In response to what Piet <
www.godfatherof.nl/@opt-in.invalid> wrote :
> I found that right after a break began shaking the phone would help and the
> conversation continued. After a disconnect making a new call was the only
> solution though.
Hi Piet,
I'm not so sure about shaking, but I used to bang TVs in the 50's and 60's
and that worked just fine sometimes!
I don't use Signal, where I had to look it up to see if it handled just
SMS/MMS only (which I had tested years ago), or if also handled VOIP and
video calls
The Signal web site claims it does:
o <
https://www.signal.org/>
"Make crystal-clear voice and video calls to people who live across town,
or across the ocean, with no long-distance charges."
So one question I'd love to ask you on behalf of myself & others is how
well does it work for you (other than those drops you speak of) for voice
and video calls?
"Share text, voice messages, photos, videos, GIFs and files for free.
Signal uses your phone's data connection so you can avoid SMS and MMS
fees."
If Signal works well, maybe it's time for me to revisit Signal as I looked
at it years ago only for SMS/MMS but where I found it kind of clunky at the
time (but that was years ago) on Android 4.4.
As for why VOIP would drop, Oooma (which is different than Signal, of
course), tells me my "jitter" is too high, although Facetime, Zoom, Google
Voice, Hangouts, Jitsi, Jami, Whatsapp, and a host of others work just fine
on the same signal.
If you want, you can test your jitter in lots of web sites & software,
but I usually use the Ooma jitter testing site:
o <
https://oomaoffice.speedtestcustom.com/>
My jitter is between 10 and 15, which Ooma says is too high
(but, interestingly, the mentioned VOIP programs work fine).
What's your jitter?
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