BT has launched the world's first phone service that allows a single handset
to make calls using both mobile and fixed line networks, seamlessly switching
between the two infrastructures.
BT Fusion provides
customers with a Bluetooth hub/DSL router and a
Motorola
V560 handset, which are included in the sign up fee.
The handset communicates with the hub via Bluetooth, but BT said that it
plans to upgrade this connection to Wi-Fi in the future
and has incorporated the wireless technology into the hub in readiness.
When the handset is within 25 metres of the hub calls are routed through the
DSL line and users are charged fixed line costs of 3p per minute for peak calls
and 5.5p an hour for off-peak.
Away from the hub the handset piggybacks on Vodafone's mobile network, but BT
claims that it can switch between the two systems seamlessly even in mid-call.
The service is only available to users of BT's own-brand broadband service,
and mobile services are locked into Vodafone.
"Technically it can be used on any broadband service provider but only if we
decide to make it available," said Ian Livingstone, chief executive at BT
Retail.
"BT has spent a lot of money on this and you will have to be a BT customer to
get the converged service. Over time we will offer it to other broadband
customers."
There are two payment packages: Fusion 100 at £9.99 a month including 100
free minutes of calls; and Fusion 200 at £14.99 including 200 free minutes.
Broadband and fixed line bills of £17.99 per month and £10.50 per month
respectively will be unchanged and charged in the usual way.
Calls are charged from the point at which they begin, no matter where the
caller then roams during the call. But 0800 numbers, international calls,
voicemail and directory inquiries will be charged at mobile rates regardless of
from where they are made.
Up to six people can be authorised to use the hub and three people can make
calls on the hub simultaneously.
BT declined to give exact pricing information on the cost of extra handsets,
but suggested that "the cost of acquisition is not so great", and that more
Fusion-capable phones would be available shortly.
"Cellular telephony revolutionised the world by taking communications mobile
and now we are taking it further with the convergence of fixed and mobile,"
said Ed Zander, chairman of Motorola.
"That is why we will be bringing out a super slim
RAZR
handset that can use the Fusion service."
In the longer term BT wants to move the fixed line service to Wi-Fi and allow
users to make calls using BT's network of 7,800 UK
hotspots, once the network is upgraded, and to use Wi-Fi
hubs in homes.
The telco said that the first Wi-Fi phones from manufacturers like Nokia will
be available in a year's time, and that Wi-Fi Fusion services would follow
shortly afterwards.
Once the Wi-Fi service is running BT will roll out a business offering,
initially targeting small and medium sized enterprises. BT customers can sign up
for services at BT Fusion.
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