The increasing number of cordless phones with an integrated Wi Fi support being launched into the market is a testimony to the fact that Wi Fi is here to stay. Unlike a couple of runs of erstwhile technologies that have a way of disappearing to the deep of the black lagoon reserved for the digital unknown after only a brief stretch of shine under the sun, Wi Fi is shaping up to be one of the most active technologies that e-consumers better keep a keen eye out for.
This, alongside the growth in the production of VOIP phones in the market, is contributing to the rising demand for cordless phones that are able to switch from one network to another. And who can blame them? As the 20th century demands more from the people, the aid and support that the digital world is able to afford e-professionals of today are becoming quite a natural fixture of the urban and suburban landscape.
Siemens, along with other phone companies like Cisco and DiVitas Networks—a company bent on the rise—has already seen this and has understood the implications it comes along with. Acting on this information, these companies, with industry leader Siemens leading the way, plan to exploit whatever avenue for profit is opened up as phones fit to shift from Wi Fi connection to another are introduced to consumer audiences at large.
After all, in the phone industry, as in any other digital industry, the latest innovation able to gather and integrate a good measure of features in one package always turns up to be the winning ace, the trump card that others will strive to follow. In this case, the scramble for a great cordless device—perhaps a Skype cordless phone at that—which is duly capable of roaming without any glitches from one network connection to another is causing many phone companies to run around in frantic circles as they try to beat others to the deadline. Imagine a digital cordless phone like that with Skype features like SkypeIn, SkypeOut as well as Skype-to-Skype—consumers, especially old time users of Skype, are certain to greet the arrival of this unit with much enthusiasm as they find themselves heaps thankful for the sublime convenience offered by the packet of its connectivity options.
Of course, the first one to deliver gets to take home a good chunk of the profit pie, thus becoming the undisputed winner of the game—at least, for the next little while.
So those who have a Blackberry and still own a cell phone or two won’t have to contend with the prospect of lugging around the lot of the digital baggage they were used to in the tedious days of old since one digital cordless phone system will effectively do. Such notions are not purely conjecture at this point, as most consumers seem to believe. With countless modifications in the system as well as in the way cordless phones work today, the production of such communication devices are not a matter of if—but simply a matter of when.