I use a calling card that is re loadable. They dont have any hidden fees. I always use them because they can recharge my credit card when the money gets low. They never have any contracts, just the flat rate per minute. I love them. My brother in the military also shares the same service account with me. Try them they are great! www.globalcallingsolutions.com I hope this is good for you. I wish you the best.
To send a fax with a smartphone, there are applications on the market that will let you send - it is called an "online fax" account. If you already have a fax machine, some models have wifi on them, that will allow you to send a document from a smartphone (or laptop) via wifi, and the fax machine can then send the transmission through the phone line.
Yes, the majority of faxing is sent through phone lines.
Phone is to call, send and receive message. Fax is to send and receive sensitive file.Internet can be a phone and a fax or both at the same time. Internet can deliver and receive messages anywhere and anytime as long as internet is present.
No but you can use the send to fax function most computers have buy you need plugged into the phone line.
Your question is unclear. If you have a single phone line, it can only be used for one thing at a time... you can talk on the phone, or send/receive fax data, not both (if you have "call waiting", switching from the fax to a call will disrupt the fax). If you have multiple lines, it depends on your fax machine, but in most cases you still wouldn't be able to send or receive a fax and talk on the phone at the same time. However, if you have a combination fax machine/phone, usually you CAN pick up the handset if a voice call comes in, even if the machine is set to default to fax mode.
Use to send and receive online fax.
No, unless it is a home phone/fax machine; it will only read it out loud.
Put a piece of paper in the proper position on the fax machine. Then dial the phone number you want to send the fax to. Then when you hear the continuous beeping sound, press the SEND button. That's it.
To print to a fax machine wirelessly from a mobile phone: you would need a fax machine (or multifunction) with wifi capability. The drivers (or app) would be on the phone, and you could fax from the phone that way. This depends on the technology that both your phone and fax machine have. To fax from a mobile phone: there are services called "online fax" services that will let you send or receive faxes from a phone or computer. To fax wirlessly from a fax machine through a cell phone: this technology isn't on the market, however there are "GSM faxes" that can operate off of a cell phone signal.
Sending a fax is a method of transmitting scanned printed material (both text and images) over a telephone line from one fax machine to another. The process begins when you place the original document into the sender’s fax machine, either in the automatic document feeder or on the flatbed scanner, typically face down. After dialing the recipient’s fax number, the sending fax machine establishes a connection by dialing the number over a regular telephone line. Once the connection is confirmed, the fax machine scans the physical document using an internal scanner, converting the visual information into a digital bitmap image. This image is then compressed using specific fax protocols (such as ITU-T Group 3 standards) to reduce the amount of data that needs to be sent, speeding up transmission. The compressed data is converted into audio tones, similar to modem communication, and transmitted as signals through the telephone line to the receiving fax machine. The receiving fax machine demodulates these signals back into digital data, decompresses it, and then prints out the reconstructed image on paper. If multiple pages are sent, the process repeats for each page. After the transmission is complete, the sending machine often prints a confirmation report indicating whether the fax was sent successfully or if any errors occurred during the process. Fax transmission is reliable and secure because it uses direct telephone lines rather than the internet, reducing the risk of hacking or interception. Although email and digital file sharing are common today, faxing is still preferred for certain official or legal documents requiring signatures or formal submission.
You can purchase a copy machine that has fax capabilities (for hard copies) or if your phone can connect to your computer and you have internet you can send from your computer.
This is one disadvantage of using fax machine, you cannot receive a fax when your phone is off hook. Unless you have a dedicated phone line for the fax machine alone. Internet fax on the other hand does not require a dedicated phone line and a fax machine. All fax documents are sent over the internet connection, which means you can send and receive faxes anytime and anywhere.