Spinvox

I’ve used a couple managed voicemail providers in the last few months. My first provider was callwave which sent me my voicemails as MP3 through email and just like any voicemail added the ability to call in and hear the voicemail from your phone in a queue. A month or two ago I started using Spinvox after a hearing it briefly on a forgotten tech podcast. It provides voicemail like any other service with a call in queue but where callwave sends you an audio file through email it converts the voicemail to text and emails me. The result is something really cool.

As a BlackBerry user Spinvox provides my voicemail to my phone immediately as text, allowing me to actually respond to any message much faster in a medium I prefer. Even though I love mobile phones  I don’t love them to talk or call my voicemail I love them for the the other connections they provide, ie e-mail, text and internet.

Personally I hate voicemail, it’s awfully time consuming. It’s slow, you have to find the time to call in, listen to the voicemail and then you have to call the person for a reply. The message that I receive now is a very good conversion of the audio left in the queue sent through email that I can read whenever I want, in a setting that I want and I could forward it to the caller with a reply.

No matter who it is I just may not be in the setting where it’s appropriate to pick the phone up; I’d say 95% all my voicemails are the result of me not being able to pick the phone up or I simply don’t want to. Now I wait 2-3 minutes for the email to be sent, I read it either on my computer or the phone and I can call them back when I can without calling my voicemail first. The majority of the time it’s just to get an answer to a question so I just text or email them back with a response. It’s extremely productive for me and it helps me not do something I don’t like, being on the phone.

If anyone want’s a Spinvox account contact me. I’m going to e-mail the contact I know over at Spinvox later this week to sign-up a few friends and he’s told me that I can pass along a full list of people to get free 1-year accounts.

If there are any drawbacks to Spinvox it would be:

  • That I have no idea how much it’s going to be after my trial is up, hopefully by that time we’ll see some other providers with the same service so it should be cheap.
  • Every phone should have access to e-mail but without constant e-mail delivery to your mobile phone you would have to rely on checking your email shortly after every call to check for a message or just calling your VM number. Since there is no other notification that you have a voice mail other than the e-mail.
  • So that little message icon on your phone, you’d never going to see that again with Spinvox. While some may see that as a drawback I see it as a plus.

About the Author, Dan Cameron:

I'm the owner and solution engineer at Sprout Venture, a web solutions company that specializes in web development including WordPress.

I started my first blog in 2003 and transitioned to WordPress in 2004. Since moving to WordPress I've written a few plugins and themes for public consumption. Lately I'm busy engineering/building/coding and have only been able to share a few code snippets.

If you're in need of some web development, web design or custom WordPress plugins and/or themes contact me, I'll be happy to discuss it with you.

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  • Spinvox's service is free but I do not recommend it. For a while I was getting some calls about credit cards and loans and I have to believe they were spamming me, or sending emails through spinvox as ads, because they would come through as if they were voicemails (translated and sent to my email as a translated call) but I never received a call. Very strange and of course they denied it.

    I used Callwave for a while for home VOIP and call forwarding but I never used the vtxt since it's a pay for service and I know have the iPhone which has "visual voicemail".

    I would expect Google's Grandcentral to have voice to text but it's up to you.
  • If I remember correctly, it's exactly the same. Spinvox started in the UK, and Callwave is the US company that's selling the same underlying technology. Not sure of the exact terms of the arrangement (some sort of licensing agreement, etc.), but I'm pretty sure they are related and Callwave is selling exactly what Spinvox offered.
  • Ron
    How does spinvox compare to Callwave's vtxt?
  • I just signed up with simulscribe.com - seems to be the same service. Very easy to use. Cost is $9.95 for first 40 messages, and then .25 per message.
  • Yeah, I've done the same thing on my phone, I was just checking if that was the method they used to transfer to the Spinvox system.

    I've thought about doing something like this before on my own, with an Asterisk box, because I hate voicemail too.
  • Dan
    Yeah, you configure your phone to forward to the number you're given from spinvox rather than the one the mobile provider sets up your phone with. All phones work this way, when someone goes to voicemail on your current phone it's being transfered to another number and that number is what you change. Some carriers make it pretty easy to modify this number, I know ATT does.
  • How do you use it with your cell account? Do you configure your cell plan to go to a number they provide instead of your cell companies voicemail #?
  • Man, I hate voicemail too. Especially when someone could just as easily send me an e-mail, but they try to call because they think they'll get my attention faster. Sign me up!!
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