Your iPad’s a Telephone With Google Voice


By Geoffrey Goetz May. 26, 2011 on Gigaom

Out of the box, Apple has you covered on your iPad 2 with FaceTimefor video chat with your friends, family and colleagues, so long as they have a FaceTime capable device and a Wi-Fi connection. But let’s face it, not everybody is on FaceTime, and certainly not constantly near a Wi-Fi hot spot. If all you want to do is replicate a phone connection, Google Voice along with a couple of native iOS apps may be just what you’re looking for.

What You Need

Google Voice Account. If you’re not already part of Google Voice, simply log into your Google account and sign-up for Google Voice (google.com/voice, but it’s U.S. only as of this writing). It will walk you through the sign-up process, including setting up a new number.

GV Connect. Google’s strategy for the iPad, including Google Voice, appears to be limited to Safari apps only. Google offers an official iOS-native Google Voice client for the iPhone, but GV Connect is a better option, as it has full support iPad support.

Talkatone. Neither the Safari interface that Google offers, nor GV Connect will make VOIP calls from your iOS device. To enable that functionality, you need to download and install the free, ad-supported Talkatone app.  Yes, this is an iPhone app, but you can control it from the iPad-friendly GV Connect interface.

How to Make a Phone Call

Once you have a Google Voice account, download and install both the GV Connect and Talkatone clients on your iPad, and set up each with your Google Voice account information. Then, in GV Connect, do the following:

  1. Under Settings, set the Start Calls From setting to Google Talk.
  2. Enable the Call using Talkatone setting.
  3. Click on the telephone handset icon in the upper left corner to place a call.

While you are controlling your Google Voice account from within GV Connect, the VOIP call is actually being handled by Talkatone. Talkatone does claim to allow calls over 3G, but the quality of those calls are dependent on the network. I’ve only used it while connected via Wi-Fi.

How to Receive a Phone Call

To direct all your incoming calls to be received on your iPad. In GV Connect on your iPad, do the following:

  1. Under Settings, set the Call Forwarding setting to Google Talk.
  2. Make sure you are logged in to your Google Account in Talkatone.
  3. Wait for an incoming call.

It’s that easy; just make sure you’re not logged in to Google Talk anywhere else. I tend to use the stock earbuds to avoid looking like a fool with the iPad pressed against my face, but unfortunately, Bluetooth headsets aren’t fully supported by either Apple or Talkatone. I have yet to completely dedicate my Google Voice account to exclusive iPad-only calling, but I’d love to hear from you if you end up using the solution described above as a total home or cell phone replacement.

News That Comes Back Around: Why Every Child Needs an iPad


Posted by Warner Crocker | May 9 on GottaBeMobile

I think if Rob, or Dennis, or Sumocat, or just about any other Tablet PC blogger said it, we said it about a bazillion times back in the day. Put Tablet PCs in the hands of children and you’ll find out why these devices are the wave of the future. Children don’t have preconceptions when you put something new in front of them, and as we’re seeing with iPads and other Tablets today, when you put one in their hands, they figure it out pretty quickly. The same thing happened with Tablet PCs back in the day.

A recent Cult of Mac post, Why Every Child in America Needs an iPad, makes similar points, and also advocates that this is a good way to un-tether a child from that well known baby sitter, the TV. The post also points up some of the controversy that comes with this as iPads start to proliferate, and I guess you could say that the leading anecdote of seeing a small child in a restaurant watching a movie might point up that this could just be replacing one electronic babysitter with another.

That said, the post lists a number of reasons why iPads and Tablets make sense for kids. I’ll just say this: regardless of the concerns about whether or not these kinds of devices are suitable substitutions for children, how children take to and relate to new technology that make us adults give pause and think before we begin playing with them is a big telling point into whether or not the device, gadget, or technology will succeed.

If you’d like you can scroll through some of the posts about Kids and Tablets PCs that can be found at this link.