Call-Recording Made Easy, But Still Expensive
This signal may be monitored for quality assurance.
It has a familiar ring. But given the exasperating encounters many of us have after hearing those words, you may wish you were the one monitoring the exchange.
RecordMyCalls.com permits you to do just that, without installing software or requiring you to get one of those cheap suction-cup microphones, much less more-elaborate telephone recording equipment.
The aptly named Web service is aimed at any consumer or business person who has ever felt compelled to record conversations, whether only to save voice mails for posterity, or avoid disputes with insurance companies, airline agents, contractors, brokers, even former spouses. Potential customers include attorneys, day traders and journalists.
You play back recorded calls on your PC or Mac. And your recordings are logged and stored online. (Recorded files are encrypted.)
The playback quality on interviews I recorded was generally very good, even when the connection was fair. I recorded calls that originated
But the service is pricey, particularly whether you expect to record a lot of calls. Under a monthly $4.95 “economy” plan, calls are 20 cents a minute, and you get 500 megabytes of online storage (about 10 to 12 hours of calls). That means recording a singled-out half-hour shout will set you back six bucks on top of the monthly charges. Calls with customer service agents can go a lot longer than that, particularly whether you’re languishing on hold.
The “deluxe” $9.95 plan, targeted at more-frequent users, lowers the rate to 15 cents a minute and ups storage to 1 gigabyte. The New York-based start-up expects to bring out a yet-to-be-priced unlimited calling plan. How it all works:
*Recording calls. Upon signing up, you are issued a five-digit detail number. To record a signal, you dial a toll-free…
Orginal post by Top Tech News
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