ACN video phone – The future starts here
May.31, 2010 in
Denver VoIP Video
ACN IRIS 3000 VOIP (voice over internet protocol) video phone For more information on the IRIS 3000 or any other ACN services please e-mail me at fortune_acn@yahoo.ca

May 31st, 2010 at 3:51 am
@Kawnification I’ve actually ran into to people that own magicjacks before, really had nothing bad to say, neither do I. Hmm never ran into anyone with a video phone that wasnt a loathed 5linx or ACN victim. Tryin to sell their soul.
May 31st, 2010 at 4:11 am
@Kawnification I dont know. Its doing pretty good. They are selling millions.
May 31st, 2010 at 4:32 am
You dont have to “pay” ATT Tmo to sell their service Thats the way it is with real TC companies. In 2005 I contacted them about selling their service, met with a local rep, gave them my biz plan, approved me, signed a contract and voila-comm checks next month. Of course I had to spend money. Comparing that hilarious $499 FEE with “spending money to make money” is a moot point. The only license I had to buy was from the city. $89. You dont have to buy that bc you dont have a real business.
May 31st, 2010 at 4:33 am
@guyinyoureye You act like your make-believe store costs you nothing. You act like you started this business with no money. One day you just had a shop, and started selling cellphones. They just showed up at your magical shop.
Everyone spends money on their own business; 85% of small businesses fail with in the first 5 years. Does that therefore mean that those people got scammed for trying a business?
The difference with ACN is that it’s cheaper and easier to run than any other business.
May 31st, 2010 at 5:28 am
@guyinyoureye If one of my customers has a problem, I call ACN, and they take care of it. Do you think ACN provides massive call-centres full of employees (for tech support) just out of the goodness of their heart? It costs money. My $499 barely pays the wages for one worker in an ACN call centre for one week. My $499 gives me a CRTC (a license which legally entitles me to sell telecommunications services), it gives me software, documents and it covers everything I’ll need for this easy business
May 31st, 2010 at 5:37 am
@guyinyoureye I don’t believe for one second you sell T-Mobile and AT&T products/services without a CRTC. A CRTC costs money; that’s part of what the $499 goes to.
Your business (if it’s not complete bullshit) has overhead. You have operating costs, advertising, employees, etc. I pay $499 and I never have to have advertise, fix anything, pay employees or release products. ACN takes care of everything, and gives me the tools I need. $499 is still the cheapest business you can buy
May 31st, 2010 at 6:14 am
@guyinyoureye @guyinyoureye Magicjacks are garbage. If you ever have home network problems (even simple router surging or tweaking), that’s a major problem if your landline goes through your internet connection! If you need 911, or you’re having Internet problems, forget it. The worst part is any standard router need resets every so often; so expect the complete loss of your landline connection. Magicjack relies on a stable PC. PC’s aren’t stable unless you BUY a good one.
May 31st, 2010 at 6:47 am
@guyinyoureye Magic Jacks are garbage. @guyinyoureye Magicjacks are garbage. If you ever have home network problems (even simple router surging or tweaking), that’s a major problem if your landline goes through your internet connection! If you need 911, or you’re having Internet problems, forget it. The worst part is any standard router need resets every so often; so expect the complete loss of your landline connection. Magicjack relies on
May 31st, 2010 at 7:44 am
@guyinyoureye Magicjacks are garbage. If you ever have home network problems (even simple router surging or tweaking), that’s a major problem if your landline goes through your internet connection! If you need 911, or you’re having Internet problems, forget it. The worst part is any standard router need resets every so often; so expect the complete loss of your landline connection. Magicjack relies on a PC. PC’s aren’t reliable unless you’re willing to fork out the money.
May 31st, 2010 at 8:44 am
@Kawnification I bought 50 pieces of MagicJack at my store, actually touched the physical product I spent my money on ($499 setup fee *cough), and eliminated the monthly bill altogether. We also sell T-Mobile, AT&T and many other Prepaid and Broadband products and…you wont believe this…I did not have to PAY them to let me sell the service! THEY pay ME!!!!!
May 31st, 2010 at 9:27 am
@Kawnification Wow what next? Maybe it will even be cordless one day! WoW!!!!!!! LMAO
May 31st, 2010 at 9:46 am
@guyinyoureye The video phone isn’t that impressive (save the fact that it will replace a regular home phone, and still be 50% cheaper on your monthly bill). However, you (and everybody else who just looks at the video phone and calls ACN a scam at first glance) are savagely idiotic for not seeing the potential in saving people money on bills.
As an ACN rep I offer people cheaper bills (for free) (on virtually EVERYTHING they already use) and I get paid for it. What a scam lol.
May 31st, 2010 at 10:38 am
@guyinyoureye Your a joke, all you do is go to ACN videos and talk about stuff of which you nothing about. Is your goal purely to slander ACN?
Guess what? The video phone being released this June has email (among many other features) dummie.
May 31st, 2010 at 11:09 am
this is a joke. video phone is a POS. get a notebook and skype people. cant check email on a videophone dummies
May 31st, 2010 at 11:56 am
@Madguy90 Hint: ACN is much more than that video phone, and I don’t even attempt to sell the video phone unless someone asks about it. ACN offers a better value (for free) on local, long distance, internet, satellite tv, natural gas, electricity, and soon-to-be insurance. That’s why I’m in ACN. Who doesn’t want a cheaper bill on any of those services? Everyone I know is happy to have their bill reduced as much as 60%, while still keeping the exact same service.
May 31st, 2010 at 12:42 pm
@Kawnification I still fail to see how this is better than Skype. Skype is free. High-speed internet is reasonably priced. As much as I’d love to drag this large phone around with me to “anywhere in the world”, that’s why I carry a cell. And if I desperately need to see the person I’m talking to, my laptop and wifi should do the trick. This thing is literally useless to anyone who’s even moderately tech savvy (i.e. just about anyone reading this). Hint: Get out of ACN.
May 31st, 2010 at 12:44 pm
@guyinyoureye oh i see, you have nothing to do but troll ACN forums and be a dick. coool
May 31st, 2010 at 12:59 pm
@Kawnification oh i see. kinda like magicjack but 3000 times more expensive and with a crappy webcam. coool
May 31st, 2010 at 1:50 pm
When is this videophone going to break through? Some moron tried to demonstrate it to me in 2006 and it was a little impressive back then. But the dvd of people smiling bc of how much money they made was as fake as donalds hair
May 31st, 2010 at 2:31 pm
i have a webcam and use skype
i don’t need a lousy tool that was invented back in 1980 and never had any succes to begin with
May 31st, 2010 at 2:57 pm
@kmckkk Unlike Skype, The ACN video phone is specifically being engineered to be compatible with ALL speeds of internet; including the slowest.
Once purchased, the ACN phone only costs $32.99/month. That is for local AND long distance. Not only that, you can take your ACN phone on a trip to anywhere in the world, and anytime someone calls you, the phone thinks you are at home; so you NEVER pay any long-distance. That’s why it’s better than skype…
May 31st, 2010 at 3:31 pm
You guys are missing the big picture. It is not just about the phone it is about a distribution channel that corporations can’t touch. (your warm market, look at ambit energy)
May 31st, 2010 at 4:02 pm
You guys are missing the big picture. It is not just about the phone it is about a distribution channel that corporations can’t touch. (your warm market, look at ambit energy)
May 31st, 2010 at 4:20 pm
You guys are missing the big picture. It is not just about the phone it is about a distribution channel that corporations can’t touch. (your warm market, look at ambit energy)
May 31st, 2010 at 4:37 pm
you got to be a believer