No, we're not talking about a new style of talking on the phone, we're talking about the way we actually make and receive phone calls. ElectricNews reports that people will be ditching their land-lines over the next few years.
...around 25 percent of households will have abandoned traditional telephony services offered via the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) by 2010 in favour of cheaper options.
Cheap? What's cheap? Are we talking Skype cheap here (read: free), or a form of cheap that costs more than nothing?

On thing is for certain. As more and more people join the VoIP revolution, telephone companies will have to revamp the services they provide to hang on to customers.

We've already seen something from BT that could pave the way forward, in the form of BT Fusion, a service which will allow a mobile phone user to utilise their home broadband connection as the carrier of their conversation whenever they're in range. However, Gartner sees it has having little appeal right now, but with potential for the future.