Google is offering its free Voice call management service to members of the U.S. military beginning Tuesday, the company said in a blog post.
Google Voice is in beta and only available to people who get an invite from Google, but with the military offer, anyone with a .mil e-mail address can get service, wrote U.S. Army Sgt. Dale Sweetnam, an Army fellow working with Google’s communications team this year.
“It’s not easy to stay in touch with friends and family when you’re fighting in a country thousands of miles from home,” wrote Sweetnam, who was deployed in Iraq as an Army journalist for 13 months. “The whole experience was physically and emotionally draining, but it was especially difficult when I called home at the end of the day and nobody was there to answer.”
A single number and an easy way to retrieve messages can be “invaluable” to military members constantly moving, Sweetnam added.
“When you deploy, your life is put on hold,” he added. “While you live and work in a different world, everyone else moves on with life back home. Your family and friends keep moving, and this sometimes means it’s just not possible for them to stay awake until 2 a.m. to receive a phone call. Calling Iraq or Afghanistan is seldom an option.”
With Google Voice, a military member’s family and friends can leave messages throughout the day, he added. “When that service member visits an Internet trailer, all the messages are right there,” Sweetnam said. “It’s like a care package in audio form.”
A Google spokeswoman said the company is not disclosing how many users Google Voice has.