Some other interesting uses, specifically in industrial applications, would be with gas pumps. Gas pumps today have an intercom the customer can use to call the local attendant for help. The key here is local attendant. When filling up with gas in the middle of the night with no attendant on duty, there is nobody there to help. By using VoIP, the customer could connect to the local attendant while they are there or connect to customer service at night or when the local attendant is not available. Similar functions could be implemented in many other areas. For example, going to a restaurant in a foreign country, either fast food, drive through, or even a walk-in restaurant, a customer could simply use an intercom system to place their order. But now because it is VoIP that is being handled by a centralized order system group, the customer could actually make the selection to order in any language and be interpreted to ascertain what is being requested. For instance, a hungry patron could go and order their food in French, Chinese, Japanese, English, Spanish, or Swahili - or any other language - and get exactly what they asked for.