June 2007 Archives

Where the VoIP Resellers Are

June 22, 2007 11:19 AM | 1 Comment
Sometimes I read marketing pieces that really make me scratch my head. This morning, while catching up on industry news I may have missed while at NXTComm, I came across a competitive site promoting a new event that was going to “fill a void in the industry”. Right away it grabbed my attention, because I could not figure out what void existed in IP Communications trade shows. Sure enough, a new show has been launched that claims it will bring together resellers and VARs with vendors. That immediately brought a smile to my face. Not because there is an actual void in the industry, but because you have to appreciate marketing speak. Here the marketers are solving a problem that has never existed outside of their own event.
 
TMC’s Internet Telephony Conference and Expo has attracted tens of thousands of resellers, VARs, agents and system integrators over the years and we have seen this audience become one of the most dominant features of our event. We have been offering these valuable attendees unparalleled conference sessions at no charge and they have rewarded our efforts by becoming the de-facto event for IP communications resellers to attend.
 
The marketing for this new event should have stated that they were “hoping to fill a void in their event that has existed for years”, since Internet Telephony Conference and Expo has been filling the void in the industry since 1999.
 
Sorry, sometimes I get fired up and have to de-bunk myths….

Home at Last

June 22, 2007 8:45 AM | 0 Comments

We had a slight delay but thankfully I am back.

Blogged via Wireless Handheld

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E-Mail and News Junkies

June 21, 2007 5:30 PM | 1 Comment
One thing I do not miss about travel is the e-mail avalanche which ensues the moment you turn on a computer to get back to work. It is quite amazing. I think e-mail is what makes us more productive and also does not let us relax.
 
In addition the thirst for knowledge many of us have, coupled with access to information in various ways such as RSS, news alerts, etc. has enabled those who can’t get enough information to at least try.
 
I would imagine those people who are really pushing the envelope in terms of being e-mail and news junkies will get farther ahead in life than others. Of course this doesn’t equate to work ethic or interpersonal skills but my experience is the truly successful people really have trouble turning off e-mail and news absorption. I would love your opinions.
Some of the rumors from last night’s party at NXTComm are that many of the enabling technology companies in communications are for sale. I know of one of these companies who is having some financial problems but I can’t say who. Expect consolidation.

Cox Selects BroadWorks VoIP

June 20, 2007 7:10 AM | 0 Comments
BroadSoft just announced they will be providing their BroadWorks platform to enable Cox Business Services – a hosted IP communications offering aimed at corporate customers. This a huge win for Broadsoft and should also be of great concern to the incumbent phone companies. The cable companies have been very aggressive in the residential VoIP market and SMBs are next.

No Logon with Skypee

June 20, 2007 6:42 AM | 1 Comment
So I got up this morning at 4:30 am which is a bit earlier than I would have liked (this is really 5:30 EST). I was hoping to get lots of work done but last night and this morning I could not get onto the hotel broadband connection. I would get the login screen but when I put in my room number it would time out.
 
I rebooted and played with settings for a long time and then I decided to call tech support. The person who answered asked me to turn of the firewall and a whole bunch of other things like changing my proxy server.
 
Nothing worked. He then asked if I have “Skypee” which I inferred was Skype (I also inferred the tech support team may be based in Italy). I told him indeed I do have “Skypee.”
 
When I disabled “Skypeee” it solved the problem and I can now join the internet community once again. Happy day.smile

Clarus Systems

June 20, 2007 5:04 AM | 2 Comments
Clarus Systems Enables VoIP Rollouts to go More Smoothly and keeps things Running that way
 
As telephony transitions to corporate WANs and LANs the issue of ensuring telephone systems continue to function regardless of network problems becomes an important issue. In some corporations there is a belief that the users are there to tell tech support when there are problems with the phone system.
 
In fact this may be OK if telephones are not mission critical or you have a small number of phones in your organization. But in either of these cases it pays to be proactive in determining of your VoIP solution is functioning correctly in your organization.
 
In a recent conversation with Clarus Systems, company executives explained to me how their VoIP testing products are doing quite well in the market and especially Fortune-class financial companies.
 
One area the company has been successful at is deploying branch office VoIP solutions with high levels of certainty the solutions will work in each branch. One Clarus Systems customer in fact is now able to turn up 15 branches per week as a result of working with the company.
 
Gurmeet Lamba VP of Engineering at the company explained to me how VoIP systems change constantly as new firmware is updated on phones and patches are added to servers.
 
Some real world problems the company has identified is a case where a company forgot to upgrade their UPS system and as a result if a power outage had taken place a large bank of phones would have been out of service. This is due to the fact the PBX had not been backed up and subsequently the configuration files were vulnerable to loss.
 
In another case a centrally managed system which implemented a single change saw 14 other phones affected.
 
The company utilizes automated active testing to ensure phones are working properly. For example using a TAPI driver they are able to make the phone ring and take samples of various office environments. They further make local and long distance calls to ensure network connectivity in both scenarios. The further test voicemail, directory services and conference bridges.
 
They also have a reporting system allowing administrators to do a sanity check. For example if there are 15 physical phones in a branch and only 14 show up in a device pool there may be a problem worth looking into.
 
The company also understands the nuances of the telephony system like the difference between a lobby phone and an executive phone. The first difference is the executive phone should likely be allowed to make long distance calls and the lobby phone should not. Moreover the lobby phone should probably be encrypted and moreover have its Ethernet port disabled so a visitor cannot come into a building and plug a laptop onto the network.
 
The company’s solution offers reporting which comes from a portal which provides a good deal of telephony information and in doing so allows less experienced technical people to quickly diagnose tech problems.
 
For example if a phone is misbehaving its configuration can be compared against that of a working phone to see if there is an easy way to solve problem.
 
Clarus Systems also has a screen allowing technicians to take control of a phone via remote control over IP and a soft client. This can be helpful in recreating problems as well as training.
 
If you plan on installing large scale VoIP in your enterprise it makes sense to connect with Clarus Systems to ensure your rollout goes as smoothly as possible. According to the company, they create software making IT look good and communications appear as just another application. In the end, who doesn’t want to look good?
As I sit in a press room in Chicago eagerly awaiting John Chamber’s entrance, about 60 or so members of the media are catching up on gossip and the happenings in the industry. Cisco’s Jeff Spagnola Vice President, Worldwide Service Provider Marketing kicked off the press conference and made a reference to Castaway, the movie with Tom Hanks. He discussed the end of the movie where Hanks had to choose from 4 different roads. He mentioned this crossroads is exactly what the service provider industry is dealing with today.
 
Jeff mentioned many carriers are on the way to a next generation IP infrastructure and the choices these providers make are complicated. Do they go into IPTV, telepresence, triple play, partner with content providers, etc. The answer according to Jeff, is Yes! He says Cisco is here to partner with service providers to make all these things this happen.
 
Jeff mentioned some of the recent releases his company has come out with to facilitate intelligent networks as well as a key telepresence certification which so far BT and Sprint have received. Furthermore he touched on a mesh networks enabling announcement.
 
John started by saying the transition to IP will happen faster than we think.
 
Fixed/Mobile convergence is coming and service providers will add value. He said it is great to be a plumber, meaning the companies supplying data pipes to customers. He also was referencing service providers who seem unhappy to just provide “dumb pipes.”
 
“Web 2.0 is the future will improve productivity for a decade or more,” according to John. He also pointed out if you are a service provider just beginning to tackle these issues, you are late.
 
The first generation of networking according to Chambers was about self-service and the next decade is about consumer content which is wiki-based. Social networking is how Cisco manages its projects internally today. This change has allowed Cisco to be up to 9x more productive than before.
 
Phase two of communications is many-to-many collaboration over any device and/or network in the world according to John. He says productivity will continue to improve. He made reference to a chart he showed the room as the same one he presented to Alan Greenspan in 1997. He said it had all come true.
 
He mentioned recent capital spending has slowed and subsequently innovation slowed down as well. Going forward, collaboration and web 2.0 will rocket us forward.
 
According to John, web 2.0 is telepresence, unified communications, podcasting and other technologies which improve collaboration.
 
 
John says the network will become the platform and his company is working on combining Scientific Atlanta, Linksys and Cisco technologies and platforms with the best of web 2.0.
 
He further went on to say the reason he was late to the press conference was because the company’s largest customer in the world was busy telling him that their telepresence solution will be a huge change in business and an incredible revenue generating opportunity.
 
John Chambers believes strongly we are entering telecom phase II.
 
“We have the capability to gain access to any content over any network.” (with proper authorization of course). He continued, “This changes entertainment and healthcare models as well as how we interact with family and friends.”
 
John has never seen such a surge in technology since the 1990. This bodes very well for the industry.
 
He says his recent conversations with government leaders has shifted from technology discussions to how the technology will change industries and lives.
 
Cisco has always done things 5-10 years before their customers and he says they are 3x more productive than the nearest competitors as a result.
 
Chambers closed by saying phones and all devices in the home, office and service provider network will interconnect. We will have the option to access content from various devices and we will see content stored in a variety of locations. According to Chambers, “What Cisco does is to make sure all of these technologies work with one another.”
 
I had the opportunity to ask Mr. Chambers if his company has considered teaching other companies how to acquire companies as Cisco has done it so incredibly well. I referenced an article where I called him the Jack Welch of tech. According to John his company has helped other companies do things the way Cisco does and although he doesn’t see this as a core part of the company’s business it is something they do to help their networking business as once they educate their customers about improving their business processes they tend to buy more Cisco equipment.

Fring on Windows Mobile

June 19, 2007 12:00 PM | 0 Comments
Tom Keating has the scoop on Fring coming to a Windows Mobile device near you. Why should you care? Well because Fring could help integrate your disparate communications clients into a single unified application. I am looking forward to trying it out.

John Chambers

June 19, 2007 11:50 AM | 0 Comments
John Chambers the CEO of Cisco is getting ready to speak here in Chicago and John is generally one of the more dynamic speakers the industry has. Surprisingly, I haven’t heard John speak as often as I like as I seem to always have a scheduling conflict. at events he speaks at.
I heard a bit of his talk at Interop and it was great. Today, I am not sure what to expect but think telepresence will be part of the message. Perhaps he will even talk about how advanced applications such as this high-end video platform will be the way for providers to replace declining voice revenue.
 
Then again, he may just announce some new products. Other speakers expected are Chris Plummer and Shannon Welch.

Packet Island

June 19, 2007 11:44 AM | 0 Comments
Packet Island Redefine Network Management
 
“It is not just about kbps” is the statement ringing in my head after a discussion I had at TMC’s Communications Developer Conference in Santa Clara, CA last month with Praveen Kumar the co-founder and president of Packet Island. As Praveen pointed out, a network can become flooded with packets when VoIP is deployed. In some cases, packet volumes can increase by a factor of ten or more.
 
To help companies cope with the ever-increasing number of packets on a network the company makes an appliance which can sit in front of the PBX and monitor quality metrics. For those of you interested in the open-source world, the company also makes a software agent for Asterisk. Furthermore Packet Island has partnered with Fonality, Digium and Epygi.
 
Our conversation focused on IP Centrex for a while and more specifically why the adoption of this technology has been slower than expected. Praveen believes the reason has to do with quality and this concurs with some informal research I have done in the area.
 
This is why his company is targeting service providers and VARs with their solutions… The goal is allowing his customers to better manage VoIP on the networks of their own customers.
 
Packet Island will even take care of tier two support and VAR training if needed. The company has a service which monitors VoIP lines for a $3 per month. If the pricing sounds familiar it is because AT&T will charge you a bit more for its WirePro service to monitor their PSTN lines.
 
The eventual goal of the company is to become the HP OpenView of the market where it relates to SaaS. This equates to hosted network monitoring for the acronym-challenged.
 
My take on the company is they are positioned well as companies are getting more and more excited about the potential to offload their technology problems to others. This is especially true in smaller companies where there is no money to hire expensive MIS people to handle the network management.

Cantata IMG/MSP

June 19, 2007 9:38 AM | 1 Comment
Cantata's IMG/MSP Speeds Application Delivery Times for Service Providers.
 
Recently I spoke with Peter Vescusi about Canata’s latest IMG roll out… Verison 10.3.3. As you may recall this is a pretty feature-driven release with more SIP methods, SIP and SS7 translation and load balancing allowing a single IP address to represent a farm of IMGs.
 
At the Communications Developer Conference a few weeks in Santa Clara, CA I had a chance to catch up with Cantata’s James Rafferty who told me the new release has been seeing positive deployment in the telecom world.
 
For example, service providers are thrilled to be able to do multiple ENUM registry lookups with up to four DNS servers. This is great for peering fabrics which of course explains why I frequently see James at voice peering events.
 
Since we were at a developer show I suppose this was the reason we got to talking about the MSP 1010 which is similar to the IMG (he calls it a sister product) but has API hooks allowing a developer to build things like transcoding under API control.
 
You can also write TCAP-based applications allowing lookups for LNP. You can also write a CNAM look-up for Caller-ID.
 
From there we discussed time to market which Jim tells me is about 90 days with the MSP and he contrasts this with developing with boards which can take 6-9 months according to James.
 
An interesting topic which came up again and again at the show is fax support. Many products have interoperability glitches when using T.38. Jim says their solutions work more smoothly than others. This is not surprising from the company which invented the fax board when it was Brooktrout many years ago.
 
As you have likely read before, the company says its products are IMS-compliant allowing you to deploy today without having to wait for standards bodies. He does mention some Interop testing and/or tweaking may be needed in some scenarios.
 
On the subject of IMS the company sees video streaming and gaming as a few of the areas where there is tremendous growth happening. His company also sees IVR, prepaid services and conferencing as other applications with real-world growth in the IP space.
 
Out discussion led us to agree that IP allows services with several disparate elements to work better with one another. To that end he sees many service provider deploying blended services which take advantage of voice, video, IM and presence.
 
So what’s my take? I am told as of our meeting, 55 carriers had purchased the IMG. I find this number to be impressive and it seems the company has the potential for great success with IMG/MSP sister products.
Chicago weather has struck again and I am enjoying the hospitality of the American Airlines flight crew as we wait for the weather to improve. So far the delay is estimated to be 30 minutes. I hope to get to NXTComm eventually. Oh, and here are the details on the party.

PhoneGnome

June 19, 2007 7:27 AM | 0 Comments
Is PhoneGnome from Televolution the ultimate CLEC 2.0 Enabler?
 
We know the story all too well. Thousands of CLECs backed by the venture capital market flooded the telecom space in the hopes of all becoming the next AT&T. The goal back in the late nineties was to roll out fiber as fast as possible with no regard for getting any customers.
 
If you remember, at the time, the stock market didn’t even value profit… It was all about eyeballs, miles of fiber and potential for future profit. Profit was an “evil” word as it allowed markets to place a valuation on your company. Many former CLEC heads tell me they wanted to focus more on customer acquisition and their investors directed them to focus on digging up asphalt as a place to lay glass and not revenue generation.
 
To make matters worse, the ILECs were throwing up roadblock after roadblock making it difficult for DSL providers and CLECs to sell their services over ILEC controlled pipes.
 
We know how the story ends. The market crashed, investors panicked and few CLECs had any customers and many went belly up.
 
Today the cable companies are the most formidable competitors to the ILECs. Still, we generally don’t expect the cable and phone companies to be leaders in rolling out new services. These larger companies are generally behind the curve when it comes to experimenting with new applications.
 
Remember, Vonage was the first major telephone service provider with a soft client. Vonage did not invent the soft client mind you; they just decided they wanted to be among the first ITSPs to distribute them to their customers.
 
Large service providers know they are slower to move than smaller companies and the promise of IMS is all about allowing telephone company partners to develop new network services on the cheap allowing the partner and telco to share in the profits.
 
Is this a good strategy? Absolutely. Will IMS be deployed globally overnight? Absolutely not.
 
In the mean time, there are a few solutions which allow application developers to deploy advanced telephony applications with little investment and with great potential.
 
One such solution is a CPE box called PhoneGnome. Made by Televolutionthe deviceis an advanced ATA with an API allowing applications to be rolled out on what has to be the most granular and targeted basis possible. You could provide service to one person on each street in the world and your deployment would be cost effective.
 
The box costs $30-$60 depending on volume and can be the easiest way in the world to provide advanced telephony service to customers on anyone’s broadband or phone network.
 
The benefit of this approach is application fine-tuning is a cinch. You can revise, refine, retune or redo your application development for just the cost of the developer. You don’t need any traditional and high-priced telco equipment.
 
In fact the absence of equipment in this model means developers can be of the software-only variety meaning access to many more programmers worldwide. One application already running on PhoneGnome is Dial Tone 2.0 where the dial tone you hear is replaced by a TellMe application asking you for or a contact or business name to call. Speech recognition and ensuing behind the scenes technical magic connects you with the party you want to call.
 
You could also develop a smart forwarding application like GrandCentral or virtually anything else. Years ago I wrote an article about if Google got into telephony they could provide an application which does a Google search on an incoming phone number. With tabbed browsing you could have a tab come up with a search for the number in the yellow pages, another search on the Better Business Bureau site and so on.
 
This sort of application can be built by anyone now. There are a variety of similar telephony mashups you can come up with in fact. You could develop an application which displays a map with the city and even address of the person calling you.
 
Call detail comes in via XML and at that point you can do whatever you want with the call. You could have it gracefully forward to voicemail or forwarded to an assistant or to your cell phone.
 
The potential here is quite staggering as the PhoneGnome devices sit in a home and can determine how long a household uses a phone. The device can establish identity trust via the phone company with a side benefit being built-in security.
 
Additionally there is the potential to correlate web and phone behavior. In the past I have written about how service providers can start making money by selling aggregate telephone data. Now, any company with enough boxes out on the network can have this same ability.
 
So Televolution allows anyone to take advantage of the most lucrative promises of the CLEC opportunity. You can now provide the advanced services and that’s where the real money is.
 
Service providers could use this sort of service to break out of their traditional markets if they choose to do so. FMC for example is a natural application stemming from this solution.
 
The technology can sit in a phone or router or even a video game. The company has a shared revenue model and can even help with distribution of the service. They also have a mobile client with many similar features to the home-based solution.
 
I am pretty blown away by this technology and it has much broader implications for the deployment of advanced telephony applications. Why? Well, for the first time, anyone can roll out enhanced services without the need to wait for a service provider to green light the project.
 
If the project is successful and you get 100,000 subscribers, you can then shop it around to service providers as a proven business model and have them help market and sell it. I see PhoneGnome as the ultimate solution to getting telephony applications rolled out quickly and efficiently and for this reason I think it the ultimate CLEC 2.0 enabler.

On my way to NXTComm

June 19, 2007 7:00 AM | 0 Comments

I am on my way to NXTComm now and am looking forward to seeing what's new at the event. I am also looking forward to seeing many of you at the NXTComm party TMC is having with Dialogic, Alliance Systems and others.

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