June 2007 Archives

RingCentral Update

June 18, 2007 3:49 PM | 0 Comments
If you have any doubt the hosted communications market is growing, you need to look no further than RingCentral who tells me their customer acquisition rate has grown at twice the rate of last year. The company does not offer VoIP but instead, a virtual office service allowing you to have the features and functions of a much larger company on a less expensive and pay as you go basis.
 
The service works with any phone system, such as a cell phone allowing a full featured auto attendant to front end calls. The company is focusing on the under 10 user market and Boris Elpinier the company’s VP of Marketing tells me they have tens of thousands of customers.
 
Boris and I met at the recent Communications Developer Conference in Santa Clara where he went on to tell me his service has the benefit of allowing you to start with a single client and doesn’t force you to use VoIP. Boris went on to say the SMB space uses fax more than he initially thought they would and thankfully his service supports fax.
 
Elpinier went on to say the value proposition for prospective customers is that for the price of a featureless 800 number or a fax service you can have both using RingCentral. There are a number of ways to build a hosted service and Boris is proud to say the company has built all of their technology themselves. One benefit he says is their ability to rapidly roll out new features.
 
He also explained some of the customers currently using the service use it to have a US telephone presence.
 
When asked what’s new, Boris told me he sees his service integrating more closely with more applications and services his customers use. Some vertical markets seem especially attractive. Real estate for example. He mentioned the service could have a virtual tour library allowing a person to drive by a house and see a for sale sign with a phone number which gives details about the house.
 
Once called, the dwelling details can be elaborated on. In the process the broker can be notified someone is at a specific house. They can then call the prospective purchaser and potentially meet them at the house on the spot.
 
Continuing the real estate line of services, there may be a fax package specifically designed for mortgage brokers.
 
A great feature I am seeing more and more of is the company’s mobile client allowing Caller ID masking so when you call a customer from a cell phone your 800 number and not your cell phone number is displayed on the called parties’ phone.
 
The service has some big news coming soon which will make the service even more useful but I can’t tell you yet what it is. Be sure to sign up for a TMCnet news alert on RingCentral or check out the RingCentral news page to stay posted.
 

VoIP Killer App From Skype

June 18, 2007 2:45 PM | 0 Comments
I am convinced after speaking with Paul Amery of Skype at TMC’s recent Communications Developer Conference that one serious killer application in our market is the integration of VoIP applications and ecosystems of partners. Now I use VoIP loosely in this article… IP communications is a more accurate term.
 
The point is, adding services like avatars to conversations and embedding games is an amazing way to extend the functionality of a conversation.
 
Paul gave the example of how playing checkers while Skyping with his family kept the kids on the phone much longer than a Skype call alone. Checkers is just one of the applications bundled into Skype as an Extra.
 
Remember, we are in an ADD (attention defecit disorder) society. This point was driven home at a TMC team lunch last week when one of my coworkers said his son’s baseball team consisted of 15 kids wanting to play catcher. Another coworker commented that 10 years ago no one wanted to play catcher. It seems in today’s ADD driven society kids need to keep themselves busy at all times (as well as many adults by the way. Can you say Crackberry?wink )
 
For the corporate ADD sufferer, we have similar solutions such as collaboration solutions like WebEx to keep others paying attention.
 
VoIP isn’t needed to have this added value but a VoIP client supporting easy to access libraries of applications is what Skype has on its hands. Ten years ago it would have been impossible to guess IP communications would be the enabler of vast communities consisting of millions of people who start with a phone call and end up playing games and/or transforming themselves into farm animals or other avatars as they converse.
 
Now that we’ve arrived at this point, one wonders what’s next.

Borderware's SBC Strategy

June 18, 2007 1:58 PM | 0 Comments
MidMarket Session Border Contoller
 
Over the past few years the Session Border Control market has seen some change. At the high end of the market there are companies like Acme Packet and Nextone. These companies generally focus on features, features oh and more features. In fact a recent meeting with Seamus Hourihan of Acme Packet was one of the most information-packed discussions I have ever had. For about 40 minutes, Seamus focused on feature after feature being added to their SBC solution. The new announcements were quite impressive and likely intimidating to the competition.
 
But while companies like Acme Packet have done a great job of creating a nice barrier to entry in the high end of the market, other companies are effectively focusing on providing solutions for smaller corporations and service providers.
 
Case in point is Borderware. Recently I spent some time with Jeff Carr the company’s VP and General Manager of the SIP Solutions Group and he shared with me how his company has been very successful selling SBC solutions to network equipment providers (NEPs) and OEMs this past year.
 
Their solution is like a purpose-built switch for SIP and VoIP. For carriers this is a great solution. When it comes to NEPs like Mitel they are working with such companies to integrate their solutions into NEP applications.
 
Jeff tells me the message my readers should leave with is Borderware is the company offering a more flexible and cost-effective SBC solution. So while competitive products could have entry costs of $100k their solution starts at $5,000 and can scale to 40,000 concurrent sessions.
 
Of course you will give up some features and functionality but you might be surprised to learn performance is something you may not give up at all. Why? Well you see the Borderware solution is based on software and more specifically runs on Solaris and can utilize Intel or Sparc processors.
 
Using commercial off the shelf technology (COTS) such as this you get the same performance at one fifth the cost according to Carr. Most importantly, his company is not in the hardware business and you are free to run your SBC on the hardware you see fit.
 
There are immense benefits to software-based SBC solutions as they give you the flexibility to choose the platform you want to run on and you are able to scale the solution with a curve directly correlating to Moore’s Law. As an entry-level SBC with the added benefit of choosing your own hardware, Borderware is worth a close look.

Lifesize

June 18, 2007 9:56 AM | 1 Comment
Near Telepresence at a Fraction of the Cost
 
There seems to be no doubt if your company has corporate jets you can afford and will likely embrace a telepresence system from a company like Cisco or Polycom and spend up to $300k per unit to do so. But for those companies who might think twice about spending the equivalent of the average US house on their videoconferencing solution, there are choices.
 
One such choice comes from a company called Lifesize who has been making lots of noise in the HD videoconferencing market. Lifesize sits in the market at the midrange, providing excellent video quality at a fraction of the cost of the big boys. The goal of the company is to be the price/performance leader and I can vouch for the quality of their technology as I had a chance to see it for myself. At one megabit per second the quality was impressive and at 512kbps the quality did degrade with some pixilation but it was still acceptable.
 
Many have made the point that $300k is a major investment for telepresence and perhaps this is why the entry level cost of $8k for the Lifesize solution seems absolutely cheap. If you want a MCU which allows three others to join in the call, the price jumps 50% to a still relatively palatable $12k. In addition, the Lifesize system interoperates with solutions from other vendors.
 
So if your company has a corporate jet and you are still reading this article you may be snickering at how the common enterprise can’t pony up millions for their videoconferencing solution. For those of you who have limited budgets and are looking for great quality videoconferencing without breaking the financial or bandwidth bank, you should look seriously at Lifesize.

Shunra

June 18, 2007 6:53 AM | 0 Comments
Developing applications for local computers is one thing but once you factor in the latency generated by wide area networks you can significantly reduce productivity if users are forced to wait for painfully slow applications to refresh screens and provide data updates. In order to help speed up the process of writing effective applications for WANs Shunra has recently released a New WAN optimization and application acceleration selection service.
 
You may remember Shunra has been a benefactor to TMC labs for about a decade providing their Cloud product which has been instrumental at simulating WAN traffic at our labs over the years.
 
In a recent sit down with the executive management team of Shunra Software I learned how the company has taken its excellent suite of technologies and began offering them up as services. The suite of services includes but is not limited to application profiling and surge testing, allowing developers to be sure applications are performing within the correct parameters – even when pushed to the limit.
 
Of course a use for such technology is ensuring VoIP applications are running efficiently but the product/service also excels in other areas. For example when choosing between various vendors, Shunra can help you company set up a virtual network environment. The purpose of such a network is to ensure you choose the right applications/solutions for your particular environment.
 
As you might imagine, Shunra’s technology is of use to service providers and not surprisingly AT&T resells the company’s technology. This works out well for AT&T as they are able to help customers see when potential SLA-breaking problems are the fault of application design and not the network.
 
The management team briefing which consisted of Michai Lesser Dir of Product Marketing, Thomas Charlton, President and CEO, Matt Reid VP Worldwide Marketing and Boaz Grinvald Founder and Executive Vice President really drove home the point that their tools help application developers be proactive and not reactive when developing WAN-based applications.
 
As corporations turn more often to applications which utilize SOA, XML and Mashups it seems inevitable that without proper testing beforehand, you run the risk of writing applications which zap productivity.

UAE Limits VoIP

June 17, 2007 6:15 AM | 5 Comments
More reminders on how lucky many in the world are to be able to choose from any VoIP provider they like. In many countries like the UAE, VoIP is regulated and in the case of the UAE only two companies are allowed to provide it.
 
See ITP.Net for more.

SPIRIT DSP and HTC

June 16, 2007 4:52 PM | 0 Comments
This HTC win seems like a really big deal for Spirit DSP.
 
High Tech Computer Corp. (HTC) will integrate the TeamSpirit Mobile Voice&Video Engine into tri-band 3G Windows Mobile based smart-phones it OEMs.
 
“Today besides HTC, SPIRIT software products are deployed by Compal, Quanta, Arima and other leading mobile OEMs in Asia, Europe and US, whose smart-phone shipments jointly exceed 55% of the global OEM/ODM market,” said Alex Kravchenko, VP Sales & Marketing at SPIRIT DSP.
 

T-Mobile Fights VoIP

June 16, 2007 7:11 AM | 0 Comments
Update: Please note this post is regarding T-Mobile UK
VoIP has obviously changed the revenue equation in the telecom space with operators now facing competitors which are smaller, nimbler and able to launch new services rapidly. In some ways these new operators embody the ultimate dream of IMS. The only problem is in some cases operators have seen these new services as competitive to their core offerings and in many cases have blocked this competition. Sometimes illegally.
 
That is the contention of Andy Abramson who runs PR for Truphone. Here are some bullet points Andy recently sent me on how T-Mobile is potentially acting illegally to shut out a mobile VoIP competitor.
 
 
  • T-Mobile has refused to interconnect with mobile VoIP provider Truphone: T-Mobile customers making a call to Truphone's number range (07978 8xxxxx) will not be connected.
  • T-Mobile refuses to interconnect with operators offering VoIP as a matter of policy.
  • However T-Online Ventures, the venture capital arm of T-Mobile's parent company Deutsche Telekom, has just invested in VoIP provider Jajah; T-Mobile connects with BT Fusion, a VoIP service; and T-Mobile has also announced a trial of a VoIP service in USA and Germany.
  • T-Mobile is required to 'make calls or otherwise transmit electronic communications to every normal telephone number', which it has refused to do in the case of Truphone and other VoIP operators.
  • The other four UK major mobile network operators - 3, O2, Orange and Vodafone - all interconnect with Truphone, leaving T-Mobile isolated on this issue.
  • T-Mobile's current adverts display the slogan "Setting the internet free".
  • Currently a 'beta' service, Truphone's is prevented from launching fully until the 07978 8xxxxx number range is fully interconnected. Beta service customers are presently unaffected by this issue.
  • Other mobile operators have employed different methods to prevent VoIP uptake. There has already been the well-publicized removal of internet telephony functionality from Nokia's popular N95 handset by Vodafone and Orange, and new data tariffs published by Vodafone that mean customers using VoIP will be charged more than for web browsing or email.
 
To be honest I haven’t done any fact checking on this issue due to time limitations but Andy has always been factually accurate in the past so I have no reason to doubt any of the above. While T-Mobile is likely doing the smart thing for the bottom line this quarter and the next, by blocking new technology on its network it makes itself a target of ferocious criticism.
 
The question T-Mobile directors need to ask themselves is how much PR damage are they willing to withstand to slow the erosion of pricing power?
 
In the mean time, I expect the blogging community and eventually the general media to skewer T-Mobile on this issue. The company will likely cave at some point but on an issue like this where they stand alone, they better be dead certain they are doing the right thing.

Why Are the Bees Dying?

June 15, 2007 5:12 PM | 5 Comments
The reason the bees are dying is linked potentially to pesticides but this is not 100% certain as a new pathogen has also recently been discovered. I have written about the dying bees before -- Bees Gone Wild, Colony Collapse Disorder. Here is more from MSNBC. Now it seems the birds are dying as well. Here is more from the Philadelphia Inquirer.

NXTcomm News

June 15, 2007 4:02 PM | 0 Comments
Here is some of the latest news coming out of NXTcomm next week. Interesting items worth reading come from Alcatel-Lucent, Aculab, Cisco and the IMS Forum.

Samsung’s Gateway Play

June 15, 2007 3:29 PM | 0 Comments
Samsung is no stranger to the world of technology with leading positions in memory chips, televisions and mobile devices to name a few. Recently the company has launched a line of gateways dubbed the Ubigate Intelligent Business Gateway (IBG) series.
 
The gateways range from the IBG3026 for large offices down to the IBG2006 for small branch offices and have many leading-edge features such as hot-swappable modules, fan and power supply, redundant power supplies and more.
 
The gateway also has a built-in firewall, anti-virus, anti-spam, URL filtering, web application firewall and end-point security.
 
I met with the company’s charismatic VP of Business Development, Alex Kim who has held positions in the past at 3Com and Spirent. Alex really focused his attention on the four distinct capabilities of the box… VoIP, security, switching and routing.
 
He went on to say in the mid market he believes a single box is a much better solution than individual solutions. Samsung is certainly ambitious as they want to be the IP mobility convergence leader.
 
As you would expect, the company will be leveraging its mobility strength to make this vision a reality.
 
At first Samsung will be selling these products through a data-centric channel and as you might imagine, Cisco is a major competitor. Kim tells me Samsung’s price is lower than Cisco with much better performance.
 
Where the solution gets very interesting is in future upgrades as Alex shares the future of this product will include a WiMAX module. This is certainly a differentiator.
 
He want on to say the company is looking for a partner program not just resellers to move boxes through the channel. He emphasized Samsung is financially stable and they will be coming out with more solutions in the future.
 
This is where he reminded me most networking companies do not have the strength in mobility Samsung has and he is right. Certainly Samsung could become a player in the burgeoning FMC space if they play their cards right.
 
Samsung is entering a crowded space and I bounced a number of competitive names off Kim… From Allworx to Epygi. Alex knew all of his competitors and he knew lots about each one. I was surprised at the level of detail he had about each company. It was surprising to see someone from such a large company with such intricate competitive positioning in his head. This is pretty unusual.
 
Even though the space is crowded, Samsung has an established name and leadership who understand where their products fit in the market. This is not necessarily a recipe for guaranteed success but it certainly is some of the main ingredients.
 
See the press release and latest Ubigate news.

Safari for Windows

June 15, 2007 9:27 AM | 1 Comment
I have been hearing some grumblings in the market about Apple’s Safari release and many are saying Steve Jobs is over-optimistic in thinking there will be one hundred million downloads of Safari for Windows. If this browser is indeed is as fast as Apple says and it has less security challenges than IE, it does have a great chance of being a serious browser contender.
 
Om Malik has some thoughts on why Jobs and company have released this software. He thinks it is a an ease-of-use play where people will see how easy to use the Apple browser is and then feel more comfortable with Macs and then switch to an iMac.
 
While this could be part of the reason for this new browser, in my opinion there is a single overriding reason for this browser launch.
 
In a word, web 2.0 and SaaS. You see the browser is becoming a more integral part of our workday. Software as a Service solutions like SalesForce.com really make the computing platform an afterthought.
 
In fact the browser is becoming the computing platform where web 2.0 applications driven by AJAX and Flash allow us to have virtually the same functionally as local software without the need to install anything.
 
In the next 5 years this trend will accelerate and although Apple probably should have rolled out its new browser years ago, better late than never.
 
Oh and one other thought. Imagine how well Safari will integrate with iTunes and Apple TV. I am sure it will be a more seamless experience to use Safari with Apple products and services than IE. If Apple plays its cards right, Safari for Windows could gain serious market share. If the browser hits 25-30% over the next five years it will be very successful.

WiFi Goes Green

June 15, 2007 8:41 AM | 0 Comments
Here is an interesting blog post from none other than mesmile on TMC’s new green blog. Be sure to click here if you want to learn more about a solar powered municipal WiFi installation.

Zed-3 Affordable VoIP

June 14, 2007 6:08 PM | 7 Comments
Please enjoy the unedited Publisher's Outlook from the July 2007 issue of Internet Telephony Magazine.
-------
One of the most colorful characters in the communications space has to be Iain Milnes the founder of Zarak and Zultys. Zarak sold to Spirent for hundreds of millions in stock just prior to the telecom meltdown and Zultys ended up being acquired after some financial troubles. Iain parted ways with Zultys a few months back and is already at it again.
 
Some people call him a legend in telecom and for sure he is multifaceted having launched successful companies in testing and the phone systems business.
 
In less than six months after leaving Zultys, Iain has a new company called Zed-3 and he is the President and majority owner. I had a chance to catch up with Iain at TMC’s Communications Developer Conference. As the name Zed-3 suggests, this is his third company to start with the letter Z. The company will make phone systems and compete head to head with Zultys and the myriad other companies in the IP PBX space.
 
The differentiator will be the focus as Iain has relationships all over the world and he will be concentrating on markets like China, Vietnam and India. Zed-3 will be based in the US but Iain seems to thrive on traveling around the world and he is likely on an airplane as you read this.
 
At Zultys, Iain had a goal of building a $500 million dollar company and at Zed-3 he has revised it downward to $100 million and this is in part due to the cost of the company’s products which will be priced at one-third of what Zultys charged.
 
Iain believes that Zultys has ignored much of the channel and it should be pointed out Zultys currently tells me they also have strong relationships with the channel. The reality is probably both companies are correct to some degree as it is a big world out there.
 
At Zarak and Zultys, Iain personally got involved in building worldwide sales channels and as a result he is well entrenched in many countries and can get things done quickly. In fact speed is something Iain seems to be a master at leveraging.
 
For example, he has just launched a new IP PBX company in a few months. He didn’t start from scratch; he went to a company that OEMs product for many larger telecom equipment providers and purchased it. He then decided to brand some of the products as Zed-3 and in the cases where contracts do not allow rebranding he is able to use the new technology his company has developed to make ever new products.
 
The PBXs are all VoIP and SIP-based and there is a variant that scales to 30 and 150 users. Soon there will be a 500-user model. The model numbers are the SE30, SE150 and SE500 respectively. The low end VoIP phone will have a user price of $60. There is a mid-range phone as well which has the ability to display graphics and color is coming at the end of the year.
 
Some sign’s of Iain’s experience are captured in stories where tells you how in many countries it is illegal to use VoIP and subsequently you can’t import products which have the word “VoIP” written on them. “IP telephony” apparently is not flagged and products with such labels get right in.
 
His company has already installed systems in Bangladesh and China and in Dubai a system is in the process of being rolled out.
 
Having an established company behind him and relationships with the right people allows Zed-3 to have approvals in over 20 countries already which is an amazing feat. Iain tells a story of how his system was improved in a major country in a mere matter of days while a very large competitor had to wait over a year for the same approval.
 
When I look at Iain’s business model I am reminded of Cisco and how the company takes promising new companies, buys them and then makes the real money through the distribution of the company’s products worldwide. Granted the scale of the respective operations is quite different but the concept is the same… Leveraging the distribution channel. In addition to a communications equipment provider, Zed-3 is a distribution channel arbitrage play.
 
As you might imagine Iain thinks Zultys has the best technology around and others in the industry certainly credit the company with technology leadership. Iain thinks that offering 90% of the Zultys feature-set at 1/3 the price is the right formula for success and it is tough to disagree with such logic. In addition Iain says the call center products will have 100% of the Zultys features.
 
The company is far from a one-trick pony as it also OEMs phones which are resold as phones on corporate jets. The irony here is the same company is behind ultra-sophisticated and expensive retail equipment and this same technology will be built into extremely cost-effective phone systems around the world.
 
In addition Zed-3 has a SoftPhone client the CU3 which works with a memory stick device. The twist is the audio is embedded in the memory stick so you can plug the headset right into the stick and start speaking right away. This is especially useful for computers with no sound capability built in. The soft client also executes from the memory stick meaning there is nothing to install.
 
He says the CU3 was designed for a hotel and as such the NAT traversal has been worked out. NAT refers to network address translation and is responsible for assigning computers and devices behind a corporate firewall with local IP addresses which are converted to an external IP address and then back. Generally, NAT wreaks havoc on equipment not designed to deal with it. Iain mentioned at Zultys, NAT traversal is something they just never got right.
 
He said the hotel client he has gives away the sticks to frequent travelers with a certain amount of free long distance time. The only catch is you have to be staying at one of the company’s properties to use the card as it checks the IP address before calling.
 
This is a really interesting application and gets one thinking about all the extensions of such a business model in the world of VoIP. He tells me he is also in talks with ITSPs about this product and this makes a great deal of sense. The price of the stick is in the $35 range.
 
Finally there is a reverse 911 product which Iain thinks has strong homeland security potential. I am aware of other PBX companies such as Iwatsu who have also seen revenue increase from focusing on disaster preparedness solutions such as this.
 
In the end, Iain is probably one of the more dynamic people in our industry. He has always told it like it is and I respect him for doing so. He should be commended for having such a grand vision and the fact he has already begun execution on his latest plan in less than six months. Certainly the telecom market has tremendous opportunity left to be exploited and if Zed-3 can get a strong foothold in many developing parts of the works, Iain may be in the process of pulling off a true telecom entrepreneurial hat trick.
 
TMC Launches Green Technology World Expo
Hopefully you are already signed up for TMC’s Internet Telephony Conference & Expo Sept 10-12 in Los Angeles, CA because at this same time and place there will be another event called Green Technology World focusing on technologies which save companies money and also save the environment. The details are being worked out as I write this but be sure to check out www.greentechnologyworld.com for details and also for the address of our new Green Blog.

 

Apathy Vs. Reality

June 14, 2007 11:33 AM | 0 Comments
The FCC is inviting public comments on the XM/Sirius Satellite Radio merger. The commission is requesting that applications be snail mailed or e-mailed to them no later than July 9, 2007. The commission will reply to the concerned parties by July 24, 2007 and declare its conclusive stand by the year-end.
 
My opinion? No one really cares about this issue. The amount of responses will likely be light.
 
That doesn’t mean the decision to allow the companies to merge is a good one by default.
 
IMHO it makes sense for Sirius and XM to work on technology sharing where a single radio can receive broadcasts from either company. This should be a first step. This allows customers to pay an incremental amount to get the best of both stations.
 
I believe baby steps like this are a logical first step. A merger is second.
Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 Next