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What’s Next In IP Communications? Here’s An Idea To Look At

Source: andyabramson.blogs.com

Last week two stories seem to generate a lot of interest all across the blogs and in the news. The first was the rumor of a “Skype Killer” being planned by the leading telcos around the world. The second was the blockbuster move by the new WiMax consortium of players including Intel, ClearWire, Sprint plus the cable companies, along with online leader Google, to take over what Sprint and Clearwire were both not really doing yet, that to create a national WiMax footprint here in the USA which will deliver, in theory, both Mobile and Fixed broadband solutions.

The two events treated separately are interesting to say the least, but what dawned on me is that the idea of killing Skype was rather ballsy and very interesting given the already installed user base Skype has worldwide. I mean short of blocking them completely, the idea of a Skype killer makes for nice speculation, but only has a chance of happening and succeeding if the entire telco world agrees on a uniting behind a standard like SIP for IP communications (voice, video and text) vs. the walled garden approach of Skype that already has all that.

You see, the genie is out of the bottle and there’s no putting the Skype Genie back in, so another more robust and accepted flavor of IP communications that does the same thing and more, but without the already known concerns that Skype raises, could overtake them in time, especially if its primary purpose was to supplant the existing analog base of installed users as the telcos move them to IP on their own or see them migrate to cable or WiMax.

So what can the telcos do together?

Given eBay has Skype up for sale, the telcos could also band together to buy Skype from eBay and simply put it to sleep. The cost to shut it down would be less than they are losing per year. But just like Microsoft propped up Apple to point to another operating system being alive and well, we know that won’t happen. So with that I’d say the idea of a SkypeKiller has far more merit as a means to play “keep away”, not “take away” because those users already in love with Skype are hooked and not easily coming back.

But simply going after the Skype type of user crowd is so “me too” and in this era of innovation, there has to be another play, and there is.

WiMax. Last week’s announcement of the mega players all joining hands was a very good deal for Clearwire and Sprint. Clearwire’s investors cashed out. Sprint got someone else to carry the ball in the USA market, plus this now provides another option to offer IP based communications versus the already existing 3G solutions.

As a result I chose to think how the very much-ballyhooed WiMax play could be differentiated versus being looked at as only a substitute for the mobile phone. As I like to say "too much me too, me also, not me different" is nothing really new. I mean, what good is going the 4G route if all it does is give a less expensive experience to make phone calls on the go, and not work everywhere for many years to come. That’s what the cable guys already did with VoIP, where the only difference from what we’ve always had from the phone company is the wire the phone service travels over and the bill.

That’s so “me also” in my book. WiMax needs to be more “me different.”

So here’s the way I see it. For the most part, the cable guys in the WiMax venture have the most to win because with the mobile WiMax play it gets them into the mobile game with something new, presuming they open up their minds (and checkbooks) and look beyond the opportunity to only a mobile voice play.

From the get-go they have the opportunity to go out of footprint (i.e. venture into markets not under a franchise agreement with a municipality) and second they get to be in the mobile space. Both are very attractive opportunities, but when it comes to selling wireless, they’ve pretty much already proven via Pivot that selling mobile phone service isn’t in their DNA. And also don’t forget this is their second go with Sprint and neither time has really worked well. Many forget the cable guys were the partners in the launch of the Sprint CDMA network years ago and look where Sprint is today.

Well maybe, three times is really the charm?

Instead of simply being another voice play to battle Skype or the mobile operators, the WiMax companies and the cable operators, and heck, even Ma Telco may all may find that they may be better off looking in another direction.

That direction is real-time video communications bundled up along with other IP related services like voice and text, all in one neat little package.

Why video when selling voice to their already installed user base is already there for the cable guys?

Because it is different.

In essence video is the next level of real-time communications to be nurtured and embraced, not only because its ready now, but because it also gives the WiMax, Telco and cable players a very different value proposition to offer and lead off with.

By offering and delivering video, along with voice and text as the new universally used platform for real time communications voice gets to come along for the ride via a real standard, SIP (session initiation protocol.) On the other hand, Skype with their self-created stigma with P2P remains further anti-telco That goes hand in hand with already being perceived by the cable MSO’s as the enemy too. Both factors makes the opportunity around making a lot to do around SIP standard based video the perfect way for the cable folks and the telcos to unite around a common bond. You see, if they don’t join hands and play together no one really wins at all.

Why standards based video to go along with voice and text?

First off, by offering video the cable guys and Bell heads offer up an instant differentiator to the traditional mobile operators. They need this, and WiMax as the next platform needs something “new and different” to get ahead and gain a foothold. Also we don’t need another GSM vs. CDMA war any more than we needed the VCS VS. BETA format battle years ago. That’s where the concept of standards comes into play big time.

Second there are already accepted video standards (H.263, H.264) already in place that that are SIP based and IMS compliant that makes it easy to then interconnect to just about anyone else who is equally standards based. This means when AT&T really enters the WiMax game and gets beyond their idea of “fooling around” and playing wireless chicken in Pahrump, NV, and they will, they’ll easily be able to join in on the fun while their common enemy keeps themselves out of because of their own walled garden approach.

Third. The cable guys are already embracing both SIP and IMS (why else would Comcast have played such a big role at this year’s IETF annual congress.) That’s why SIP based and IMS compliant video is a natural.

Fourth. There is proven expertise in the SIP video space already in the marketplace today, with existing customers and patented intellectual property, so all the cable, Telco and WiMax folks need to do is put the video communications technology “inside” the network. This can happen the day the network is turned on, not in a few years after it starts getting deployed. More instant differentiation and faster user gratification.

So what’s the Net-Net? That’s easy to see.

The NEXTGEN 4G cable backed carrier, and yes even the telcos all get something very safe and very open, and something they can’t likely build themselves as a international group. They also get to offer something that is very easy to use, as well as something that is very much different.

The challenge though is while so many of us may see the opportunity, we all know that others may not see what is plain as day, simply because of the ever present "not invented here" myopia to often found inside some of the cable and Telco lands. Oh…that’s right, WiMax wasn’t invented by any of those players either and look at all the money they spent…well maybe they will get to see it after all.

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Writer’s note for sake of transparency: My agency advises SightSpeed the award winning video communications solution and has since 2006.

Published on May 13th, 2008 under , , , , ,

Have We Advanced In IP Communications

Source: andyabramson.blogs.com

Dean Bubley has a great perspective as usual on how far, or how little we’ve traveled.

Published on April 5th, 2008 under , , , ,

D2 Technologies and Ikanos Unveil VoIP-Enabled Quadruple Play

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com

BOSTON–(BUSINESS WIRE)–D2 Technologies, the market leader in embedded software platforms that power IP communications, and Ikanos Communications, Inc. (NASDAQ:IKAN), a leading developer and provider of Fiber Fast broadband solutions, today unveiled a quadruple play residential gateway with D2s voice over Internet protocol (VoIP) software. Attendees at the Fall VON 2007 conference can see a demonstration of the Ikanos Fusiv® Vx180 optimized with D2 Technologies vPort embedded VoIP software in Suite 105 at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center, Oct. 29-Nov. 1.

The solution, which combines Ikanos Fusiv Vx180 VDSL2 gateway processor with D2s vPort VoIP software, enables designers and manufacturers to quickly deliver residential gateways that support voice, video, data and mobile wireless services. The residential gateway design also accelerates the rollout of new VDSL2 customer premises equipment (CPE) for the home office or small- to medium-size businesses, offering comprehensive quality of service (QoS) for VoIP and Internet protocol television (IPTV) applications.

By integrating our Fusiv technology with D2s vPort platform, we are able to offer original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) more flexibility and choice in developing products that will support unified communications offerings around the world, said Dean Westman, vice president and general manager of Ikanos Gateway Products Group. This platform further enriches the Fusiv eco-system, enabling customers to benefit from a variety of solutions that utilize the advanced processing capabilities of Ikanos industry-leading Vx180 gateway processor.

The Fusiv Vx180 multi-mode VDSL2 gateway processor provides 2.7 GHz of processing power, VoIP, multimode DSL and security, and supports best-in-class QoS and wire speed performance. With the Fusiv Vx180, space and power requirements are lower because it combines Ikanos industry-leading VDSL2 CPE PHY and its widely deployed Fusiv network processor architecture onto a single chip. The gateway processor is optimized for IPTV and triple play with features such as dynamic rate repartitioning (DRR) and seamless rate adaptation (SRA), which are expected to be incorporated into future standards enhancements.

D2’s vPort embedded VoIP software offers the industrys broadest support for integrated circuit and system on a chip (IC/SoC) designs, including ARM- and MIPS-based architectures. It enables manufacturers to rapidly deliver the latest IP communications devices by ensuring networking, signaling and voice processing functions execute as an integrated solution on a single processor. D2s VoIP software solutions are field proven, processing more than 45 billion minutes of VoIP traffic in customer-deployed products per month.

Ikanos and D2 have the same goal: to help designers and manufacturers bring full-featured communications solutions to market quickly and economically, said Doug Makishima, vice president of marketing and sales at D2 Technologies. By combining the strengths of our technologies, we now offer OEMs a way to simultaneously simplify design and improve the performance of VoIP-enabled gateway products for the fastest-growing market segment — consumers and small businesses.

Getting Ready for Microsoft VoIP Launch, Unified Communications.

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com

Waiting for Microsoft VoIP solutions, two my favorite news publishers said that people better get ready for it and the SPs, service providers are getting ready for supporting OCS systems. Tech Republic said in it’s summary of a long article;
"Microsoft OCS 2007 provides enterprise-level VoIP and integrates with Exchange 2007 for full-fledged unified communications. However, as with other enterprise services, deployment can be a complex process. Many businesses will probably find it best to engage the services of a specialist to get it up and running."
CRN said that "Channel partners are gearing up for the flood of new business opportunities expected to flow their way as Microsoft jumps into the VoIP market with its long-awaited unified communications portfolio."
TMCnet did even better, it went out and interviewed one such service provider, Nuvio;
"With the release of Microsoft Office Communications Server 2007 right around the corner, TMCnet got curious how the new software will affect other IP communications vendors. One such company is Nuvio, provider of the nPBX phone system for small to medium-sized businesses (SMBs). Jason Talley, co-founder and CEO at Nuvio, shared his perspective on the OCS launch and the broader unified communications market.", a must read to even a get an idea how these people view OCS.I hope these people become Windows Experts too. I have seen how windows servers got bloated since I beta tested Windows Server 4. I have seen people trying very hard to get exchange server and portal server working together. (Just ask Cisco why they moved Call Manager to Linux platform.)By experts I mean not those carry the badge MCSE and the like. (Just last month I saw a person who just barely knew windows becoming a MCSE, just after a week at a boot camp. Even the person who passed it felt let down.) People who knows how to handle those Window servers will be really needed. Because incompetent engineer trying to bring such complex system together only will drive most of the customers in the Asterisk or Digium way!

Tech Republic Is Microsoft VoIP ready for prime time?

CRN Partners Bulking Up Ahead Of Microsoft VoIP Launch


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