All posts under tagged ‘Yahoo’

Feed for all posts filed under "Yahoo"

Telerupted: Worldwide Communication

Source: gigaom.com

Related Stories

Powered by Sphere

The disruption potential of VoIP lies not so much in its ability to push down the cost of telephone service than in its ability to get consumers to ignore the telephone business altogether. The nature of the Internet makes VoIP advantageous even after the cost of plain old telephone service goes to zero. For while the network determines all the essential features of traditional telephone service, from audio quality (low) to addressing (telephone numbers), the Internet asserts few constraints on VoIP services or devices. Thinking of communication solutions as an extension of the web and implementation as hosting can help break the grip of the telephone myopia reflected in most VoIP business plans.

Framing the value of VoIP as replacement for traditional telephone service makes interconnection with the telephone network seem essential, but VoIP enables communication solutions that go beyond the
“telephone call.” Think of it as viewing the telephone itself as a more efficient telegraph. The infocom industry needs to unleash new demand associated with new services. A transformation from world wide web to worldwide communication requires interconnection among VoIP providers, not the telephone network. The unwillingness of Vonage and Skype to interconnect with other VoIP providers makes no more sense than Yahoo imposing on users a proprietary browser that can’t be used to access any other sites on the web.

The voice quality of a telephone call remains inferior to even an AM radio broadcast. Low fidelity loses much of the character of voice necessary to convey mood or subtle meaning not contained in the words themselves. A telephone call remains a poor substitute for meeting in person, but demand for high-quality audio still requires an industry wide market push, as in the effort that won HD video momentum. Improving voice quality remains off the table as long as the value of VoIP requires interconnection with the telephone network.

None of the means used to navigate the Internet have analogs in the telephone world. Web site visitors can arrive by entering a URL into the browser address bar. The relative ease of remembering domain names vs. telephone numbers is difficult to dispute; a significant portion of web site visits are the result of people guessing the URLs. And compared to web search engines, both the online and offline versions of yellow pages offer very weak functionality.

Absent a requirement to connect with the telephone network, VoIP implementations can support click-to-connect and flat-rate global connections. The problem is finding a path to critical mass. The rapid growth of the web after the emergence of the browser in 1991 followed the addition of click-to-connect functionality to flat-rate global connectivity associated with Internet. The web browser set in motion a virtuous cycle of growth as expanding content attracted new audiences and audience growth attracted new content. The same process could play out with a worldwide communications model that combines click-to-connect addressing and flat-rate global termination — neither of which can be found by interconnecting with the telephone network.

Daniel Berninger is the CEO of Free World Dialup

Published on July 24th, 2008 under , , ,

Carolyn Smacks Jajah and Yahoo

Source: andyabramson.blogs.com

Carolyn Schuk is no stranger to the VoIP world and her VoIPPrincess blog is going to be one to keep tabs on.

Yesterday she gave a butt whoopin’ to both Yahoo and Jaja…I can only wonder what she’s going to say to AOL!!!

Published on May 1st, 2008 under , , ,

Business Week About Yahoo and Jajah

Source: andyabramson.blogs.com

I woke up this morning and found VoIPWatch being cited in Business Week’s TechBeat by Olga Kharif. This made me think back to one of the reasons to start VoIPWatch, which was to always be a helpful source of information to the media and to provide a perspective that offers insight and viewpoint.

Right after that I read a post from our client ifByPhone’s founder, Irv Shapiro offering his take on the same deal as he details how the future of telephony rests in the applications, a viewpoint that I have agreed with for a long time.

With minutes dropping to almost zero, or being at zero in many ways, Irv’s business is based on delivering the new services to business in the same vein as Jajah and how they’re bringing services to Yahoo.

Its the apps baby. Its the apps.

Technorati Tags:
IVR, voicexml

Published on April 30th, 2008 under , , , ,

Jajah Says Yahoo

Source: andyabramson.blogs.com

With the possible merger of Yahoo with Microsoft this agreement between Jajah and Yahoo can be very good, or much to do about nothing. But for now its all very good for Jajah and they deserve the credit for being the number one minute stealer, taking advantage of an opportunity when everyone has their eyes elsewhere. Well done.

Here are the facts as I see it:

Jajah picks up the inbound and outbound call management for Yahoo voice, which has not really set the world on fire. Isn’t that why Yahoo bought Dialpad? Score lots of money to Craig Walker and Vincent Paquet. Yahoo, doesn’t score any points.

Jeff Bonforte has left Yahoo for XOBNI. Reportedly Microsoft wants to buy XOBNI. Jeff developed Yahoo voice with the help of some very talented developers. He also developed the guts of GizmoProject for SIPPhone. Candidly, since Jeff left Gizmo the product hasn’t been as stable, but it still works. Score one for Jeff, nothing for Yahoo as they let a talented whirling dirvish like Rockstar slip away.

Brad Garlinghouse is still there at Yahoo trying to help clean up the sticky situation brought on by the Peanut Butter Manifesto (and things are showing he was right). So the two guiding lights who moved Yahoo big time into voice are not paying any attention. Give Brad some Skippy.

Now this is where you have to really wonder whose paying attention to what at Yahoo. AT&T and Verizon are/were big parts of the Yahoo on-ramp strategy. This Jajah relationship can’t exactly appeal to them given how may DSL customers they drive to Yahoo as their home page. Also since Yahoo powers AT&T’s portal for WiFi with its ad engine, one has to wonder if the right hand at Yahoo knows what the left hand is doing.

So Jajah shows off smarts in landing a deal that has lots of marquee value, will enable Yahoo to not be in the phone infrastructure business and likely has some community and ad delivery value for them.

Score Jajah 10, Yahoo 0.

Published on April 29th, 2008 under , ,

Jajah Gives Yahoo Voice, AOL Wants Others to SIP AIM Voice

Source: gigaom.com

Jajah, one of the many callback service providers, is slowly trying to transform itself into a voice platform, offering others the ability to use its network and back-end billing and fulfillment infrastructure. It struck up a partnership with Jangl back in November 2007. This managed services focus seems to have gotten a big boost, thanks to a deal with Yahoo. Yahoo and Jajah share a common investor: Sequoia Capital.

Jajah co-founder Daniel Mattes tells our friend Alec Saunders that Yahoo will outsource voice services for their 97 million Yahoo IM users to Jajah. Mattes says it now has 10 million users, about 8 million of them joining Jajah over the past 12 months. I guess if you include widget users and people using services on other networks, the 8 million additional Jajah users starts to make sense.

If Yahoo is turning to Jajah for voice on IM, then AOL wants to offer others an ability to integrate AIM Call Out service via its Open Voice APIs into softphones, as well as SIP-enabled hardware and cell phones with Wi-Fi connectivity. AIM Call Out is a pay-as-you-go outbound voice calling service built right into AIM.

Jajah, AOL Open Voice, Ribbit and scores of others are taking a platform approach to VoIP, hoping that adding voice to applications will drive up minute volume and turn them into a viable business.

Published on April 29th, 2008 under , , , , , ,

Is It Yahoo or is It My Travel Router or is It I-Bahn

Source: andyabramson.blogs.com

I have to do more testing, but Yahoo Messenger for the Mac’s new beta finally includes Voice, just like the PC client has, after a L O N G almost two year wait.

Sadly I can dial, but no one hears me.

Published on March 28th, 2008 under , , , ,

March 5, 2008: Vonage’s Cranky Creditors

Published on March 5th, 2008 under , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Feb. 14, 2008: Happy Valentine’s Day

Published on February 14th, 2008 under , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Feb. 12, 2008; BlackBerry’s Jam and Android Angst

Published on February 12th, 2008 under , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Feb. 11, 2008; Cloudy Reception and Mobile Web

Published on February 11th, 2008 under , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Microsoft Wants To Buy Yahoo

Source: andyabramson.blogs.com

Is 44 Billion dollars the right price? Well, the acquisition of Yahoo by Microsoft would certainly help MSFT a lot in the quest to stay in the online world battle against Google.

The two do fit nicely together. Both understand content, advertising, entertainment. There’s a lot of complimentary benefits. Here’s why. Yahoo which has a very big audience that has stuck to it, tons of community aspects, and lots of digital and intellectual property assets would bring a lot to Yahoo and vice versa.

In my mind, only a Time Warner-Yahoo combo would be better.

Published on February 1st, 2008 under , , , ,

A SIP address for Skype? Better the other way around!

Source: goebel.net

If you’re new here, you may want to subscribe to my rss-orange.gifRSS feed. Thanks for visiting!

There is a much quoted explanation from Emoci of Toronto how to create a SIP address that will ring to your Skype name using the Net2Max.com service. It’s quite difficult to implement but has received many kudos.

I like these kinds of solutions very much, but I would prefer it the other way around: that Skype rings my SIP address. So I would never have to switch on Skype again. I have all my SIP accounts nicely consolidated to ring my phone or my cell phone. I could do the same with Google Talk, Yahoo and MSN. Only on Skype I am nearly never reachable because I don’t like communications that force me to switch my computer on. That’s why Skype is Oldschool to me. VoIP has left the PC world long ago and goes along with me.

Mr Blog, David Beckemeyer, thinks the same:

I couldn’t agree more, particularly "So I would never have to switch on Skype again." Why doesn’t Skype simply offer a ‘forward to my SIP address’ option? Of course we know why. They want to keep everyone contained in their world. They say it’s because Skype users don’t want interoperability - if you are a Skype user, maybe it’s time to tell them, not me. I agree with you! :)

That reminds me of the recent discussion started by Dan York: "Skype says "No" to VoIP interoperability - *because customers aren’t asking for it!* - Well, I am!".

Me too. As well as Martyn Davies and the commentators to his post at VoIP User.

Published on January 25th, 2008 under , , , , ,

Member of "Hype Media! Network"