Thanks, Steve G.,
Finally got to read it and found it quite entertaining and interesting.
The following article supports several of the points I've been making about the dominant (and emerging, larger) carriers' future roles in this sector: ------ March 27, 1998
The voice-over-Internet Protocol market is booming and making enough noise to get carriers to invest in equipment and provisioning services. And though telecommunications service providers are usually slow to change, hardware vendors continue to aggressively hawk IP telephony products in efforts to make the market easier to break into. After the dust settles, consumers may be reaping the benefits with supercheap rates.
"The big change in the IP telephony market is mainstream telephone carriers have recognized its threat," says Christopher Mines, director of people and technology strategies at Forrester Research Inc. (www.forrester.com). "Our money used to be on the Internet service providers to lead the charge, but now it's on the carriers."
The rapid maturation of the technology made deployments by big carriers such as AT&T Corp. (www.att.com) possible. But incumbent carriers will have to figure out how to brand and price the new Internet telephony services since they'll have to compete with their core voice offerings. Mines says the market is changing current business models. "Do you call it Internet telephony or supercheap long-distance?" he asks.
Carriers, such as ICG Communications Inc., IDT Corp. and Qwest Communications International Inc., with less to lose can spend their marketing and network resources on the IP services.
Of course, provisioning new IP voice services means buying the right equipment. There is a huge array of choices. Most recent announcements consist of IP gateways to connect IP networks to the public voice network.
When it comes to gateways, there are stand-alone models and IP gateway modules that fit into carrier switches. Gateway vendor Hypercom Corp. (www.hypercom.com) recently announced its IEN 6000 stand-alone voice-over-IP gateway. The vendor further enhanced the box with phone-like software features such as call waiting, call forwarding, local switching, extension dialing and the ability to assign access charges or privileges to a group of extensions.
Another gateway configuration features a switch with an IP gateway add-on. Siemens AG, for example, announced it's incorporating 3Com Corp.'s Internet gateway module into its Class 5 switch.
But despite the flurry of voice-over-IP enhancements to service provider products, Jeff Pulver, analyst at research firm Pulver.com (www.pulver.com) and chairman of Voice Over the Net Coalition, remains unimpressed.
According to Pulver, a lot of the vendors' products are "me too" announcements. He says hardware vendors should gear much-needed products to the midrange service provider market with capacity at more than 96 ports and fewer than 10,000.
IP Vs. Circuit Switch
Will the IP switch and gateway ever replace the circuit-switched phone switch? The voice market is still colossal, according to Dataquest Inc., at $100 billion in revenue in 1997 and expectations of $150 billion in revenue in 2002. The phone switch market is expected to grow in other directions as well.
"As regulation is reduced, there will be more opportunity to sell these switches to new carriers," says John Coons, Dataquest's director and principal analyst for Internet infrastructure.
And rather than replace it, it's more important that the IP elements coexist with the circuit-switched world. New access concentrator equipment often features voice network signaling, known as Signaling System 7, and voice-over-IP support. What's more, these platforms can handle data, fax or voice within the same platform. The signaling system support makes these platforms more than an overlay onto a voice network. It allows IP platforms to live alongside Class 5 switches as peers.
"While computer telephony products used to be an overlay on top of the existing infrastructure, that's not the case anymore," Coons says.
In this model, the network's architecture is slightly different when it comes to where the remote access equipment sits. Remote access concentrators could reside next to a telephone company's central office switch, which could switch long data calls onto the remote access concentrator's platform in order to free up the dial-up lines on the phone switch. According to Coons, this model lets the local exchange carrier or competitive local exchange carrier rise up the food chain to provide a value-added dial-up service. It also allows Internet service providers to do away with costly modem pools and dial-up equipment.
But service providers may want to look closely at their new IP voice connections. While they'll be able to service more users on an IP connection with compression -- 200 per one IP connection, as opposed to 64 on one T1 -- compressed IP connections don't carry signaling well.
Smart service providers know that. For example, Qwest (www.qwest.net) is not compressing its IP voice services. It offers full 64-kilobit circuits within the IP packet. "Right now, they get superior quality without much IP overhead," Coons says. "That also sets them up well in terms of the future to offer extra services like fax in the remaining bandwidth in the pipe. "
Trying to find the right business model often means making partnerships between vendors and service providers from different industry segments, another trend in this new market. The industry coalition for voice on the Net, for example, is a mix of computer and telecommunications companies, including Cisco Systems Inc., Dialogic Corp., Intel Corp., Inter-Tel Inc., Lucent Technologies Inc., Microsoft Corp., Vienna Systems Corp. and VocalTec Communications Ltd.
The members will convene at the third Internet Telephony Common Ground meeting in San Jose on March 30 during the spring '98 Voice on the Net Conference to discuss the effect of IP telephony on universal service as defined by the Telecommunications Reform Act of 1996.
"I hope to promote a dialogue that can give voice to our belief that Internet telephony is a necessary and inevitable consequence of an innovative Internet industry and a boon for universal service," Pulver says.
Another uncommon partnership is one among Computer City, Ericsson and Internet Global Services Inc. (www.iglobal.net). IGS will sell its voice-over-IP service using Ericsson's Phone Doubler and will make the deal available at every Computer City store in Dallas. The Phone Doubler lets end users make Internet- based calls while they're online and allows a caller to bypass long-distance charges by dialing into an IP-enabled local phone office. |