re: A Welcome Message to Jeff Pulver and pulver.com
                      Hello Jeff,
                      Please allow me to speak on behalf of myself and the others here, and offer                      you a warm welcome to the board. We're both pleased and honored that                      you could find some time to reply to my request to entertain some questions                      here concerning this still nascent, yet growing, area known as the trading                      and swaps of:
                      Telecom Commodities, Minutes, Bandwidth Futures, and Derivatives.
                      And, of course, whatever you can bring to the table and disclose about your                      pulver.com Min-x, or Minutes (of use) Exchange, as it is now                      constituted and where it is going, would likewise be highly appreciated, as                      well.
                      It happens that your message appears here at a time when I was preparing                      a reply to several other posters concerning the strategies that the                      exchanges must employ in order to remain competitive, as they grow  during a time when the dollar value of a transmitted bit continues to drop.
                      I've also been contemplating posting what I perceive to be the taxonomy of                      this nascent space, as I understand it to date. I would appreciate your                      commenting on this and other aspects of the sector when I post them, as                      well. Or, better yet, you might want to enumerate on those issues on your                      own.
                      One question, specifically, that I have spent some time researching has to do                      with a point that was brought up by Jay Lowe, upstream. Jay asked how                      the exchanges might differentiate themselves in the future when bandwidth,                      alone, loses most of its dollar value. The same has occurred to me, as I'm                      almost certain that it has to you. 
                      Once most of the arbitrage effect is gone (which will happen eventually,  agree?), what must the exchanges do in order to add value to their offerings? 
  One way that we all know about is to be able to provide differentiated services,                      which usually means the ability to throttle at will between delivering higher                      quality service and, well... not so high quality service. I see some problems                      with this because at some point it may be more costly for the provider to                      degrade services in order to have a comparative selection than just letting it                      fly. Could happen. Or, will the mere element of a "guarantee" as the operative condition, be the key?
                      But how about beyond QoS? At what point do the exchanges themselves                      cease to be intermediaries and begin implementing and deploying services                      of their own? I know that to some extent this is already the case, but there                      is still that veil that exists.
                      I know that you touched on this briefly in your post, but the intermediaries,                      as they are called, are still generally regarded as third party at this point. At                      what point do they cross the line, so to speak? That's what I'm  getting at. 
  When does the veil get lifted. Or do such distinctions between intermediaries  and service providers become moot by that time? Or, are they already there?
                      Also, if you could briefly describe the existing competing players and                      sectors in this and related fields (exchanges, settlement firms,                      clearinghouses) with a bit more detail, or comment on my attempts at same                      at some point, it would be greatly appreciated.
                      Enough already ! concerning such questions directed at you on your maiden                      visit to FCTF. I wouldn't want to discourage your returning. -g-                     --------
                      On another note, I understand that you've had a book published, recently.                      Congratulations!
                      Please provide us with a brief synopsis of its contents, if you will,  and the                      details for anyone interested in reviewing or purchasing it (title, pub., pp.,                      ISBN, price, etc., the works).
                      Hope that you'll stick around and keep us honest as we attempt to break                      this area down, further. I think that we all need to understand its impact                      better, both now, and what it portends, going forward. Thanks again.
                      Regards, Frank Coluccio |