| Evoke mentioned in this article (in bold): 
 Business Week Internet Telephony Article 4/24/00:
 
 The Talking Internet
 The Net is beginning to be used for a dizzying array of voice
 communications--and you don't even need a computer
 
 Spokane is 250 miles east of Seattle, far enough to avoid the traffic jams but
 close enough to be caught in the orbit of the nearby technology center. So it
 shouldn't surprise anyone that this small city has started a revolution of its own.
 School officials ripped out the district's old phone network and, last fall, started
 using radically new Internet technology for all its communications. The Net
 system is saving the school district about $100,000 a year in telephone- and
 Internet-access fees. More important, it's doing wonders for the education
 process. One example: Students scattered throughout the district can listen in real
 time to a teacher giving a lesson over the Net--and ask questions through their
 computers if they have them. 'The payoff has been unbelievable,' says
 information technology manager Dennis Schweikhardt. 'But the real value is that
 it has changed the way teachers teach.'
 
 Welcome to the dawn of the talking Internet. What has been mostly a medium
 for text, colorful graphics, and the occasional music clip, the Internet is beginning
 to be used for a dizzying array of voice communications. Web sites like Yahoo!
 Inc. and Excite@Home are letting Web surfers chat verbally with each other
 about everything from a stock's prospects in the turbulent tech market to the
 New York Knicks' prospects in the NBA playoffs. America Online Inc. just
 introduced a Web browser that lets people click on a button so that they can talk
 to friends over the Net. And you don't even need a computer: Companies like
 Net2Phone Inc. will route a call from your home phone over the Internet to
 another telephone, cutting your phone bill by as much as 90%.
 
 Voice-on-the-Net is serious business, too. Companies around the globe are
 beginning to use new systems based on Net technology in place of their old
 phone networks--not only because they're cheaper but also because they can do
 so much more. In its New Jersey offices, brokerage giant Merrill Lynch & Co. is
 installing 6,500 Internet phones that will let employees have free conference calls
 over the Net and trade instant text messages at the same time. That's just the first
 step in the company's plan to convert its entire global network to let all 67,200
 employees do the same. Compaq Computer Corp. is expected to launch a
 massive initiative within the next month that will let visitors to its Web site click on
 an icon to speak live to a company representative. And American Express Co. is
 using voice technology to combat fraud. When it suspects that someone is trying
 to use a stolen credit card online, an AmEx employee can zip a text message to
 the person and then start up a voice conversation over the Net. If the person
 can't answer certain questions, such as the cardholder's mother's maiden name,
 the transaction won't be processed. 'We can actually use this technology to ask
 additional questions and go through a verification process,' says Jeff Fleischman,
 vice-president of interactive services at American Express.
 
 All this adds up to the biggest change to hit telecommunications since the
 invention of the telephone 124 years. Today's phone technology is basically a
 souped-up version of the 19th Century system. It converts sound into electrical
 waves and shoots it across copper wires and optical cables.
 
 Internet technology is completely different. It turns sound, like the human voice,
 into digital form and breaks it into chunks of data for transmission. That allows
 many calls to share the same phone line. Voice-on-the-Net is cheaper, and it
 opens up the communications field to a flowering of innovation. While the old
 phone system was tightly controlled by a handful of companies, the new
 technology is being developed by a host of fast-moving companies in Silicon
 Valley and the rest of techdom. The outlook: Voice-on-the-Net, which
 accounted for less than 1% of global telecom traffic in 1999, is expected to surge
 to 17% by 2003 and more than 30% by 2005, according to U.S. Bancorp Piper
 Jaffray. 'I think voice over [the Net] is an inevitable outcome of technology,'
 says C. Michael Armstrong, the chairman and CEO of AT&T, which is investing
 billions in Internet telephony.
 
 The move of voice traffic to the Internet will force wrenching change on
 established telecom players like AT&T. While they used to keep the same
 equipment for up to 30 years, they now have to replace some gear every 24
 months or so in order to keep up with competitors that are buying the latest
 technology from the computer industry. To make matters worse, prices for their
 core telephone services are plunging as lower-cost alternatives emerge. To stay
 on top of the changes, AT&T agreed on Mar. 31 to lead a coalition that is
 investing $1.4 billion in Net2Phone, a leading provider of phone services over the
 Net. AT&T also is preparing to offer voice-on-the-Net service over its cable
 networks.
 
 Even more vulnerable are overseas phone companies that have been living off
 international phone rates that are sky-high. For example, people in Afghanistan
 who use Net2Phone to call the U.S. pay $1.13 per minute compared with more
 than $5.50 per minute without the service. Not surprisingly, many phone
 companies have fought off voice-on-the-Net services. They were illegal in Japan
 until last year, and Telefonos de Mexico has been trying to shut down Net-based
 services offered by AT&T and British Telecommunications PLC.
 
 RELIABILITY. The transition to Net technology won't be easy for
 corporations and other customers either. Spokane had to redo part of its $19
 million project last summer because of technical glitches like strange pauses in
 conversations and scratchy music when callers were put on hold. Another big
 hurdle is reliability. Calls over the traditional system are completed on the first
 attempt 99.999% of the time, and even if the power goes out, the network
 continues to work. The Internet, or people's connections to the Net, fail all the
 time--and if the power goes out, so does a phone link to the Net.
 
 Carriers are rushing to fix these problems. AT&T originally installed batteries in
 people's homes to make sure that its local telephone service would continue to
 work even when the power went out. However since AT&T would lose some
 control with that approach, it later decided to put power supplies for each
 neighborhood in its own facilities. Qwest Communications International Inc. and
 other carriers are investing in their own Internet equipment so they don't have to
 depend on the sometimes unreliable public Net.
 
 Still, the sheer economic benefits of voice-on-the- Net keep the market growing.
 Geoequipos SRL, a mining equipment company based in Peru, slashed its
 international phone bill 90%, to $150 a month, by using a Net telephone service
 from an upstart called deltathree.com Inc. Parsons Brinckerhoff Inc., an
 engineering company in New York, has cut the cost of its conference calls in half,
 to $3,000 a month, by conducting them on the Net. And Merrill Lynch's new
 Net phones in New Jersey are expected to reduce its telecom bill by one-third,
 people familiar with the project say.
 
 UP FROM WALKIE-TALKIES. Cost savings will pale in comparison to the
 innovation that lies ahead. Voice-on-the-Net will lead to profound changes in
 how we communicate. A company called Voyant Technologies Inc. in
 Westminster, Colo., plans to make its click-to-chat technology available for
 handheld Palms and other devices in about three months. That means you could
 make a Net phone call with your electronic organizer--and wouldn't need to
 carry around a cell phone. Tellme Networks in Mountain View, Calif., and other
 companies are developing voice-recognition technology that will allow people to
 navigate the Net from a phone by asking verbally for things like stock quotes or
 movie locations. And Evoke Inc. in Louisville, Colo., is working on software that
 will let people make cheap video calls over the Net. 'I believe that our services
 will be as popular and pervasive as e-mail and the telephone,' says Evoke CEO
 Paul A. Berberian. 'We believe these tools will be used every single day in the
 corporate environment.'
 
 If that happens, the new voice services could have a powerful effect on electronic
 commerce. Right now, 80% of people who begin a transaction on the Web
 cancel it before it's completed. While market research on the topic is thin, that
 could be because those folks get confused, or they're worried about security. If
 they could speak live to a company representative, that completion rate would
 likely shoot up. 'The fact that you can click on the button of a Web page and
 instantly talk to someone over the Internet will make people feel more
 comfortable about buying things online,' says AmEx's Fleischman. Market
 researchers agree. 'Companies that voice-enable their Web sites will achieve an
 immediate improvement in the number of sales that are completed--in the realm
 of 50%,' says Charu Gupta, an analyst with Renaissance Strategy in San
 Francisco.
 
 It's hard to believe that voice-on-the-Net didn't exist until five years ago. It began
 with a pioneering Israeli company called VocalTec Communications Ltd., which
 developed early commercial versions of the hardware and software for making
 calls on the Net. Users downloaded the software from the Web for a fee. Once
 installed on a PC with a speaker and a microphone, free calls could be placed to
 other similarly equipped computers around the world. But there were
 drawbacks: Both users had to be logged on to the Internet at the same time and
 the callers had to take turns pushing a button to talk, just as if they were using
 walkie-talkies. To make matters worse, the sound quality was terrible.
 
 The big break occurred a few years later when VocalTec developed a device
 called a gateway that allowed people to make Internet calls with regular phones.
 The gateway serves as a bridge between the Internet and local phone networks
 around the world. It essentially allows callers to bypass the long-distance
 networks. That means you can call around the world for the price of a local call.
 Because the service was so much easier to use and the quality had improved
 substantially, upstart phone companies like Net2Phone began buying VocalTec's
 gateways and marketing the service aggressively. In some markets, such as
 South Korea, voice-on-the-Net accounts for 20% of international calls.
 
 Internet telephony is becoming an extremely contentious issue among major
 phone companies. AT&T and British Telecom, through their Concert joint
 venture, have created a clearinghouse that finds the cheapest international route
 for other phone companies. Sometimes that's a traditional telephone cable, and,
 increasingly, it's an Internet-based network. 'We have been using voice over [the
 Net] to carry traffic to countries such as Mexico, China, and Vietnam,' says
 Cathy-Ann Martine, president of Concert international carrier services. In
 contrast, consider China. The country imprisoned Chen Zhui, 36, and Chen Yan,
 30, last year after they launched a tiny discount phone service using Internet
 technology. The brothers were released on appeal, and now China has issued a
 limited number of licenses for voice-on-the- Net. Taiwan, Vietnam, and
 Singapore continue to limit use of the technology.
 
 Although voice-on-the-Net technology was developed for discount phone
 service, it's now evolving in myriad ways. Here's an example. Back in February,
 Justin Ohrmundt, a project manager at the architecture firm Grund & Riesterer in
 Chicago, faced the task of inspecting all 30 buildings in Walpole Point, a condo
 development on the Windy City's North Side. A real estate firm called Prairie
 Management & Development Inc. had hired Ohrmundt's firm because it needed
 to know if it had budgeted enough money to fix up the property. No problem:
 Ohrmundt used his digital video camera to shoot a snapshot and record a brief
 voice clip about any problems. He then sent the digital photos and audio
 descriptions over the Net to a group of people at Prairie Management and his
 own firm. The job was done in one week instead of the usual three--and the
 clients could use the Net to see more accurately than ever before what problems
 they faced. 'We're a small firm, but we can update our technology faster than
 larger firms,' says Ohrmundt. 'That helps us compete.'
 
 The Web also is doing wonders for communications within companies. Managers
 at the engineering firm Parsons Brinckerhoff used to gather once a year for an
 annual training session at company headquarters in New York. The trip has been
 replaced with 12 monthly conference calls on the Web. 'The total cost is about
 $200, and that includes the cookies,' says Stephanie Parson, the company's
 chief information officer. 'But more important, we are communicating more
 often.' And more effectively. During the conference calls, participants can send
 Parson instant text messages, which she can answer privately or share with the
 group. The conference software also lets the participants view PowerPoint slides
 as they talk to one another.
 
 CLICK FOR HELP. Voice-on-the-Net is likely to be the biggest development
 in customer service since the invention of the 800 number. While Compaq
 Computer won't comment, people familiar with the company's plans say it will
 roll out the technology on its site within the next month. That will allow customers
 who press 'click-to-talk' icons on Compaq Web pages to speak live with
 customer service agents. American Express is about to begin a 90-day trial of
 similar voice technology, from Lipstream Networks Inc., on its Web site. If the
 trial works, AmEx plans to integrate voice throughout its Internet operations.
 
 There are a few big challenges for voice-on-the-Net before other companies
 follow suit. One major issue is that the medium is split by a series of currently
 incompatible technology standards. That means that someone using Yahoo for
 voice chat can't talk to another Web surfer who is using AOL's technology. The
 issue may get ironed out over the next year. AT&T'S investment in Net2Phone,
 which also counts AOL and Yahoo among its investors, is designed to make
 Net2Phone the industry standard for both voice and text instant messaging. Once
 a standard is clear, businesses can use voice-on-the-Net to communicate with
 many more people than previously possible.
 
 That's hardly the only challenge for the talking Internet. Instant messaging's
 'presence' function, which announces whether that person is online, isn't that
 useful yet because many people are online all day, especially in office
 environments, even when they aren't sitting at their desk. Newer versions of
 instant messaging software are expected to correct this problem by the end of the
 year. What's more, security is poor, so that in some cases outsiders may be able
 to listen to private conversations. 'It is vulnerable to security hacks,' says Jeff
 Pulver, CEO of pulver.com, which publishes voice-on-the-Net research. Future
 generations of the software should become more secure.
 
 Perhaps the biggest problem for voice-on-the-Net is that sound quality can be
 dreadful. In some cases, people can't even understand each other because of
 delays and interference. Carriers have been boosting quality in recent months by
 integrating their Internet telephony equipment with a high-quality data
 transmission standard called asynchronous transfer mode. In addition, some Net
 voice players, including Lipstream, are installing their own servers so their can
 improve the quality of their service.
 
 During the next few years, these new voice technologies will find as many
 applications as there are users. Back in Spokane, the new network has allowed
 the school district to create a special class for hearing-impaired students, who
 use videoconferencing gear to work with teachers many miles away. 'Yes, the
 network is faster, but that is not the point,' Schweikhardt says. 'It is allowing us
 to do things we could never do before.' Alexander Graham Bell, who began his
 career tutoring deaf students, would have been pleased.
 
 By Steve Rosenbush in New York, with Bruce Einhorn in Hong Kong
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