rocksta' -- Nice post on the Clik! news. Here's a post from another site which gives you an idea of where phones with which Clik! could be linked are rapidly heading. The stuff that pertains most directly to Clik! applications is in the final couple of paragraphs. See if you don't think there's at least a chance for Clik! to be a part of this emerging technology.
The question will become: has your phone become a micro-computer, or has your computer become a mobile phone?
On another possible Clik! niche -- I'm seeing ads for combination video / digital cameras for the mass consumer market ( under $1,000) They use traditional tape for video storage and also include digital still capabilities. The digital still portion can then make use of the better lens and bigger batteries. Wouldn't a Clik! work great in these? Does anyone else remember the post we had several months ago where someone on a flight reported a couple of Japanese Sony (?) engineers with a Zip built into a video camera? The post was jumped all over as we were envisioning the Zip as storage for the video. But, with these new combo cameras coming to market, it makes me wonder if it wasn't a proto-type of one of these.
Pop your Clik! disk from the camer, stick it in your IP phone as describe below and use it to send the pictures anywe in the world -- just-like-that -- and you can talko the person receiving them while they view them. Who'd have use for anything like that?
--the poster formerly known as Jak!
$5 and Under: DGIV -- Good Prospects?
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To: macker (7341 ) Saturday, Apr 25 1998 5:08PM ET From: sandstuff Reply # of 7351
BREAKTHROUGH: INCREDIBLE VOICE OVER IP
This is from Byron's link a few posts back.
"To repeat, IP Telephony in 1997 is to telecommunications what the IBM PC's introduction in 1981 was to the computer industry." I sit shell shocked. I've just spoken to Australia on the Internet. It was crystal clear. No irksome delays. No crackling.. My first decent Internet phone call (after two years of trying). Two days earlier I tasted U.S. long distance calls on private, corporate IP networks. The quality was also superb. Price for the calls was right - FREE. "IP Telephony may be the biggest computer telephony opportunity ever ." By Harry Newton, Computer Telephony Magazine IP Telephony in 1997 is to telecommunications what the IBM PC's introduction in 1981 was to the computer industry. IP Telephony is huge. It is vastly different to anything we've seen in CT. No one can get their arms I around it. No one can predict where it's going. We've just skimmed the surface. More in coming issues. There are two types of IP Telephony opportunities: First, ways for corporations to save money and love their customers better; and second, ways for entrepreneurs to get into the act. First, the corporate ways: Any corporation with an internal (i.e. managed) IP data network can save huge amounts of money by stuffing voice onto the network. Corporations with offices overseas will hook IP-to-PSTN gateways to their data networks and save vast ironies by turning their international calls into local calls. Fax swims easily and flawlessly over both Internet and private IF networks. For corporations sending faxes overseas, the savings will be gigantic. Any corporation with a call center and a Web site already has a "call me" button. But today that means a call back on a second line. Soon they'll talk to their customers directly Via the Web. We'll close sales faster. IP Telephony equipment already shows a fewer than six months pay-back in toll-saving installations. Prices are about to plummet. We'll see installations with 30-day pay-backs within six months. There's more competitive action here than I've seen in 30 years of competitive telecom. (That's how long I've writing about telecom.) Second, the entrepreneurs: Internet, Regional and National Service Providers (ISPs, RSPs and NSPs) can piggyback voice and fax onto their IP networks and form global consortia. The approach: "You put gateways in your Korean cities. I'll put gateways in my U.S. cities. Our customers will be able to dial between Korea and the U.S. for the price of a local call (or whatever we charge)." I hear under 15 cents a minute international calling - half what companies pay from today's circuit- switched IXC& (AT&T, MCI, Sprint, etc.) Inter-Tel, which sells a wonderful IP-to-PSTN Telephony gateway powered by NMS boards, is installing gateways all over the world. It believes it will sell more boxes if the global. IP Telephony infrastructure is in place. Computer network resellers, systems integrators, Novell dealers, Microsoft Solution Providers and telephone interconnect. dealers will find new work selling, installing and integrating IF Telephony equipment into corporate data networks. To repeat, IP Telephony in 1997 is to telecommunications what the IBM PC's introduction in 1981 was to the computer industry. It rewrites the rules. Its ultimate appeal lies not in immense dollar savings. Those will drive IP Telephony for years. What's most exciting is that IP Telephony empowers the user. For 120 years, progress in telecom has been "driven" by glacial behemoths. Make the network stupid. Move the innovation to the desktop. Everyone now becomes a telco. Your PC is the intelligent network. That means an explosion on innovation. Things we can't dream of today. Ideas someone will create three years out. Bingo non-stop, mind-bending innovation in telecom. Browsers may be our new phones. Netscape versus Internet Explorer? You ain't seen nothing yet. The telephone industry dwarfs the computer industry There's major motivation here. The concept of IP Telephony is I deceptively simple: Put all your phone calls into packets. Stuff two things into each packet: First, the conversation. Second, instructions about where to send it and what to do with the conversation. Those instructions might just be the address. Or they may be more complex: "if Joe isn't there, try this other number." Or "if his phone is busy, hold the call, send him a message saying it's Harry calling and wait on his instructions." With IP Telephony, the network transmits raw bits. The world becomes a gigantic LAN. Everyone is on the Net all the time. Everyone has a "smart" phone, powered by software they buy. Everyone thus defines their phone to be what they want - just as they define their PC today to be what they want. And everyone, through the intelligence at die "phone" defines the IP Telephony services they want to use. Your IP address is your one-number, follow-me phone number. I saw a man log onto the Internet via our LAN and receive a phone call transferred by the auto attendant on his remote PBX. It rang the phone on his .FC during our meeting at our New York City offices. The caller had no idea where he was, except that he was available. The caller could see that in a "busy lamp field," updated by messages from Internet log-ins. The FBX was in Texas. My "phone" might be a powerful $3,000 PC, with software to handle several simultaneous voice calls, one continuous high-speed email feed, one continuous news feed from the Wall Street Journal, one continuous stock feed and maybe one video feed in the background for the movie I want to watch that evening. Your "phone" might be a $200 phone that plugs into 10Base-T and sports a BIOS that can be improved with downloads. "With such a phone, I could get my high quality FM audio I've always wanted," says the music-loving Brough Turner, Chief Technology Officer, Natural MicroSystems. Says Brough, "What we at NMS are pushing now are gateways to the legacy phone system. There are a billion phones out there. They're not going away. But within five years, these IP telephones with neat displays will cost $10 more to make than today's very dumb animals. "Within two years, most PCs wilt come with full-duplex sound cards optimized for voice. Today's cheap multimedia PC cards are half-duplex and contribute materially to the delays you hear today on Internet phone calls," says Brough. Classic definition: Computer telephony is the adding of computer intelligence to the making, receiving, and managing of telephone calls. With IP Telephony, the telephone user finally has the intelligence he has craved for so long. IP Telephony is the purest manifestation of this classic definition. This is awesome. <<<<<<< |