SOUTHNET JOINS RACE TO BRING VOICE-OVER-IP TO MARKET
[All,
Another win for Ascend's MAX 4000/6000 gear Another Dedicated IP Backbone Another 5 to 8 cpm model at retail Another Phone-to-Phone with PC-to-Phone to follow Another Consortium approach to aggregating ISP and CLEC providers Another dragon slayer that will give incumbents fits Another 100 city nationwide rollout in record time (would you believe a month?) Another goal of 250 cities over time Another future plans for international service
Enjoy, Frank C.]
August 26, 1998
IP-based voice services could become a serious competitor to ISDN-based voice services over the next several years.
Another Internet service provider, SouthNet Telecomm Services of Atlanta, is launching an IP-based voice network. This comes on the heels of a similar announcement by Internet Global Services of Dallas earlier this month, and only weeks after Sprint [FON] of Kansas City, Mo., and the AT&T/British Telecom alliance announced they will develop voice- over-IP services.
"We are going to deploy a voice-over-IP network nationwide," says Gerald Escobar, sales and marketing manager at SouthNet Telecomm Services. "We are looking to have the service rolled out in 100 cities by Sept. 30. A few cities are up now. Our long-term goal is to have the service deployed in 250 U.S. and international cities by the end of 1999."
However, SouthNet will need help if it is going to reach its goal of 100 cities by Sept. 30. SouthNet only operates nine points of presence itself. The company plans to sign up Internet service providers and competitive local exchange carriers (CLECs) to resell its service in areas where it does not operate. SouthNet offers the voice-over-IP service in Atlanta; Columbus, Ohio; New York; Northern Virginia; Savannah, Ga.; and Washington.
"We have less than five partners for the service right now," Escobar says. "But we have just made the announcement, so we have to give the service some time. We are not just looking for domestic partners. We are looking to partner with ISPs and telcos internationally."
SouthNet could not reveal which companies it has formed partnerships with because it has signed non-disclosure agreements. This is a standard procedure in contracts in which one company agrees to resell the telecom services of another business.
"I think that even though SouthNet is a fairly small ISP, the small guys can make voice-over-IP work," says Michael Harris, president of Kinetic Strategies, a consultancy based in Phoenix. "This offer will be of great interest to other ISPs. The large carriers and Internet service providers are going to create IP-based voice services - the announcements of late have made that clear. The small ISPs and CLECs will have to find a way to offer IP-based voice if they want to compete.
"Whether SouthNet will be able to put the pen to paper with these smaller ISPs and carriers, we will have to wait and see," Harris adds. "But SouthNet has excellent timing in developing the service. The market is headed in this direction."
...Will The Long Distance Rates Be Competitive?
SouthNet believes it will be able to attract ISPs and CLECs to its service because the price is right. The company would not reveal specific pricing for the service, but it says carriers and ISPs that resell voice-over-IP will be able to offer domestic long distance to the public for between 5 and 8 cents a minute. That beats the pricing of many domestic long distance plans offered by large long distance carriers to small businesses and residences in the United States.
"If you are a big company, you can get [5 to 8 cents a minute] on standard phone service by bundling long distance minutes together," Escobar says. "Our service is for mid-sized businesses and small businesses. They often do not have large volumes of long distance minutes, and can't get discounts on their long distance costs from carriers. Some of our partners are selling the service to residential customers as well."
"Five to 8 cents a minute should put a lot of ISPs in a solid position to compete against the AT&Ts and MCIs [MCIC] of the world," Harris says. "This seems like a good target price for SouthNet too. It allows SouthNet to still turn a profit on its service, while giving its customers a price point they can do some damage with in the market."
International long distance pricing is likely to be higher than 5 to 8 cents a minute, but less than the international long distance pricing of the large interexchange carriers in the United States. SouthNet is still in the process of forming parterships with ISPs and carriers outside of the United States, so SouthNet would not predict what the pricing for international long distance will look like.
...A Look At The Specs
The quality of IP-based voice services has been a concern among ISPs and carriers in the past. When packetized voice calls are transmitted over an IP network with heavy traffic on it, their packets can be delayed. This causes pauses in conversations, and can cause popping or clicking noises on a call.
However, SouthNet is taking measures to eliminate the possibility of delays occurring on its network. The company is dedicating an IP backbone to voice traffic alone, rather than including standard Internet traffic on the backbone. SouthNet also is promising partners it will upgrade the voice-over-IP backbone from T-1 lines with frame relay running over them to T-3 service in network segments where voice traffic becomes heavy.
SouthNet has chosen an Ascend Communications [ASND] system to integrate voice onto its frame relay network. The MultiVoice solution is available on Ascend MAX switches. SouthNet has approximately 110 MAX switches deployed in its frame relay network.
"We offer MultiVoice on the MAX 6000 and the MAX 4000," says Jose Garcia, senior product manager at Ascend. "Our MAX 4000 Access Concentrator has slots in the back for cards - you can put six cards in them. There are three MultiVoice [digital signal processor] cards available for the slots - a 16-port model, and 12-port model and an eight-port model. Each port can handle one call at a time."
The software on the MAX 6000 can handle up to 48 simultaneous IP voice calls. The MAX 4000 also has six slots for MultiVoice cards, but the software on the switch only can maintain 16 simultaneous IP voice calls.
A software package called MultiVoice Access Manager also is required in the MultiVoice solution. It creates a gateway for voice- over-IP calls. The functions of the gateway include authenticating user names and personal identification numbers, translating phone numbers into IP addresses and routing voice calls over an IP network.
The price for a MAX 4000 switch equipped with 48 ports for voice-over-IP service runs $36,000. This includes the switch, the MultiVoice DSP cards and the voice-over-IP software for the switch.
SouthNet is using the Ascend voice-over-IP system to offer phone-to-phone voice calls. Customers dial a phone number to access an Ascend MAX switch, and then dial a second phone number to reach their destination. SouthNet plans to launch a PC-to-phone voice service in January 1999. (Michael Harris, Kinetic Strategies, 602/598- 9500; Jeff Lemay, SouthNet Telecomm Services, 770/937-9550; Jennifer Reidy, Ascend Communications, 510/747-2761.)
[Copyright 1998, Phillips Publishing] |