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To: Bull4Now who wrote (25731)9/13/1998 2:10:00 AM
From: Dolfan  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 50264
 
Very interesting article huh...thanx
Check this one out I received this from Individual Investor Online.

Here is the link.
iionline.com

Voice Over the Internet Set to Skyrocket

More and more companies are reaching out and touching
their customers, suppliers and colleagues via the Internet
instead of traditional phone networks.

Thanks to Internet Protocol (IP)-based voice communications
technology, businesses are increasingly becoming aware of
savings they can realize by sending voice traffic over
networks running on packet switching technology instead of
the traditional circuit switching technology. And the savings
are impressive.

PSINet (NASDAQ: PSIX), one of the largest commercial
Internet service providers (ISPs), estimates that it can save
its business customers as much as 80% on
telecommunications-related expenses by switching corporate
voice communications to IP networks.

Explosive Growth Anticipated

According to a recent survey taken by Killen & Associates,
a provider of market research and consulting services,
telecom/datacom executives at Fortune 1000 companies
expect that corporations will send 18% of their voice traffic
utilizing IP by 2002. By 2005, this figure is projected to
balloon to 33%. Currently, Fortune 1000 companies send
less than 1% of their voice traffic over IP-based networks,
the survey says.

In response to this anticipated explosive demand,
telecommunications carriers and Internet service providers
(ISPs) alike are rolling out new voice-over-IP services. On
July 26, AT&T (NYSE: T) and British Telecom (NYSE:
ADR BTY) struck a $10 billion deal to form a joint venture
that would offer integrated telecom services, including voice
communications, to multinational corporations via IP-based
networking infrastructure. The new venture will serve 6,500
corporate and carrier accounts.

One of the biggest players is SouthNet Telecom Services, a
privately held Atlanta-based ISP that is actively deploying
voice-over-IP technology. Through reseller agreements with
other ISPs and telecommunications carriers, SouthNet plans
to offer its IP-based voice services in 100 cities by the end
of September, according to management. By the end of 1999,
SouthNet is hoping to introduce the service in 250 cities.
Telecom and ISP resellers will be able in turn offer
SouthNet's, according to the company.

Broad-based adoption of voice-over-the Internet technology
also promises to greatly benefit IP gear vendors. Companies,
such as Lucent (NYSE: LU) and Cisco Systems
(NASDAQ: CSCO) are among of the leading providers of
switches, routers and software for IP-based networks.

Bay Networks (NYSE: BAY), now a part of Northern
Telecom (NYSE: NT), is stepping up efforts to incorporate
the voice-over-IP feature into the company's cable modems.
Bay says it plans to deliver first adopter cards for its
modems by the fourth quarter of this year.

The capability to transmit voice over the Internet using cable
modems might look very attractive to long-distance telecom
carriers such as AT&T and Sprint (NYSE: FON) who are
actively trying to penetrate the local residential telephone
market.