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To: telephonics who wrote (26)1/11/1999 1:16:00 AM
From: CUBBY  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 275
 
Analyst sees $60 billion IP phone market
By John Borland
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
January 8, 1999, 4:45 p.m. PT
The worldwide market for IP-based telephone service will skyrocket to $60 billion by 2005 as telephone companies make "radical" network changes, according to predictions by a London research firm.

The prediction, made by Ovum Research, far outstrips most other analysts' expectations for how quickly telephone companies will replace their traditional infrastructures with Internet-style voice traffic.

Senior Ovum analyst Susan Sweet said that pressure from corporations, some of which have already started to adopt Internet Protocol (IP) functions and applications inside their own internal telephone networks, will force the big telcos to pick up the pace in shifting their infrastructure towards IP traffic.

"As IP becomes the basis for wide-area corporate communications, so the pressure from corporate customers will grow on telcos to adopt IP in their backbone," Sweet wrote.

IP telephony is the use of Internet packet-switching protocols to transmit voice traffic, instead of the traditional network of circuit-switches. The technology has been available for several years, but the quality of calls transmitted this way still ranges widely.

Sweet predicted that corporate use of applications such as "unified messaging" services--which integrate voice mail, email, pages, and faxes--and IP-based call centers would help boost the use of IP telephony on private networks and ultimately pressure telephony companies to modify their networks to follow suit.

Already, some of the biggest telephone companies have taken steps in this direction. As a part of its merger with Tele-Communications Incorporated, AT&T has said it would start moving its cable based local telephone services towards packet-switched Internet protocols by the end of next year. The company also is pushing IP telephony through its WorldNet Internet service and in relationships with ISPs worldwide.

By 2005, the U.S market for IP telephony will have climbed to $29 billion, Sweet forecast. Western European will be close behind, with a market worth $13.5 billion, she said.

Other analysts are still less bullish on the speed of this transition, however.

"You're talking about radical shift in the way voice is carried," said Bruce Kasrel, a telecommunications analyst with Forrester Research. "That doesn't happen overnight, especially in the telecom industry."

Kasrel said he thought it would be two to three years before most of the big telcos begin integrating voice IP infrastructures into their traditional networks, and that it would take another two to three years beyond that for substantial progress to be made.

"Even that's probably optimistic," he added. But he said that if the telcos around the world did decide to move quickly, Ovum's bullish figure could be in the ballpark. "If carriers decide that packetized [voice transmission] is the way to go, then it could be even bigger than that."

Analysts noted that consumers would not necessarily notice much difference if telephone companies do change their infrastructure to handle Internet-style voice transmissions.

"Does that really matter to consumers?" Kasrel asked. While the cost of phone service might drop slightly due to packet-switched technology's efficiency, consumers would simply still pick up a traditional phone and dial as always, he said. "If the transport mechanism changes, they won't know."

CUBBY



To: telephonics who wrote (26)1/11/1999 1:22:00 AM
From: CUBBY  Respond to of 275
 

Telcos to push IP telephony in 1999
By Wylie Wong
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
January 5, 1999, 11:40 a.m. PT
news analysis Telecommunications companies in 1999 hope to entice more people to use telephone services over the Internet, but those companies must first overcome some chronic problems that have plagued the technology since its inception.

IP telephony promises to simplify the delivery of voice, video, and data in a union of computer technology and telephone services. But the technology has been slow to catch on, as the lack of standards between IP networks and traditional phone networks has stymied industry growth.

"The whole industry can not take off without interoperability," said Vocaltec chief executive Elon Ganor.

Yet the industry may see some changes this year, as Internet telephony companies, including Delta Three, roll out new features to lure new customers, including unified messaging services--the ability to check voice mail, email, pages and faxes through a single device.

The standards game
Probe Research analyst Hilary Mine said the four-year-old technology still needs to resolve some problems before consumers switch to the technology en masse: service quality needs to be improved, and standards for the technology need to be established. Mine said she expects vendors to work on both issues during 1999, and hopefully resolve them by mid- to late-2000.

Up to now, vendors use proprietary networking technology. But some 10 companies, including Ascend, Cisco, Clarent, Lucent Technologies, and VocalTec have joined together to create an organization, called iNow, to work on forming industry standards.

One feature that has frustrated IP telephony users--having to dial special access numbers to make a Net phone call--may soon disappear. Mine said several service providers early this year plan to integrate SS7--technology that allows IP networks to access a public database of 1-800 phone numbers--so callers don't have to dial those additional numbers.

Analyst Bruce Kasrel, of Forrester Research, said telephony sound quality still varies from near perfect to absolutely miserable.

Vendors are taking steps to change that, Probe's Mine said. Some have built their own IP networks to ensure decent sound quality, usually on par with regular phone lines. New networking hardware technology is making transmission delays a thing of the past, Mine added.

Networking vendors have created technology that cuts down delays to 50 milliseconds, Mine said. Humans can't decipher delays that are under 150 milliseconds. "It's not the equipment. The big deal is traffic engineering on the Internet. Service providers need to engineer more efficiency," she said.

Two standards will help improve service quality as they are installed into routers, Mine said. The Reservation protocol (RSVP) allows a router to reserve bandwidth for audio and video transmission and eliminate skips. The Differentiated Services (Diff Serv) protocol will allow service providers to offer different levels of quality--top quality for voice and perhaps low quality for e-mail, Mine said.

"The phone companies set a standard and quality is a challenge," said David Greenblatt, chief operating officer of Net2Phone. "Our goal is to provide equal or better high quality products."

Price wars
Telecommunications companies will need to offer new services to get people to sign on to IP telephony, as traditional long distance phone rates are expected to one day plummet to current IP telephony levels, said Elie Wurtman, president and chief executive of Delta Three, based in Israel.

"As telecom pricing comes down, the big differentiating factor will be value-added services. Given the popularity of the Web, anything we can do to integrate communication tools to a Web interface is a sure-fire winner," Wurtman said.

IDT, owner of Net2Phone, for example, plans to launch a portal Web site in late January that will allow users to set up an account that lets them check email, news, and stock quotes through the phone, said IDT spokeswoman Sarah Hofstetter. The portal, tentatively named EZSurf, will also link to e-commerce Web sites, allowing users to call stores from their browser to buy products.

Kasrel said Internet telephony will lose its price advantage in the United States early in the next decade as traditional phone services drop prices to compete. Currently, U.S. Internet telephony users save about 60 percent on international calls and a few cents a minute on domestic calls, Kasrel said.

"Internationally, there's a lot of money to be made. Domestically, there's really no benefit," he said.

Forrester Research expects consumer spending on Internet telephony will reach $1 billion in 2002. Internationally, use of IP telephony will continue to grow beyond 2002, thanks to business travelers and residents of countries where phone service is expected to remain expensive.

Domestically, however, Kasrel believes the U.S. Federal Communications Commission will further erode Internet telephony's price advantage in 2001 by imposing long distance access charges to Internet calls. As a result, telecommunications companies will have to invent unique services to better compete and stave off a perpetual price war, he said.

The options package
Internet telephony can occur phone to phone, PC-to-PC, fax to fax, or any combination. Most vendors are creating IP telephony applications, such as Internet call waiting, for the PC.

Internet telephony vendors, including AT&T, currently offer a service that allows consumers to launch audio conference calls and participate in Web chats. IDT and Delta Three plan to offer audio conferencing for gamers at the end of the year. "Gaming is going to take off in a huge way," said Wurtman, of Delta Three.

But will new applications on the PC really drive widespread adoption of Internet telephony? Jim Kwock, general manager for AT&T's global IP telephony services, believes mass adoption will result from a "killer application" that hasn't been invented yet.

Mine said that Internet telephony has the potential to reach a mass audience within five to seven years as issues, such as bandwidth, get solved. With cable companies performing trials on IP telephony through cable later in 1999, and DSL service coming soon, Greenblatt believes the industry is two or three years away when people can have constant video and audio communication with TV.

"We're in the early generation of multimedia PCs. It's awkward to get on the Web. Not everyone is on it," Greenblatt said. "You can dream, and see this unfolding several years from now."

CUBBY