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May 04, 2008

San Diego Airport Broadband Part Two

I'm on my way to the Bay Area for a week's worth of meetings, meet up and to also assist winemaker friend Sylvain Fadat of Domaine d'Aupilhac on Monday at the annual Kermit Lynch Client event that starts tonight.

As I await my slightly delayed Southwest flight to SFO I ran a fast  speed test.

Download  14403kb/s
Upload 8359 kb/s

To me, that rocks and shows that making pointed comments directly to the airport management as I have really didn't fall on deaf ears.

January 13, 2008

Roll With The Changes in WiFi

Back in 2005 Westfield Americas announced an agreement with WFI, the company that is pretty much the Mercedes Benz of wireless deployments in the world. The agreement was for the deployment of WIFI for both the family of malls tenants as well as for folks like me who have to play bag carrier while my wife shops. I just whip out a laptop and take advantage of the access.

Much to my surprise here in San Francisco at the SF Westfield Center where Nordstroms, Bloomindales and the Container Store serve as anchor tenants, I saw a splash screen that said the $20 a month service being offered by WFI and Westfield, that had been dubbed WFI WiFi was ending on the 27th of January.

Considering how many residents in SF have been waiting for muni WiFi one has to wonder if this is one more barometer of demand and interest, or is this simply WFI getting out of the business due to their sale and spin out of their deployment business last summer to private equity?

Well there's always Boingo and T-Mobile plus FON and Meraki....here in SF.

December 25, 2007

Is VoIP In The Air?

Rich posts about in flight WiFi and the potential banning of VoIP on the planes.

First I'm old enough to remember the GTE Airphone and actually used it a lot in the90's, especially when they had their $1000 a year all you could talk plan. Back then I was flying about every three weeks cross country and after doing the math, found out that I could talk cheaper from the plane after month four or so than I could on the ground. It ended my "need" constantly flying only on red eyes.

Now fast forward to the Internet in the sky era. As someone who received a few "phone calls" on overnight flights between the west coast and Germany on Lufthansa and the Boeing Conexxion service, and also made a few, it sure came in handy so I'm not seeing the rub so much as others.

Consider this as a counter. What happens when you want to sleep and you have two "chaty" Charlie's of "chaty" Cathy's sitting behind you the entire flight? Is there any difference? Have you ever tried to tell them to be quiet, and that you want to a) sleep b) write the next great novel when the two people who never met before decide to tell their life story to one another...?

So given that argument of facts as my old argumentation professor would say, I ask "why not just ban all talking on airplanes?" I mean what's the difference between a cell phone like call on a plane and a chat from those two someones next to you. Both are noise?

Maybe we should just ban all talking on airplanes.....?  NOT!

December 17, 2007

Hello From Madrid..Getting Ready For Mobile Monday

I figured its time to toast what has been a very good year, and to get ready for tonight's Mobile Monday in Madrid........

Do you think I'm going to have fun? You bet. Coming off of Le Web 3, this is the time to stretch out and do some serious looking forward. I've consulted some of the best minds in Mobile and VoIP and built a rapid 15 minute deck....and while this won't be a "Me Too, Me Also, Me Different" kind of presentation, it will be full of just what is going on with Mobile VoIP. I plan to talk about Challenger, Yeigo, T-Mobile, Truphone, Mobivox, TalkPlus, Gizmo5, MobileTalk by Packet8 and more...if you're in Madrid, come by...if you can get in. I hear the event is usually sold out!

December 13, 2007

Hotels and Airports Don't Get WiFi

I'm getting more and more convinced that airports don't get WiFi. The idea of a blacklist of web sites that may be critical of them is hilarious.

First San Diego went free, but gives such a poor experience its not worth it.

Now I'm reading that hotels and airports are playing around with blacklists of legitimate web sites.

This is bordering on censorship and prior restraint, two issues that are treading on the whole concept of freedom of the press.

Update--Now lets go to the next level. Imagine if an airport or hotel was "sponsored" by Yahoo and access to Google or MSN search was blocked? What if only Macs were allowed on? What if.....

Get the point. Blacklisting is akin to slavery and that ended over 150 years ago.. I guess we need an act of Congress to change the rules...

October 11, 2007

DeviceScape Scores Big With Nokia

I've had the good fortune to have DeviceScape on one of my panels and to get to know the company rather well thanks to their bubbly and outgoing Marketing lead Beth Rogozinski. They will be returning to a panel I'm moderating at MuniWireless later this month, so the news about their relationshp with Blogger Relations Client Nokia is quite rewarding.

If you're not using Devicescape on your PC, Nokia N800 or N95 you're in for a treat. Log-ons to hotspots are a breeze and made really simple. They also a client for some of the Linksys WiFi phones too.

Why FON Has Some Acceptance Problems

Glenn at WiFi Net News posts about FON and some of the issues he has with the social WiFi service that says "you share me your's and I'll share you mine." On paper the concept is very good, but in reality broadband varies by installation and FON is thus a "free and best efforts" type of service in my mind.

So too as Glenn points out is the definition of a "hotspot" versus and installed FON router.

I have one in my house. It works, but its range is limited and given where the router is in my house it barely reaches the pool area or my HOA's complex clubhouse. Using the term lukewarm vs. hotspot in the post is a very good descriptor. In my view FON needs better extended range extension built in. But with that said, the concept still is solid in my mind, only in need of tweaking in how they reach the public so it really can be called HOT.

 

August 26, 2007

In the Media-Stay plugged in on the road and in the air

Part of the fun of being a quotable blogger is seeing yourself in print. Today Paige Wiser of the Chicago Sun Times has a story that really helps people figure out how to be working anywhere, and guess what? I'm quoted.

August 20, 2007

Over 30 VoIP Services At Mashable

Check out the nifty compilation over at Mashable that profiles many of your favorite VoIP related services.

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June 26, 2007

Earthlink Give N800 Owners Free Access to WiFi Net

If you have a Nokia N800 and are living in one of the Earthlink Feather cities Nokia and Earthlink have a great deal for you.

Free access.

TMCnet's Tom Keating provides some perspective and is promising to give the N800 Internet Tablet a real workout.

February 04, 2007

Why Some Innovate And Die

The Purple Wonder himself, Mr. VON, has a very good post about innovation. But Jeff, please don't think you are alone in this battle. Others of us like David Beckemeyer (PhoneGnome), Alec Saunders (iotum), Jeff Bonforte (Yahoo), Craig Walker (GrandCentral), Luca (Abbeynet), Michael Robertson (SIPPhone), Jim Tobin (Comcast), Jeff Black and John Todd (TalkPlus), Surj Patel (eTel's conference chair), AOL's Sr. VP of Voice Services Ragui Kamel and even I have been on this same kick for about as long (even if some of us weren't blogging back in 2002.)

But rather than take a purple sky view through mauve colored glasses, something we all have been guilty of more than once, let's start with where the problems actually lays. A fundamental lack of knowing how to market to consumers that exists in so many companies that are trying to bring consumer products and services to market today.

Here are some thoughts on this which may likely cause discussion, some discomfort, some angst and even some indigestion…but better over a blog post than over one’s career or investment dollars I figure.

1. To sell new and innovative products and services requires marketing, not just selling. And marketing requires real dollars. Demand either exists and that need can be satisfied, or demand has to be created. Marketing finds the need, and satisfies the want, by knowing how to tell the market why it needs it.

2. Most venture backed voice related companies are led by people who don't have a clue what it really costs to market a product or service to consumers. They have great ideas, but no experience.

3. The reason the cable MSO's are winning in VoIP over the upstarts is simple. They have all kinds of marketing and promotional inventory to use to get the attention of the customers. Backing a play without the right marketing dollars in the funding round is a recipe for disaster, unless owning the Intellectual Property is the play from the start.

4. It's not about selling in. It's about selling through. Too much time and energy is spent getting the deal, and not enough time is spent on what to do once the customer signs on. I call this the B2B2C paradox. You have the deal, but have no way to fufill it.

5. Most companies in the start up phase hire an experienced B2B marketer to get deals done. This is the same person, because of their success at getting the deals done, who ends up running the B2C business into the ground. Why? Because a real consumer marketer doesn't speak the right "tech speak" or VC speak language. There's a reason for that. The consumers don't either.

6. To continue the sell in vs. sell through point, to sell through means you need to know thy customer. To know thy customer means to conduct two types of research.

A. Primary, meaning you do it for your company directly with the customer segments and

B. Secondary, meaning you review what is publicly available from sources that matter and apply it.

I don’t know how many startups I have suggested hire a real consumer marketing company to help with market segmentation, usage and attitude studies and more. Few take us up on that offer. Why? Because their investors don’t take the time to understand how to take a new product to market, have never spent a day in consumer marketing at the face to face level or have almost no consumer marketing agency experience to know what is needed. The most successful companies we all know of all research how they research, constantly improving their processes. Who does this best? TV Networks. Packaged Goods companies and yes, even the established telcos. Funny, aren’t those the companies that online companies are trying to better..hmmm..

7. Not enough customer centricity...The products that get launched today are so non-customer centric it's scary. It’s not that consumers wouldn’t want to buy and use them, it’s just that they have too many challenges learning how and just give up.

How do you take a new product to market? By putting it in the hands of thousands of people in one-on-one and focus groups to find out what they think and then boil it down to where it is plain dumb simple to use. I don't know how many of the executives in the emerging VoIP plays have ever done a real focus group in their lives, or spent time selling to the public, but I do know that Level3 has done just that to enable their clients, mostly the Cable MSOs, to know more about what their customers want and it shows. Cable VoIP sales are up vs. the other guys, and Level3's stock is up. Someone at Level3 should give Cynthia Carpenter a huge raise for that study alone as she quarterbacked the project under the now departed to Verisign, Charlie (Two Buck Chuck) Meyers.

8. Distribution---the web is a lousy distribution outlet. I repeat. The web is a lousy distribution outlet.

The web is a great marketing channel for awareness and serves as a wonderful delivery vehicle via download or for order entries and sign up. So you ask, why isn’t it a great distribution outlet for everything? Well for starters it’s a lousy way to interact with consumers who have questions. FAQ files only frustrate the masses and you have to know exactly the right words to use the search tools.

Now compare this to going into a specialty retailer.

For starters when I'm in a specialty store I can get questions answered in real time from people who should have some product knowledge (okay CompUSA is the exception but they are a big box store without any specialty vs. Frys or Best Buy which actually trains people as product specialists.)

Most online services want the customer to email and then WAIT for a reply. Or worse, you call up, and experience what we all now accept as normal. A call to some outsourced service provider in some foreign land who doesn't even know what day it is, let alone have the basic level of product knowledge of a web page that does.

Compare this to QVC, HSN or even going to a Costco. There you get answers and you get service and it happens more often than not, almost right away.

9. Retail is still important.

Building retail distribution takes money. But having retail distribution will make you money. I'm continually amazed how clients and companies we interact with won't spend one day looking at how to get their products to retail, and yet will spend months trying to figure out how to optimize their web sites for higher Google rankings. Believe me. Selling services in 10,000 convenience stores sure made a lot of money for the calling card folks, so one has to wonder why no one is really pushing VoIP in Radio Shack or at the independent cellular stores let alone selling new services at 7-11.

10. Sample This--nothing works better than sampling. I'm continually amazed that services that offer trials don't do more sampling. Not on the web. Offline.

At start-ups the pressure to start showing uptake is enormous. But you can’t have uptake if you don’t reach you’re the potential customers. If they would sample more, in more places the awareness and uptake would be far greater

Heck anyone with an email account can keep sampling or keep trying free services online. What amazes me is the lack of sampling of a service where people are. People are not just at home on their PC's they are at events, in malls and on the street.

Apple gets this idea better than anyone with their Apple stores. Consumers come in and try out an iPod, a MacBook and then order from somewhere. For Apple the sales at Apple stores are a bonus. Secretly Apple doesn't care where you buy Apple products just as long as you buy Apple. The whole facade of exclusivity is just that. It's a cachet and Apple does it as well as a Ferrari or Porsche dealership can. Cisco practices a similar marketing approach. Buy from them. Buy Cisco from someone else, but at the end of the day, they are happy if you just bought Cisco (or Linksys.)

Nokia understand this too and with their Nokia World locations is taking the same approach. Show people what they didn’t know about. Let they try the product and then let them buy it there, on the web or anywhere, but just buy Nokia.

But the path to success has its failures. Gateway failed at this with Gateway Country stores, but it wasn't for lack of trying. It was because Gateway didn't have the rest of the retail market channels in place the right way. Before Apple launched Apple Stores they already had stores within other computer stores staffed by Apple people. Gateway didn’t. Oh.there’s that research thing coming up again. And oh, there’s that lack of sampling and trial. And oh, there’s that selling in, not selling through mentality at work.

Innovation isn’t dead. It’s being killed. And the killers are the people who give birth to the ideas by practicing the worst form of euthanasia. They kill off their young not because their idea isn’t right. Because they’re not the right people to innovatively market the idea.

In this changing game from where technology has gone from geeks to the general market, the time for innovation in marketing is here. To market innovatively takes money, or at least some clue.

December 26, 2006

Skype Subverts T-Mobile

Many a writer, analyst and blogger have put the label of “disruptive” on Skype.

I think NOT.

The proper term, as I have said before is “subversive” and what the following will prove and point to that exact claim. Now for those who don’t see the fine points of differentiation, disruptors upset the status quo. Michael Robertson at SipPhone, best known for MP3.com is an example of a premiere disruptor. Subversive types do an Al- Quada  type 9-11 unexpected attack and profit from it.

That’s exactly the category that Skype has to be taken in and always should be.

Not only did Skype set out to disrupt the market, something they have done, but with three independent moves, or what only on the surface would appear to be independent, Skype has subverted their own promotional partner, T-Mobile in a masterful way that I applaud.

Let me first give you the ingredients to this explosive recipe that is clearly inspired by one part “Alchemist’s Cookbook” and another part “Mini Manual For The Urban Guerilla” . The execution is pure asymmetrical marketing, a concept I not only subscribe to but applaud when I see it as it not only on the surface appears to be disruptive, but in the end subverts the very nature of the T-Mobile relationship.

It is pure genius and what’s more unless you looked at the sum of the parts, on the surface everything seems to be just what it is.

But it’s not.

Here are the ingredients

1)    Skype on Sony Mylo available for $349.00 at Best Buy
2)    Skype/T-Mobile Hotspot Free Access For a Year Promotion With The Mylo Upgrade NO CHARGE
3)    Skype Unlimited Calling for $14.95 for one year 

So what does this mean?

Well for starters for the crowd that goes to Starbucks with a cell phone, for what amounts to $365.00 you can make unlimited calls to your friends now who aren’t on Skype with a the Mylo which is also a very useful PDA, music player and lightweight web browse. You add in the free calling and all of a sudden for the hotspot connected, no-need for a mobile phone crowd, the same crowd that Earthlink covets and wants to attract, and you have the very first real salvo at the mobile phone industry, and in true subversive fashion, Skype used the industry’s own infrastructure, or at least T-Mobile’s for their very mission delivery vehicle. If you already have a Mylo this means it stops being a paper weight.

I’m not sure if Sony was a party to the Skype “Pearl Harbor” move on T-Mobile, but as someone who appreciates great execution in marketing, this is one for the books in how to take independent pieces of non-volatile elements and make something up that pure incendiary.

Ka-Boom!

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August 05, 2006

A Present Of Sorts

I woke up this morning and felt like a present arrived. A present that was from a member of the mainstream media, and this time, it was not only about a client of my agency', Nokia and their Blogger Relations Program, but the very well penned story was about me too.

I'm not only honored and very jazzed about the story, and the accolades, but also by the validation from the Washington Post that clearly shows that what we're doing for Nokia was so instrumental in their current success.

You see, over the past 12 months my agency and I have been working on a program that I designed from the ground up for Nokia, called the Nokia Blogger Relations Program after getting a call  on Skype from  fellow blogger Martin Geddes who was doing some high level strategy work with Nokia then.

While the Nokia Blogger Relations Program has been previously recognized by our fellow bloggers in the blogosphere, recognized by our peers, applauded by the participants and validated in the Public Relations press, we were never expecting what is really a behind the scenes story to become household news.

So you can imagine my delight following a 30 bottle/12 person birthday wine dinner with some of my closest friends and fiancé, when I saw the Google alert on the story, learning that the interview I provided Kim Hart, had made it onto the press.

Our efforts in the blogosphere for Nokia reflects the kind of company they are, and the kind of client work my now almost 14 year old agency has been built to deliver.

The program for Nokia was out of the box, asymmetrical and perfectly timed. More importantly, it has worked, not just been a great idea, but a great idea followed near perfect execution by our entire team. And that is why we do, what we do, for the clients and the people that we proudly serve. Having a great product line really helped, and having a company like Nokia as a client with their forward looking view of marketing is equally heartwarming.

Thanks for letting me share this moment of happiness with you....It is a great way to start my birthday weekend.....

July 20, 2006

Skype WiFi Phones Due Out

I just heard that Skype plans to offer four WiFi phones that will help consumers become more unteathered. The phones are made by:
Belkin, Edge-Core, NETGEAR WiFi Phone for Skype and SMC. They are all similarly labeled Wi-Fi Phone for Skype which has to be one of the smartest marketing moves of the year over at Skype to have them all called the same thing, but one that will only make it harder at retail for consumers to buy due to lack of any brand differentiation other than packaging.

Unfortunately, the phones remain only useful with open hotspots and do not provide the ability to be used on services supplied by T-Mobile, Boingo or The Cloud.

If you want to use your WiFi with a carrier and be able to make free phone calls, then the Nokia Tablet 770, with the 2006 OS and Gizmo Project or Google Talk (but I have not been able to get this to work yet) is the answer. The Nokia Tablet 770 has a browser that lets you log onto the hotspot first, then authenticate the device with the Gizmo or GTalk service.

July 16, 2006

GoogleWiFi Coming Soon

Glenn Fleishman points to a PC World report on Google's WiFi network in Mountain View. \

My new Nokia 770 Tablet is perfect in this public environment of what I call for casual qwik look up and fast hits on the web. With the addition of Gizmo, and eventually a functional GTalk things become very disruptive.

This means a cheap WiFi phone for local only use could become something very meaningful very quickly and impact the cell carriers.

Whose at risk first? Well for starter the prepaid cellular carriers who sell into the lower stratas of phone users who don't really travel and who use the cell as their primary telephone. Those people, who tend to not own computers may finally with the advent of an inexpensive browser and phone combination are likely the most attractive, untapped market for this kind of "free" service.

Imagine saving the forty dollars a month because google gives you the ad supported services you need.

This clearly falls into the over the top play the carriers have been concerned about coming from Google and it's so, so possible.

February 15, 2006

New Phones Coming Soon For WiFi/VoIP/Cellular

ABC News has a report about the new Nokia and Motorola phones that will handle VoIP and Cellular.

It's all part of the Fixed Mobile Convergence world.

December 18, 2005

Wait Until They Pay You to Call

IP Democracy has a great analysis of the current pricing model that the pure IP VoIP players (i.e. Yahoo, Skype, GizmoProject) are moving forward with.

But I think there is a whole other model that will eventually come into play. That's where they pay you to use the service. While it won't be so transparent, the more added value services you purchase (i.e. voice mail, find me/follow me, unified mailbox messaging, etc.) plus ads that you click through on, merchant club, frequent buyer programs and more that you become a part of, loyalty, affinity and such, all that is data base driven, will result in telephone service being a basic lifestyle amenity.

I keep thinking the mobile guys are a natural for this play also. Imagine having your unused monthly minutes rolled over to your IP calls, and you getting a bonus for calling your friends and family who are on network with you, but the traffic goes IP to IP.

That's the future as I see it, especially with more VoIP via WiFi coming online really soon.

Continue reading "Wait Until They Pay You to Call" »

August 22, 2005

Firetide and Meru Align-VoIP to Be Better Deployed @ HotSpots

Firetide and Meru Networks are working together to make VoWiFI sound better, and operate more like cell phone networks.

<This is a play that will only mean more as better next generation WiFi phones come to market, but based on what I have seen first hand with FireTide, this is a very significant move and will benefit IMS companies like BridgePort Networks as well as they are part of the technology chain that makes the handoff from GSM and CDMA networks to WiFi or WiMax networks possible.

By having Meru and FireTide in a technology alliance, once the software and hardware gets deployed means the call quality over WiFi now can be managed and more importantly guaranteed.

May 17, 2005

Microsoft Partners With Sprint

Years ago Microsoft and Qualcomm created a venture called Wireless Knowledge, sometime within the first year the venture sort of went sideways and the two slowly separated a lot quieter than they announced the marriage.

Now I see some of what the claims from back then of what the venture was to do making the light of day, only this time Microsoft is at it with a Qualcomm partner in Sprint, but without the kings of CDMA.

Continue reading "Microsoft Partners With Sprint" »

April 01, 2005

Verizon Looking At VoIP Over 3G

Verizon Looking At VoIP Over 3G doesn't have me at all surprised.

Qualcomm's outgoing CEO and Chairman Irwin Jacobs talked about this back in September at a San Diego Telecom Council Headliners event.

Is this the The Truth About e911, Vonage and SBC?

Is this the The Truth About e911, Vonage and SBC? If so, Om has done some very good detective work and executed a very high degree of journalistic integrity.

What I like is that Om had the story and sat on it to get more facts and elicit a reply from SBC and balanced the story with input from one of IDC's better analysts, William Stofega who has a keen insight about all things VoIP.

I'm sure this will be a topic of discussion when I meet up with Om for coffee and catch up today when I pass through San Francisco.

Great News For Pocket PC Skype Users

Stuart's Skype Journal has good news for Pocket PC users. An upgraded release from Skype which fixes many bugs and adds more of the PC client features.

Way to go Skype. Now since Skype Journal didn't have the link to the download, I'm adding it here.

March 28, 2005

Aswath Has A Dream

Aswath does a parody of the famous "I have a dream" speech by Dr. Martin Luther King. It is brilliant, witty and well done, in a tasteful manner.

March 27, 2005

Credit Due and Deserved

A lot of media coverage has fallen on Vonage's complaints about Port Blocking by a couple of companies. The real credit goes to Paul Kapustka, who has been like a proverbial bloodhound on breaking and covering the story from its very start.

Kapustka, editor of Advanced IP Pipeline for CMP. He's been on the story ever since the first issue and always maintained a steady watch.

While Paul is not a Blogger, the line between journalism and blogging is very thin, and Kapustka always links to the blogosphere when stories there help with his writings.

A Killer Combo: Eyebeam and BroadVoice

The folks at XTEN and Broadvoice were kind enough to help me sort out configuring the awesome SIP softphone, Eyebeam with the BroadVoice service. Having been on the road for over ten days in broadband enabled WiFi hotels all over France all I can say is the combination is the VERY BEST softphone/VoIP experience I have had to date. Easily on par with SkypeToSkype, the call quality has been pristine and in most cases people I have been calling have not known I'm on a softphone or in Europe. That's the acid test.

Eyebeam is a significant step up from the X-Pro or X-Lite clients I previously tried from XTEN. Those improvements and the well engineered BroadVoice network makes for a seamless conversation process.

All I can say is if you're a road warrior like me, this allows you to not have to travel with a Telephone Adapter and if you're in good WiFi locations and use a solid headset as I do (The Plantronics DSP 100 that Tom Keating first suggested) then you have the makings of a very useful, portable phone system. I don't know how much more one needs.

The only rub has been when I fire up my HotSpotVPN, which seems to disrupt things. I plan on getting XTEN and HotSpotVPNs Glynn Taylor talking as their has to be a fix possible. It's just software. As for BroadVoice, they have rapidly become an easy to reccomend provider, in the same league as CallVantage. Their quality is superior to Vonage, and they provide incredible support. That, and they're very nice people to boot makes them the kind of company that's hard not to like. 

March 22, 2005

Voice over WiMax A Threat

I have regularly expressed the opinion that VoIP and VoWiFi is a compliment to cellular companies. Now an analyst firm in the UK says VoWiMax is a threat to them.

I tend to agree since the new companies in the WiMax game will not initially be the same companies. This is all about competition. Eventually the existing global players will acquire the WiMax companies. In some cases they will be the same, but different divisions. This is how cellular began, especially in the USA.

I personally see new players using new and emerging technologies as good for competition, and of benefit to the enterprise and the end user, especially if it drives prices down to commodity pricing levels.

March 16, 2005

Scam Deliverd By Skype

EuroTelcoblog's James Enck discovers a flaw in the Skype multi user chat system and waxes on about it.

One of the aspects of Skype I see is some type of social networking feature being overlayed with it. The Pulver Communicator already has this type of feature built in but until the type of trust system that is available with LinkedIn or ZeroDegrees type of operations, I don't think Skype should let this type of technology be authorized.

Why? Skype's firewall penetration technology is very good at poking the hole through the firewall and even though you trust your friend, I don't think third party trust is really there just yet.

March 11, 2005

On Mobile VoIP

Answering the Mobile TéliPhone is a story about a mobile VoIP play coming out of Montreal. The idea is simple, VoIP + WiFi phone.

I'm a big proponent of this and think that the giants like AT&T and soon to be AOL need to move in this direction too.

March 10, 2005

Tehrani on The Blogging Panel

Rich had a few minutes to sit in on part of the Blogging Panel at VON. I appreciate the kudos and his recognition of the creative approach I took.

I'll have to come up with a gimmick for the next one, if Pulver's folks invite me back.

March 09, 2005

BroadVoice Gets A New WiFi HandSet Partner

Broadvoice is working with the same partner as Vonage for WiFi handsets. Given the better quality and higher levels of customer service that Broadvoice offers, those wanting a WiFi phone may want to look in their direction.

While Vonage has market share, Broadvoice as with VoicePulse and Net2Phone all offer this feature and more features on the back end that mobile professionals will want.

March 08, 2005

Net2Phone Pushing WiFi Phone Service

Net2Phone has formally introduced their WiFi service. I've been evaluating this for a few months off and on and have to say it works and the quality is on par with other carriers who offer the same think like VoicePulse and Broadvoice.

The issue remains the phone. I think the initial phone is really first generation. Once the new phones from US Starcom come along, like the one I saw I the LibreTel booth that will come carrier agnostic this will all change.

March 03, 2005

Skype and WiFi for Free Calls

Today's announcement about Skype and WiFi seems to be one more supporting effort by companies that want to compete with the mobile/cellular carriers.

EuroTelcoblog's James Enck has some interesting views on Skype as always.

In many ways the skype Broadreach announcement is no different than Boingo going with TelSym, as both are non standard. I fully expect that T-Mobile, Cingular and others will opt for a SIP based platform, once they wake up to the fact that there are ways to still manage the customer relationship and make more money.

March 01, 2005

Wireless VoIP on The Rise

In an announcement today that may have some wireless companies looking over the shoulders, Towestream announced wide area WiFi VoIP roaming with successful handoffs between access points. The WiFi VoIP product sounds to me like a pre-WiMax type of offering, sort of a proof of concept of what is and what may be.

Wireless king Craig McCaw is still betting on his ClearWire venture.

February 21, 2005

Free2Innovate.net: Too Much Too Soon May Mean Less Later

Free2Innovate.net: Too Much Too Soon May Mean Less Later has a recap of an Associated Press report on VoIP, VoIP regulation and the potential impact on jobs.

February 20, 2005

GSM - watch VoIP

GSM - watch VoIP--James Seng in Singapore has a post about GSM, WiFi and VoIP. He quotes Mike Mulica CEO of Bridgeport Networks. If you are not familiar with Bridgeport they have some of the smartest guys in the crossover biz involving Mobile and VoIP.

I keep watching this company closely and am never amazed by what they do, because they are the kind of company you want expect them to do great things. Between their Management team's background and the technology they are creating plus their insight, makes them idea experts in the convergence space.

February 19, 2005

A Wireless Downtown

CheetahWireless out of Las Vegas made the city of Encinitas CA's downtown area wireless. It's gotten me to go there every day the last four days for breakfast or lunch. The idea of being always on does have it's limits but with the frantic pace of late on multiple fronts it has been a real time saver in many ways for me. I'm on so many deadlines right now, that being connected this way, and via EVDO, Blackberry, home WiFi and even on my Sprint card really is worth it.

WiMAX Has Potential to Transform Telecom Markets

WiMAX Has Potential to Transform Telecom Markets is a report from inStat. I've been holding back on WiMax coverage but plan on looking at it more closely.

I think WiMax has significant transformational potential for telecom, especially for rural areas in the USA that are greatly under-served by the broadband providers.

The idea of a mesh like canopy of always on will lead to all types of advances in the ways people communicate, but at the same time spur the need for less server intensive application processes. Things like voice mail storage, file sharing and file transfer will be what first happens. Just like VoIP, it will be the applications which drive the acceptance of WiMax. For companies like Qualcomm, WiMax is a direct threat to EVDO and CDMA.  With the current consolidation in wireless going on not only in the USA, but around the world, the opportunity for new players to enter the game is larger now than ever before. That said, if the cable MSOs could grasp the potential of WiMax they would have a very significant market offering that allows them to be head to head with the telcos on end to end communications in an always connected universe

February 16, 2005

Skype and BenQ Pocket PC

Skype keeps rolling into the cell phone marketplace with another deal. First was iMate, then Motorola. Now it's with BenQ. The BenQ P50, is offering free Wi-Fi Skype calls, will be promoted and available from BenQ's website and retail shops throughout Taiwan beginning in April

February 14, 2005

More on WiFi Phoning

WNN Europe Archives a part of the WiFi NetNews and jiWire group of sites has some facts and figures on WiFi phoning...

February 12, 2005

Wi-Fi Comes to Blackberry

Wi-Fi Comes to Blackberry and I can't wait to switch over to this. I don't have voice on my T-Mobile Blackberry, but I do use it for email, especially when I'm in Europe.

The implications of using a softphone vs. a cell phone, especially in the enterprise are huge.

SIPthat.com: Consolidating Telcos

SIPthat.com: Consolidating Telcos is a call for a VoIP Revolution.

I wonder if it will be televised?

February 03, 2005

I New VoIP-Enabled Roaming Client from PCTEL

Information Week > VoIP > New VoIP-Enabled Roaming Client > February 2, 2005

Just as Bridgeport Networks does things inside the network, this works at the handset level as a piece of software. I see the convergence of WiFi, VoIP and Wireless coming...and you wonder why SBC bought AT&T. While I'm sure there are more reasons, I'll leave that to the Om Malik's of the world who are far better than I at analyzing the numbers and politics of telco.

The New York Times also weighs in on why WiFi will be a big voice play.