Qwest & Cablevision Launch VoIP Service 109
securitas writes "Qwest announced that it will be the first RBOC to offer VoIP service to its customers, starting with Minnesota. Not to be outdone, Cablevision launched VoIP service for its '1 million high-speed Internet customers in the lucrative New York market.' Cablevision's Tom Rutledge said the company plans to take advantage of last Monday's FCC local-number portability ruling that lets customers keep their phone numbers when switching service providers. Qwest plans to challenge the local-number portability ruling. It looks like the disruptive technology hype that surrounded VoIP in the late-1990s is about to see its first real litmus test."
suprise (Score:2, Insightful)
Adaptation (Score:3, Insightful)
Corporate logic (Score:5, Insightful)
If you can't beat them, sue them!
Seriously thought, VoIP isn't a new thing. I myself use it frequently to talk to my fiancee in the US - as I've have broadband I don't pay any extra to call her, and as she don't pay for local calls* she don't have to pay anything either. The option - picking up my phone and dial her number - would cost me a staggering 9 cents a minute, as well as gobbling up her 'long distance minutes'** (I would have to use her mobile phone; as much as I like my motehr in law, I don't want her to be able to listen in, and as the phone is in the kitchen...). I'm happy to see that the US is taking up numberportability thought - somethign we've enjoyed for years now. The next step they are introdusing here seems to be the ability to take your number along even if you move from one end of the nation to the other.
_*) This is the one issue which I think the US telecomsystem is better than the norwegian one.
**) What kind of idiot decided that _you_ should pay when someone calls you? As long as y'all accepts that, you'll be getting screwed bigtime by your telcos.
Re:Corporate logic (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Corporate logic (Score:2)
incoming calls dont get charged long distance minutes
Re:Corporate logic (Score:1)
Its b/c they're using homogonised phone numbers. Ie cell phones don't have their own dialing code like the UK (which uses 07###), for all intensive purposes a cell number is the same as a land line in the US. A caller wouldn't know if they were calling a cell phone and wouldn't know if they would incur extra charges. It was deemed unfair the the person
Re:Corporate logic (Score:1)
intents and purposes.
INTENTS AND PURPOSES.
Re:suprise (Score:2)
Seriously. Actually, now that this is hitting closer to home for more Americans - (Remember, Joe Sixpack doesn't care that Diebold is suing people to prevent them from saying they suck; nor does he care about some Russian guy arrested by Adobe) - more people will realize that companies will just automatically sue instead of doing something to fix the problem Hopefully these frivolous lawsuits will be brought to th
What a concept! (Score:1, Funny)
The apparent trend in the industry (Score:4, Interesting)
We are now agressively working towards a partnership with AvenTail to compete with Netscreen and Cisco. Our goal is to make phone access a commodity; we will target the content of the phone conversations as a potential revenue source or provide it as medium for advertisers. Our initial research showed that people were willing to tolerate commercials of certain amount of length in return for crystal-clear free (or very inexpensive) long-distance calls.
We have the product and with some luck we'll be able to get the cooperation of smaller CLECs in the mid-western area for a pilot.
Which is nice.
Re:The apparent trend in the industry (Score:2, Funny)
oh boy, here it comes. Telemarketing's last revenge.
Re:The apparent trend in the industry (Score:3, Insightful)
I would rather pay $0.02/minute for my LD voice instead of listening to a 30 second ad everytime I wanted to make a call. My time is worth MUCH more that $0.02/minute
If your business plan is truly based on advertising, I recommend you learn how to say 'Would you like fries with that?'
Re:The apparent trend in the industry (Score:3, Insightful)
Your research is WRONG. pop up ads don't work on the web, the certainly will not work on a voice call. Maybe I should patent 'voice pop unders' so x10 can't use them.....
How would pre-call advertising be labeled as a pop-up ad? It's not an advertisement IN THE MIDDLE OF THE CALL.
What he describes is like Moviefone, people call in and listen to ads before they can g
Re:The apparent trend in the industry (Score:1, Funny)
I have bad news about the BBS world of FidoNet too.
Re:The apparent trend in the industry (Score:3, Interesting)
I read this as "we will listen in on your conversation for keywords and then but in with targeted advertising", am I wrong?
I can just see it now, I pick up the phone to make a call after my housemate gets off and hear "We've heard you're interested in herpes, would you like to try the new medication wart-b-gone?"
Re:The apparent trend in the industry (Score:2)
Re:The apparent trend in the industry (Score:2)
911 (Score:4, Insightful)
Does it link your number (ip?) with your address?
I think 911-protection is keeping a lot of us from switching...
Maybe now that we can transfer our phone number... we'll soon be able to transfer our 911 protection as well.
Davak
Re:911 (Score:4, Insightful)
but any old cellphone(with working battery) will do for that(at least here, any gsm phone from the last 10y can be used for for emergency numbers, no need to have a sim card either).
.
Re:911 (Score:2)
Re:911 (Score:3, Informative)
the call centre that is closest to the cell your phone is using at the moment gets the call. satellite phones might be bit more problematic in this sense though.
Re:911 (Score:2)
Can you explain what this means? I know 911 is your emergency telephone number for the police etc., but what do you mean by "transfer our 911 protection"?
Re:911 (Score:4, Informative)
In most areas of the US, dialing 911 will connect you to a local police/fire/ambulance dispatcher. The 911 system reports your incoming phone number to the dispatch computer system, and it automatically brings up your address at the dispatcher's computer screen.
If you were to call 911, and could not stay on the line to speak to the dispatcher (perhaps you dialed while having a dizzy spell then passed out, or perhaps a criminal took the phone from you and hung up) the police will be dispatched to your home. Most every parent of a toddler has had the experience of the police coming to their door after the child has been playing with the phone.
When you are using a mobile technology, your protection is reduced. If you call 911 from a cell phone and don't stay on the line, the police have no way of determining your exact location. The probably know that you are within a few square mile area around the base station that received the call, but that is all.
Likewise, some of the VoIP carriers such as vonage [vonage.com] can't determine your location either. You can take your vonage unit and plug it into any broadband internet connection anywhere in the world and call jsut as if you were in your house. Vonage offers a rudimentary 911 service that requires you to update your location, so that vonage can route a 911 call to the correct dispatcher.
Re:911 (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
It isn't really "911." (Score:5, Informative)
You almost always have to enable the service, after you've signed up, by providing a real physical address to your house. The service provider then determines your nearest Public Safety Answering Point (called PSAPs), which is what operators used to do when you dialed "0" and said "HELP!"
This is not the typical "911 Center" that most people would think it is, and they don't automatically have your address when you call. You'll likely have to state what type of emergency you have, wait on hold, and then provide them with your address.
Beyond all of this, Vonage, in particular, highly advises you to not depend on their 911 service. An outage on their behalf, upstream from them, of your broadband, or of your electricity would eliminate your ability to dial 911 from your Vonage service. There are many weak links in that chain, and they're smart to tell you so.
I read earlier that someone suggested picking up a wireless phone that has good signal but isn't subscribed to any particular service. Cell phones almost universally will dial 911 if they can, subscribed or not. (Double-check that, though.) There again, though, remember they'll likely not have your physical address.
All that said, if you have some higher-than-average-reason to need 911 services, I'd not depend on anything but an ILEC landline. (Even CLECs tend to save money by ditching the E911 tandem, which, even though unlikely, could cause a problem.)
justen
Re:It isn't really "911." (Score:2)
Even worse, in Minnesota it's been the source of more than one newspaper article that 911 on cell phones goes the State Highway Patrol dispatcher, not the the local 911 service. I don't know i
Re:It isn't really "911." (Score:2)
Re:911 (Score:2, Funny)
Define "a lot". I personally wouldn't switch unless I could realize meaningful cost savings, and would not sacrifice reliability. Quite frankly, I don't consider any home computer to be reliable simply because it has to broad a range of tasks.
If I didn't have 911, I could just as easily tape a list of important numbers to my phone, or program them into the phone's memory.
555-DORK (Score:2)
Let's hope when you hear your neighbor shouting "Oh God he isn't breathing" from the street at 2:17 AM, you can be calm enough to walk into the other room to find the one phone you taped this set of numbers on -- and you haven't worn the numbers off in your daily use so that you can't read them in the dim light without the glasses you can't find. When I heard that voice, I was damn glad it was just 911.
911 is the m
Re:911, same as cell phones (Score:1)
Until then however, your 911 is not activated and you must wait for a confirmation email once you do register confirm
Re:911 (Score:3, Informative)
Packet8 doesn't support [packet8.net]
Re:911 (Score:1)
There is no reliable way to link an IP to physical locatoin in a halfway decent amount of time.
There is a number of projects, such as this [uiuc.edu] one(there are many better projects out there, but this was one of the first I googled.)
You can generally get an area, but not with certain ranges, and certainly not specific addressing without either a re-write of a majority of hte structure of the internet, or mass forced cooperation with isps(would this even be feasible?)
I see 911 service in the fut
Re:911 (Score:2)
Whether or not the suppliers of VoIP would be required to abide by the same restrictions as the normal phone companies, including having operators, having emergency #'s, etc.
Since the federal ruling was they dont have to follow these rules (see link in original post), they likely dont have to supply 911 services.
don't bother calling 911 any more... (Score:1)
Re:911 (Score:3, Informative)
Just keep your existing land line connected. You won't have any regular service on it, but it will still give you 911.
Re:911 (Score:2)
I just got a vonage IP phone and couldn't be happier.
911 works like this. You have to manually submit your address for 911 service. Usually takes a day for the 911 records to be updates. After that, 911 works exactly the same as POTS.
Re:911 (Score:2)
Re:911 (Score:2)
Since I only use it at home, this arrangement is perfectly fine for me. If you travel around and use your VoIP phone from multiple locations, then it isn't going to give you appropiate levels of 911 servic
Telcos Win? (Score:5, Interesting)
So have the telcos won due to the long gestation period of wide spread VOIP. Other than international callers, or those who shun cell phones, what reason would one have for going with VOIP. Personally the one thing that keeps me attached to my land line, is more of the "comfort" of having such an old tried and true technology around "just in case" (redundancy good). That and it still serves as the "family" phone number for inbound calls. And with cellular home distribution gadgets coming online, even that use will slowly be eliminated.
Re:Telcos Win? (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Telcos Win? (Score:2, Insightful)
Really? What provider? I'd wager your "unlimited long distance" just means it doesn't cost you anything except your normal local minute charge. That's where the phone companies are raping us these days. Gon
Re:Telcos Win? (Score:2)
Weeee-lllll, if you're lucky enough to live in Vancouver BC, you've got a cell company offering US$29.93 (exchange rate of the moment on C$40.00) unmetered calling 24/7 right NOW. So pony up the extra $9.93 and live large, big guy.
http://www.cityfido.ca/
Re:Telcos Win? (Score:3, Insightful)
I just had a thought.. A large company usually buys a lot bigger bandwidth than it actually uses for the "just in case" periods. I wonder if there's a technology out there that will switch between VOIP to POT
Re:Telcos Win? (Score:2)
This would be kindof pointless. VOIP streams are small, so a large company would have to have a lot of POTS lines to use as a backup, negating the cost savings of VOIP. The excess bandwidth is cheaper than excess telephone lines.
Re:Telcos Win? (Score:2)
You're right that they'd probably need lots of POTS lines as backup. But by routing the calls through VOIP, they eliminate/reduce the long distance charges. So basically the point here is, maximize the use of current resour
Telcos Win? No (Score:2)
Re:Telcos Win? (Score:2)
Local-number portability gotcha (Score:3, Interesting)
But if you use local-number portability,
then something with your VOIP doesn't work,
you may not be able to switch things back.
Or am I missing something here?
Cheers, Joel
Re:Local-number portability gotcha (Score:2)
Re:Local-number portability gotcha (Score:1)
Tom
First? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:First? (Score:3, Interesting)
VoIP and Qwest (Score:3, Interesting)
This is still a new growing alternative communication technology which is correctly making use of a global connection as everything is fated to do. Cell phones already make use of this and research is working on a better computer to do this and really harness the power of the internet intelligently. I hope major corporate players who seem to have a tendacy to stiffle the competition and development of new technologies in the name of business do not destroy what is shaping to be a very good thing. True, the heavy hand of the government will get involved fiscally for their cut but we should all keep an eye on how corporate giants will try to abuse VoIP and brandish the tools they purchased in congress such as the DMCA.
Actually..... (Score:5, Interesting)
From the cable node or repeater on the telephone pole behind someone's house a new cable was ran (This isn't some Time Warner thing). Then the customer gets a new box put on the back of their house, the NID. The NID did all the frequency splitting and stuff, and has an IP address in it. All we had to do was hook up the already exsisting cable lines that were in the house and telco lines to the NID, and you had VoIP. You even got high speed internet access.
Qwest an RBOC? Since when? (Score:1)
Re:Qwest an RBOC? Since when? (Score:2, Informative)
The only company more irritating to deal with was (at the time) Bell Atlantic.
Re:Qwest an RBOC? Since when? (Score:2)
What always irritates me is that their on-line billing system shuts down on weekend evenings. That is right, you cannot pay your bill from 8pm saturday. Now I know I should be going out and having fun on a saturday, but sometimes I dont, and on those days I'd like to pay my phone bi
Re:Qwest an RBOC? Since when? (Score:2)
Qwest (which bought USWest) is at least as much an RBOC (Regional Bell Operating Company) as Verizon (formed by the merger of BellAtlantic and GTE) and SBC (PacificBell, Nevada Bell, Southwestern Bell and Ameritech).
Litmus test (Score:1, Offtopic)
This is a pretty good definition:
"A test that uses a single indicator to prompt a decision"
So there cannot be a "first litmus test". There is merely "a litmus test" and it's either "yes" or "no" and you're outta there.
Why not just write "... the disruptive technology hype that surrounded VoIP in the late-1990s is about to see its first real test." ?
thank you and have a nice day.
VOIP and ADT ??? (Score:3, Insightful)
Anyone have Vonage and ADT together?
Re:VOIP and ADT ??? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:VOIP and ADT ??? (Score:3, Informative)
Most VOIP will allow for 9600 or 14.4k calls (to support FAX), so it will probably work with modems. I know my DTV box works, and I've made 9600 bps data calls before.
But that's NOT how you want your alarm system connected. You really want GPRS or CDPD (being phased out) wireless data service where available. Most nicer alarm s
Super .. (Score:4, Funny)
Not Geeky Enough - more Tech info (Score:1, Interesting)
RBOC? (Score:2)
Doesn't everyone know all the acronyms?
Re:RBOC? (Score:2)
Wow. That's strange (Score:2)
Number Portability Key (Score:3, Insightful)
Of course, a larger part of the problem for VoIP solutions is that most of them are now being sold as an add-on to your existing telco service, something that's great for free long distance. With long distance costs falling like they are, though, unless VoIP providers can start acting as CLECs -- in other words, you buy their service, your phone needs are taken care of completely -- I doubt if many VoIP companies will survive. Though I'm not sure how this will happen as long as you have to provide a phone number before you can get broadband hooked up...
It's way cheaper if you use long distance... (Score:2)
The main players in VOIP right now offer free nationwide long distance for a flat rate - $20 a month for Packet8, $35 for Vonage. They also offer huge discounts on international calls. If you have, say, family in another state, or are in a long-distance relationship, or for some reason make a lot of long distance calls, it can be a good deal.
I just signed up for Packet8, haven't gotten the equiptment yet. Previously, I've just used a cell with nationwide long distance, but I get awful reception in my ne
so slashdot is actually good for you . . . . (Score:1)
woe is me (Score:1)
Lucky for me, I live in Minnesota and Qwest is our phone provider. Unlucky for me, Qwest is a bunch of a~~holes who provide DSL in my area, but just not at my house. Not only that, but half the time, it sounds like I'm talking on a cell phone in a tunnel. It gets really scratchy, and sometimes dial-up doesn't even work. On one hand, I want it to fail, because I hate Qwest. On the other hand, I want it to succeed because it'll make VoIP bigger than it is now. Decisions, decisions...
incripshin
Re:woe is me (Score:2)
This is not because they're assholes; it's the nature of the technology. If the copper loop from their CO to your house happens to be longer than 15,000 feet (the length of wire, not distance as the crow flies), there's a good chance you'll have a variety of problems from time to time, and it's just not economically feasible to try to provide you access. If they tried, they would almost certainly lose a lot
Easy VOIP. (Score:2)
Qwest isn't first (Score:2)
Why Qwest is doing it now...in Minnesota (Score:1)
Cablevision.... Ewwww.... (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
At leas the RBOC's..... (Score:3, Insightful)
The cable companies however don't have to open anything on thier networks, and locally, they have just as much a monopoly as your RBOC's. They get to sell cable, data and now telecom without ever having to allow competition onto thier networks-what a bargain.
Re:Why Qwest? (Score:2)
Re:Why Qwest? (Score:1)