VoIP Gets A Big Backer And Another Lawsuit 169
Ungrounded Lightning writes "Time Warner Cable has announced plans to roll out a VoIP telephone service. I see two implications. First: ISPs providing VoIP phone service have a competitive advantage over third-party VoIP/PSTN providers (such as Vonage), who must ride on top of a separate broadband subscription for the packet transport. This could lead to consolidation of this industry segment in the hands of ISPs. Second: Cable ISPs have an advantage over Telco DSL operations - where a VoIP offering would cannibalize their own POTS and short-range long-distance revenue. This implies rollout on cable providers first, followed by harder times for telcos, long-distance companies, and third parties."
chipperdog writes "In this article it is mentioned that the small rural phone companies in North Dakota are filing a complaint against a local VoIP provider, CallSmart. Interesting to see how this one works out, given what happened in Minnesota a few months ago."
mixed bag (Score:5, Interesting)
I think government and telcos need to realized that VOIP can and shouldn't be regulated anymore than any internet-based service. Governments need to find other revenue streams than regulatory fees....just my $.02
Re:mixed bag (Score:5, Interesting)
Actually, you can get UNLIMITED (North America) for $20 from packet8.net [packet8.net]. Seriously, Packet8 should subcontract all of the independent geeks out there and offer $25/month service with a $5/month comission to the installer. I recently set up a 4-line packet8 system for a partner's (at my employer) home. It is saving him approximately $700/month over PSTN and I'm wishing that I'd get a piece of that aside from the initial fee that I charged...
It is only a matter of time before the wireless routers out there start building in SIP/2.4ghz cordless phone functionality. I'll laugh if I ever buy a Linksys or Netgear cordless phone.
Sigh...
Re:mixed bag (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:mixed bag (Score:5, Interesting)
Interestingly enough, my provider is offering VoIP in a PARTNERSHIP with Vonage for $25/month (500 LD minutes) or $35/month unlimited. Personally, I think this is the way ALL providers should do it -- partner with a third party company.
Re:mixed bag (Score:3)
Cost savings with VoIP (Score:5, Interesting)
The other added benefit is that I would be responsible for phone traffic, also, in that it would be routed through the normal network. More job security...heh.
Re:Cost savings with VoIP (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Cost savings with VoIP (Score:5, Funny)
Even better, no more calls during the middle of weekend when the network goes down!
Re:Cost savings with VoIP (Score:5, Interesting)
We did a VOiP rollout. We are a 6,000 person local government agency that is in the middle of a rollout. It is great - we are using the phones from Cisco and we have a tremendous ROI.
Of course, it does help that we have a Gigabit backbone. But I have seen some of our telecom guys walking around with a phone from Cisco that is an IPPhone when in range of a WAP for our network, and a regular cell-phone otherwise. Pretty sweet.
If anyone wants more info, you can email me at foyc at hillsboroughcounty dot org
Re:Cost savings with VoIP (Score:5, Informative)
No you didn't.
The Cisco 7920 Wireless IP Phone [cisco.com] does not at this time do anything but 2.4GHz 802.11b. It has no cell phone functionality, although this has been discussed as a possible next-generation product direction (as well as some possible OEM agreements with PDA makers).
This phone is a pretty solid product, albeit a little light on battery life. This comment is ironic, as the original delays on the product (to the tune of about 10 months) while Cisco worked on the battery life.
There are two main competitors in the Wireless IP Space:
Re:Cost savings with VoIP (Score:2)
You may be right about this. They may have said that it is supposed to do that in the future, and I thought they meant now. Though we do spend a *lot* of money on Cisco, so they may have had a beta phone. If I find out more I will post it
Re:Cost savings with VoIP (Score:1)
Re:Cost savings with VoIP (Score:3)
Any manager who saw those figures and decided to NOT go with VOIP is either a moron, in bed with the telco, or there's some other costs you're not including (support, support personell for the VOIP hardware, etc).
Re:Cost savings with VoIP (Score:2)
The guys who do it right will end up on top. I think companies with broadband infrastructure in place will have an advantage; Telcos, LD and Cable companies.
So, when your web
More info (Score:2)
Maybe I'm stupid... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Maybe I'm stupid... (Score:2)
Re:Maybe I'm stupid... (Score:2)
The "1 is a toll call prefix" was used in some places. 1-xxx-xxxx and 1-xxx-xxx-xxxx. It helped people with the surprises on their phone bills. It's been depracated for a while.
And don't get me started on "local toll" calls.
Brilliant! (Score:5, Funny)
So when your cable service is interrupted, you can't call 'em to tell 'em you lost your TV signal! Think of the money they'll save on customer no-service!
You won't need to call. (Score:2)
They'll notice that they're suddenly not getting calls from a given area. If it's just you, you use your neighbors phone. And if you don't have a neighbor, well, you don't have cable either.
Re:Brilliant! (Score:2)
Wireless in Local Loop? (Score:2)
Re:Wireless in Local Loop? (Score:2)
Re:Wireless in Local Loop? (Score:4, Informative)
So? Cable is unreliable (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:So? Cable is unreliable (Score:2, Informative)
i have comcast that stays up pretty much all the time. its been down like twice in 31/2 years. plus i get better than dial-up or dsl speeds (3.5x1, yay). and i actually pull those speeds.
i also work for a major DSL ISP/POTs provider (yeah, i dont have it, that should say something) and trust me POTs is NOT more reliable than cable. its down all the time and is usually effected much more so by weather than wonderful cable.
at any rate i no lon
Re:So? Cable is unreliable (Score:3, Insightful)
Also, one other thing... I use the internet a lot. I am pretty much on it many hours (especially since I'm unemployed
Re:So? Cable is unreliable (Score:2)
DSL with Covad and/or Flashcom was superbly reliable. Not as fast as cable, but I never, ever, had any problems with it.
When I moved and Covad couldn't service me, I went with Qwest DSL. Big mistake. The connection was always reliable, but the problem was the ISP was not. Who was the ISP? MSN of all companies. Never again will I e
Re:So? Cable is unreliable (Score:2)
Probably because of the price difference.
For example, you might:
does cable really have an advantage? (Score:5, Interesting)
If it rains, we have an outage.
If the weather's hot, we have an outage.
If our cat farts within ten feet of the modem, we have an outage.
Yes, I like my cable modem for the download speed, but I won't give them my phone service anytime soon. Calling tech support is often an exercise in futility.
BTW - I have no land line, my wife and I use wireless only. It's not as reliable as a land line, but it's actually cheaper and works pretty damn well.
Alan.
Re:does cable really have an advantage? (Score:2)
Where I am, the Comcast plant, ex-MediaOne, is in good shape, and well maintained. I get phone service off of it and reliability is better than VeriZontal's. This is not VoIP, just TDM/FDM cable telephony. The cable modem's pretty reliable too, though there are sometimes outage -- most often upstream, getting to the Internet backbone. On the other hand I've known cable systems whose raison d'etre seemed to be to make VeriZontal look good. It doesn't hurt that I'
Well, the real issue is... (Score:2)
As for reliability, I Can't remember the last time my cable TV was out, although my cable modem had its issues until they installed a booster - the frequency your cable modem signal
CallSmart==pretty stupid? (Score:1)
you have to have a valid account (Score:1)
competition? (Score:4, Insightful)
I could be wrong, but I think that one of capitalism's biggest problems is industries that require a large infrastructure. I know that socialist approaches to most things tend to be less efficient (due to the lack of competition), but in a case like this I think it's better, since to get REAL competition we need multiple infrastructures reaching every single house, the cost of which of course would still get passed on to the consumer.
Re:competition? (Score:2)
But isn't the purpose in competition consumer benefit? Actually, competi
Re:competition? (Score:2)
first of all (Score:4, Funny)
I think Cheech would like VoIP. I mean tihnk about it who doesn't cannibus tehir own pots or place cannibus in POTS or something.
When I finish smoking tihs doob I'll come back to this post dude.
Nobody wins yet... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Nobody wins yet... (Score:4, Interesting)
Cable ISPs have no experience running a teleco, but they have a marginal technical advantage over a non-ISP VoIP provider simply because of better network routing
Actually, I think that, by owning the network end point (i.e. the consumer VoIP gateway) as well as all of the switching fabric between the end point and the VoIP-to-POTS gateway, the ISP has a substantial advantage in terms of quality of service.
Think about it this way: by using the QoS features that come with the switches, the ISP could guarantee a much better user experience for their customers, while third-party VoIP providers would have to trust best effort. (In fact, if they ISPs are less-than-moral, they could also use QoS on their network to ensure that they had better voice quality than any competitors that also rode their network.)
they already have the most important thing - (Score:1)
Telco regulation is so bass ackwards (Score:2)
As a US citizen I am both pissed off, and embarrased this is how my country is helping us "advance" telco technology and telco business models.
-Pete
Re:Telco regulation is so bass ackwards (Score:1)
Are you embarassed enough to do something about it beyond complaining? If not, consider yourself part of the problem.
Re:Telco regulation is so bass ackwards (Score:3, Informative)
Under FCC guidelines (not formally "rules" yet, a phone to phone nonlocal call that crosses state lines is properly treated as long distance, whether or not it happens to use IP, ATM, or smoke signals in the middle of it. The local phone companies are thus allowed to charge "switched access" charges, rather than local; for a rural company, those charges can be quite stiff. CallSmart is claiming that their phone-to-phone service is
cable's core business could be attacked as well (Score:3, Interesting)
Take the number of stations within sixty miles of you and double it. That's the approximate number of sources of free programming. The advertising revenue will come back into the community too. You can subscribe to specialized stuff on broadband. Wrestling, Celebrity sports, E!, all the shit you so desperately need.
Re:cable's core business could be attacked as well (Score:2)
Why? Digital TV just gets you the same channels that are already available in analog broadcasts. The fact that so few people watch analog broadcast TV should tell you that people aren't satisfied with those channels. And why would Baby Bells give away TV tuners?
Take the number of stations within sixty miles of you and double it.
Are you saying that digital
you should read about it then (Score:1)
Re:cable's core business could be attacked as well (Score:2)
Yeah, who even watches local TV anymore except retirees who don't have cable? The only channels I ever watch anymore are Sci-Fi, Discovery, and TLC. I'd just laugh if the local phone monopoly tried pushing TV tuners that could only receive the lo
Phone companies shouldn't feel threatened (Score:2, Interesting)
That's because a lot of customers using VoIP for international phone calls wouldn't make those calls using conventional phone services anyway. I know I wouldn't. If VoIP was not available, and I need to keep in touch often with
Re:Phone companies shouldn't feel threatened (Score:3, Insightful)
Things may get back to normal for the industry as a whole, but the telcos will not survive the transition to VoIP due to their massive amount of capital assets which are becoming increasingly worthless.
Remember when (Score:1)
Everybody has to ride their (telco) depreciating capital assets to get from here to there. VOIP uses the same infrastructure unless new infrastructure has *magically* appeared.
The Cable infrastructure is not maintained at the same level of the phone company. That's why people complain a lot.
It has all happend before (Score:1)
It's all economics (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm not sure if the price difference is really warranted because the technology behind your old-style phones is fairly mature. It seems like they're gouging you out of pure greed because of the monopolistic control phone companies have.
Or local Verizon in my area is about $35 for no-frills nothing service.
Compare that with my cellular verizon service which is about the same price except with voicemail, caller ID, "free" longdistance because they must remain competitive with other cellular carriers.
VoIP is a frightening technology and I would prefer if it was avoided. But when you're a struggling small business and are looking at reversing your cash flow hundreds of dollars per month you really don't have any choice at all.
Re:It's all economics (Score:2, Insightful)
There is no Altruism in VOIP (Score:5, Interesting)
Taxes that apply to current voice tariffed services do not apply to "data" services the same way.
Since all the carriers are actually carrying most, if not all of their "voice" traffic by the same methods, on the same kind of equipment as "data", there is money to be made carrying voice but calling it data.
Very little infrastructure remains circuit switched and is now packet switched like data. Much of this was driven by the requirements for pumping a bunch of traffic over fiber; WDM, DWDM etc.
Now the efforts are clearly to pave the way for providers to pocket the difference or most of it; this difference being the amounts charged to the customer which are turned over to the government as taxes.
If you pay $100 per month for "voice" services and $30 of that is taxes, and you switch to VOIP for $85 without taxes, you save $15 at the same time the provider makes an additional $15.
And this doesn't even address the investment tax credits and "cost of doing business" deductions the providers enjoy for building up the ability to offer new services.
So what we have is a bunch of people angling for position in the inevitable VOIP fray.
Some are clearly innovators.
Some want to be first just to stake a claim for later work.
Some have deep pockets but nothing else to offer. So they are about to expend massive legal fees and efforts to keep others out of the game.
If you can't innovate; Litigate.
The end result will ultimately be that the average customer spends about the same as they do right now. How the fees are assessed will look different, but the bottom line will be pretty much the same.
The providers will then benefit or fail based upon how successful their legal tactics were in creating, sustaining or closing tax loopholes in order to benefit their bottom line.
There is no altruism in the move to VOIP.
Cheaper to run, but same quality? (Score:3, Interesting)
With the IP phones I lose my train of thought because I feel like I'm talking to myself rather than into a phone. It weirds me out. Do all IP phones take away the echo, or is it just the kind we have?
Re:Cheaper to run, but same quality? (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Cheaper to run, but same quality? (Score:1)
Thanks.
Re:Cheaper to run, but same quality? (Score:2)
The main purpose of sidetone, by the way, is to help you control the level of your voice. Secondarily it also lets you know that the phone is working, removing a distraction.
causes communication issues for me (Score:1)
It is possible that being able to hear yourself is linked to speech patterns. I understand that stuttering may be related to this in some strange way.
Re:Cheaper to run, but same quality? (Score:3, Informative)
POTS won't die for a while... (Score:5, Insightful)
A couple of things to consider:
- You need broadband and not everybody has it, can get or will ever want it
- Cable and DSL (especially cable according ot my own experience) are definitely not as stable as POTS. They are next to useless when power is out unless you AND you proveider have UPS
- Emergency services are still an issue with VoIP. I'm expecting the first headline about someone dying because 911 wasn't available on VoIP anytime now.
- There is still no end to end QoS on VoIP. Home gateways are still too dumb to prioritize VoIP trafficover your Pr0n traffic.
It's only a matter of time (Score:3, Informative)
I don't see how this apparently diverse market of Free/cheap QoS is going to somehow limit VoIP? End to end QOS is necessary, so ISPS will provide it, Why? Because your ISP will be your provide
Power on a phone line (Score:2)
To heck with 911 availability. As mentioned by many, power outages aren't friendly to cable. In fact, they're not friendly to the internet at all.
Telephone lines have a voltage to them, which means that unless the phone line is severed, even having no power doesn't mean you can't call out.
The scenario I see is that somebody is *fixing* a bad wire, whate
Re:POTS won't die for a while... (Score:2)
Or vice versa..
"damnit grandma, I can't talk right now, it's interfering with a *very* important download.."
Cable companies != common carrier. Beware. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Cable companies != common carrier. Beware. (Score:1)
It also means they will have to invest in updating their rotting infrastructure. Also, those little booster boxes will have to have batteries for backup.
Sprint and MCI [anonymized] (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Sprint and MCI [anonymized] (Score:3, Informative)
Now, I'm not sure who's going to do the final VoIP-> POTS integration, or who's handling that...but it was my understanding that Time Warner was going to piggyback this on their DOCSIS network -- one of the reasons they they bumped up RoadRunner to 3 Megs Up/Down bandwidth.
From a Technician's stand point, I really hope that before Time Warner goe
VoIP in office setting (Score:3, Informative)
You really have to be careful about the data network though. We have near-dedicated bandwidth from our data provider, which is why quality is good. Forget about trying to serve business class users with VoIP over cable modem or DSL -- the quality goes to hell when someone tries to download a large file. The QoS really has to take place upstream of you (at the point of the bottleneck). Otherwise it doesn't achieve much.
VoIP: No Excise Taxes (Score:5, Informative)
I'm curious to see what alliances will be formed: local governments and the phone company on the same side for once, against cable providers and possibly the FCC. It could be a real dog fight.
Why have a landline at all? (Score:3, Informative)
And to boot, its all about 10 bucks cheaper / month than the landline was ( 300 anytime minutes + unlimited evening and weekend + unlimited long distance - who uses more than 300 minutes during the weekdays? You're probably at work and using the company phone).
Seriously I don't know why people bother with landlines. The solicitations alone were enough to drive me away.
Re:Three numbers... (Score:2)
These have been available for a long time now. And according to this article all Sprint phones have this capability.
http://www.compukiss.com/populartopics/tech_gad
Home VOIP abyssmal shared performance (Score:1, Flamebait)
http://www.bigbruin.com/html/dlinkdvg1120.htm
The tester had a home cable connection where he saw nearly 6000k download rate and almost 1000k upload until he plugged in the gateway.
Simply plugging it in ate up 700k of download speed.
But the real killer came when he actually USED the phone:
Download=75K
Upload=39k
Basically, the use of VOIP ate up 99% of the bandwidth of a very fast connection.
For those with the
Let VOIP stand on it's own (Score:1)
Also if your worried as a business for service get 2 diffrent access providers. I bet that will get you security in your phone system. Especially where I live phone lines are on poles and tend to get hit by trees in storms. Data lines however are underground and not nearly as
The only choice for consumers (Score:3, Insightful)
At the consumer end of the spectrum, copper works fine for voice calls, and is required for DSL. So there is no clear advantage for VOIP over DSL. But with cable, the TV line that has already been expanded to carry data can now carry voice. Big win for cable network owners.
I don't really care though, I've been a cell user for years. Would be nice if Nokia could work on the stability of the 3650 though
Horrible idea (Score:2)
Go to your telco and actually pay for at least a PRI people.
Latency? (Score:1)
I have two high-speed circuits and I am a Vonage subscriber. My main router box is configured to use the DSL route for voice; the wireless link gave me too much drop-out.
Is my experience with Cable circuits atypical, or have others experienced the same thing. And is anybody using a VoIP service over cable who can report?
Critical 911 services...over cable? (Score:4, Interesting)
This is really why (aside from reasonable rates for customers) that the Telcos are regulated - and fined heavily if they screw it up.
Dialtone uptimes will be hard to manage for current cable networks - given the current traffic patterns as well as the poor scalability vis-a-vis DSL.
Finally, don't worry about the Telcos; most if not all of them are already leveraging these new technologies in various creative ways to make copper wire a value added proposition into the forseable future. Don't overlook SDSL rollouts over the horizon - and who knows what is on the drawing boards. Given that copper wire touches more homes than cable - who do you think is really in a better position to take advantage of broadband communications of all types in the long term? Who do you think critical government agencies and emergency services are going to trust with their external communications gateways?
I will leave those answers as an exercise for the user...
Re:Critical 911 services...over cable? (Score:2)
Huh? Since when did telcos have reasonable rates? Last time I checked, it was cheaper to use a cellphone than a landline, and the cellphone companies don't treat you like crap when you call customer service like Qwest does.
Re:Critical 911 services...over cable? (Score:2)
Cox Digital Telephone VoIP Service (Score:2)
This [com.com] is also a good reference from CNet.
VoIP: Been there, Done that, Welcome to Canada. (Score:3, Informative)
VoIP is already here... it's just that the USA lags leading telco providers by about three years!
Re:VoIP: Been there, Done that, Welcome to Canada. (Score:2)
TELUS -- ONE OF CANADA'S MAIN TELCOS -- USES VOIP FOR ALL ITS LONG DISTANCE TRAFFIC.
If you are in BC, Alberta, Ontario, Quebec, or whereever else Telus operates, and you place a long-distance call, that call is done using VoIP.
It's live, it's working, it's got QoS guarantees up the wazoo, and it's been here for at least a year.
Re:VoIP: Been there, Done that, Welcome to Canada. (Score:2)
Why Minnesota? (Score:3, Funny)
Not knowing what you were talking about I did a quick search on Minnesota and you're right. This is the most exciting event in the history of the World compared to what has happened in Minnesota in the past few months.
Already done in Rochester, NY (Score:2, Interesting)
The Big Win (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:WRONG (Score:1, Troll)
Doesn't really make much business sense...
Re:WRONG (Score:3, Informative)
Re:WRONG (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:RIAA sound familiar? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:RIAA sound familiar? (Score:2)
It is nothing new (Score:2)
Don't you see some irony in this statement? (Score:2)
Businesses will attempt to seize market domination and then use their political influence to maintain their monopolistic positions. This will never change, the only we can do is make sure that we have laws in place to protect against it.
In many cases, the same thing that you are looking at to rectify the situation is the very problem that's creating it - more laws. There is an econmic theory called "rent seeking" that businesses will get laws passed to maintain or increase profits. Less regulation fre
Re:RIAA sound familiar? (Score:3, Insightful)
There are very valid points as to why VOIP have unfair advantages over POTS. IMHO, too many people are jumping on the VOIP bandwagon because it is "new" and because they are the "little guy" fighting
Re:RIAA sound familiar? (Score:2)
Re:RIAA sound familiar? (Score:1, Interesting)
The big issue at this point in time is government regulation. In the U.S., when AT&T was broken up, and in Canada when deregulation took place, there was (and continues to be) a valid concern that Bell would use their dominant posi
Re:RIAA sound familiar? (Score:2)
That's paying though the nose?
You're in Canada and you're complaining about taxes? You live in a socialist country!
Re:RIAA sound familiar? (Score:2)
It's called "Profit by Legislation," and it pisses me off. Anyone's eligible for being entered into that category, however, it's really hard to determine the people who would fit. For starters, the DMCA, CAN-SPAM, that kinda thing.
Between that and the total erosion of my civil liberties, I'm thinking that maybe the Netherlands are a better place to live
Ian