Archive for January, 2007

Intelliverse Introduces New Channel Program for VoIP Service

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007

Intelliverse announced the launch of their new channel program yesterday.  callEverywhere is aimed at small to medium businesses and its goal is to assist customers with maximizing profitability and remaining competitive.

“Agents have the unique opportunity to partner with a company like Intelliverse that is both well-established and has innovative VoIP technology,” said Stacy Conrad, vice president of agent sales for Intelliverse. “We really value working with agents, which is why callEverywhere was set up as a channel only sales strategy. We feel we have created an agent program that is both innovative and advantageous to both parties.”

Intelliverse has been in business since 1986.  Additional details can be found in their press release.

Digium Founder Steps Aside

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007

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Windows Vista is Everywhere

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007

You’d have to live in seclusion to not know that Windows Vista was launched earlier this week, and I’m sure Bill Gates is smiling … the buzz is everywhere.  But is the wow now? 

KIDK TV in Idaho Falls is up first, talking about how few people were actually buying Windows Vista.  And the folks at CBS in Denver agree.  That being said, there are still the diehard fans that got in line in the middle of the night to get their copy - I’ll never understand that.  I’m sure there’s enough copies to go around, but that didn’t stop some people. 

The folks at RealTechNews are talking about a workaround for clean install that was discovered for Vista.  And better still, it’s been tested and it works!

Advertising Age talks about the very big $500 million marketing campaign Microsoft has undertaken to push Vista. 

The folks at Extreme Tech think that Windows Vista doesn’t suck.

Windows Vista has even made it into Wikipedia already!

Last February, Yahoo News! did a piece on the Top 10 Reasons to Buy Windows Vista - now that it’s out, were they right?

Gamers are already reporting glitches with Windows Vista.

The new release is expected to generate $3.5 billion in new revenue for the IT area in the Greater Washington DC area, and some 11,000 jobs.

Star News Online says to slow down … no rush to buy Vista.

And if that’s not enough, you can get more dish and dirt than you’ll ever want at the Windows Vista Team Blog.

Around the Blogosphere … Gizmo Call, Gizmo Call, Gizmo Call

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007

VoIP Blog - Tehrani starts us off this fine Wednesday with his thoughts on Gizmo Call.

VoIP Central picks up the Gizmo Call baton, sharing information on it as well.

Tom from the VoIP & Gadgets Blog chats about a VoIP phone appearing on QVC and the state of affairs with VoIP blogs in general.  Yup, there are a lot of them, but only the dedicated will survive. 

Andy from VoIP Watch takes on Fring and Gizmo Call.  Hmmm, maybe I should write about Gizmo Call too…?  Nah.

Heard of PoIP?  Yeah, I hadn’t either, until I stopped by VoIP Now.

And finishing us off today, one last post on Gizmo Call, this time from IP Telephony.

 

Back from Sunshine and IT Expo

Tuesday, January 30th, 2007

Fort%20Lauderdale.jpg I just returned from travels south, to Fort Lauderdale and Internet Telephony EXPO — and arrived in Winter in New York. It was bound to arrive at some point (although I thankfully missed the deep freeze, eight-degree temperatures of a couple of days ago).

The show was great — well-attended and full of good content in the conferences.  Jon Arnold and I spent some time together basking in the glow of our recent announcement.  See Jon’s post about show highlights.



I just returned from travels south, to Fort Lauderdale and Internet Telephony EXPO — and arrived in Winter in New York. It was bound to arrive at some point (although I thankfully missed the deep freeze, eight-degree temperatures of a couple of days ago).

The show was great — well-attended and full of good content in the conferences.  Jon Arnold and I spent some time together basking in the glow of our recent announcement.  See Jon’s post about show highlights.

sunburn.jpgAnd yes, I did spend a little time in the sun — and barely escaped serious harm. I keep forgetting that the Florida sun can burn you alive — even in the dead of winter…

  

Here are a few takeaways from the show  — a mix of events, observations, and the like:

Peering is Hot:

Apparently the VoIP Peering Fabric sessions had to be relocated to larger quarters due to the overflow turnout.  Greg Galitzine has more on this and other happenings in his show recap.

SIP Trunking Adoption Gaining Momentum

The other standing-room-only crowds I saw were soaking up as much as they could about SIP Trunking. A number of sessions, including the SIP Trunking Series hosted by Ingate with presenters from BandTel, Cbeyond, Sphere, Ericsson, Objectworld, Level 3, pingtel, and Shoretel, covered everything from a basic introduction to SIP and SIP trunking, to deep dives into the service provider and enterprise networks, a look at SIP trunking in Latin America, and case studies showing SIP trunking actually at work — delivering real-world benefits.

I’ve been covering the SIP trunking movement for a while — here’s a link to a whitepaper I authored a ways back — so, I’m glad to see the excitement over it — and the adoption rate — is building nicely.

VoIP Security Issues Finally Getting Respect

Some really good education came out of the sessions covering VoIP Security. It’s an area I’ve covered before in blog posts and columns, and I’m glad that not only is information about current VoIP vulnerabilities coming into the light, but awareness is also growing about the ways to effectively deal with them. Greg also wrote up a nice review of the issues that were presented by Mark Collier, CTO of VoIP security specialist SecureLogix and VoIP security blogger.

Billing Takes Front and Center

I had the pleasure to moderate the session, “VoIP and NGN Billing: A Primer” last Thursday at the show, and was very impressed by each and everyone on the panel, which included  Bruce Trvalik, Director, Product Management at Sonus Networks; Joe Hogan, CTO and Founder of Openet Telecom; Jim Dalton, CEO, TransNexus, Inc.; and David McNierney, VP of Market Development at Highdeal Inc.

The discussion was lively and insightful, and I found it very interesting to hear that billing and other “back office” functions are starting to migrate to the “front office” of providers — all the way into the executive suite — as they start to play a bigger and bigger strategic role and become integral in various marketing, cross-selling, and promotional activities. 

For more about current billing trends, you should check out Rich Grigonis’ terrific article in the January issue of Internet Telephony magazine.

Great Drawings



And yes, I did spend a little time in the sun — and barely escaped serious harm. I keep forgetting that the Florida sun can burn you alive — even in the dead of winter…

  

Here are a few takeaways from the show  — a mix of events, observations, and the like:

Peering is Hot:

Apparently the VoIP Peering Fabric sessions had to be relocated to larger quarters due to the overflow turnout.  Greg Galitzine has more on this and other happenings in his show recap.

SIP Trunking Adoption Gaining Momentum

The other standing-room-only crowds I saw were soaking up as much as they could about SIP Trunking. A number of sessions, including the SIP Trunking Series hosted by Ingate with presenters from BandTel, Cbeyond, Sphere, Ericsson, Objectworld, Level 3, pingtel, and Shoretel, covered everything from a basic introduction to SIP and SIP trunking, to deep dives into the service provider and enterprise networks, a look at SIP trunking in Latin America, and case studies showing SIP trunking actually at work — delivering real-world benefits.

I’ve been covering the SIP trunking movement for a while — here’s a link to a whitepaper I authored a ways back — so, I’m glad to see the excitement over it — and the adoption rate — is building nicely.

VoIP Security Issues Finally Getting Respect

Some really good education came out of the sessions covering VoIP Security. It’s an area I’ve covered before in blog posts and columns, and I’m glad that not only is information about current VoIP vulnerabilities coming into the light, but awareness is also growing about the ways to effectively deal with them. Greg also wrote up a nice review of the issues that were presented by Mark Collier, CTO of VoIP security specialist SecureLogix and VoIP security blogger.

Billing Takes Front and Center

I had the pleasure to moderate the session, “VoIP and NGN Billing: A Primer” last Thursday at the show, and was very impressed by each and everyone on the panel, which included  Bruce Trvalik, Director, Product Management at Sonus Networks; Joe Hogan, CTO and Founder of Openet Telecom; Jim Dalton, CEO, TransNexus, Inc.; and David McNierney, VP of Market Development at Highdeal Inc.

The discussion was lively and insightful, and I found it very interesting to hear that billing and other “back office” functions are starting to migrate to the “front office” of providers — all the way into the executive suite — as they start to play a bigger and bigger strategic role and become integral in various marketing, cross-selling, and promotional activities. 

For more about current billing trends, you should check out Rich Grigonis’ terrific article in the January issue of Internet Telephony magazine.

Great Drawings

harley.jpg I was sure the Harley was mine. Then the next day I was sure I was driving the Toyota TJ Cruiser home. But alas, this did not come to pass…

The bike and SUV were in close approximation to Internet Telephony yellow — and were definite crowd-pleasers — and great choices for grand giveaways.

ITEXPO Photos and More

Tuesday, January 30th, 2007

Here is Ari Zoldan from Launch 3 based in Garfield, NJ. His company is in the investment business - they invest in communications companies worldwide. On this day he walked away with a great education as well as a new SUV. Wow – now that’s a show.



 About 30 minutes later when I accidentally saw him on the road he seemed elated. I think the shock wore off and it turned to happiness. 




  Note to self. We would get even more people to shows if we didn’t have chalk boards in the exhibit hall. Seriously – this booth – Ask The Geek was stroke of genius from Interactive Intelligence. They staffed the booth with really smart engineers who answered questions from attendees in an objective and no nonsense fashion. PS: If you want to stump them just ask them in a very serious tone why the Pussycat Dolls don’t sound so good on a VoIP line.  


 


 This bag is the only other thing in this world with more frequent flyer miles than me. For some reason thinking about this is best done with my eyes closed.



 Aculab’s Jo Taylor is one of the few people in the industry who is jet-lag proof. After traveling 25 hours in a row the Aculab team seemed as fresh as ever.



 

Andy Voss had a SanSaytional show and is selling session border controllers like hotcakes it seems. I met many of his new customers at ITEXPO.



 For some reason I decided to lead an impromptu prayer service at the Stratus Technologies booth. They seem impressed.



 Gregory Giagnocavo learned that at ITEXPO in Ft. Lauderdale you can have an amazingly successful show without a single booth babe. The absense of booth babes at his booth was bad news for TMC as we no longer knew where to find our sales team.



 Chris Dunk the President and CEO of BandTel actually crouched down for the photo so as not to make me look insignificant in his shadow. He still towers over me. Now I know how he got his last name.



 Either the Dialexia team had a good show or they were just happy to be out of Canada in January.

The team from Ingate was thanking me for a great show. Here is a testimonial from CEO Olle Westerberg



 Actiontec had a great show even though they were located in the back left corner of the hall. I could barely get to the booth during the whole show.

Apparently I was making some really important point to Ditech Network’s Homayoun Razavi. What it was I have no idea but it looks like I really meant it.

Idle banter at the LumenVox booth.

Stealth Communications had a great show and I had a chance to catch them Jon Arnold in the booth. This is the first show after I declared it the year of VoIP peering. I guess this is the year of VoIP peering + 1. 

Doug Vilim and I had a brief chat about the show. Sangoma was another happy customer.




Tags: ip communications, itexpo, photos, voip

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New Digium CEO

Tuesday, January 30th, 2007

Mark Spencer is a competitive weapon at Digium and is well-liked by many in the open source community. It was evident to anyone who knows Mark that he is spread thin as a coder, manager, chief strategy officer and company spokesman. As the company expands the smartest thing the company could do is divide Mark’s responsibilities allowing the company continue its rapid growth rate without having to count on Mark for everything. I just read on Tom Keating’s blog (he heard it from Alec Saunders) that Mark will become Chairman and CTO and Danny J. Windham, President, Chief Operating Officer and director of ADTRAN will become the new CEO of Digium. There is a synergistic relationship between ADTRAN and Digium which you can learn about on Tom’s blog. I believe this a great moved for the company and for the open source community as a whole.



Tags: adtran, asterisk, ceo, cto, danny winham, digium, mark spencer

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Old New AT&T

Tuesday, January 30th, 2007

Many people have told me about the Steven Colbert video about AT&T and thanks to Manuel Vexler of the IMS Forum who sent me the link, I have just seen it myself for the first time. It is pretty funny.



Tags: at&t, bellsouth, broadband, fcc, net neutrality

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Google Shield Prevents Bombs

Tuesday, January 30th, 2007

Google is now providing some relief to the many presidents and others who have been targets of Google bombs. Google bombs work when a number of people get together and decide to use link text as a weapon. I could link the word “miserable failure” to the biography page of a president for example. Search engines would then have a higher propensity to return the linked web page when people search on the term used as link text. So for example miserable failure once returned search results to Jimmy Carter’s biography page on the White House website. Over the past years many presidents were targets of these attacks and eventually Google decided to take action and prevent these bombs from being dropped. In my informal research it seems that the bombs have been diffused for some terms but not others. Some have surmised Google has hard-coded something into its search engines to prevent the leading search engine from being “associated” with politician bashing of any sort. I wrote about Google Bombing about two years ago and in the article I surmised that companies would be bombing one another for their taglines. One example I gave was “ultimate driving machine” which any self-respecting car enthusiast knows refers to BMWs. At the time  I wrote the article this query on Google returned a number one result of
www.bmw-car-for-sale.com. Interestingly it now comes up with BMWUSA. On a related note you may not be aware that Google banned the German version of BMW because of so-called black-hat SEO techniques – specifically the use of doorway pages. This may be the highest profile website to be banned by the search engine in fact. So sadly, many bloggers and other politically motivated web citizens will have to find new and more interesting ways to bash their political opponents. For now anyway, bombing search engines will have no effect. Until new ways are invented, many people will have to go back to the tried and tested technique of getting at their political adversaries — calling them unpatriotic, stupid, etc. If you want to read more about how Google is trying to prevent bombing read this great article from Rahul Prabhakar.



Tags: google bombing, miserable failure

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Even More Photos

Tuesday, January 30th, 2007

Here are some more photos from this past week’s ITEXPO. I tell you the show was like one massive week-long adrenaline rush. It was just absolutely great to be part of this show. I am looking forward to the next show September 10-12, 2007 in Los Angeles. We have some amazing ideas for the next show that will hopefully blow you away.  
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Tags: ip communications, itexpo, voip

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