VoIP (Internet Telephony) News 1999
- "Working with Nortel Networks, the Canadian equipment manufacturer,
BT announced [5/18/99] it would roll out its IP network in 12 Spanish
cities this year and install 90,000 fiber optic lines with a capacity of
1.5 million customers. Within three years it planned to extend coverage
to 27 cities. ... The company said the cost of building an IP network
was half that of a traditional circuit-switched network, operating costs
were less and network build-out could be achieved more quickly. It said
it would invest £600m ($971.5m) in Spain over the next ten years." Tech Web,
Racing
Toward Net Telephony (Dec. 20, 1999)
- "INTERNET PHONE SERVICE CATCHES ON WITH MILLIONS IN CHINA
China Telecom's monopoly is facing competition from IP telephony
providers. Millions of customers in China have begun using
low-cost IP telephony although the service has only been
available for six months. Although the government's control over
licensing and pricing is an obstacle to true competition, IP
telephony providers have emerged as China Telecom's most
formidable rivals. The Yankee Group predicts that over a third
of China's international traffic may be routed over the Internet
in three years. IP telephony providers will grab one third of
China Telecom's business in the next five years if the company's
pricing scheme does not change, according to Edward Tian, CEO of
China Netcom, which is licensed to provide service. China United
Telecommunications, Jitong Communications, and China Telecom are
the other companies licensed to offer Internet telephony."
(Wall Street Journal 12/21/99) EDUCAUSE
- "'Today infrastructure is only about 10 to 23% of cost. Switching
and transmission account for only about 6 percent of total cost, while
overhead represents 49 percent, access 34 percent and operations support
systems (OSSs) about 11 percent, according to Sidgmore."
Sounding
Board, May 1999
- Taking
the Garbles Out of Internet Phone Calls, April 15, 1999 (on
speech testing at Nortel)
- IP Telephony to Top $14 Billion by 2003. "Within four years,
the market for IP telephony-related software, hardware, products and
services will boom to $14.7 billion, according to "The IP Telephony
Report -- Driving the Open Communications Revolution", by Edward R.
Jackson, a senior research analyst at Minneapolis-based investment
banker Piper Jaffray Inc. (www.piperjaffray.com). ... Eventually, he
believes, enhanced services such as click-to-call, Internet call
waiting, unified messaging, surf-with-me, collaboration and conferencing
will become the dominant driver. ... In 1997, 70 million minutes -- less
than .1 percent of all minutes over the public switched telephon network
-- went over IP networks. By 2003, however, Jackson predicts that there
will be 70 billion minutes, 6.1 percent of all PSTN minutes." (Sounding
Board, April 1999, p. 10)