|    There   is a fundamental problem with the "VoIP is dead" debate continuing   to rage across the VoIP/communications part of the blogosphere (see Alec   Saunders part 1 and part   2, Jon   Arnold, Andy   Abramson, Ken Camp,   Jeff Pulver part   1 and part 2,   Om Malik, Shidan   Gouran, Ted Wallingford, Dameon Welch-Abernathy   (PhoneBoy), Rich   Tehrani and a   zillion others...)  Aswath Rao and Luca   Filigheddu came closest to the mark in their posts. The fundamental problem with this entire debate is   simply this:    Define   "VoIP"? As   I discussed in an   Emerging Tech Talk video podcast I put up this morning, there are a range   of definitions you could give to "VoIP", including, but not limited   to, the following:      The        underlying infrastructure, a.k.a. the "plumbing" - the mechanisms, protocols, etc. that are used for        the transport of        voice/video/etc. over IP. Things like SIP, H.323, RTP, various codecs,        etc.Consumer        "PSTN line replacement" services - Offerings like those of Vonage and so many others        where the basic idea is that you can get cheaper telephone charges by        going over the Internet and getting rid of your local landline. Also        called "pure play" VoIP by some or "VoIP arbitrage"        by others.Computer-to-computer/softphone        offerings, often coming from the IM space - Skype sets the bar here, but there's a host of        other players as well, including Gizmo, GoogleTalk, FWD, and many        others. Some of these came from existing Instant Messaging services that        simply added voice.Enterprise        IP-PBX/"Unified Communications" solutions - Communications systems used by enterprises, large        and small - what has traditionally been called the "PBX" but        that term is increasingly meaningless given the range of options now        being provided. The        *entire* vision of rich communication        over IP        - The whole picture... everything over IP... voice, video, IM, presence,        file/data sharing... the whole rich communication experience.  Each   and every one of these is referred to as "VoIP"   by some segment of our industry. (And there's even more... I did have someone   once reply to me that "VoIP" was the pre-paid calling cards that   you can buy in convenience stores, etc. (And in truth, they usually do get their cheap rates by using VoIP for   transport somewhere in there.))  The   point is that we need to be a bit more precise in what we call   "VoIP" before we can argue about whether it is alive or not.  From   my point-of-view, the life and death of these different definitions of   "VoIP" varies:      The        underlying infrastructure        - Doing extremely well... in fact, so well, that it's fading into the        background and just being part of our underlying network infrastructure,        both in the fixed and mobile environments. (Which also argues that some        of the VoIP-infrastructure-specific        products/services are no longer quite as necessary.)Consumer        "PSTN line replacement" services - Great for cable companies; not so good for        pure-plays - Looked at Vonage's        stock price lately? They and so many of the other companies whose        only real selling point was "get cheaper phone calls with us"        are certainly struggling or dying. Why? The cable companies, for one,        are cleaning up in this space with their "triple-play"        bundling of voice with Internet access and television. The pure-play        companies may be cheaper on voice        but the cable packages may be far        more compelling. Add in the "unlimited calling" mobile phone        plans we have here in North America, plus the softphone players like        Skype plus some of the emerging cloud/hosted offerings... and all-in-all        it's not a pretty picture for Vonage and friends. (And this is really the VoIP "industry" to which Alec was        referring.)Computer-to-computer/softphone        offerings        - Very alive - Skype is flirting with 15 million simultaneous online        users and also reporting decent income, Gizmo is rolling out a        Flash-based softphone to remove the need for a client, TringMe is        providing widgets to various folks... and a whole range of others are        growing. (While some players are shrinking here, too, of course.)Enterprise        IP-PBX/"Unified Communications" solutions - Very alive - Basically every        vendor supplying communications systems to enterprises are now doing so        over IP. No one is selling traditional TDM PBXs anymore. Players in this        space include the traditional telephony players like Nortel, Avaya,        Siemens, Mitel, Alcatel-Lucent, along with newer entrants like the        dominant Cisco, ShoreTel, Digium/Asterisk and then even newer entrants        like Microsoft OCS and IBM Sametime.The        *entire* vision of rich communication        over IP        - VERY alive! - In        fact, I'd say that the next few years will be one of the most        fascinating years in this space. We're at this amazing intersection of        insane amounts of local bandwidth and computing power, increasingly        ubiquitous powerful mobile devices, and incredible power out "in        the cloud". All around us we are building the massive IP        communications interconnect. It's happening. At a glacial pace in some areas and at a crazy        pace in others. We're layering on applications        and services. We're        making them available through simple APIs and mashups. We're all        collectively doing some pretty amazing things out there. It's a great time to be in this space!  So   how do you define VoIP?  If   you think of "VoIP" as my #2, the "cheap telephony consumer   services", then sure, if you don't consider the cable companies then   than sector isn't doing too well. If you define VoIP as one of the other   definitions here, well, then in my view it is very much alive.  What   do you think? How do you define   "VoIP"?  P.S.   If you'd like to join a number of us to discuss this topic, Sheryl Breuker and Ken Camp   are hosting a conference call tonight at 9pm US Eastern / 6pm US Pacific.   Join us... it should be fun. :-)  | 
 
4 comments:
I own a small VOIP Consultant business in Nashville, TN. We deploy custom Asterisk Systems. So for my part VOIP is alive and kicking. VOIP, is best thing to happen to this industry. I always have to explain to my clients what the term VOIP actually means. They hear it and think about Vonage or some other replacement line service. Part of my business is explaining the difference.
I have been using VOIP system for about two years. It has really help me to control my budget of telephony. I have a import/export business which require me to make international calls because many of my customers are from Europe. Making calls are cheap through VOIP.
Had quality/codecs problems until I used this one http://www.voipsipsdk.com
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