RE: ABC news on Internet Telephony
David Sternlight writes:
There's something fundamental going on here beneath the surface. Surprisingly, a recent item (maybe the one you reported) on this suggests that the big phone companies are trying to use this phenomenon rather than stop it. I think it was AT&T who announced that they had web software that improved the quality of such internet voice calls. Surprisingly constructive, in contrast to the coalition of small phone companies screaming for the FCC to "stop it". The FCC has wisely said they're not going to act right now because it could kill an incipient new technology.
There is something fundamental going on here, a lack of common sense, and/or critical reasoning. Lets try it again. Who is the most likely to be disintermediated by a global packet network? (how do you get to your ISP?) I assume by "big phone company" vs "little phone company" you are refering to long distance vs local service, tell me, if the RBOC's continue merging, at what level do they become a " big phone company." The RBOC's are not the only local service providers of course, here in Illinois alone there are more than 80 (at my last count) providers of local service, and soon there will be many more. The other "urban myth" you are helping to support is the notion that it is the local providers that are fighting deregulation. Ameritech filed for total unbundling in March of '93, and you don't see them insisting on having a percentage of the long distance market before the long distance companies are allowed to compete in the local loop.
This is the rankest speculation on my part, but could some of the bigger, smarter phone company cum internet providers have done some serious analysis and concluded that we're moving away from distance-based rates for voice calls. Might they even have examined where we'll be in the next ten years (with ADSL, etc.) and decided that the network technology and simple market economics makes fixed charges per "line" more profitable to them than metered usage? Maybe this is wishful thinking on my part, but some of the bigger actors are starting to behave in a surprisingly counter-intuitive (based on the way we stereotype them) fashion on this topic.
point to point circuits are more efficiently handled by circuit switching rather than packet switching networks. Nicholas Negroponte wrote an interesting piece about asynchronous vs synchronous, I believe it is in his book "Being Digital." ADSL is an interesting attempt at digital telephony but expensive and basically would mean replacing existing central office switches. (backbone bandwidth) In a packet network you have to either dedicate a portion of the bandwidth for a synchronous circuit, or you have to have a very fast network and use very small packets (ATM), expensive either way. A single central office has many times the bandwidth of the widest part of the internet, and the average state has hundreds of CO's. If even a small portion of the Internets current users tried placing a call things would grind to a halt. A huge increase in the number of backbones and their bandwidth would solve this, but who will pay the bill? TANSTAAFL Sometime ago the discussion was on the cost of laying new fiber, may I suggest the realworld heuristic of "a million dollars a mile." Please note I am not trying to make fun of anyone personnally, I am in the words of Jubal Harshaw "heaping scorn upon an inexcuseably silly idea, a practice I shall always follow." Brian communicate globally, censor locally
At 1:54 PM -0700 7/18/96, talon57@well.com wrote:
David Sternlight writes:
There's something fundamental going on here beneath the surface. Surprisingly, a recent item (maybe the one you reported) on this suggests that the big phone companies are trying to use this phenomenon rather than stop it. I think it was AT&T who announced that they had web software that improved the quality of such internet voice calls. Surprisingly constructive, in contrast to the coalition of small phone companies screaming for the FCC to "stop it". The FCC has wisely said they're not going to act right now because it could kill an incipient new technology.
There is something fundamental going on here, a lack of common sense, and/or critical reasoning.
Starting off with defamation is a sure tipoff that what follows is crap. And sure enough...
Lets try it again. Who is the most likely to be disintermediated by a global packet network? (how do you get to your ISP?)
I assume by "big phone company" vs "little phone company" you are refering to long distance vs local service, tell me, if the RBOC's continue merging, at what level do they become a " big phone company."
No. I'm referring to the consortium of small phone companies that asked the FCC to stop it, in contrast to big phone companies which explicitly refused to join in that request. The big ones were both long-distance carriers and big local ones (a distinction that will soon disappear).
The RBOC's are not the only local service providers of course, here in Illinois alone there are more than 80 (at my last count) providers of local service, and soon there will be many more.
And...?
The other "urban myth" you are helping to support is the notion that it is the local providers that are fighting deregulation. Ameritech filed for total unbundling in March of '93, and you don't see them insisting on having a percentage of the long distance market before the long distance companies are allowed to compete in the local loop.
I'm doing no such thing. I'm reporting the empirical data. Have you some problem with facts?
ADSL is an interesting attempt at digital telephony but expensive and basically would mean replacing existing central office switches. (backbone bandwidth)
I'm not sure this is accurate. The ADSL modems are already down to the price of v.34s at the start of v.34 and ADSL is still in its initial stage. Being able to sell 6 MEGAbyte/sec bandwidth over ordinary copper phone pair will increase telco revenues substantially with little additional cost except at the switch. Switch mods don't require replacement and their cost per dollar of revenue (even if they give away 6Mb bandwidth at ISDN prices for 128Kb bandwidth) is pretty low. They could even charge what the cable guys do for basic service (using video dial tone), add current charges for local phone service, include a free Internet connection, and make money. In fact, PacBell stopped wiring California for fiber and simply buried incomplete cable in most locations last year because ADSL is so much better a deal, infrastructure cost-wise. If you haven't already done so you should check out the web sites for the ADSL consortium.
In a packet network you have to either dedicate a portion of the bandwidth for a synchronous circuit, or you have to have a very fast network and use very small packets (ATM), expensive either way.
ATM is going bye-bye according to the trade press. It IS too expensive. As for the synchronous circuit, if you're talking a signalling path that's provided for and takes a tiny part of the bandwidth. At the switch it won't look any different than today's call routing.
A single central office has many times the bandwidth of the widest part of the internet, and the average state has hundreds of CO's. If even a small portion of the Internets current users tried placing a call things would grind to a halt. A huge increase in the number of backbones and their bandwidth would solve this, but who will pay the bill?
Now we're back on topic. Dunno how the increased bandwidth will be paid for if lots of people start doing internet phone. Perhaps a new pricing model with metered, but not distance-sensitive rates. Perhaps a special charge for voice packets. Perhaps the number of subscribers attracted by cheap phone will be enough to pay for the bandwidth under current pricing models. Perhaps the split between the ISPs and the backbones will have to change. Love will find a way.
TANSTAAFL
Last time I looked my ISP was charging me about $20 a month--hardly "free". And business users pay more.
Sometime ago the discussion was on the cost of laying new fiber, may I suggest the realworld heuristic of "a million dollars a mile."
Naah. The existing bandwidth that would go dark if phone calls shifted to the net would become available. And I understand there's a huge amount of dark fiber already in existence. I don't think this is the scarce resource. I'ts starting to look like you're attempting proof by assertion rather than referring to the known data.
Please note I am not trying to make fun of anyone personnally, I am in the words of Jubal Harshaw "heaping scorn upon an inexcuseably silly idea, a practice I shall always follow."
I will refrain from heaping scorn on what appears to be a wild set of ill-thought-through and uninformed objections. Your better-informed colleagues will do it for me. If it's any comfort, I thought exactly as you do until I started to read the discussions of this topic by experts. (By the way there's a lot of material on Internet Phone on AT&T's web site.) David
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David Sternlight -
talon57@well.com