
Friday, June 22, 2007
Web 2.0 Enterprises

Labels:
collaboration,
web 2.0

Thursday, June 21, 2007
It's a trade show, after all...

The subject was voice and application peering. As far as drivers, though quality is an issue, Derek Koecher, Qwest wholesale VoIP manager quipped that "price represents nine of the ten criteria for buying wholesale VoIP services." And, presumably also drives desire to peer.
The session was held at NxtComm, which was pretty quiet, though vendors put on a brave face about the quality of their meetings and booth traffic. Nothing like the old SuperComm. Of course, there's a huge current of weariness and dissatisfaction with just about all of the bigger trade shows IP executives have been attending (and I am being polite). People honestly are questioning why they keep coming. And if they are coming, lots of people are saying they won't be exhibiting. Clear signs of trouble for major telecom show producers...
Labels:
Acme Packet,
NxtComm,
Qwest

Wednesday, June 20, 2007
Do the Math

"Everything else comes after that, because the wireless is the most personal communications device and goes everywhere with you," Stephenson said. Of course, he fairly quickly added that at&t is not neglecting its wireline broadband strategy.
But there's an important principle here. If one totes up the actual revenue any telecom provider can generate from video (ARPU is nice, but gross margin for an entertainment product has to be sliced in half to figure out what "gross revenue" actually is for a service provider), and then compares that to what a service provider can lose from current voice and data, the potential loss from voice and data is a larger number than the potential gains from new video services.
That isn't an argument against providing video. It is an argument for not getting defocused on core data and voice revenues. That's where the money is.
Labels:
ARPU,
att,
IPTV,
Randall Stephenson

Tuesday, June 19, 2007
John Chambers on Surviving the Coming Shift

Hubris: the idea that your company is so powerful, so well managed, so agile that it cannot fail, even as a new computing paradigm replaces an older one.
"You have to keep it constantly in front of yourself," Chambers says. As in, looking nervously and constantly over one's shoulder, hoping to hear approaching footsteps before anyone can be seen. "We make Andy Grove look relaxed," Chambers says, alluding to the classic Grove dictum that "only the paranoid survive."
"Transition will happen; not could happen," says Chambers, who is as aware as any executive ever has been of what it would mean to lead in two waves of computing. It would make history.
Labels:
Cisco Systems,
IBM,
John Chambers,
Wang Laboratories

It's Quite a Metaphor


Monday, June 18, 2007
WiFi Will Supplement, Not Replace...

Labels:
muni Wi-Fi

Saturday, June 16, 2007
Not Convinced, Eh?

Labels:
hosted VoIP,
managed services,
SME

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