Tag: interview

  • SiBeam CEO Welcomes Wireless HD "Competition"

    INTERVIEW: With a third group now entering the race to deliver a high-speed wireless technology in the home – and wireless HDTV products hitting the market – momentum is building.

    John LeMoncheck, president and CEO of SiBEAM, and a leading member of the WirelessHD (WiHD) consortium, tells hdtv.biz-news that he welcomes the addition of the rival Wireless Gigabit (WiGig) Alliance to the fray.

    Over the past few years a number of wireless technologies have announced their intention to rid homes of cables and stream content around the home.

    Their number was enlarged recently when the newly formed WiGig Alliance declared that it is to develop a high-bandwidth wireless specification before the year end.

    The fact this group has the backing of household names such as Microsoft, LG, Dell, Samsung, Marvell, Nokia, NEC, Intel and Broadcom (among others), might have been cause enough for the competing groups to worry.

    But WiGig’s plans to use the 60 GHz spectrum would have been a particular worry for the WirelessHD (WiHD) consortium, which also uses 60 GHz to send signals.

    Not so, said John LeMoncheck, president and CEO of SiBEAM, and a leading member of WiHD.

    He told hdtv.biz-news that, in general, WiGig’s arrival was very good for the 60 GHz spectrum.

    "This is the way in which the rest of the wireless world is going," he said. "There is room for multiple uses of the spectrum."

    For LeMoncheck the adoption of the 60 GHz spectrum is also something of a personal vindication.

    "When we first started talking about 60 GHz, they laughed me out of the meeting," he said.

    "Now it is satisfying to see the big guys focusing on this technology."

    He added: "There’s not a better or more cost-effective way to do this."

    Growing Interest

    WiGig joining the other competing groups – WiHD and the Wireless Home Digital Interface (WHDI) – also highlights the growing interest in wireless technologies.

    However, LeMoncheck said he would question whether WiGig was actually in direct competition with WiHD – which he described as very consumer electronics focused.

    "WiGig have not been able to clearly elucidate what they want," he said.

    "They are trying to be a lot of things to a lot of people, which can lead to a standard that’s not any use to anyone."

    That’s definitely not the case with WiHD, according to LeMoncheck, who said he was very happy with the progress being made.

    This year has seen the first WiHD-enabled products come to market in Japan and Korea, with launches from Panasonic, LG and Toshiba.

    Panasonic’s Z1 WirelessHD Plasma

    He said more HDTVs are going to be launched in the US and Europe this summer.

    "It has been a very exciting first half of the year for the rollout of the product," he said.

    "We are working hard to have products come out and work seamlessly."

    This has included publishing compliance test procedures in January – tests that all products have to pass before being able to carry the WiHD logo.

    And facilities offering WiHD testing are now also operational.

    A further boost has come from Philips joining the WiHD consortium as a promoter company.

    This brings the total number of promoter companies up to 10 and there are 40 firms associated with the WiHD standard.

    Pieces in Place

    "All the infrastructure is there to bring products to market," said LeMoncheck.

    "We have had tremendous traction in the market and other tier 1 guys should be launching in the fall."

    While products using the WiHD technology are in the high-to-mid range price bracket, LeMoncheck said they were working on bringing the cost down.

    The use of general-purpose complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) technology is expected to help with this, and he expected to see products in 42" range and lower as a result.

    "We can pick very friendly CMOS geometry, so we have room to migrate down as smaller geometry gets further down the cost curve," he said.

    "We can cut a lot of the cost from a system."

    That will undoubtedly be welcomed by consumers – as will the fact that wireless-enabled products are finally making their way onto the shelves.

  • SanDisk CEO Harari Bullish About Flash Memory


    SanDisk CEO Eli Harari believes that at $2/GB SSDs aren’t competitive yet with hard drives.

    But he is bullish about the technology’s prospects and believes it offers an ideal storage solution for netbooks.

    In an interview with Tech Trader Daily, he said that you can buy an 80 GB HDD for USD $30-$35.

    SanDisk CEO Eli Harari

    However, that same USD $30 would only get you 15 GB of flash. He suggests that 32 GB of storage is probably enough for many netbook applications.

    But to be competitive with hard drives, Harari said the flash industry will have to be able to sell at USD $1/GB while maintaining profitability.

    He said that wasn’t possible at the current 42-43 nm process technology now used for manufacturing flash.

    But he believes it should be possible at 24 nm, or two generations ahead of the current technology.

    Harari told Tech Traders usage of SSDs will start to pick up in this year’s second half and hit the mainstream in a big way in 2011.

  • VoIP Vendors Failing To Re-think SMB Retail Products


    The economic crisis has frequently been held up as an opportunity for the VoIP industry to introduce businesses to the benefits and efficiencies offered by "non-traditional" telecom services.

    But Kent Hellebust, CMO and general manager of Individual and Digital Phone Services at Telanetix, believes many VoIP service providers are failing to respond to the fast moving pace of the business retail channel.

    He tells voip.biz-news how telecom vendors can effectively capitalise on potential opportunities in the US Small and Medium Business (SMB) market.

    Of the approximately 23 million businesses in the United States, more than 90 per cent have fewer than 50 employees (as reported in a recent AMI Inc Market Study). In total, 15 million have fewer than five employees.

    This is strong evidence that the business of America is truly Small Business.

    The question remains though: how is the current economic climate affecting these small businesses? In particular, how is it affecting their purchase of VoIP services?

    Kent Hellebust, CMO Telanetix

    The smaller the business, the less likely they are to have "redundant staff".

    With fewer than 10 employees, everyone does everything. There are no specialists; no dedicated IT staff, no full time HR person. If the business needs phone service, there’s a very good chance that it’s the owner of the business who does the buying.

    Since all small business employees are generalists, you can count on the fact that purchasing "infrastructure" like phones, phone service, computers, fax machines, etc. is considered an extra burden, not a job.

    The purchaser does not have the time or inclination to become expert and they do not know the industry "standard sources".

    In many respects, they are very close in their purchasing process to that of a consumer.

    These executives are likely to do some quick research online to find what they are looking for, and they are guided by a combination of a need for cost savings, a need for understandability (remember, they are not specialists; they wouldn’t know what "NPA-NXX, PBX, LNP, or RespOrg" meant if you held them at gunpoint), a need for simplicity, and finally, a need to save time and get on with their "real" job of driving revenue for their small business.

    In the current economic environment, the need for savings becomes paramount. You may have noticed that it’s the big companies that are getting offers of federal assistance, not the small ones.

    These small businesses have to reduce any expense they can in today’s market, and phone service is a prime target for them.
    Because of the economic pressures they currently face, they seem to be increasingly willing to try new brands and new services that they may previously not have been willing to try.

    Here at Telanetix, and our VoIP wing of AccessLine Communications, we have been specializing in small business telecommunications services and solutions for over 10 years, and we have never seen the SMB market more willing to consider VoIP as a solution to their infrastructure cost reduction challenge.

    However, this is not to say that selling any type of telecommunications service, VoIP or otherwise, to SMBs is getting easier.

    The SMB purchaser balances a complex set of factors in making their purchase decision. While they are looking for savings, they do not want to be pitched with complex "ROI" savings calculations.

    They do not have the cash flow to invest more upfront in order to achieve greater savings down the road and if the equipment and services they are purchasing have a significant upfront cost component, they are likely to look elsewhere.

    Beyond the savings, they are guided by brands they know and trust. Given that the purchaser is not going to be steeped in telecom industry knowledge, only the very largest telecom brands will have spent enough on brand advertising to be known by them.

    Once you get much below names like AT&T and Verizon, the chance of the customer knowing a non-traditional telecom brand is small.

    However,since the purchaser is a generalist, they are open to non-telecom brands that are affiliated with new telecom services as a sign of vendors they can trust.

    A number of new VoIP providers have taken advantage of this non-traditional business telecom buying process to affiliate with major business retail chains, ranging from Staples to Office Depot.

    Finally, there is the question of simplicity.

    Telecommunications, as an industry, has done its level best over the decades to be as complex as possible in the eyes of the customer.

    Hidden fees and processes, ranging from wiring fees to installation and maintenance fees, have made the acquisition and installation of business phone systems and service an arcane art that only the IT department specialists at midsize and large enterprises are comfortable in navigating.

    Many telecom vendors have failed to re-think their product, making it unsuitable for the fast moving pace of the business retail channel.

    At the same time some of the biggest names in the telecom and IT business have experimented with retail distribution, only to be puzzled and frustrated by their lack of success.

    Only those that have focused on simplifying their message, the offer structure, and the installation of their products and services for the generalist small business purchaser are able to profitably harness this channel.

    At Telanetix, we have taken all these lessons to heart.

    We have created an integrated solution specifically for the SMB market. The product includes a state of the art PBX phone system, sold in conjunction with fully integrated VoIP phone service, serving businesses with between two and 20 employees.

    Business customers hear about the product through major retail channels. We have invested quite a bit of "magic" in the upfront setup and provisioning of the phones and phone system, so that when the customer receives it, it is literally plug and play.

    All the key SMB buying criteria are met: savings, simplicity, and trusted support. There is no need for the business owner to hire a specialist to charge them USD $1,000 or more to install the system.

    There is no need to hire a wiring specialist that charges USD $100 per desk phone to run custom wiring through their office or store.

    We as a company are attempting to meet the SMB business owner on their own turf, talking in clear terms about value, savings, simplicity, and reliability.

    Given that the SMB market drives America’s business, we think that even in the current economic environment, this is a recipe for success.

  • Social Networking and IM Broaden Appeal of Mobile VoIP Beyond Cheap Calls


    INTERVIEW: Alan Paton, research director for independent VoIP comparison website LowCostMob.com, tells voip.biz-news about the increasingly crowded – and sometimes confusing – mobile VoIP market.

    He also explains how social networking and Instant Messaging services such as Twitter have the potential to extend the appeal of mobile VoIP beyond simply offering cheap calls.

    Q: Why did you think it was necessary to set up LowCostMob.com and how does the service address this need?

    A: Though mobile phones have been popular for over 20 years – the penetration reached 100 per cent years ago and there are more mobile phones than people in the UK, many having two or more – the industry is far from mature.

    In fact it is now entering a period of even greater changes than in the past.

    With LowCostMob.com we are currently addressing one of these great changes and that is the availability of alternative mobile calling services, especially for international calls.

    Alternative phone services are not new in themselves. They have been a big part of the fixed line business since telecoms liberalisation in the 1980s and have become even more important since local loop unbundling was introduced.

    Ofcom (the UK regulator) statistics show for the UK there are at least 350 alternative fixed line calling services.

    But alternative calling services for mobile are new and have sprung up only in the last two years.

    The great enablers for this are:

    • the increasing computing power of mobile phones allowing them to run a wide range of add-on applications
    • their improving ability to access the web and services that the web makes possible

    We see an opportunity here to explain the growing range of offerings without the confusing marketing hype and to help users to select what suits them best.

    Solutions range from the very simple (you can use your existing mobile phone as it is) to those that require you to download and install an application (usually done in a few minutes).
    Many services make use of dual-mode smartphones (they can use WiFi). Each solution has its pros and cons.

    Q: What are the most confusing/misleading aspects facing consumers when contemplating mobile VoIP or mobile calling applications?

    A: The new services use one or more of several basic technologies, call-back, call-through, local number substitution, VoIP and WiFi, and it is amazing how often you have to dig deep into a provider’s web site to know exactly what they are offering.

    It is like a garage selling a car but making it difficult for the customer to know if its automatic or manual, diesel or petrol, or four door or five door.

    One of the biggest confusions is over what constitutes true mobile VoIP.

    We think it should be only those systems that implement the transformation to VoIP on the phone itself.

    Many providers call it "mobile" VoIP if any part of the overall connection to the called person uses VoIP.

    There is very little information on the current practicalities of using mobile VoIP; does your data service allow it, what quality will you get, what are the costs of using the data channel for VoIP, and the role of WiFi.

    Q: Do consumers base their choice of which service to use solely on price or are other factors involved?

    A: A desire for cheaper calls especially international calls is a big driving force but by no means the only one.

    There is also at this early stage of market growth a lot of interest from the gadget minded who just love to get the latest electronic gizmo.

    Another very big factor is the popularity of Instant Messaging, services like Twitter, and Social Networking.

    Managing your contacts is a real headache and people want access to all their communications services, and this includes social networking, when they are on the move.

    Many alternative calling providers offer aggregation services, that is access to all the IM communities or social networks that a user might belong to through one application interface on their mobile phone, and other services such as address book management.

    Cheap calls may be just one, and not necessarily the most important, of a rich range of features and new mobile services.

    Q: Do you see a move towards a particular type of service (Mobile VoIP, Call through, Call Back etc)? If so, what is driving this?

    A: VoIP is the long term future for the whole mobile industry but there is plenty of scope for other technologies for many years, perhaps indefinitely.

    Smartphones are having a big impact and from being a few per cent a couple of years ago are expected to be at least 30 per cent of the market by 2012.

    The iPhone has given a big push to the market giving users for the first time a really good web experience on a mass market mobile phone.

    The Skype WiFi mobile application for the iPhone achieved over 2 million downloads in 9 days of being launched. Incredible.

    The user demand is there. And, by the way, Skype is certainly cheap but it is by no means the cheapest for mobile VoIP calls. (See here for a comparison)

    Over the coming months we will see what Google with its Android operating system for smartphones and Nokia with its new product response to the iPhone, can deliver.

    Q: Is the current economic situation likely to lead to a clear-out in the mobile VoIP industry?

    A: No, of itself it won’t lead to a clear out, though I’m sure it will make conditions tougher for everyone.

    Changes will happen, companies will fail, new ones will appear, services will evolve or be dropped and new ones appear, but who flourishes and who doesn’t, depends most on management skills and sound product concepts.

    Q: What are the likely implications of potential legislation by regulators in the EU and US which could force mobile operators to allow mobile VoIP calls to be made on their networks?

    A: Huge. Think of those Skype iPhone application downloads and that was just for mobile VoIP over WiFI.

  • INTERVIEW: Carrie Hartford Fedders From IPsmarx Technology








    IPsmarx was named as joint winner of the 2008 voip-biz.news Product of the Year Award last week for its SIP-based calling card platform.

    Carrie Hartford Fedders, account manager with IPsmarx, spoke to voip-biz.news about the solution, which eliminates the need for a VoIP gateway and PSTN lines using DID (Direct Inward Dialing) technology.

    She said that removing the need for a gateway in the network reduced both initial costs and overheads for operators.

    This meant savings could be made on initial investment of between 30-40 per cent compared to a calling card and gateway solution.

    As well as being more feature rich, the new platform also gives operators the flexibility to use fewer channels and upgrade when needed – as opposed to paying for T1/E1 lines.

    "When our sales people are talking to prospective clients, the main challenge is to convince them that they do not need a gateway in the network," she said.

    "People are so used to having it that they don’t believe it’s no longer required.

    "We really do feel that we are on the cusp of this new technology.

    "It’s a very innovative solution, which others are not offering."

    IPsmarx was founded in 2001 and initially offered a calling card platform designed for enterprises that needed a more effective way to manage their billing.

    Hartford Fedders said it grew quickly from there, with the company’s in-house developers continually adding new and more advanced features.

    The development progressed with the addition of a software switch.

    "Now we have all different kinds of solutions that enable businesses to offer VoIP and Calling card systems, the latest being our SIP-based platform," she said.

    While not needing a gateway in the network has streamlined equipment requirements, it has also added flexibility to the platform.

    Hartford Fedders said that in situations where a client’s business was growing, adding new capacity and lines was no longer a time-consuming and costly business.

    "Now you simply have to upgrade the software license with us and order more DIDs," she said.

    "So the long-term benefits are very attractive to our clients."

    Since the IPsmarx platform takes advantage of SIP Based DID technology, operators can provide calling card services to customers worldwide, where DIDs are available, and they only need one platform.

    Hartford Fedders said they had clients in 62 countries around the world, with the main markets being in North America, Latin America and the UK.

    "Every region demands different features and operators have certain fees they like to apply to a service in a particular country," she said.

    IPsmarxs portfolio of VoIP and IP telephony solutions and services includes:

    * Prepaid and Postpaid Calling Card and Residential Solutions
    * Softswitch IP-IP Billing Solution
    * CallShop and Hosted CallShop Solution
    * VoIP Termination Solution
    * Wholesale Carrier Solution
    * Carrier Services
    * VoIP Network Integration, Configuration and Migration Solution