VoIP, WiFi and the Future of Traditional Telecom 92
PetiePooo writes "Those of us in the telecom industry have been watching it wither and die in the past few years. Here's why. The Register has an article about the future of mobile communications using VoIP on WiFi. From the article: "... voice over IP would gradually come to be a prime driver of mobile Internet." VoIP has been considered by many for a while now to be the future of traditional telephony. Combining VoIP and WiFi makes a compelling argument for the convergence of voice and data services over a single platform. Here's a previous slashdot discussion on industry's efforts to make this happen."
Huh? (Score:3, Insightful)
How could some barely deployed technology before responsible for the destruction of an industry? What, did Verizon, Sprint, AT&T, etc al just decide to make poor business choices out of fear? I'm really at a loss on this one.
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Informative)
It will be interesting to see what tiny telcos which are miraculously on the same standard and able to communicate seamlessly will be able to do.
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
I agree, it will be interesting. Think about how great it would be for towns to set up their own VoIP system. This would help the most in small remote towns (like in Arizona) where there are miles between them. If the people in these towns mostly call eachother they would not have to pay some evil Telco.
Re:Huh? (Score:2, Informative)
Back in the old days when Internet was embryonic, most of the traffic was telephony. Carriers were operating networks designed for voice and carved into it some channels for the little data applications that were required then.
With the growth of the Internet and entreprises IP networks, this model broke. Carriers had to implement and operate telephony and data networks in parallel.
Bu
VoIP rocks! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:VoIP rocks! (Score:5, Insightful)
According to AT&T, that happened more than 20 years ago: even before the 1984 breakup into Baby Bells, they were saying the most expensive element of a long distance call was timing and billing it. They may have been exaggerating, but once you factor in the need to audit and log everything, keeping clocks synchronized, all the extra CPU load on the exchanges, and most significantly the extra software requirements (instead of "patch line X to line Y", it becomes "log start time, patch line X to line Y, keep track of time until the line is dropped again") and customer support (people querying charges - "I didn't call Wisconsin that day, I was in hospital!", "But 281-555-1234 should be a local call from here"...) - just charge $x per month and make sure the calls get through. Much simpler, hence cheaper. (Just compare a telco's billing department to an ISP's...)
A few years ago, a FAQ for ISPs was "why don't you offer a pay-per-minute option, as an alternative to flat-rate subscriptions?" - the answer was that all the extra overhead would make the per-minute billing more expensive than flat-rate.
For that matter, MCI now offer flat-rate calls through the US (and Canada, for an extra $4/month) on landlines.
Re:VoIP rocks! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:VoIP rocks! (Score:2)
Re:VoIP rocks! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:VoIP rocks! (Score:1)
Another company (Score:2)
No idea what kind of "catches" there are, but sounds good.
Re:VoIP rocks! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:VoIP rocks! (Score:2)
Having the same number follow you from your desk, to anywhere in the campus, to anywhere you can get a VPN connection (WiFi or otherwise), to home (over VPN) is just too cool and too usefull if you want to telecomute part time.
Ummm...I can think of a couple of easy ways to have my number follow me on the circuit-switched network. Cellphone? Call forwarding?
Some of the marketing folks were simply blown away when I showed em that they could get calls at the airport, at the coffee shop, at home, and any
Re:VoIP rocks! (Score:1)
CDMA technology will do this soon (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:VoIP rocks! (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm cabled today in instead of using the wireless right now as planes flying overhead do disrupt my WiFi--something I never expected.
Re:VoIP rocks! (Score:2)
While the marginal costs of VoIP are reduced, the initial rollout can be expensive. Decent handsets with VoIP capabilities are nearly twice as expensive. Many vendors have digital phones that can later be upgraded to VoIP by adding an additinal module.
Anyways, if your corporation has sites across the country, your PBX can take advantage of this as well. If you are in New York and you make a phone call to someone outside your corporation i
Re:VoIP rocks! (Score:1)
Yes, and about time too (Score:5, Interesting)
Here's what I'd like to see replace it. Forget VoIP over WiFi, you still need a carrier. Wouldn't it be great if we could have a mesh radio network, with a suitable self-discovering routing protocol, that would allow calls to be made from any handset to any other handset? Combined with decent encryption, this would put the privacy back in communications.
Re:Yes, and about time too (Score:3, Interesting)
It's coming. Low frequency digital spread spectrum. Fast, carrier-optional, longer range, works through dense walls and is about four years from hitting the market.
Re:Yes, and about time too (Score:3, Interesting)
Meshes will never become a reality. They are the most wasteful of radio access network implementations. Instead, expect to see virtual arrays. Simplistically meaning you get to have network access because some other user does and vice versa.
Encryption on wireless/mobile comms is a joke, as WEP has shown. Work is being done, but good encryption algorithms, suitable for the environment to be used in, are not like pizzas. You just can't order one.
The "intellign
Wireless = Bad (Score:4, Informative)
What do I mean? Well, for a start I have lost track of the number of times individual machines on Wireless simply 'drop out' of communication, leading to perception on the part of our customers that this isn't a reliable , responsible technology.
We have seen, in implementing Wireless, a whole host of different issues - in ideal circumstances Wireless access works well, is fast enough to be used for most internal office purposes and so on.
The problem with Wireless in any form is that it is not as tollerant of non-ideal conditions. Adverse weather conditions (especially during the summer, when static build up knocks out entire Wireless networks on a regular basis), passing vehicles, other communication devices (especially mobile phones, which regardless of advancements in tech will continue to operate alongside any upgraded solution for some considerable time) and simple things like the type of clothing work by the person using the computer, have been known to knock a machine out of a WAN.
Solutions of phone technology over existing Cat5e UTP cable networking, such as that provided by Nortel Networks [nortelnetworks.com] work well, with integration into existing office apps, but Wireless for Data is still, in the field, an unreliable technology. Wireless for VoIP still runs the issue of packet lossage (which on any Wireless solution i have ever seen runs at upwards of 25%), which is far more serious than equivalent signal loss for conventional mobile telecom solutions.
Re:Wireless = Bad (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Wireless = Bad (Score:2)
Almost all of the new "wireless phone" systems being sold in the US today are 2.4GHz.
-clee
Re:Wireless = Bad (Score:1)
Re:Wireless = Bad (Score:2)
The WAN thing was a typo, my bad.
But yes, you are correct in everything you say, the weather shouldn't affect signalling, nor should conventional mobile phones.
But it does.
There is a very definite, and very noticeable correlation between weather conditions and poor Wireless connectivity. Every time we have done any research into the problem, with the manufacturer or in any one of a bunch
Re:Wireless = Bad (Score:2)
Re:Wireless = Bad (Score:2)
We are recomending a return to wires. They work, the wireless doesn't.
Re:Wireless = Bad (Score:2)
Go to any UPS warehouse and you'll pick up 802.11b. Just because your installers are FoS, doesn't make the technology bad.
Even a poorly installed CAT5 networks sucks. Runs beyond 100 meters, zip ties too tight pushing into large bundles, bad punch-down techniques (untwisting too much cable), running over flourescent lights, etc., will all mak
Re:Wireless = Bad (Score:2)
I'd look for circumstances that might be amplifying the interference.
Remember, it isn't that wireless can't be affected by, for instance, weather - but simply that it should have sufficient fault tolerance that you don't need to worry about it.
So it sounds to me like there's something in your setup amplifying the interference, or a breakdown in the fault tolerance features, or both.
It's just a wild guess, but, well, I've seen radio interference from weather drastically amplified in the vicinity of iro
Re:Wireless = Bad (Score:2)
The fact of the matter is that I and the rest of the techs are fed up of hearing the word 'should' being used in conjunction with Wireless in all its forms. It isn't good for us to troubleshoot, it isn't good for the customer who has critical operations failing because of the technology.
Give it 5 years and I'd expect that most of the issues will have been docu
Re:Wireless = Bad (Score:2)
Do you have any links to good web sites about that sort of thing? I have wireless internet, but the ISP is a bit... amateur. It's very cheap, but my connection craps out frequently. It's still good enough to use the web and download Futurama episodes, but it could
Re:Wireless = Bad (Score:1)
Re:Wireless = Bad (Score:1)
Re:Wireless = Bad (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Wireless = Bad (Score:2)
FCC Licenses (Score:5, Interesting)
About VoIP WIFI taking over local telecos ... (Score:2)
Like the speculation that Internet is dead, the one about VoIP and WIFI will deal local telecos a death blow is too premature.
No matter it's VoIP or WIFI, the data packets need the WIRES to complete their journey.
Who runs the WIRES ?
Well
Plus, don't forget that the local Telcos have the option to change with time.
Perhaps in 20 years, local Telcos may not earn as much money from their current business, they may branch o
VoIP over 802.11b is fine and dandy... (Score:4, Interesting)
Unfortunately the handset manufacturers do not sell to consumers, they sell to cellular telephony network operators which then pass the phones on to consumers cheaply. The network operators desperately need bandwidth hungry applications such as video telephony or "multimedia" messages. That is what the phone manufacturers care about providing right now. None of them would dare put anything on the market that takes bandwidth use away from the network operators.
It will happen in at most a few years though; unnatural market conditions tend to fix themselves unless conditions are truly exceptional or the government intervenes.
Re:VoIP over 802.11b is fine and dandy... (Score:1)
They do sell to consumers in countries where tying cell phone device and service together is illegal (to ensure healthy competition and consumer's freedom of choice). In the homeland of world's biggest handset manufacturer all phones are sold directly to consumers.
Perhaps the biggest problem with replacing cell phones with WLAN and VoIP is an order of magnitude difference in network cove
Re:VoIP over 802.11b is fine and dandy... (Score:2)
Spectralink offers 802.11 VoIP handsets. Cisco is supposedly implementing one of their own, as well.
Have you forgotten about the huge world of telephony that exists outside of marketing-driven, pay-per-minute cellular phones?
And Bluetooth? Who cares. It's another overlapping standard that nobody cares to implement fully. The state of its cur
Re:VoIP over 802.11b is fine and dandy... (Score:2)
As to Spectralink and Cisco, let me quote from Spectralink's press release: "The NetLink e340 is priced starting at $399". They are targeted at enterprises and they do not have a chance at the mass market.
For BlueTooth, the cell phones and headsets alone can keep that standard alive and chipsets cheap.
Re:Why it's dieing... (Score:2, Interesting)
Just expanding pipes != works well and cheap (Score:2, Insightful)
If you have only a mesh of six or two T1s, then sure, maybe replacing all those T1s with pairs of T1s or fractional T3s and replacing all the routers with new ones to handle the new bandwidth might be cheaper than playing around with complex protocol design.
But if you have a nation wide network with literally hund
Re:Just expanding pipes != works well and cheap (Score:2)
Let me give some more context to the original post. By "complex protocol design" I mainly think of the way classic telcos run things: e.g. run SS7 signaling, use expensive 5ESS switches, ATM, circuit switching, etc. In comparison, an IP network is much simpler, and cheaper; there are only datagrams forwarded through stateless routers. (Though to run a voice network, there will have to be some signalling protocol like SIP, and the VoIP traffic separated from best effort t
VoIP payoffs (Score:1)
Keep in mind that in many, though not all, cases the 'cheaper' phone service over IP is also of less quality than the PSTN -- or less assured quality. (i.e. codec compression, lack of QoS guarantees, etc.) It's often easy to make a cheaper version of a product by lowering the standards. So, payoff for Sprint and other companies: more calls crammed into less bandwidth over trunk lines giving more efficient use
Re:Why it's dieing... (Score:1, Offtopic)
link at your own risk.
Re:Why it's dieing... (Score:1)
Circuit Switching (Score:4, Interesting)
When it comes to dial tone, whenever you pick up that phone, you expect to get it - period. We get very annoyed if connection drops or we can't hear anyone on the other end, no matter where we call. The exception to this of course is our wireless calls. It is still a relatively new technology and so we put up with it. We are willing to hang up and retry the call if we get a bad connection. Sometimes we even wait until we get in a new cell on the network, or wait until we get back to a wired phone. The technology is not that dependable yet.
Neither is packet switching. You have already begin to hear of the technology replacing circuit switching on occasion, but we are a ways off from massive replacement of traditional circuit switching. Just as it took a while for electronic switches to mature enough to replace the mechanical ones, so to will this technology have to mature. We are not talking about replacing a few PCs on a network. The Telecom industry moves quite a bit slower. Public expectation is just too great. No, you are going to except that dial tone to be there every time you pick up that phone; even while they are replacing the switch...
Re:Circuit Switching (Score:1)
Re:Circuit Switching (Score:2, Interesting)
On top of that, you just don't replace a Central Office or a large business PBX overnight. Tons (more than you can even imagine) of planning is required even before the first circuit is swapped out. Implementation of that plan is still another time intensive issue. A press release is only the begining of the process.
The packet switching an
Re:Circuit Switching (Score:1)
Yes, circuit switching is not going away today or tomorrow. Regulatory implications alone almost guarentee at least a decade more.
You said
Interesting VOIP application (Score:2)
VOIP might just be the future (Score:3, Funny)
The number of subscribers increases everyday, and how would the telecom operators cope with the increasing need for additional bandwidth without laying more cables (which of course, increases cost)? By using existing IP network, of course!
The dot-com internet slump has left most of the urbanised areas on the planet over-wired, and underutilized. By deploying VOIP in their switching and access networks, fixed-network operators can now cater for more subscribers, and at the same time, stay competitive with lower prices.
Also, operators can then focus on their business (customer service, billing, operations) without worrying about network expansion, deployment and maintenance of the physical medium, since it's already taken care of by the IP network provider.
One further advantage that VOIP has over conventional switched networks is that IP networks can include a Quality of Service (QOS) package for each subscriber. This means that by subscribing to different QOS packages, subscribers can now have a choice between a low-cost, low (but bearable) voice quality; and high cost and quality alternatives.
VOIP could be the telecom's way into the future. I personally do not see the end of this industry so soon, as there are still lots of terrain to cover. The world is wider than we think!
Hold your horses... (Score:3, Informative)
An earlier poster made the comment that "a number that follows you anywhere." This would not be a function of the pipe that delivers the call to you. WiFi as it stands now is not a good protocol for VoIP. In general IPv4 is not a good protocol for VoIP, and there Internet is VERY MUCH not a protocol for VoIP. It all has to do with the bandwidth that voice takes, and the unusually high quality that us humans need to have to feel the service is good.
If you want a good VoIP solution, you have to run a seperate pipe to the desktop, on seperate routers to ensure decent bandwidth. You have to use propriety IPv4 QOS and you have to sratch you head a bit when it doesn't work right. Also, you Data folks tend not to understand Voice applications and you have a hard time getting pratical support from your WAN/LAN administrators.
We have heard a lot about carriers switching over VoIP. Well, what they are mostly doing, which is pratical these days, is using it for intra-Central Office traffic, which is fine and dandy when the only thing going over your Pipes is Voice. You can guaruntee the quality, know what the bandwidth usage is, etc... but this isn't much different than ATM except that it has a cool name. A lot of us forget that almost every networking technology (ATM, T1, Fiber, etc) was orginally a voice pipe before it was used on the data side.
GSM, CDMA, etc are GOOD wireless protocols that show what adaptive bitrate protocols can do, WiFi would be abosolutly horrible in its current incarnation. It is a fully cooperative very limited bandwidth protocol. Great for our data bursts, but very bad for the sustained traffic of voice. It has a VERY large overhead, plus you had the overhead of IP and you are at a pratical 3-4Mbs which then has to content with the guy down the hall dragging porn files off a remote server or someone playing Warcraft III with 20 other players. Now even 802.11g/a would be a tough bandwidth to deal with. I don't know the specifications in detail, but I doubt they have any standard QOS features.
Anyways, that is my 2-3 cents...
Re:Hold your horses... (Score:1)
I'm using it now and it works great. Vonage supplies you with a cisco box and you just plug it into your router. free long distance in US and Canada.
i can download files and talk at the same time. there's no bandwidth problems at all.
Power Requirements? (Score:4, Interesting)
The real holy grail of wireless tech is not needing wifi repeaters at all. I know a guy at CMU who is working on wireless devices that communicate with base stations and each other. That way, bandwith and power are conserved by each device broadcasting over the smallest area possible. Within densely populated areas like colleges and cities this could focus as a serious competeditor to celluar service, while in more rural areas phones and computers could switch back to the more traditional celluar and wired services.
Why VoIP will eventually prevail... (Score:4, Interesting)
Those VERY few telcos that stuck to sound business decisions avoided chapter 11, and are laughing all the way to the bank!
That being said, VoIP, properly implemented, is a very strong contender going into the next 5 years, because more and more businesses are looking for a 'silver bullet' for ALL their comm needs. The carrier that hands them a magic box that serves their internet, voice, VPN and PBX needs will retain the business of the Enterprise customer, and be successful.
This hasn't really been possible until about next year, when we reach a critical mass of clue in the Enterprise world. IP PBX vendors are already starting to clean up, because, contrary to what voice only guys tell you, or data only guys tell you, IT IS AMAZINGLY EASY to get a VoIP PBX going, if you have enough bandwidth (and most anyone can afford enough bandwidth in their office), and it is SLIGHTLY LESS EASY to get it delivered through a smart carrier, who will bring you a multi-megabit facility to handle your voice and data needs...
Bottleneck removed, Class of Service (via MPLS) built in, works seemlessly...
The key, as always, is access and bandwidth.
battery power is a limiting step (Score:1)
A case in point - a friend of mone who works as a US defence contractor told me that they piloted some real fancy GPS + communication device. The only flaw was the battery life - the device wasn't so useful to mreit carrying around a charging backapck..
When I'm out shopping for a mobile device, battery life usually is among the top two crieteria..
IPv6 a pre-requisite for VoIP (Score:3, Interesting)
Telephony might just be where you see IPv6 being deployed first.
Telephony is by definition peer-to-peer so you are stuck if you are hidden behind a NAT. Even if you confined VoIP to a class A network like 10.255.255.255 you would only have a little more than 16 million available numbers.
IPv6 is also prepared for QOS which will be a good thing for telephony.
Internet QOS (Score:3, Insightful)
The problem isn't bandwidth/speed at either end - but throttling at the internap points between backbone providers (XO Communications is particularly notorious when it comes to this issue)
When it comes to VOIP packets, there needs to be decent QOS/Priority Queuing from end to end to make it viable - and right now the tier one providers aren't exactly playing nicely together in the sandbox.
Re:Internet QOS (Score:1)
Call my New York Telephone number and it rings wherever in the world I've got the ATA connected. It has worked in Tokyo and London with better than cellular voice quality.
I don't have the same mobility as cellular and I have to register the phone with the server everytime I relocate it, but it's a push of a button.
And for $39.95 a month I have unlimited calling within the US (inc. Alaska and Hawaii
Will 911 keep up though ? (Score:2, Insightful)
VoIP and WiFi are both overhyped (Score:4, Interesting)
Yes, you can run voice over IP. Yes, you can run IP over wireless. Heck, 16 years ago I was running IP over 1200 bps Aloha AX.25 packet radio links. Very instructional, because Phil Karn's NOS let me watch a decoded protocol trace of passing packets, and they came so slowly that I could study all of them in real time. Think about it. The point is that you can't run voice over *any* IP, just some paths.
Circuit-switched telephony is cheap to build. Sure the existing telco networks are made of gear that they paid a lot for, but ILECs depreciate gear over 20+ years. So the Lucent 5ESS and Nortel DMS-100 are VAX-era hardware. What did a MIPS cost when the 5E was designed? Modern circuit switching (which CLECs and some small ILECs buy, not to mention the PBX market) uses modern parts. The switching hardware is only a little costlier than IP stuff, and it sounds better. All the sexy call control features are in the control software, which in a modern system is agnostic about physical-layer protocol. So you can do nice things on circuit, ATM, or IP. Just a different card in the switch.
WiFi's limits are obvious -- there's finite spectrum, and it's shared with domestic cookers (microwave ovens are right in the middle of its band!), cordless phones, VCR "multipliers", baby monitors, and all sorts of other crap. WiFi5 is cleaner spectrum, though the lower-volume gear is costlier. The 5 GHz band will benefit from a recent FCC rule change that adds 275 MHz more bandwidth. But unlicensed still means low power, and either very short range *or* directional antennas (which take more work). And you have to worry about things like hills and trees.
I'm always looking for alternatives to Bell wire -- that's really a big part of my job! But WiFi ain't it. There are non-WiFi radios that are better for "last mile" purposes (and slower, because they have to trade speed for range -- see Shannon). The FCC is contemplating making some additional frequencies available, and in rural/exurban areas, especially flatland, wireless can do wonders. In hilly or woody areas, it's tougher. In urban areas, spectrum is too limited. Fiber optic bandwidth is infinite -- there's lots of sand out there, and only one radio spectrum.
unlicensed also meand sharing.. (Score:1)
Heheh 1200 baud AX.25 Packet is still active. I know WHY but it's handy and free that little yellow light is flashing on my TNC now even. Look Maw! Email!
BS Alert (Score:2)
"Today, broadband is email; but it enables voice. That's why it's so exciting. We want to get everybody a little excited, a little bit edgy."
WTF?
I suggest he really wants to get everybody a little bit confused. Easily achieved with consumers having to listen to BS such as this.
Confusion among consumers is the key to ensuring small-print laden service contracts and complex tariff structures maximise revenues. Drive the demand with sexy marketing slogans but go
Voice over IP over WiFi is stupid (Score:2)
There's a good argument for voice over IP on fibre, because transmission there is cheap and there's a fibre glut. But deploying 3G telephony to provide faster Internet connections so that VoIP can be run over them is stupid.
Besides, cellular m
Dialtone over WiFi is not a good idea. (Score:1)
All it takes is sending WiFi deauth control messages to the broadcast MAC and your phon
WiFi is NOT killing the telecom industry (Score:2)
VoIP a Telco Savior? This is a joke, right? (Score:1)
Wireless Voice Needs Quick Handoff! (Score:2)
When moving around with your traditional cell phone, you move from one cell to another. The handset and network both switch "connections" simultaneously. One analogy is to think of the cell phone as having a really long imaginary phone cord (or ethernet cable for VoIP) connected to a wall jack. As you move around, the cord stretches out so far it can stretch no more - so the magic in the system silently connects you to a "closer" wall jack in the blink of an eye.
Incredible numbers of man-hours have
Can't wait for VoIP (Score:2)
VoIP, you would just need to go in and tell it to have the number ring over there instead of here.
Not to mention not having to wait 2 weeks for this crap to actually get done - and the costs s