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Subject: TELECOM Digest V23 #209

TELECOM Digest     Mon, 26 Apr 2004 11:25:00 EDT    Volume 23 : Issue 209

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    A New Day for Voice (VOIP News)
    FCC Taps 8x8 for Washington, DC Video-Over-IP Demonstration (VOIP News)
    Net2Phone and Navini to Offer Wireless VoIP Company Charter (VOIP News)
    $10 M Wireless Telecom Network Proposed for Lower Manhattan (Nick Ruark)
    Re: Book Review: 19th Century Telegraphers (Jim Haynes)
    Re: Bad Weather Storm; Vonage Goes Out (Bob Goudreau)
    Re: Bad Weather Storm; Vonage Goes Out (Keith)
    President Bush: Internet Sales Tax Moratorium to be Continued (Editor)

All contents here are copyrighted by Patrick Townson and the
individual writers/correspondents. Articles may be used in other
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included in the fair use quote.  By using -any name or email address-
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               ===========================

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against crime.   Geoffrey Welsh

               ===========================

See the bottom of this issue for subscription and archive details
and the name of our lawyer; other stuff of interest.  

----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: VOIP News <voip news>
Date: Mon, 26 Apr 2004 00:17:27 -0400
Subject: A New Day for Voice
Reply-To: VoIPnews@yahoogroups.com


http://www.techcentralstation.com/042604C.html

By Kevin Werbach
 
Quick. What technology has two billion paying customers worldwide,
generates over $300 billion in annual service revenues in the US, and
is so important to daily life and business that we'd have a hard time
functioning without it? No, not the Internet, the personal computer,
or even the television. It's the humble telephone. So it's no small
news that the telephone is facing its biggest revolution since
Alexander Graham Bell called out for Mr. Watson. The four letters
spelling out that revolution are: V-O-I-P.

Voice over Internet Protocol means carrying phone calls and other
forms of voice communication over data networks. It will have profound
impacts on the economy, and on the way we work, socialize, get
information, and entertain ourselves. It will power a transformation
of the telecom industry, and of the entire information sector that
depends upon it. It will generate enormous benefits for innovation,
business efficiency, and individual freedom. That is, if politicians
and government regulators don't smother it.

And that, in a nutshell, is the rationale for this new section of Tech
Central Station, focused on the important policy questions surrounding
VOIP. Our goal is to make it the central meeting place for
intellectuals, businesspeople, commentators, and other thought leaders
concerned with this issue.

Telecommunications is among the most heavily regulated segments of the
economy. VOIP points towards the day when competitive free markets can
replace that regulation, but we face a challenging transition to reach
that point. Today's VOIP is like the early mammals scurrying around
the feet of the dinosaurs: it will inherit the Earth as long as it
isn't stamped out in its infancy.
 
Full story at:
http://www.techcentralstation.com/042604C.html

How to Distribute VoIP Throughout a Home:
http://michigantelephone.mi.org/distribute.html

If you live in Michigan, subscribe to the MI-Telecom group:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MI-Telecom/

------------------------------

From: VOIP News <voip news>
Date: Mon, 26 Apr 2004 09:59:36 -0400
Subject: FCC Taps 8x8 for Washington, DC Video-Over-IP Demonstration
Reply-To: VoIPnews@yahoogroups.com


http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/04-26-2004/0002159352&EDATE=

    Packet8 VoIP Video Devices Will Change the Way People Communicate and
      Dramatically Improve the Quality of Life and Accessibility for all

    SANTA CLARA, Calif., April 26 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- 8x8, Inc.
(Nasdaq: EGHT), the Packet8 broadband voice over internet protocol
(VoIP) and video communications service provider, announced today that
Dr. Barry Andrews, 8x8's President, will present and demonstrate the
benefits of next-generation IP-communications services for disabled
citizens at the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Solutions
Summit on Friday, May 7, 2004.  

This Solutions Summit is the second in a series where government,
industry leaders and stakeholders discuss creative ways to address
policy issues that arise as communications services move to
Internet-Protocol-based platforms.  This meeting will focus on the
ways in which persons with disabilities access services that will be
increasingly based upon IP technologies.  8x8 plans to demonstrate the
DV326 videophone with Packet8 service to illustrate how IP-based
technologies can help consumers with hearing and other disabilities
communicate more completely.  

Dr. Andrews stated, "IP-based services with real-time, two-way
TV-quality video will change the way all people communicate and
operate every day in society."  Dr. Andrews continued, "The FCC is
looking into how people living with disabilities will be able to
access these new IP-based services.  We believe that rich media
devices like the 8x8 DV326 that include video and other data services
will actually improve the accessibility of those with disabilities to
communication networks, and additionally provide unprecedented access
to the physicians, careworkers, family and other remote parties that
need to care for the disabled on a regular basis."  The summit is open
to the public, and seating will be available on a first-come,
first-served basis.  The FCC is recommending that attendees submit a
pre-registration form. Pre-registration is encouraged, but not
required.  The pre-registration form is located at:
http://www.fcc.gov/voip/.

    About 8x8, Inc.

    8x8, Inc. offers the Packet8 broadband voice over Internet
protocol (VoIP) and video communications service
(http://www.packet8.net), Packet8 Virtual Office and videophone
equipment and services.  For more information, visit 8x8's web site at
http://www.8x8.com.

    About Packet8

    Launched in 2002, Packet8 enables anyone with high-speed Internet
access to sign up for voice over internet protocol (VoIP) and video
communications service at http://www.packet8.net.  Customers can
choose a direct-dial phone number from any of the rate centers offered
by the service, and then use an 8x8-supplied terminal adapter to
connect any telephone to a broadband internet connection and make or
receive calls from a regular telephone number.  For $19.95/month,
Packet8 subscribers can make unlimited calls to any telephone number
in the United States and Canada, and unlimited calls to any other
Packet8 subscriber anywhere in the world.  All Packet8 accounts come
with voice mail, caller ID, call waiting, call waiting caller ID, call
forwarding, hold, line-alternate, 3-way conferencing, web access to
account controls, and real-time online billing.  Packet8 Virtual
Office allows users anywhere in the world to be part of a virtual PBX
that includes auto attendants, conference bridges,
extension-to-extension dialing, ring groups and a host of other high
end business class PBX features while still following true to Packet8
unlimited calling anywhere in the United States and Canada.

    NOTE: 8x8, the 8x8 logo, Packet8, the Packet8 logo and Packet8
Virtual Office are trademarks of 8x8, Inc.  All other trademarks are
the property of their respective owners.

SOURCE 8x8, Inc.
Web Site: http://www.8x8.com http://www.packet8.net
http://www.fcc.gov/voip 

------------------------------

From: VOIP News <Voip news>
Date: Mon, 26 Apr 2004 10:21:23 -0400
Subject: Net2Phone and Navini to Offer Wireless VoIP Companies Charter
Reply-To: VoIPnews@yahoogroups.com


http://home.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/index.jsp?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20040426005365&newsLang=en

Net2Phone and Navini to Offer Wireless VoIP Companies Charter the Next
Wave of Wi-Fi Expansion with Telephony Bundle

NEWARK, N.J. & RICHARDSON, Texas--(BUSINESS WIRE)--April 26,
2004--Net2Phone (NASDAQ: NTOP) and Navini Networks, a leading
Non-Line-of-Sight wireless broadband provider, today announced plans
to empower wireless broadband connectivity with telephony
services. The companies will jointly deliver Net2Phone's broadband
telephony services over Navini's wireless broadband infrastructure,
extending the flexibility and mobility of VoIP calling.

Under this agreement, Navini and Net2Phone will offer VoIP telephony
solutions to Navini's wireless broadband customers.

Net2Phone has adapted its residential broadband telephony solution
called VoiceLine to enable communications over wireless IP
networks. VoiceLine provides a robust set of features and
functionality, including inbound and outbound calling with
applications such as phone number selection, call waiting, caller ID
and voice mail. Calls are routed over Navini's Wireless Metropolitan
Area Network (WMAN) solution to Net2Phone's SIP-based platform, which
performs call routing and management, supplies CLASS 5 features,
provides billing and provisioning integration and distributes the
infrastructure required for interconnecting onto and off of the Public
Switched Telephone Network. Customers can place and receive local,
long distance and international phone calls miles from the Navini
Ripwave Base Station while stationary or portable throughout Navini's
wireless metropolitan area broadband network.

"Wireless Metropolitan Area Networks are clearly the next frontier for
Net2Phone, as we extend our reach beyond the wired world," said Bryan
Wiener, President of Net2Phone Global Services. "Navini's
technological leadership in the space and superior support for QoS
will allow Net2Phone to continue its leadership position in providing
high quality VoIP solutions to telecom and high speed data providers
across the globe."

Wide area wireless broadband has become a viable alternative for
customers to receive high-speed Internet access in rural areas and
areas with low high-speed data availability where wired broadband is
not an option. For Net2Phone, extending its retail VoIP offerings to
the wireless environment enables Net2Phone to ride the wave of
wireless broadband deployments by offering a bundle of telephony in
conjunction with a high-speed wireless data product. Further
enhancements to wireless VoIP will likely include VoIP enabled mobile
handsets that allow consumers and business users to use the VoiceLine
service anytime they are within the coverage footprint.


Full press release at:
http://home.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/index.jsp?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20040426005365&newsLang=en 

------------------------------

From: Nick Ruark <nbruark@qualitymobile.com>
Subject: $10 M Wireless Telecom Network Propsed For Lower Manhattan
Date: Sun, 25 Apr 2004 20:26:07 -0700


A Plan for Wireless Telecommunications Network

By JOHN HOLUSHA

A WIRELESS telecommunications system that would keep Lower Manhattan's
computers and phones connected with the rest of the world in the event
of a major disruption downtown has been proposed by officials of the
Alliance for Downtown New York. (http://www.downtownny.com/)

The proposed system would send signals through the air, rather than
through fiber-optic cables or copper wires and would be the first such
system in a central business district in the country, according to
executives of the alliance, the downtown business improvement group.

The signals would be sent to switching centers in Manhattan and some
other location, probably in New Jersey, to ensure that if there is
damage in one location, connections would be maintained through the
links to other centers.

The Lower Manhattan Wireless Redundancy System
http://www.citylimits.org/content/articles/articleView.cfm?articlenumber=993
is intended to carry data, like stock and bond trading and banking
transactions, but could be used for voice communications, if necessary,
they said.

However, the system requires an investment of $10 million in public
money to install the basic components -- roof-top antennas and the
structure to keep them in place.

The system and other initiatives are part of a strategy by the
alliance to use communications technology to increase the
attractiveness of the area to small and medium-size companies that
want reliable connections, but cannot afford to develop systems on
their own.

The issue of reliability is an important one downtown because the
Sept. 11 attack cut off many companies, even those who had multiple
carriers, because all their wires connected at 140 West Street, which
was heavily damaged.

"We looked at what Merrill Lynch and other large companies did to
develop private networks," after the World Trade Center attack, said
John J. Gilbert, the executive vice president of Rudin Management and
chairman of a committee that studied the communications problem and
recommended the new backup system.

He said they relied on high speed data transmission through the air,
which is called broadband wireless, to locations outside the city to
ensure that their operations remain connected, regardless of the
emergency.

"Broadband wireless is here," Mr. Gilbert said. "The question is, how
do we provide access to small and medium-size business?  As we rebuild
the telecommunications system downtown, we do not want to do it as it
was; we want to do it as it should be."

Shirley Jaffe, vice president of economic development for the
alliance, said the group had been making presentations to the city,
the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation and other institutions of
government to secure the financing needed to build the basic system,
which could be used by multiple telephone companies. Because of this,
no single telephone company is willing to make the investment. "It has
a lot of support from business, but we still need an entity of
government to pay for it," she said.

With billions being spend to rebuild downtown, Ms. Jaffe said, "$10
million is a relatively modest amount of money."

She added, "We could be in operation within six months, and it would
have a major positive impact in the short term."

The system would cover all of Lower Manhattan by installing antennas
and related equipment on five of the tallest buildings in the area,
which are called hubs. Planners said just about every office in the
area would be able to "see" one of the hubs, either through a window
or by a common antenna operated by the landlord near the top of a
building.

The hubs would collect the communications signals and transmit them to
what is known as a Point of Presence, or POP, which is a large
switching location connected by various types of links -- wires,
fiber-optic cables and microwave links - to national and international
telecommunications networks. The transmission would be to POP's in
multiple locations to ensure reliability.

The transmissions would use both laser light in the not-visible
infrared wavelengths and radio microwaves to add to reliability,
Mr. Gilbert said.  He said using both compensated for light's
inability to penetrate fog and the tendency of microwave beams to
spread out and grow unfocused.

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/25/realestate/25COMM.html


Forwarded from the Private Wireless Forum
for Mobile Communication Professionals
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PrivateWirelessForum

------------------------------

Subject: Re: Book Review: 19th Century Telegraphers
Reply-To: jhaynes@alumni.uark.edu
Organization: University of Arkansas Alumni
From: haynes@alumni.uark.edu (Jim Haynes)
Date: Sun, 25 Apr 2004 23:50:32 GMT


I too wish I could read somewhere about the late history of W.U.
What's in the business press is pretty sketchy.

Back on the subject of 19th century telegraphers, there is a 
more recent book, "My sisters telegraphic : women in the telegraph
office, 1846-1950" by Thomas C. Jepsen, Ohio University Press.

Concerning the business relationship between AT&T and W.U., Oslin's
book says some of that started back when AT&T bought a controlling
interest in W.U. and introduced the practice of accepting telegrams by
telephone and having them appear on the phone bill.  And that practice
was continued even after the government forced AT&T to divest W.U.  Of
course at that point the new president of W.U., Newcomb Carlton, was
hand-picked by Theodore Vail of AT&T.  Some of the later W.U.
presidents were hired from railroad companies and didn't know the
telegraph business at all.  The outstanding late president of W.U.
was Walter Marshall, who ironically came to W.U. as part of the merger
with Postal Telegraph.  The last president of W.U. was a man who came
up through the ranks starting as a messenger boy (trying
unsuccessfully to remember his name right now).  Perhaps he was the
only one who could be found who would wear the captain's hat as the
ship went down. 

jhhaynes at earthlink dot net

------------------------------

From: Bob Goudreau <notchur.biz>
Subject: Re: Bad Weather Storm; Vonage Goes Out
Date: Sun, 25 Apr 2004 22:50:45 -0400


[Please obscure my email address as usual.  Thanks.]

Linc Madison wrote:
 
>> By the way -- the next time someone tries to argue that Amtrak should
>> be getting a direct subsidy to level the playing field with all those
>> public highways and interstates, you might point them to the $30
>> Billion every year that US taxpayers are paying for those roads.

> Exactly the point -- the public highways and interstates are subsidized
> by the taxpayers, tilting the playing field. To *level* the playing
> field, we should subsidize rail travel, too.

So, you are advocating charging additional taxes on rail users as a
way of making rail *more* attractive?  To *really* level the playing
field, divert part of those rail taxes to pay for roads.  After all, a
portion of road fuel taxes is already diverted to other forms of
transportation.

Bob Goudreau
Cary, NC

------------------------------

From: Keith <NOkmonSPAM@adelphia.net>
Subject: Re: Bad Weather Storm; Vonage Goes Out
Date: Sun, 25 Apr 2004 22:54:35 -0400


Pat,

Yeah as others have mentioned, use a UPS.  I have both a 650 and 1000
for a couple different computers.  I have my cable modem and wireless
router+switch on my UPS.  It's pretty neat to be online surfing when
the power is out to the house.

With this being said, I think this is a good argument for why I would
never get rid of a normal regular POTS line at home.  I hear people
replacing their home phones with cell phones, with VOIP phones, etc.
I've got a regular el cheapo corded plugged in that takes power from
the line.  The uptime experienced in the voice world kicks butt over
anything in the data world.

Keith

TELECOM Digest Editor <editor@telecom-digest.org> wrote in message
news:telecom23.206.12@telecom-digest.org...

> My questions are: since battery will keep computers going temporarily,
> and assuming one's cable line/or phone and DSL line was working, I am
> wondering if one could not run a battery to the Motorola MTA and the
> router and keep your Vonage on line even when the computers otherwise
> are shut down?

> PAT

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: But a good flip side of this argument
is that an independent UPS or power supply eliminates another of
the excuses for the 'why Vonage could never replace traditional Bell'
things, doesn't it.  When the UPS is properly configured, since the
'telephone' line (DSL in this instance) is so reliable, Vonage is
also. PAT]

------------------------------

From: TELECOM Digest Editor <editor@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: President Bush 'No Internet Taxes' Promise Today
Date: Mon, 26 Apr 2004  10:00 CDT


As I compiled/edited this issue of the Digest, President Bush was
speaking (over the satellite radio, from a university in Minnesota)
and promising that if he is re-elected in November, the moratorium
on 'taxes on sales over the internet' will be continued. Of course
Bush has occassionally (?) been sometimes less than forthright in
his statements and promises so it remains to be seen how this will
work out when the present moratorium (established for five years in
1998-99) expires later this year. But note your records please, he
is promising it today at the all-day event in Minnesota.

PAT

------------------------------

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End of TELECOM Digest V23 #209
******************************
