Joho the Blog
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July 09, 2003
Paddy Holahan of NewBay thinks that camera phones will change everything. As the data from voice declines, the telcos are looking for data apps to fill the pipes and the coffers. Raju Gulabani of Telesym focuses on delivering voice over wifi. Louis Holder of Vonage says that they offer phone service over a broadband connection. [Unfortunately, it's not available in Boston, unless you're willing to get a new phone number. I checked a couple of months ago.] They have about 33,000 customers. You get unlimited calling for $40/month, including long distance. Now they're adding services. David Isenberg of David Isenberg asks which we would choose if forced, telephone or email. Most of us in the audience would give up our email instead of our phone. In fact, these days we set up long phone calls through IM or email. The era of voice is over. SIP will do for communications what HTML did for documents. And don't forget to keep the network Stupid! Raju agrees that voice is undergoing a transition and that the idea of charging more for distance is going away. But we're going to have more phones and more talk than ever before. But don't underestimate the power of a disruptive business model. The audience argues about whether voice is dead, or exactly how dead it is. More minutes. Fewer lines to homes. David clarifies: The era of voice-only is dead. Arnold Kling asks if the last mile has to be wireless. General agreement on the panel.
Posted
by D. Weinberger at July 9, 2003 03:36 PM
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Comments
David -
Vonage says it can handle 617. The form to check for your particular exchange didn't seem to work when I tried it.
I'm in 781 and I have a Vonage account.
Craig
Posted by: Craig Allen | July 9, 2003 09:31 PM
I just checked again and it's as before: I can get Vonage service but I'd have to switch my phone number.
Posted by: dweinberger | July 10, 2003 09:48 AM
So much for the "law" requiring true number portability across carriers.
Can you say "telco lock-in" kids?
I ended up changing my number to go to Vonage. It was hard to lose my 212 area code, but I was getting screwed by those two old hags AT&T and Verizon for minimal phone requirements.
Now I pay a lot less and get a lot more. But it wasn't a huge hardship for me to change my number in the end. YMMV.
Posted by: Mr. Nosuch | July 11, 2003 11:05 AM
Interesting comments.
Posted by: Vonage | August 23, 2003 10:53 PM