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June 30, 2008

Asterisk 1.4.21.1 Released

The Asterisk.org development team has released Asterisk version 1.4.21.1.

This release includes a critical bug fix for 1.4.21.  All users that experienced lockups when upgrading to 1.4.21 should have their issues resolved with this update.

Asterisk 1.4.21.1 is available for download from the downloads site:
 * http://downloads.digium.com/pub/telephony/asterisk

Thank you for your continued support of Asterisk!

AT&T moves HQ to Dallas

 
 
High-quality videoconferencing is the bright new hope for cutting down on air travel, but it apparently came too late for AT&T, which is moving its corporate headquarters to Dallas to be closer to the third-largest airport in the U.S. The carrier, which offers residential wireline service in 22 states as well as a cellular network nationwide and operations in 160 countries, has been based in San Antonio, Texas, since 1992.
 The move should be completed by the end of the year and will involve about 700 of the carrier's 6,000 San Antonio workers, according to the company. AT&T has 310,070 employees worldwide.

One reason the company cited for the move, announced Friday, was the need to be close to its suppliers and other telecommunications vendors. There are about 1,300 such companies in the Dallas area, with approximately 45,000 employees, AT&T said. They include Alcatel-Lucent, Nortel Networks, Cisco Systems, Research In Motion and Samsung Electronics. Dallas is about 275 miles north of San Antonio.

But AT&T also cited the hope that air travel to and from Dallas will be more convenient and cost effective. Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport has nonstop service to 35 international and 133 U.S. destinations, and Dallas also has another airport, Love Field, the company said. Good access to air transportation is critical as the airline industry consolidates, according to AT&T.

Click Here to Continue Reading 

iPhone 3G Plans for Rogers Wireless Officially Announced

We were teased with so-called leaked memos, telling us that there would be unlimited data for $30. It was understandable that you needed to pair with this a qualifying voice plan, but we were given the impression that good times were coming. Today's announcement is a step in the right direction, but at the same time, it's also one big slap in the face.

The official voice and data plans for the iPhone 3G have been announced by Rogers Wireless and it seems that you won't be buying your voice and data separately. Instead, the suits at Rogers have concocted some pre-configured plans that give you a little bit of both. When I say a little bit, I mean it. There are four iPhone 3G plans in all.

Check them out

June 23, 2008

Polycom IP 670 IP Phone - Color LCD Screen and Gigabit

Editor Note:  Well its about time, if my readers remember that this was called for when the IP 650 came out. Good call Polycom.  Time to get my hands on one. 

Polycom today announced the newest addition to its SoundPoint IP desktop phone line, the SoundPoint IP 670. The SoundPoint IP 670 is an application-enabled desktop SIP phone with a high-performance color display, Polycom's revolutionary HD Voice technology, and Gigabit Ethernet (GigE) connectivity. It provides professionals with an intuitive color interface for easier viewing and navigation of phone functions and productivity-enhancing applications.

 

The SoundPoint IP 670 also features the industry's first color expansion module. When equipped with up to three color expansion modules, the SoundPoint IP 670 delivers the industry's first color attendant console solution for call attendants and administrative assistants. This solution significantly increases the call handling capability of the phone and enables attendants to better manage incoming calls by being able to view presence status without having to be in front of a PC.
 
"Polycom's new SoundPoint IP 670 phone is a good choice for organizations that are pursuing a standards-based communication strategy and are planning to embed applications on the phone," said Matthias Machowinski, directing analyst with Infonetics Research. "And what's noteworthy for power users is that it operates at 1 Gbps, so it doesn't introduce a new congestion point on the network."
 
"The SoundPoint IP 670 provides a full-color user interface to deliver a significantly augmented and visually pleasing user experience when running productivity-enhancing applications, such as the Polycom Productivity Suite," said Victor Yue, Director, Fujitsu Asia Pte Ltd. "We applaud Polycom for enabling us to continue to offer our customers the most comprehensive, best-sounding, most interoperable, high-quality IP telephony solutions for small and medium-sized businesses and enterprises."
 
The SoundPoint IP 670 supports six-lines and includes advanced SIP features and capabilities, such as support for shared lines, text messaging, and buddy presence monitoring. It features 14 default color background displays for phone personalization. Additional customized backgrounds, such as a company logo, can be added to deliver a rich desktop branding experience. The phone also includes an integrated XHTML micro-browser that enables users to take advantage of productivity-enhancing Web-based applications and also provides the ideal platform for Polycom's recently announced Polycom Productivity Suite for SoundPoint IP phones.
 
As the industry's first color expansion module, the SoundPoint IP Color Expansion Module augments the color user interface of the SoundPoint IP 670 phone. It features 14 multifunctional line keys that can be set up as line registration, call appearance, speed-dial, or a direct station select (DSS)/busy lamp field (BLF) keys. Up to three Color Expansion Modules can be snapped onto the SoundPoint IP 670 to form a full-featured color call attendant console solution. The solution supports up to 34 line registrations, 47 BLF monitored lines, and 24 concurrent calls. This enables the telephone attendant to promptly accept, screen, dispatch and effortlessly monitor incoming calls.
 
"We're always seeking ways to improve the customer experience and offer productivity-enhancing features that drive the speed of business," said Sunil Bhalla, senior vice president and general manager of Polycom's Voice Communications Solutions division. "The SoundPoint IP 670 combines a rich color display with Polycom HD Voice to offer our customers a visually pleasing user interface, an incredible sounding voice experience and a future-proof platform with Gigabit Ethernet."
 
The SoundPoint IP phone is being certified to deliver comprehensive interoperability and extensive feature support with Polycom's growing list of more than 24 SIP-based call control platform partners including 3Com, BroadSoft, Digium, Interactive Intelligence, Sylantro, and other Polycom VoIP Interoperability Partners. For more information on the Polycom VIP Program, visit www.polycom.com/vip.
 
Pricing and Availability

The Power over Ethernet (PoE) version of the Polycom SoundPoint IP 670 is available in North America, most of Central and Latin America, Europe and most of Asia-Pac today through Polycom certified channel partners for an MSRP of U.S. $599.00. The SoundPoint IP Color Expansion Modules are available for an MSRP of $319.00 each. To learn more about the SoundPoint IP 670 and its Color Expansion Modules.

Digium and Critical Links Offer Carrier-Grade Asterisk Telephony Boards

Digium and Critical Links, a global provider of converged voice, data and IT solutions for SMBs, announced today that Digium will be the exclusive vendor of Asterisk-compatible analog and digital PCI and PCIe telephony boards for Critical Links’ flagship edgeBOX product line. Critical Links has extensively tested Digium boards to ensure compatibility with edgeBOX and chose Digium over other competitors.

Digium is the creator and driving force behind Asterisk, the open source telephony software deployed by more than four million servers worldwide to manage voice over IP (VoIP) calls for businesses and individuals. More resellers, telecom professionals and software developers choose Digium’s products than those of any other open source telephony company because only Digium delivers the technical superiority, security and flexibility associated with Asterisk. Asterisk powers Digium’s family of software and hardware appliances, including Switchvox™, Asterisk Business Edition™ and AsteriskNOW.

“Open source Asterisk provides the key IP telephony component of our edgeBOX feature set. In evaluating vendors of digital and analog telephony cards for Asterisk-based solutions, Digium was an obvious choice,” said Abdul Kasim, vice president, global business development and marketing, Critical Links. “Digium’s active support of open source Asterisk provides us with a low-cost VoIP development platform on which to develop our commercial value-added products. In evaluating card vendors, it became clear that no other vendor can match Digium’s total package of guaranteed quality, breadth of product, core Asterisk support capability, and connection to the Asterisk project.”

Critical Links is a global provider of converged voice, data and IT solutions for SMBs that dramatically simplify and cost-reduce by consolidating over a single scalable and fault-tolerant platform.

The partnership between Digium and Critical Links includes analog telephony cards (4-, 8- and 24-part analog cards) and digital telephony cards (single-, dual- and quad-span T1/PRI/E1 cards and ISDN BRI cards).

“Digium is excited to work with Critical Links and the impressive group of international carriers that have built their service upon the edgeBOX product line,” said Bill Miller, Digium’s vice president of product management and marketing. “The agreement provides an excellent opportunity for Digium to access new audiences with our new line of digital and analog telephony cards, which are covered by the Digium Exceptional Satisfaction Program – the strongest quality guarantee in open source telephony.”

Source: BusinessWire 

June 19, 2008

Cisco offers free WebEx for a day

Cisco Systems is offering US companies free access to its WebEx collaboration service for one day on 19th of June. The company has opened the service to everyone as part of a promotion for national 'Dump the Pump Day' in which commuters are encouraged to avoid using petrol.

Cisco said that it hopes to persuade more people to telecommute or use public transport.

All companies will have the option of allowing employees to work from home and to conduct all meetings online rather than face to face.  In doing so, Cisco hopes to contribute to the effort to use less petrol and consequentially emit less carbon into the atmosphere.

The company also, of course, hopes to win over new customers to WebEx.

"We are helping to clean the air one meeting at a time," said Joe Schwartz, director of WebEx marketing operations at Cisco.

"By helping to reduce the need for travel, WebEx offers a great solution for commuters who want to do their part to reduce carbon emissions.

"We hope that commuters across the country will take advantage of travel alternatives on Dump the Pump Day."

Source: Vnunet.com 

June 18, 2008

Senate passes VoIP emergency-dialing bill - Finally

The U.S. Senate has passed legislation that requires the operators of 911 networks to allow VoIP providers to connect. The Senate on Monday passed the New and Emerging Technologies 911 Improvement Act by unanimous consent. The legislation passed the House of Representatives in November, but the Senate made some changes, so the bill will have to go back to the House for approval.

In May 2005, the U.S. Federal Communications Commission voted to require VoIP  providers to offer enhanced 911, or E911, to their customers by early 2006. But VoIP providers have run into several problems, and the FCC extended its deadline.

Some VoIP providers have complained that some 911 networks, controlled by traditional telecom carriers, have blocked access and some emergency dispatch centers have worried about legal liability if VoIP 911 calls fail.

The legislation, which had bipartisan support in the House and Senate, would give dispatch centers liability protection when handling VoIP calls. It would require that 911 networks connect VoIP providers using the same rates and conditions they use when connecting mobile phone carriers. And it requires the U.S. government to create a plan for migrating to IP-based 911 networks.

Click Here to Continue Reading 

 

3G iPhone Will Pressure Prices Of Smartphones

The new iPhone's feature enhancements, openness to third-party applications and AT&T-subsidized starting price of $199 will put heavy pressure on the sales and prices of other-brand smartphones, and that's bad news for consumer electronics retailers who continue to be excluded from the iPhone's distribution channels, said analysts and retailers.

The $199 and $299 iPhones will also have an impact on retailers' sales of the iPod Touch, which uses the same touchscreen interface as the current iPhone and costs close to $300, said Bonny Joy, device strategies analyst for Strategy Analytics.

To compete with the 3G iPhone, retailers will have to polish up their salespeople's qualification skills so they can point out the growing number of iPhone alternatives that offer touchscreens, high-speed data, multimedia playback and email, retailers and analysts said. Competing carriers will likely sharpen their smartphone prices and begin promoting their array of alternatives, they added.

Already, Verizon Wireless announced plans to launch three new LG multimedia phones, including an all-touchscreen LG Dare due sometime in June. The others are the LG Decoy, due June 16 with detachable Bluetooth headset, and the LG Chocolate 3, a flip version of the Chocolate slider. It's due in July with embedded 1GB memory, memory card slot and FM transmitter to broadcast music to a nearby radio.

"Anytime there is a big swing in price for a better product, it causes some short-term agita," said Kevin Sinclair, president/CEO of Wireless Zone, a 286-store franchise company that exclusively sells Verizon Wireless service. "Other carriers will do what is common: step up based on pricing and work with other manufacturers to launch new products with the same features to compete," he said.

For its part, Wireless Zone "will make sure store owners and salespeople understand the options," Sinclair said.

Click Here to Continue Reading 

June 16, 2008

Tandberg releases E20 IP Desktop Video Phone

Tandberg today introduced a new video VoIP phone for mass enterprise deployment. Replacing the standard office phone, the E20 combines CD quality audio with DVD quality video to deliver the desktop video phone for businesses at an affordable price. Designed with the user in mind, the five-megapixel high resolution camera positioned at eye-level provides a head-on image that eliminates the “nose view” typical of currently available video phones. With the 10.6 inch LCD widescreen, users can clearly see facial expressions and read body language.

“The E20 has the potential to drive mass personalization of video communications in the enterprise,” said Fredrik Halvorsen, TANDBERG CEO. “The E20 brings natural communication into workplace conversations with the emotional connection and understanding that is only possible through video.”

The E20 features an ultra wideband 20 kHz speaker phone and 10 kHz handset. Other features of the E20 include familiar IP telephony functionality such as call transfer, message waiting and call forwarding. In addition, the E20 features intuitive directories and menus, and quick keys for access to advanced IP phone and video services. The E20 has the ability to receive multimedia presentations.

Equipped with standards-compliant video and audio, the E20 interoperates with all other standards-compliant major office communication devices from phones to video conferencing and telepresence systems. Calls from the E20 are secured with Advanced Encryption Standard (AES).

“The democratization of unified communications through the convergence of video and voice devices can help enterprises alleviate IT costs today,” said Nora Freedman, senior analyst at IDC. “What is needed are simple and comprehensive video and phone solutions that can be deployed across the organization for core internal and external business communications and collaboration.”

The E20 will ship in the first quarter of 2009. For more information about the TANDBERG E20 or to contact a TANDBERG representative.

WiChorus rolls out WiMAX ( 802.16e) Mobile Internet Gateway

WiChorus, today unveiled their WiMAX Mobile Internet Gateway solution. This first of its kind solution enables all of the WiMAX core functions necessary to deploy NWG-compliant Mobile WiMAX networks in a single feature-rich platform, providing a cost-effective entry-level solution for operators. Functions supported include ASN Gateway, Home Agent, AAA (Authentication, Authorization, and Accounting), peer-to-peer traffic management, advanced charging, policy control and security. While simplifying initial deployments, the Mobile Internet Gateway also provides a smooth migration path towards larger networks over time.

"Smaller WiMAX networks also require an NWG compliant and feature-rich, differentiated WiMAX core, but have been challenged by the complexity and cost involved," said Rehan Jalil, president & CEO of WiChorus. "WiChorus WiMAX Mobile Internet Gateway has solved this pain point gracefully. It enables providers to easily deploy smaller WiMAX networks with NWG compliance and advanced capabilities at a lower cost, while ensuring that core infrastructure can be software upgraded in the future to accommodate larger networks."

The WiMAX Mobile Internet Gateway provides WiMAX Forum NWG-compliant infrastructure for handling subscriber authentication, DHCP-based address assignment, QoS policy provisioning and enforcement, accounting and mobility management. In addition to these basic features, the Mobile Internet Gateway offers value-added content management capabilities that allow operators to identify and monitor network content at a very granular level, including difficult to track peer-to-peer applications.

Operators can define standard policies across their network for controlling and managing network resources based on this content to ensure equitable access amongst their paying subscribers. This network intelligence can also be used to support unique content-based services through differentiated QoS and accounting.

"Operators are looking for solutions to help reduce the CapEx and OpEx associated with initial Mobile WiMAX deployments," said Godfrey Chua, research manager for the wireless and mobile infrastructure program at IDC. "The Mobile Internet Gateway from WiChorus is an innovative solution that simplifies network deployments and aligns well with current market requirements."

Based on the recently announced SmartCore platform, the WiMAX Mobile Internet Gateway offers exceptional performance, network intelligence and scalability as operators deploy their networks. In addition, operators have the peace of mind that these platforms can be readily upgraded through software to support higher capacity dedicated ASN Gateway or Home Agent solutions over time, offering them a smooth migration path to expand their networks as subscriber demand builds.

Source: Businesswire 

 

June 13, 2008

FCC Chief Lays Out Plan for Cell Phone Fees

Note: Usually I don't agree with Martin, like lifting rules on media ownership. But on this I do agree that the early termination fees should be pro-rated based on the time left on your cell contract. 
 
The chairman of the Federal Communications Commission laid out a plan Thursday to regulate the expensive fees that cellular phone companies charge consumers for canceling their contracts early.  FCC Chairman Kevin Martin's proposal was similar to an industry plan put forward last month.  Martin said he was skeptical ongoing class-action lawsuits would adequately resolve for consumers all the pending issues about the unpopular fees. The chairman made his comments at a public hearing.

Martin joked that his wife, apparently unhappy about the fees, had volunteered to testify at the hearing. He also criticized the fees, saying that "in practice, it can leave people locked into a service that they really want to leave."

Companies charge early termination fees that can range from $150 to $225 to recover the cost of cell phones, which they subsidize under long-term service contracts, according to wireless companies. The fees also defray costs for signing up new customers, companies said.

The fees have resulted in class-action lawsuits in several states and legislative proposals on Capitol Hill and in state legislatures.

Martin's plan would require the fees be related to the actual cost of the phones. A fee for a $50 phone would be higher than for a $5 phone, he said.

Martin said such fees should be pro rated, or reduced over the time of the contract. The nation's two largest wireless carriers have both begun pro rating fees with other national carriers promising to follow.

The chairman also said the contract should be a "reasonable length of time" and extension of contracts should not necessarily include a renewal of the termination fee.

Finally, he said consumers should have a chance to examine their first bill before they are subjected to the fees.

The Associated Press last month revealed details of the industry's efforts to help consumers avoid such fees in exchange for letting companies off the hook in state courts where they are being sued for hundreds of millions of dollars by angry customers.

Click Here to Continue Reading 

 

Let the SPIT (Spam over Internet Telephony) Wars Begin

If SPAM arrives in your inbox at 4am, the chances are your antispam software will catch it. But even if it doesn’t, you won’t lose much sleep over its arrival.  But it’ll be a different story with SPIT (spam over internet telephony). Junk phone calls at 4am are going to drive you mad because the chances are that antispit software won’t be able to intercept the call.

Today, Andreas Schmidt and pals from the Fraunhofer-Insitute for Secure Information Technology in Darmstadt Germany explain why intercepting SPIT is so much harder than spotting SPAM.  The main difference between junk calls and junk email is that the email arrives at your mail server before you access it. This gives the server time to analyse its content and filter out the junk before it gets to you.

Internet telephony, on the other hand, goes straight through to you in (more or less) real time, giving your server little or no time to analyse its content.

There are still a number of strategies that could be employed to filter out SPIT. For example, white lists that allow only calls from predetermined callers, Turing tests such as audio CAPTCHAs that make a caller prove he or she is human and payment-at-risk services where the caller makes a small payment in advance and is refunded immediately if the receiver acknowledges the call as legitimate.

Click Here to Continue Reading 

Cisco To Buy Danish Video-Management Player

Cisco Systems announced plans Tuesday to acquire Denmark-based DiviTech A/S, a provider of digital-service management systems for broadcasters, cable and IPTV operators. Financial terms of the transaction were not disclosed. Cisco plans to fold DiviTech into the Cisco Digital Media business unit as part of the Service Provider Video Technology Group (the former Scientific Atlanta). DiviTech employees will move into Cisco's Copenhagen facility.

DiviTech's DSM technology includes a software application that lets service provider customers centrally provision and deliver localized content, such as local and regional news and on-demand video and services, within a specific geography.

Cisco plans to integrate the DiviTech product with the Cisco ROSA network- and element-management solution.

"DiviTech provides Cisco with a core team of some of the most talented engineers in the DSM market," Dean Rockwell, vice president and general manager of the Cisco SPVTG Digital Media business unit, said in a statement. "DiviTech's DSM platform will serve as the foundation for Cisco's continued leadership in next-generation management tools and applications for complex video networks."

The DiviTech acquisition—the 128th in Cisco's history—is subject to various closing conditions and is expected to close in Cisco's fourth quarter of fiscal year 2008.

Source:  Multi-Channel 

June 12, 2008

Asterisk 1.4.21 Released

The Asterisk.org development team has released Asterisk version 1.4.21.

This release is a regular bug fix release for the 1.4 series of Asterisk.  For a full list of changes, see the ChangeLog included in the release.

 * http://svn.digium.com/view/asterisk/tags/1.4.20/ChangeLog?view=markup

Asterisk 1.4.21 is available for immediate download from the Digium downloads site.

 * http://downloads.digium.com/pub/telephony/asterisk/

Thank you for your continued support of Asterisk!

June 11, 2008

Cisco sees $10 billion market in video

Note:  With fuel prices heading up it makes logical sense that video and teleconferencing with become a more critical service for companies to combat these rising fuel prices.

Cisco says its opportunity in video is $10 billion over the next 3-5 years, not including network upgrades required to  support video applications. Physical security alone is an $8 billion market, but TelePresence virtual conferencing accounts for Cisco's biggest product ramp, according to Marthin DeBeer, senior vice president of Emerging Technologies.

DeBeer says Cisco has 100 customers for its TelePresence virtual conference rooms since the system's launch in 2006. These customers have equipped anywhere from 50 to 200 office rooms with the system.

Cisco itself has TelePresence-enabled 230 rooms in San Jose, DeBeer says. The technology has enabled Cisco to save $60 million over the past year, and DeBeer himself has cut his amount of travel by 66% while "seeing" twice as many customers as he would had he traveled.

Click Here to Continue Reading 

Verizon Wireless secures $7.55 bln bridge loan for Alltel Purchase

Morgan Stanley has provided a $7.55 billion 364-day bridge loan to back Verizon Wireless' acquisition of Alltel Corp for $28.1 billion, including $22.2 billion in debt, according to Reuters Loan Pricing Corp.  The 364-day loan matures June 4, 2009, and includes a $4.8 billion drawn portion and a $2.75 billion delayed-draw portion that will be available in three drawings, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing.

The borrower has already drawn $4.79 billion of the loan to finance the purchase of Alltel's unsecured bridge loans that were incurred when the company underwent its leveraged buyout last year.

Bank REO 

Initial pricing on the loan is 75 basis points over the London interbank offered rate, with an 8 basis-point commitment fee on the undrawn portion.

Pricing will eventually flip to a grid that will be tied to the borrower's long-term ratings from Standard & Poor's.

Source: Reuters 

Commercial Loan

ZyXEL Introduces SIP-Based Wi-Fi Camera - V750W

ZyXEL announced the ZyXEL V750W—an industry-first IP camera that enables video monitoring via easy-to-use Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) technology. Recognizing the increased importance for residential and business users to monitor their loved ones, property and assets remotely, the ZyXEL V750W allows users to contact the camera’s phone number from anywhere in the world using their computer activating real-time video and two-way audio services.

Each ZyXEL V750W SIP camera is embedded with its own phone number. Remote users simply dial into the camera and control the viewing angle with the numeric keys on their handsets or soft phones. The motorized pan, tilt and digital zoom actions give users the convenience of flexible remote monitoring. In dark environments, remote users can easily illuminate the embedded LED lamps through pre-defined numeric keys. Extremely easy to configure, the V750W can also be set to call a pre-defined phone number (such as the user’s cell phone or police) when an intrusion is detected at their home or business.

ZyXEL’s V750W will be available through telcos, MSOs and VoIP service providers wishing to offer a unique value-added surveillance and monitoring service to their customers without major capital or operational expenditure. ZyXEL also provides PC management software allowing users to record images by leveraging PC hard disks and computing power to ensure better security management.

Innovative Features Offer Powerful Applications and Value-Added Services with Minimal Investment

The V750W gives service providers a powerful application to offer innovative, value-added services to their customers with minimal investment while generating recurring revenue. The SIP camera functions on existing VoIP infrastructure alleviating the need for any capital expenditure. Additionally, the auto-provisioning technology built into the V750W makes it extremely easy for service providers to deploy the V750W at the customer premises, thereby reducing operational expense.

“ZyXEL’s V750W has taken remote monitoring to a new level by offering an innovative way for customers to not only monitor remotely but also communicate both ways over the same device,” said Munira Brooks, vice president of sales and marketing for ZyXEL. “Now it’s possible to not only keep an eye on your child or elderly parent using your Web-enabled phone—you can also talk to the nanny or nurse using the same device. The applications for a two-way communication device like this are unlimited and so are the opportunities of new value-added services for service providers.”

The ZyXEL V750W SIP-based camera was recently named as a 2008 NXTcomm EOS awards finalist in the Home Networking Technologies and Applications category.

Cost-Effectively Opens Doors for New Applications over Traditional Web Security Cameras

For the monthly service cost of VoIP service, end users can install a very sophisticated remote monitoring system—enabled with two-way communication—that can be controlled from anywhere in the world.

Pricing and Availability

Please call ZyXEL at 1-800-255-4101 for product availability and pricing.

The iPhone's limits

For the second time in a year, Apple has slashed the price of its coveted iPhone by $200. The basic model now sells for less than the cost of an iPod Classic (not counting the $70 monthly charge for using AT&T's mobile phone and data network, which eventually makes the purchase more expensive than an iMac). 

Given Steve Jobs' hypnotic appeal to consumers, one can expect that every single person in America between the ages of 3 and 100 will soon be using an iPhone to surf the Internet whenever they're away from their computers. And make calls, in the unlikely event their friends aren't logged into Facebook.

They'll soon find that the iPhone doesn't deliver everything that the Web has to offer. It doesn't support Flash, one of the most popular forms of online video. Nor can it play songs or videos in Microsoft's copy-protected Windows Media format. Those limits reflect the trade-offs Apple made in designing the iPhone, and if consumers don't like them, they can buy a competing manufacturer's phone.

There's one other restriction Apple imposes: It won't permit iPhone users to run Internet-phone programs such as Skype through AT&T's network. Instead, they can use them only through the iPhone's WiFi connection, which works in far fewer areas. The rationale is simple: Skype's cheap calls compete with AT&T's voice service.

Click Here to Continue Reading 

June 10, 2008

Open Patent Alliance Formed to Advance WiMAX 4G Technology

To accelerate the widespread adoption and deployment of WiMAX technology and products, Alcatel-Lucent, Cisco, Clearwire, Intel Corporation, Samsung Electronics and Sprint today announced the formation of the Open Patent Alliance (OPA). The OPA will advance a competitive and open intellectual property rights model, thus stimulating a larger WiMAX industry that supports innovation through broader choice and lower equipment and service costs for WiMAX technology, devices and applications globally.

WiMAX is a 4G, IP-based broadband wireless technology that provides low-cost, multi-megabit speed and greater throughput for the mobile Internet era of video-rich content and bandwidth-intensive applications. It is based on the IEEE 802.16e standard.

To accomplish its goals, the OPA will form a WiMAX patent pool to help participating companies obtain access to patent licenses from patent owners at a predictable cost.

The patent pool will aggregate essential patent rights needed to implement the WiMAX standard as defined by the WiMAX Forum and the IEEE 802.16e standard. To help ensure product differentiation and interoperability at a more predictable cost, this approach will focus on providing a more competitive royalty structure by charging only for the features required to develop WiMAX products. The patent pool will incorporate a variety of royalty licensing solutions, including accounting for cross-licensing among individual members within the pool.

In addition to the formation of a WiMAX patent pool, the OPA will educate the WiMAX ecosystem about, and serve as a central resource for WiMAX intellectual property rights topics.

The OPA will issue a call for WiMAX essential patents for inclusion in its patent pool. An independent third-party reviewer will serve as the “patent referee” and will evaluate submitted patents to determine how essential they are to the WiMAX standard and WiMAX Forum profiles. While the OPA initially will focus its efforts on the WiMAX standard, it may work with other industry groups in the future.

Made up of six founding companies at its inception, the OPA expects to secure participation of an additional six to nine investor companies to encompass the WiMAX value-chain and broad geographic representation. Each investor company will have a seat on the OPA board of directors. The OPA will have dedicated staff that is directed by and accountable to the OPA board, and the alliance will serve as the licensing agent for the WiMAX patent pool, representing the licensors who agree to participate in the pool.

OPA Founded With Broad, Cross-Industry Support

“As an early and consistent supporter of the WiMAX 802.16e ecosystem, Alcatel-Lucent believes that end-user experiences will drive the broadband wireless revolution,” said Philippe Keryer, president of Alcatel-Lucent’s mobile access business. “We are confident that the formation of the Open Patent Alliance, which is fully in line with Alcatel-Lucent's Open CPE Program, will ensure that a broad and diverse set of devices will be available to the consumer, enabling service providers to deliver an unparalleled selection of applications and optimized device form-factors that can unleash the huge potential of broadband wireless anywhere, anytime, that WiMAX enables.”

“Cisco supports the Open Patent Alliance and its charter to stimulate further adoption of WiMAX broadband wireless technologies and enhance the mobile experience around the world,” said Brett Galloway, senior vice president of Cisco wireless and security. “By driving the adoption of WiMAX, innovative technologies will help enable people to move freely throughout the world while maintaining continuous connectivity to cool new applications and services.”

“Clearwire fully supports the OPA as a vehicle that will ensure the rapid development of an open, worldwide WiMAX ecosystem,” said Scott Richardson, chief strategy officer of Clearwire. “We are committed to innovation in all aspects of WiMAX technology, from the network infrastructure to end-user devices. Just as mobile phones now connect to people rather than places, Clearwire is giving our customers the ability to access the Internet, at true broadband speeds, when they are on the go.”

“Intel's vision in driving the formation of the Open Patent Alliance is to bring the openness of the Internet and computing industries to the wireless industry and WiMAX” said Sriram Viswanathan, vice president, Intel Capital and general manager, Intel WiMAX program office. “By facilitating an open intellectual property rights model, we expect the alliance to in turn create a more competitive, innovative and broader WiMAX industry that ultimately benefits the consumer with more choice for WiMAX technology and services.”

“Samsung Electronics is very proud to join the OPA with industry-leaders in WiMAX technology,” said Hwan Chung, senior vice president of Samsung Telecommunications America. “We believe that this initiation can be a significant momentum to expand mobile WiMAX services. Thanks to a flexible and easily adoptable scheme for participants, we can accelerate the mobile WiMAX deployment and marketing so that people can enjoy the benefits of fast, revolutionarily new, and more cost-effective data communications.”

“We expect to unleash wireless innovation with this patent alliance,” said Barry West, president of Sprint’s XOHM business unit. “The open licensing program will help prompt pervasive WiMAX technology. This speeds the day when consumers can enjoy the convenience of WiMAX mobile broadband services on new devices in new places, and experience all the open Internet has to offer.”

For information regarding the submission of patents for testing, visit the OPA Web site at www.openpatentalliance.com. Information about and a replay of the OPA web cast held earlier today can be found at http://newsroom.cisco.com/dlls/2008/prod_060908.html.

June 09, 2008

Digium rolls out SwitchVox AA300 PBX Appliance with T1/PRI Support

 
 
Digium, today announced that it has executed on the initial planned build-out of the Switchvox appliance family with the release of the Digium Switchvox AA300 appliance. The new product, a flexible, easy-to-use IP PBX, gives companies with up to 150 users a turnkey business telephone solution based on Asterisk software. It is the latest offering from Digium following that company’s fall 2007 acquisition of Switchvox.

The AA300 is available immediately and is backed by Digium’s Exceptional Satisfaction Program (ESP) guarantee. Digium has also recently delivered two other Switchvox appliances, a free, downloadable version of the Switchvox IP PBX software and a combined reseller program.

Digium created and is the driving force behind the open source Asterisk telephony project and Switchvox is the most widely used IP PBX based on Asterisk. Last year, Digium acquired Switchvox and has quickly integrated the two companies’ offerings to provide customers with a wide range of options for benefitting from the power, flexibility and feature set enabled by Asterisk. By implementing Switchvox software on Digium appliances, customers now have the ease of use and rich feature set of Switchvox, plus the reliability and convenience of appliances. The Digium Switchvox appliance family provides options for businesses with up to 400 users, plus an easy upgrade path for growing companies, a money-back guarantee, and subscriptions for professional support and maintenance.

“The integration of Switchvox into Digium has moved ahead quickly, and the AA300 with SMB 3.5 software is the latest result of our continuing progress,” said Joshua Stephens, Digium’s general manager, San Diego operations. “Customers and our channel partners are benefitting from the rapid delivery of Switchvox on appliances that can be up and running supporting calls just about as soon as they come out of the box and that can be easily upgraded as customers need more features or add users. The result of all our work is more options for customers that let them get rid of expensive phone systems, yet keep all the functionality of a PBX designed for the largest businesses.”

A Switchvox IP PBX for Every Company

The introduction of the Digium Switchvox AA300 appliance provides a mid-sized solution for the Switchvox product family. Digium Switchvox appliances are now available on three systems that provide a fit for a wide range of companies:

  • The AA60 appliance, which features Switchvox SOHO or Switchvox SMB, supports up to 30 users and is ideal for demanding small offices or home offices that need a professional phone system in a small form factor.
  • The AA300 appliance, which features Switchvox SMB, supports up to 150 users and is ideal for medium-sized businesses that want the power of a server-class PBX.
  • The AA350 appliance, which features Switchvox SMB, supports up to 400 users and is a redundant rack-mount server that is ideal for larger customers that want the highest level of performance and peace of mind.

The newly introduced AA300 is a medium-sized appliance that can be used on a tabletop or in a rack. It supports up to 150 users and up to 45 simultaneous calls. It also supports up to 10 recorded calls and up to 15 simultaneous conference calls.

Highlights of the new Digium Switchvox AA300 include:

  • Full coverage by the Digium Exceptional Satisfaction Program, the strongest guarantee in open source telephony, which gives customers their money back if the product is defective or fails to perform as described.
  • VoIP ready—No extra hardware is necessary to connect to SIP or IAX voice over IP trunks.
  • A standard one-year warranty and optional three-year warranty.
  • Support for analog and T1/E1 interfaces gives customers flexibility in working with their existing network.
  • A choice of three subscription plans to suit every company’s support and service needs.

Pricing and Availability

Pricing for the Digium Switchvox AA300 with SMB 3.5 software begins at U.S. $4,240, with substantial discounts available when customers purchase the product from Digium partners. It is available immediately.

 

Asterisk 1.4.21-rc2 Now Available

The Asterisk development team has released Asterisk version 1.4.21-rc2.

This release is a release candidate for the upcoming official release of 1.4.21.  A few bugs have been fixed since 1.4.21-rc2.  Please continue to assist in testing before we release 1.4.21!

The release candidate is available on the download site:

http://downloads.digium.com/pub/telephony/asterisk

Please provide release candidate testing feedback to the asterisk-dev mailing list, or the issue tracker, http://bugs.digium.com/

Thank you for your continued support of Asterisk!

June 05, 2008

Toshiba Takes the Wraps off New IP Phone Series

Toshiba has introduced its new IP5000-series IP phones, offering a new design, backlit displays and a built-in Gigabit Ethernet switch that supports high-speed network connections directly to the desktop for enhanced performance and sound quality. The IP5000-series telephones are compatible with the Toshiba Strata CIX family of IP business communications systems, Toshiba’s IP User Mobility feature, and also can function as supported IP stations for Toshiba’s Video Communication Solution.

The executive IP phone, the IP5131-SDL is a nine-line LCD IP telephone with 10 programmable buttons and LCD key labels plus an integrated browser. The IP5132-SD offers four lines and 20 programmable buttons; and the IP5122-SD offers four lines with 10 programmable buttons, available with or without local CO line interface.

IP Phones

The line also offers the following add-on modules: the LM5110 with 10 programmable buttons with LCD key labels; the KM5020 with 20 programmable buttons; and the IDM5060, which is a DSS/BLF console with 60 programmable buttons.

Toshiba’s IP phones are available through authorized Toshiba dealers.

Polycom Recalls 2W Wireless Conference Phone Batteries Due to Fire Hazard

The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, in cooperation with Polycom Inc., today announced a voluntary recall of the following consumer product. Consumers should stop using recalled products immediately unless otherwise instructed. (To access color photos of the following recalled products, see CPSC's Web site at www.cpsc.gov)

Name of product: SoundStation2W Wireless Conference Phones with Lithium Ion Batteries

Units: About 5,800 units Phone Distributor: Polycom, Inc., of Pleasanton, Calif.

Battery Pack Distributor: Gold Peak Industries Ltd., of Hong Kong

Hazard: The battery packs can overheat, posing a fire or burn hazard. Incidents/Injuries: Polycom has received one report of a battery pack overheating resulting in minor property damage. No injuries have been reported.

Description: The recalled battery packs were supplied by Gold Peak Industries Ltd. and sold with Polycom's SoundStation2W wireless conference phones from December 1, 2007 until May 2, 2008, and separately as replacement battery packs during the same time period. The SoundStation2W part numbers and SKU numbers are printed on the underside of the telephone and include the following models:

Part Number SKU Number 2201-67800-022 2200-07800-001 2201-67880-022 2200-07880-001

SoundStation2W recalled battery pack part numbers, SKU numbers and date codes are as follows: Part Number SKU NumberDate Code 1520-07803-003 2200-07803-002 GP1207, GP0108, GP0208, GP0308 (December 2007 through March 2008) 1520-07804-003 2200-07804-002 GP1207, GP0108, GP0208, GP0308 (December 2007 through March 2008)

The battery packs have a black or white plastic coating and a white label with the following title: "RECHARGEABLE Li-ion BATTERY." The recalled battery pack part numbers can be found on the bottom right hand corner of the white label on the battery pack. The date code can be found to the left of the part number printed on the white label of the battery.

Sold by: Authorized dealers nationwide through catalogs, online, telesales, office supply stores, the Polycom Web store, and Fry's Electronics retail locations from December 2007 through May 2, 2008 for between $700 and $900. Replacement battery packs were sold for between $50 and $90 through the same outlets.

Manufactured in: China Remedy: Consumers should immediately remove the battery pack from their SoundStation2W wireless conference phone. Once the battery pack is removed, consumers can still use their conference phone by keeping the charger plugged into the unit. Consumers should not attempt to use battery packs other than those supplied by Polycom in the unit. Consumers should contact Polycom for a free replacement battery pack.

Consumer Contact: For additional information, contact Polycom, Inc. at (800) 963-7627 between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. ET Monday through Friday, or visit the firm's Web site at www.polycom.com/2WBattery.

AT&T speeds up 3G network

AT&T said today it has upgraded its 3G wireless network to reach downlink speeds of up to 1.7Mbps, a 20% increase over previous top speeds. AT&T says the increased speeds are the result of upgrades to the High-Speed Packet Access (HSPA) network that the company projects to complete by the end of the month. HSPA is a mobile broadband technology that is comprised of two wireless broadband protocols, known as High Speed Downlink Packet Access (HSDPA) and High Speed Uplink Packet Access (HPUSA), that operate on 3G mobile devices.

The company says it will have deployed HSUPA across its entire 3G network by the end of June, and it will result in uplink speeds of 1.2Mbps, a 50% increase over its previous peak uplink speeds of 800Kbps.

AT&T will offer its 3G services to all customers who have HSPA-enabled handsets and laptops, including any laptop with a LaptopConnect wireless modem. The company says 75% of its currently available handsets are 3G-capable, and it plans to release more 3G smartphones throughout the year. Apple's new iPhone 2.0, due to be unveiled next week, is widely expected to be a 3G-capable handset that will connect to AT&T's HSPA network.

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Asterisk-Addons 1.2.9 and 1.4.7 released; Asterisk-Addons 1.6.0-beta4 now available

The Asterisk development team has released Asterisk-Addons version 1.2.7, 1.4.9, and 1.6.0-beta4 to address a major security vulnerability in the ooh323 channel driver. The releases may be downloaded from

http://downloads.digium.com/

AST-2008-009 details a remote crash vulnerability in the ooh323 channel driver:
 * http://downloads.digium.com/pub/security/AST-2008-009.pdf
 * All users of chan_ooh323 in all versions of Asterisk-Addons are affected

In addition to the security vulnerability, there are a number of bug fixes included in this release. Changelogs for the various releases may be found at the following addresses:

 * Asterisk-Addons 1.2.9:
http://svn.digium.com/view/asterisk-addons/tags/1.2.9/ChangeLog?view=markup

 * Asterisk-Addons 1.4.7:
http://svn.digium.com/view/asterisk-addons/tags/1.4.7/ChangeLog?view=markup

 * Asterisk-Addons 1.6.0-beta4:
http://svn.digium.com/view/asterisk-addons/tags/1.6.0-beta4/ChangeLog?view=markup

June 04, 2008

Canada's fight for Net Neutrality

Shortly after I founded the Net Neutrality advocacy site Neutrality.ca in January 2007, TheTyee, published an article saying that Canada was sleeping through the war to 'save the internet'. Writer Bryan Zandberg cited the lack of signatures on my petition (a 'paltry' 217 at the time) as evidence of Canadians' disengagement with the issue.

Today, the same petition, which is now run by the rock-star professor Michael Geist, has collected over 14,000 signatures. Clearly something has changed. We can all thank Bell Canada for turning a hypothetical threat into the personal cause of thousands of Canadian internet users.

What Bell did was to throttle P2P traffic while, almost simultaneously, launching competitive video-on-demand services — and that's what the Net Neutrality Rally in Ottawa last week was all about: competition. The technology that is being throttled by Bell is primarily used to distribute video content on-line.

Some of it is copyright infringing content like pirated movies and TV shows, but increasingly, it is legitimate content from outfits like Bitorrent Inc, Vuze, and even our own CBC which attempted to distribute Canada's Next Great Prime Minister using this technology. Canada's limited competition in 'last-mile' connectivity is making matters worse. Typically, in any given market there is a duopoly consisting of two giants — a cable company and a phone company.

For most users, this is a binary choice that represents no real market choice. Partly in response to this lack of competition, Bell was required to open up its lines to competitive resellers. For a while, this reseller arrangement resembled some form of competition — at least in customer service, if not pricing. One such reseller is TekSavvy, which, seeing the benefit to a neutral network, promised never to interfere with its customers' traffic — and in the process stole a large number of accounts from Bell.

Then came the shocking realization that Bell, acting as the network 'owner', was starting to degrade specific traffic on these resellers services, and in the process was breaking TekSavvy's non-interference promise to its customers. Bell's actions exerted control over its supposed competitors' services. On April 3rd, the Canadian Association of Internet Providers, filed a complaint against Bell with the CRTC.

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3CX IP PBX Passes Tests for Interoperability With Linksys IP Phones

3CX, developer of the 3CX Phone System for Windows has announced that interoperability testing with Linksys IP telephones has been completed successfully. The tested integration offers a cost effective VoIP Telephony solution that is well suited for the small and medium business market.

"3CX Phone System for Windows' interoperability with Linksys IP telephones portfolio conforms to our strategy of offering a SIP-based IP PBX that works with the world's leading IP phones," said Nick Galea, CEO at 3CX. "We are pleased that the collaboration between 3CX and Linksys to perform interoperability in laboratory tests between our products has proved fruitful, as this will benefit many of our mutual customers."

The 3CX-Linkys VoIP combination provides a highly scalable and efficient solution to help address the increasing IP communications needs of today's businesses. Using 3CX IP PBX and Linksys IP telephones, businesses can leverage the power of end-to-end VoIP communications to help reduce deployment costs, and to benefit from a rich set of features normally only available to large enterprises.

"We are glad that all the required tests have been completed so that Linksys and 3CX customers can benefit from an excellent value VoIP solution. It is a pleasure to collaborate with such an industry innovator as 3CX," said Alberto Montilla, Linksys Product Manager.

3CX Phone System for Windows is a software-based IP PBX that is simple to install, configure and manage, and yet includes enterprise-grade features such as integrated fax server, phone provisioning, and unified messaging that can help businesses increase productivity, reduce their telecommunication costs and boost their profit margins.

Source: MarketWire 

June 03, 2008

Asterisk 1.4.21-rc1 Now Available

The Asterisk development team has released Asterisk version 1.4.21-rc1.

This release is a release candidate for the upcoming official release of 1.4.21.  It contains fewer bug fixes than usual for a 1.4 release series update, but some of them are important enough to get the release out sooner.  We would like to encourage the community to assist us in testing before we release 1.4.21.

The release candidate is available on the download site:

http://downloads.digium.com/pub/telephony/asterisk

Please provide release candidate testing feedback to the asterisk-dev mailing list, or the issue tracker, http://bugs.digium.com/

Thank you for your continued support of Asterisk!

Asterisk 1.2.29 Released

The Asterisk.org development team has released Asterisk version 1.2.29.

This release contains a fix for a security issue that is documented in AST-2008-008.  The SIP channel driver in Asterisk 1.2 had a remote crash vulnerability when pedantic mode is enabled.  For more information on the vulnerability, see the advisory:

http://downloads.digium.com/pub/security/AST-2008-008.html

Thank you for your continued support of Asterisk!

Sangoma Files Patent Application for Fax Synchronization Product

Sangoma announced today that it has filed an application for the issuance of a patent for the company's fax synchronization product: Telecommunication System and Method of Synchronization. This solution increases the capacity of the board-based PBX to enable the synchronization of multiple interface cards, enabling error-free faxing on PC-based analog phone systems including T1, E1, and BRI digital.
Sangoma's patent-pending fax synchronization product guarantees reliable faxing, eliminating common errors including missing content, blank pages, distorted images, and unwanted lines. This solution enables companies to work with computer-based telephony systems when dealing with sensitive materials and legal contracts, tasks that VoIP faxing systems were once not trusted handle.

"We believe that this solution empowers industries to continue to use VoIP for their mission critical tasks," said David Mandelstam, Sangoma's CEO. "Our fax synchronization product further substantiates the reliability of computer-based telephony systems, making faxing a reliable and error free process."

The patent-pending Telecommunication System and Method of Synchronization solution is available for use on Sangoma's award-winning Advanced Flexible Telecommunications (AFT) product line.
 
For pricing and additional information, please visit: http://www.sangoma.com/products_and_solutions/

June 02, 2008

Digium and Fanstel Corp. Announce Partnership

Digium Inc., the Asterisk Company, and Fanstel Corp. today announced a partnership that will help ensure interoperability between Fanstel telephones and Digium products. Fanstel SIP telephones are now “Digium Asterisk Certified,” allowing companies that want the flexibility and cost-savings of a voice over IP (VoIP) platform based on Asterisk Business Edition to benefit from full-featured Fanstel telephones.

Digium is the creator and driving force behind Asterisk, the open source voice communications software deployed by more than 4 million servers worldwide to manage VoIP calls for businesses and individuals. More resellers, telecom professionals and software developers choose Digium's products than those of any other open source telephony company because only Digium delivers the technical superiority, security and flexibility associated with Asterisk. Asterisk powers Digium’s family of software and hardware appliances, including AsteriskNOW, Asterisk Business Edition and Switchvox.

Fanstel, founded in 1990, is a leading manufacturer of carrier-grade and enterprise-grade telephone products. Fanstel has delivered high-quality telephone products to 55 countries. A vertically integrated telephone manufacturer with engineering and production facilities, Fanstel offers customization and branding services for made-to-order products. In addition to Asterisk-interoperable and ready-to-use SIP phones, Fanstel makes customization and branding services available to Asterisk communities.

Fanstel SIP phones offer many advanced features, such as multiple line appearances, DND, transfer, pick-up, park/unpark, conferencing, intercom, busy lamp field, XML messaging and auto-provisioning, as required in enterprise applications. In addition, up to five parties can be conferenced locally, saving PBX processing power to support more extensions.

“Fanstel is committed to support Asterisk, the leading open source VoIP platform, and will continue to expand Asterisk-interoperable product lines,” said Yuan Fan, President at Fanstel. “Interoperability with Asterisk Business Edition is important to a growing number of our customers and partners, so we’ve taken the important step of becoming a Digium partner and deepening our relationship with the company.”

Jim Webster, director of technology partnerships at Digium, commented: “We’re happy to partner with Fanstel and to make the combination of that company’s SIP telephones and telephony systems based on Asterisk Business Edition an option for companies worldwide. We believe the offering will be a compelling one for small to mid-sized businesses in the U.S. and abroad.”

Source: Business Wire 

Chambers banks Cisco's future on Web 2.0

Cisco CEO John Chambers says the company's future depends on technologies that enable human collaboration. "We build our culture at Cisco around catching market transitions," Chambers said during a keynote address on Web 2.0 and collaboration at Forrester Research's recent IT Forum in Las Vegas. Cisco's moves in Web 2.0, from its TelePresence video conferencing technology to the acquisition of WebEx, are steps towards making sure it doesn't get upstaged by more innovative competitors.

"It isn't just about growth, it's about survival," Chambers said. "Market transitions are built on catching them right, and if you miss them it's almost impossible to recover."

Chambers also talked about how collaboration efforts within Cisco almost failed. An effective Web 2.0 strategy has to be spearheaded by a CEO, but leadership also has to give up some power to make it work, he noted. "The hard part about collaboration is we don't like change," Chambers said.

"Nor did my organisation and nor did I. I love command and control and I'm pretty good at it. 65,000 people, I say turn right, we turn right. I very rarely have to say it twice. That's not the future. It's the ability of groups to think together, to combine knowledge and experience." The first two years of collaboration in Cisco were "miserable", Chambers said, noting that when he first thought about Web 2.0 he was interested mainly in telepresence and simple forms of collaboration.

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