The Yahoos! at Yahoo live up to their name bit.ly/KjjGFb
Lightsquared goes dark and circles the wagons http://nyti.ms/JDzW4Y
Facebook Privacy Policy Clarifies They Suck http://bit.ly/LMStg1
ATT and Axeda did a webinar with me http://bit.ly/LMUB7v
Tag Archives: Yahoo!
Jerry Yang, Thank you but…
Jerry,
While I advocated you make the deal with Microsoft. I want to tell you I am sorry to see you leave.
What that says to me personally is that your company is going to be nothing like you envisioned it.
Anyone who has started a company and then watched it change over the years knows this experience.
I often wonder when is the right time for people to get out of the way and let a new regime takeover.
In California often you see existing teams morph work in to newco’s.
I am looking forward to you doing a newco. And I will be your fan.
To the board. Rather than searching for talent, how about hiring Sabeer Bhatia formerly of Hotmail. He may help the team see the value of going back in and trying to get something done with Microsoft.
Freedom2Speak.org Launched
Jim Kohlenberger has shared this information with me. Included in this site which highlights the innovation of VoIP is the ability to petition to keep VoIP as an enhanced service.
With the FCC poised to vote November 4th on a key decision that will impact the future of Internet communication, today VoIP leaders are launching a new voice activated web site and online campaign to educate consumers and policymakers about the power and potential of VoIP: www.freedom2speak.org
An incredible transformation is making its way across the Internet — helping to bring voice to the net. These innovative Internet voice applications are changing the way we communicate, stay connected to our friends, family and colleagues. Together these technologies have the potential to deliver extraordinary new benefits.
We want to introduce you to some of the exciting new voice tools now just emerging. This new web site contains nearly 300 different cool tools — each unique — that are stretching the horizon of voice on the net.
But the future of some of these exciting technologies is not all assured. There are an unfortunate set of policy proposals by special interests that could limit your ability to speak and be heard on the Internet. And that’s why we’re asking you to get involved. Stand up — speak up — and fight for your freedom to speak on the Internet!
The web site:
1. Highlights the amazing things that are happening when voice is integrated with the Internet. Providing examples of nearly 300 innovative new voice enabled tools that are emerging on the Internet. These voice enabled Internet applications are giving voice to blogs, connecting friends together on MySpace and Facebook, empowering people on the campaign trail, transforming video games, integrating voice and video into instant messaging, allowing one telephone number to reach all your phones at once, ushering in a new era of voice recognition based information retrieval tools, integrating click to dial functionality into mapping and other web sites, and doing things never before possible.
2. Demonstrates the extraordinary benefits that VoIP enabled tools can deliver. The site includes a state by state map of benefits; highlights the broader benefits for consumers, the economy, the environment, homeland security, etc.; and provides examples of exciting and beneficial ways the technology is being put to use. For example, at a time when families are struggling to pay their bills, VoIP enabled competition is poised to save consumers an astounding $110 billion over the next 5 years.
3. Enables users to take specific actions to protect their freedom to speak on the net. The FCC is poised to vote on November 4th on a key decision that will impact the future of these technologies. The site describes key policy issues that could impact the growth of these technologies, and gives people the ability to take specific actions to protect their freedom to speak on the Internet. With just a few clicks, the site allows users to file comments at the FCC or talk directly with policymakers. Its critical because some proposals could subject voice enabled web sites to a patchwork of potentially conflicting state rules, or reverse key policies that would apply per minute fees to Internet commutations and voice enabled web sites.
4. Using the medium as the message. Voice enabled tools are incorporated throughout the site, including into voice blogs, a virtual VoIP debate between Obama and McCain, a tool to call members of Congress, and a voice broadcast tool tell their friends about the site.
VoIP is not another flavor of telephone service. It’s a new frontier in communications for individuals and businesses alike, and it requires forward-thinking regulatory approaches. If policymakers reflexively subject these new voice enabled Internet tools to yesterday’s telephone regulations without first understanding the variety of tools emerging, consumers and business users could miss out on the new services, increased choices and new ways to communicate that VoIP can deliver.
Jim Kohlenberger
Executive Director
The Voice on the Net Coalition
About the VON Coalition:
The Voice on the Net or VON Coalition consists of leading VoIP companies, on the cutting edge of developing and delivering voice innovations over Internet. The coalition, which includes AT&T, BT Americas, CallSmart, Cisco, CommPartners, Covad, EarthLink, Google, iBasis, i3 Voice and Data, Intel, Microsoft, New Global Telecom, PointOne, Pulver.com, Skype, T-Mobile USA, USA Datanet, and Yahoo! works to advance regulatory policies that enable Americans to take advantage of the full promise and potential of VoIP. The Coalition believes that with the right public policies, Internet based voice advances can make talking more affordable, businesses more productive, jobs more plentiful, the Internet more valuable, and Americans more safe and secure. Since its inception, the VON Coalition has promoted pragmatic policy choices for unleashing VoIP’s potential. http://www.von.org
IIT VoIP Conference speech
Friends, Netizens, Developers, Lend me your ears.
I have come to bury VoIP, not to praise it.
The protocols men build live after them.
The good intentions often interred in the message boards.
So let it be with VoIP, the keepers of access
Told us VoIP was merely new access
If this is so, it was a fatal error.
Skype says “VoIP is Dead”, and I have lost my bearings.
And VoIP has rightly paid the price for its ambitions.
And access providers will use VoIP for compost
Regulators are the gatekeepers of public good.
They all work for the good of the public.
VoIP was more than this to me and I will miss VoIP.
But the gatekeepers said that VoIP was access.
And they are the keepers of the public good.
VoIP integrated Instant Messaging and inspired Skype!
Included Video and Presence information signaling
But VoIP was merely access and deserved to die.
VoIP that the commission said was enhanced
Is now called access by the gatekeepers of the public good.
But even as I look at the remains of VoIP
The Presence of VoIP is still with me.
It was the presence of VoIP that inspires me.
And I will not rest until the Presence is returned
Forgive my malformed Shakespeare as I reply to Jonathan Christensen’s VoIP is Dead speech and ask you all to rethink the term VoIP with me. When I came to the Internet, I was a bell-head focused on the issues of modem banks and circuit switches. My thoughts were of signaling and redirection for the protection of the switches. Enabling software to talk to switches about the Internet traffic struck me as not only valuable but essential for my customers to talk.
Today, the switches I tried to impact with software are now themselves little more than software, but somewhere along the way these softswitches lost the model of signaling that made them valuable to the Internet. These switches are so far removed from the traffic they support, that the connectivity they provide is indistinguishable from the devices they replaced. And yet they get to be called VoIP.
Part of this confusion that allows POTS over IP to be called VoIP is the issue of price. The vision for adoption of VoIP included the saving of money and ITSPs were created with very little cost and reach. The ITSPs margins was arbitrary based on settlements. When Jeff Pulver was running the Minutes Exchange known as MIN-X the concept of VONage was born because the buy side, which at the time was nascent at best, had no way to reach the edge.
Unfortunately, Vonage ended up selling the service not based on Internet communication, but as POTS over IP with very few enhancements to the IP experience.
But the true Internet model was more apparent when looking at ICQ (the first Presence and Instant
Messaging service) which had an adjunct piece of software called QTALK. This model separated the access information from the voice communication.. It was viral because access via dial up was often contentious and the status of someone made for better communication using voice and text (chat).
But after that initial adoption, new presence applications not associated with access were adopted slowly.
When Yahoo! first entered the Instant Messaging market, they loaded the application with enough additional features that the lack of buddy’s on your list was acceptable. Presence Interoperability was considered essential by many in the industry as AOL / ICQ dominated the space.
Jeff Pulver ran presence and instant messaging conference at the turn of the century, but interoperablility started being selectively negotiated in 2005 with Blake Irving and Brad Garlinghouse agreeing to interoperate Yahoo! and MS Messenger.
This was two years after Skype started to dominate the marketplace as a client that was totally independent of any access method. The adoption reflected the migration from dial up to to connections we generously call broadband.
However, even Skype with its millions of users and the benefit of a viral community sought connectivity with the PSTN with SkypeIn and SkypeOut.
These services were not because of the landline connectivity, but the nomadic growth of the Wireless industry.
And here we are. Awaiting the ubiquity of the next generation of the Wireless Internet and being placated with devices that again we generously call Internet Enabled.
Many of us are thinking the answer is in social networking. Believing the massive communities online in various communities achieve the goal of gaining critical mass.
I would contend that we are again losing our focus. It should be our mission to make presence a beneficiary of Metcalfe’s law.
Being an application available to all on the Internet is not as valuable as Internetworking our applications together.
Metcalfe’s law promises that all applications that share connectivity between each other is six times more valuable than running in parallel.
I am advocating not just parallel play on some store on the cloud, or integration with an API. But a creative commons of presence.
We are being lost in the forest of what my friend David Jodoin calls Technocrud.
We, the communication services, are in a drop in the applications available on the Apple’s iStore, Facebook, and other activities currently planned by the service providers and their vendors. Not only isolated but have a poor adoption rate
We represent less than 10% of the messaging apps as cateogorized by facebook . Applications are being called communications because they send gifs of hallmark cards, share notifications, location information, and messages in near real time email like solutions. These are “better than what we had” but not what can be.
And here we are in the darkness of closed systems that ubiquitously isolates our communication as we chat within their domains. Once again the Internet is being used to isolate in aggregate.
Many of us are transcending these communities such as Calliflower, but we can go farther if we enable URIs or other identifiers that can be accessed from a common query.
And we need this collective ability. We need to maintain the public Internet signal.
In my humble opinion, both Skype and the iPhone are beneficiaries of auxiliary (peripheral or secondary) opportunities. Skype from the base that was part of Kazaa, and Apple’s iPhone from the iTunes / iStore customer base. Neither of them in my humble opinion could have launched without the base of their previous users.
I would contend that like the age of VON the trouble of showing the possibility of something more has eluded us and will continue to elude is if we do not enable presence connectivity amongst our applications.
We need demonstrable improvements in communication that enable users to not only say – I want that application, but I need that application. Applications that cannot be confused with unifying a series of previously offered communication tools. More personally private and yet more publically identifiable.
And I believe we need have most of the tools we need today.
If we manage to share presence information collectively we gain a few benefits. The first is that we are gaining the benefits of Metcalfes law. The second is we are promoting applications to the community. If my status were to say, “Alwaysoncarl is busy using GoogleTalk”,
We should understand that with today’s asynchronous communication privacy has to be self-managed. I would like to think that the Data Portability Forum will look at these issues.
Presence information should be part of everything we convey and communicate.
However, the ability to communicate should not require inclusion on a specific system. Therefore communication at minimum should be convertible and transportable as part of the Internet overall. I should point out that people are doing with content not associated to the Internet, so it is somewhat hypocritical for us not to be able to do this from within the community.
Every application that connects to every other application benefits the story of User – Initiated Internet Communication [UIC]. If we spent half the time working on presence aware application interoperability as we did to PSTN interoperability we would be at far better place in communicating with the regulators and legislators.
As the current administration draws to a close a number of long standing rules are being attacked. And as economic issues face the world, governments are going to be looking for revenues.
I also want to warn that the recent purchase of a web based API framework by a keeper of access may in the long run be harmful.
Most importantly by enabling communication between applications, transport and communication would not be considered bundled. Quality of Service if it exists as a problem should be solved by the edge. While my friend Henry would tell me to leave the dead to bury the dead, the dead will come back to haunt us if we do not differentiate ourselves from the plain and the old telephone system of the past. We should not allow the gatekeepers of access to associate us with a dull black phone service.
As Netizens, applying Metcalf’s law clearly shows our common good is the public good. If we do not become “Presence – aware Application Caesars” we will find that all glory is fleeting.
Thank you.
Is Facebook the AOL of its time
Sometimes even typing the title of blog post is scary. I expect to get some pushback on this one.
At Gigaom’s blog this weekend was the analysis that Social Networks had peeked. I always try to be a contrarian. My history is to never join a ground swell in either direction. So this obviously has to be the an upbeat discussion.
So let me put this in terms of what I see with the wife and kids. My wife is still an active AOL user. She has email loops and favorites and if she ever was going to leave AOL it would be because those features disappear. In other words, her good will is almost everlasting. AOL is her address book and her buddy list. AOL lost its “cool” was when broadband became available and apps were discovered by the subscribers that made AOL’s interm portals irrelevant.
Facebook has very similar relationships with my kids. The “kewl” factors are the network they have with their friends. And the groups and apps are minor for them the networking and the wall is a great asynchronous communication amongst their friends.
So what would drive the friends off of Facebook?
I think a mis-step in privacy and the effort to insert more financially viable solutions may allow the kids to look elsewhere. As Facebook starts to lose execs and add new executives from Google and Yahoo! the question is will the kids be everlasting Facebook users.
The obvious question is what are they willing to pay for? Unlike AOL, Facebook has set their prize at zero.
I would love the analysis of the change in Facebook use five years after graduation.
So far I don’t see the driver to leave.