Wednesday, March 31, 2004

White Rock Gains RUS Acceptance for SONET Products

White Rock Networks has gained RUS acceptance and RUS Buy American Status for its VLX2020 optical products from the Rural Utilities Service (RUS) Technical Standards Committee . The designation enables rural telecommunications service providers to obtain low-interest funds to deploy the VLX2020 for voice, data, and video applications over OC-3, OC-12, OC-48, and OC-192 survivable SONET networks. http://www.whiterocknetworks.com/

Net2Phone to Provide VoIP for Vietnam ISP

State-owned Vietnam Datacommunications Company (VDC), the largest provider of data services in Vietnam, is providing Net2Phone's VoIP services to its corporate and residential customers throughout Vietnam. Net2Phone has partnered with VITC, a U.S.-based communications firm with operations in Asia, to secure relationships with top Vietnamese ISPs, including VDC. Financial terms were not disclosed.



Net2Phone's hosted SIP platform provides partners with residential broadband telephony, calling cards, prefix dialing and enterprise services. http://www.net2phone.comhttp://vdc.com.vn

Global Crossing Signs Brazil's Largest Financial Extranet

Global Crossing was awarded a one-year contract to provide multimedia services to provide Rede de Telecomunicações para o Mercado (RTM), the largest financial extranet in Brazil. The contract covers international voice capacity through Global Crossing's Direct Dial Services (DDS). http://www.globalcrossing.com

USDA Offers $2.2 Billion in Loans for Rural Broadband

The U.S. Department of Agriculture's Rural Utilities Service (RUS) will offer no less than $2.211 billion in loans for FY 2004 as part of its Rural Broadband Access Loan and Loan Guarantee program. The funding includes $2.051 billion for direct cost-of-money loans, $80 million for direct 4% loans, and $80 million for loan guarantees. The official notice was published in the Federal Register Online: : March 29, 2004 (Volume 69, Number 60). http://www.usda.gov/rus/telecom/index.htmhttp://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/index.html

Court Challenge to Cable Modem as "Information Service"

The U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals declined to review a lower court's ruling that had overturned the FCC's classification of cable modem service as an "information service." The case originally arose regarding whether local municipalities could require cable operators to open their networks to other ISPs.



In October 2003, the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court vacated the FCC declaratory ruling that had classified cable modem service as an "information service without a separate offering of a telecommunications service." The FCC promptly appealed the decision. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has now declined to review the lower court's ruling.



The FCC's declaratory ruling, which was issued 15-March-2002, classified cable modem service as an "information service" rather than a "cable service." As an interstate information service, cable modem service would therefore be subject to FCC jurisdiction rather than state or local rules.



FCC Chairman Michael K. Powell expressed disappointment in the decision, saying the Court's failure to address the merits of the FCC's policy would only "prolong uncertainty to the detriment of consumers."



FCC Commissioner Michael Copps applauded the decision, saying "This is a good day for consumers and Internet entrepreneurs. I look forward to the start of a fresh dialogue on broadband service at the FCC."



The National Cable and Telecommunications Association (NCTA), which represents the cable TV industry, said "While we are disappointed with the Ninth Circuit ruling, we will urge the FCC to seek U.S. Supreme Court review. We believe that if and when the Ninth Circuit's decision is given a full substantive review by the Supreme Court, it will be reversed."



EarthLink said "Yesterday's decision by the Ninth Circuit confirms what EarthLink has been saying for over five years now, that cable modem service contains a telecommunications service. As the Court noted in its decision last October, ‘The practical result of such a classification is that cable broadband providers would be required to open their lines to competing ISPs.' Cable modem users deserve choice in high-speed Internet providers. Yesterday's ruling is another step towards finally affording them that choice."http://www.fcc.gov

Agilent Introduces SAN Tester for 4 Gbps FC

Agilent Technologies announced test capabilities for the 4 Gbps Fibre Channel standard. The Agilent 1733A SAN test module enables Fibre Channel traffic generation at wire speeds of 2 Gbps or 4 Gbps, with allowances for any combination of data, error, link, fabric control and fabric services test. It fits in the same Agilent platform as the company's existing 1 and 2 Gbps test modules. http://www.agilent.com

ADC Supplies FTTP in Florida

Home Town Cable Plus, an integrated service provider in Port St. Lucie, Florida is deploying ADC's OmniReach FTTP products to deliver voice, video, data, and Internet services to homes and businesses in its subscriber area. These services include POTS and long distance, 217 channels of switched digital video (SDV), gigabit Ethernet Internet service and enhanced home security service over the IP-based FTTP network. http://www.adc.com

Level 3 Acquires ICG's Wholesale Dial Access Business

Level 3 Communications has acquired the wholesale dial access business of ICG Communications for approximately $35 million in cash. The business unit provides dial-up Internet access to America Online, EarthLink, MSN, United Online and other leading ISPs.



Level 3 plans to migrate a majority of ICG's customer traffic onto its own network infrastructure over the course of the next two quarters. http://www.level3.com

BT Selects Alcatel's IP-based Service Delivery Platform

BT awarded a EUR 30 million contract Alcatel for an service delivery platform that enables advanced IP services and supports existing Number Translation and Network based Call Centre services. The contract, which is part of BT's 21st Century Network (21CN) strategy, covers the Alcatel 8690 Open Services Platform (OSP). Alcatel is working with Sun Microsystems and Ulticom to supply the IT platforms and signaling software, respectively.



The Alcatel 8690 OSP is part of Alcatel's Open Path to Enhanced Networking (OPEN) program for enhanced broadband services, which protects current voice revenues by using a staged migration to a converged packet infrastructure. http://www.alcatel.com

Spirent Adds VoIP Conformance Testing for IP Telephony

Spirent Communications rolled out a new bundle of Convergence Test & Measurement applications for the Abacus 5000 IP Telephony Test Migration System. The new features add SIP, H.323, MEGACO, MGCP, and SIGTRAN protocol conformance. Spirent's Abacus 5000 system provides a variety of test scenarios and unique capabilities, such as emulating a call agent (media gateway controller) and signaling gateway, the backbone of a VoIP network. By generating real voice and data traffic and Real-time Transport Protocol (RTP) packets, the Abacus 5000 with CTM-5000 tests interoperability among different equipment manufacturers and devices, allowing customers to easily pinpoint failures before new VoIP networks and services are deployed. http://www.spirentcom.com

SBC Offers Faster DSL -- 1.5 to 3 Mbps Downstream

SBC Communications launched higher speed consumer DSL tiers at up to twice the download speeds of its current flagship DSL offer.

Residential customers, who qualify, can get speeds of 1.5 to 3 Mbps downstream and 384 Kbps upstream - for $36.99 a month if they also subscribe to SBC Total Connections, which includes local, long distance and wireless service. If ordered online or as part of a qualifying bundle of SBC services, residential and business customers can receive the higher speed SBC Yahoo! DSL for $39.99 a month. When purchased separately with a one-year term commitment, it is available for $44.99 per month.



SBC Yahoo! DSL with download speeds of up to 1.5 Mbps remains available for $26.95 a month for SBC Total Connections customers. It can also be ordered online or as part of a qualifying SBC bundle for $29.95 a month. When purchased separately, SBC Yahoo! DSL is offered for $34.95 a month.



SBC is also charging a monthly FUSF (Federal Universal Service Fund) cost recovery fee to help cover charges for data transport, pursuant to state and federal telecom regulations. This fee is not a tax or government required charge. http://www.sbc.com

QUALCOMM's Push-to-Talk Claims Set-up Latency Under 1sec

QUALCOMM announced that its QChat push-to-chat solution achieves a call set-up latency of less than one second. At the IIR Push-to-Talk World Summit, QUALCOMM demonstrated its QChat technology running over a CDMA2000 1xEV-DO network (Release 0 with QoS software enhancements). http://www.qualcomm.com

Malaysia Equips Teachers with Wi-Fi

Malaysia's Ministry of Education has equipped 35,000 teachers with notebook PCs using Intel Centrino technology in the first phase of a five-year technology integration plan that also includes enabling all schools with Wi-Fi. http://www.intel.com

Foundry Switches to Power "FlashMob" Supercomputer

Foundry Networks is supplying its Layer 2/3 Ethernet switches for FlashMob I, a supercomputer to be created on 03-April-2004 at the University of San Francisco by hundreds of volunteers using their ordinary laptop PCs. The "FlashMob" computer uses the combined processing power of all the donated laptops to work on a single problem. The Foundry FastIron 1500 Layer 2/3 switches will be interconnected via 10 Gigabit Ethernet to enable a very high-speed switch fabric. http://www.flashmobcomputing.orghttp://www.foundrynetworks.com

Tuesday, March 30, 2004

FCC Commissioners Call for Negotiated Settlement on UNE-p

All five of the FCC Commissioners have signed a letter urging the nation's telecommunications carriers and trade associations to begin a period of "good faith" commercial negotiations on UNE-p resale rates. FCC Commissioners are encouraging the parties to utilize all means at their disposal, including a third-party mediator, to maximize the success of this effort.



To provide additional time for these negotiations, the FCC intends to petition the D.C. Circuit for a 45-day extension of the stay of its decision vacating its unbundling rules. The FCC will also request an extension of the deadline for seeking Supreme Court review.



The FCC has previously been split 3-2 on the issue of UNE-p unbundling rules. For this announcement, all five Commissioners agreed "to come together with one voice to send a clear and unequivocal signal that the best interests of America's telephone consumers are served by a concerted effort to reach a negotiated arrangement. "



Industry reaction:



SBC Communications said it is "greatly encouraged that the FCC sees the value in business- to-business negotiations and mutually acceptable, commercial agreements as a preferable alternative to government-mandated and -managed competition for consumers. " The company noted that it made an identical offer to wholesale customers three weeks ago.



AT&T said it "welcomes any opportunity to negotiate a fair, economically viable agreement with the Bell companies for access to the facilities they control." However, the company noted that "any such talks are inherently difficult given that the Bell companies control the sole supply of a needed good."



CompTel/ASCENT, which represents competitive carriers, accepted the FCC's request to enter negotiations but said it "is vital that the process governing these negotiations is transparent, so that all competitive carriers - large and small alike - are afforded the same considerations in a non-discriminatory fashion."

The Communications Workers of America, a trade union, applauded the FCC's move to encourage a negotiated settlement, saying the current policy has only stifled the rollout of broadband. http://www.fcc.gov
  • In early March, a three-judge panel in the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned the FCC's Triennial Review Order with regard to network unbundling rules. The FCC rules, which were announced in February 2003 but actually issued in August 2003, empowered state public utility commissions as the decision makers on issues regarding UNE-P unbundling and local competition. The Court of Appeals said the FCC erred by not providing unified, federal guidelines and by pushing many FCC decisions to the states. The court also upheld the Triennial Review Order's exemption provided to incumbent carriers from unbundling for certain fiber-fed loops and for line sharing. The ruling was applauded by ILECs but condemned at CLECs.

  • One day after the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned the FCC's Triennial Review Order with regard to network unbundling rules, SBC Communications issued a public offer to AT&T, MCI and other competitors, inviting the companies "to negotiate commercially reasonable UNE-P wholesale rates ."

FCC to Collect $273 Million in Fees, Spend $292 Million in Budget

The FCC expects to collect $272,958,000 in regulatory fees for Fiscal Year (FY) 2004. The fees collected to recover the regulatory costs associated with the Commission's enforcement, policy and rulemaking, user information, and international activities.



As for its budget for the coming year, the FCC is requesting that Congress authorize spending authority of $292,958,00, requiring a direct appropriation of $20,000,000. This represents an increased spending level of $19,000,000 or 6.9% over the previous fiscal year. The increased spending includes $13 million for upgrades to its labs, lifecycle replacement of enforcement vehicles and new equipment for those vehicles, and training programs for its staff. http://www.fcc.gov

Intoto Raises $11 Million for Security

Intoto, a start-up based in Santa Clara, California raised $11 million in new funding for its integrated security, wireless and voice software platform aimed at network equipment manufacturers. Intoto said it has licensed its iGateway software solutions to over 100 networking and communication equipment vendors. The Intoto software, which runs on a number of embedded microprocessors, SoC communications processors and network processors and is compatible with all major OS/RTOSs, provides functionality such as firewall, VPN, intrusion protection and wireless security. The new funding round was led by AsiaTech Management and a corporate partner. http://www.intoto.com

VON Keynote: ITXC Sees Unstoppable Momentum for VoIP

For the next two years, people will continue to purchase VoIP primarily for cost savings rather than for advanced feature sets, predicted Tom Evslin, Chairman and CEO of ITXC, in a keynote at the Spring VON conference in Santa Clara, California. To be really useful, advanced features require deployments at both ends of the call. Evslin figures that once penetration rates reach somewhere around 15% an inflection point will occur and people will start to buy VoIP in order to have the same advanced features as the early adopters.



In the mean time, momentum continues to build. Evslin presented a "Top 7" List of indicators that VoIP is hot again.



  • Jeff Pulver owns the VON show again


  • The stock prices of VoIP companies now have digits before the decimal


  • People at cocktail parties talk about Internet telephony


  • Industry consolidation is happening and will pick up pace


  • AT&T and MCI have joined the VON Coalition


  • The industry has gone from building networks to joining networks -- interconnecting VoIP networks is now the most pressing industry issue


  • Government wants to tax VoIP -- Regulators want to regulate it




A few years ago, Evslin predicted that by 2010 all calls would travel over IP for a portion of their route. Now, he says, this time frame "may be too pessimistic."



Evslin's presentation highlighted a number of industry pain points. "We don't really have plug-and-play interoperability between networks," he said, " even when both networks are using equipment from the same vendors." VoIP carriers are also caught in the middle of a protocol conversion from H.323 to SIP. Even when interoperability issues finally shake out, Evslin believes there will be an ongoing need to have a clear demarcation between networks. Routing, billing and security will continue to be issues wherever carriers exchange traffic. And the "n-squared problem" will prevent every carrier from peering and maintaining business relationships with every other carrier, thereby necessitating VoIP Interexchange Carriers, such as ITXC.



Evslin, who is an active participant in the VON Coalition, also argued in favor of a "light regulatory" touch. VoIP providers are not asking for a free ride on somebody else's network, he said, and traditional telecom regulations are not needed for the new VoIP world. Nevertheless, he believes that current economic forces that are driving VoIP are so strong, the technology could not be killed at this point even by really bad regulatory policy. Any unnecessary regulations, however, "would have high social costs." The VON Coalition advocates voluntary industry efforts to meet social needs like access for the disabled, access in rural areas, E-911 and CALEA.
  • In November 2003, Teleglobe International Holdings announced plans to acquire ITXC, the largest provider of international VoIP wholesale services with direct relationships with carriers in more than 175 countries. Teleglobe has been a major player in international telecommunications for well over 50 years and ranks among the top five providers of international wholesale voice, data, IP and mobile roaming services. Teleglobe's network reaches more than 240 countries and territories and is physically interconnected to approximately 275 fixed-line telecommunications operators and 360 mobile operators. After the merger, Teleglobe will be one of the top three international voice carriers. The company hopes to improve operational efficiency by the application of ITXC's automated technology to Teleglobe's older back-office processes.


  • For 2003, ITXC carried approximately 4.1 billion minutes of Internet telephony traffic versus approximately 3.1 billion minutes for 2002.

PacketExchange Signs Tellabs for MPLS Backbone

PacketExchange, an independent global carrier with POPs in London, Frankfurt, Amsterdam, Paris, Dublin, New York, Washington, Palo Alto and Dallas, has chosen the Tellabs 8800 Series of Intelligent Multi-Service Routers (MSRs) to expand its MPLS backbone. The deployment will enhance PacketExchange's ability to deliver future-proof services with specific Service Level Agreements (SLAs). Financial terms were not disclosed. http://www.tellabs.comhttp://www.packetexchange.net

PacketLight to Focus on Storage Transport

PacketLight Networks, a developer of metro multi-service optical transport and access systems, announced plans to focus on the growing storage transport market. PacketLight offers a range of products for storage over DWDM and SONET/SDH, using the latest GFP/VCAT and FC-BB standards. The company's new product line offers high-speed storage services, such as Fibre Channel, FICON, and ESCON over large distances--without performance degradation--using SONET/SDH and DWDM.



PacketLight also named Hezi Lapid as chairman of the board of directors. Lapid was one of the pioneers of SDH development in ECI Telecom and served as CEO of Innowave, an ECI company that was acquired by Alvarion last year. http://www.packetlight.com