This
story appeared on Network World Fusion at
http://www.nwfusion.com/columnists/2000/0710bradner.html
'Net
Insider:
Will voice-over-X be
visible?
By Scott
Bradner
Network World, 07/10/00
There
has been a lot of buzz of late about voice-overs. Voice over DSL and voice over
cable are all the rage in the trade press. But much of the buzz misses what may
be the real story.
Standards are being defined on how to run voice
over these technologies. The model assumes the service provider has a DSL
circuit or cable connection from a point of presence (POP) to a customer
location. At the customer location there is a modem-like piece of customer
premises equipment (CPE) attached to the line. The CPE has multiple connectors,
one or more for each service that can be offered.
For example, a cable
modem might have connectors for cable TV, high-speed Internet service and one
or more phone ports. At the POP, the other end of the line is attached to some
electronics that split the customer traffic into separate streams, one for each
of the connectors on the CPE.
In this model, if the customer wants
voice service he plugs a phone into a phone port on the CPE and the service
provider configures the POP equipment to logically connect that phone port to a
telephone service provider. The customer appears to have a direct connection to
the phone service provider and gets the same type of phone service and bills
that any other customer of that phone company would get, along with some
potential savings resulting from the use of a shared-access line. This model is
quite attractive to service providers because they can bill for each service.
But
this is not the only model. An alternative is where the CPE is simpler and only
provides cable TV and Internet service. If the customer wants to make phone
calls, he does so from an Internet-enabled phone or a PC. In this case, the
voice traffic is not separated out; it is sent along with all the other IP
packets on the Internet link. The phone call can go over the Internet directly
to someone with another Internet-enabled phone or to a gateway to the phone
network run by a third party.
This is not attractive to service
providers because there is no reliable way for them to figure out which is
voice traffic and charge separately for that. But it will be attractive to
customers for exactly the same reason.
The service providers may claim
that without separating the traffic, they cannot guarantee the right quality of
service for the application. I would claim that you should not be buying
Internet service from a provider whose basic service is crappy enough that this
makes a difference.
In any case, this alternative model has been
generally ignored in all the buzz, but may easily be the dominant model in a
few years.
Disclaimer: Harvard understands the concept of the dominant
model, but has expressed no opinion on this topic.
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