This
story appeared on Network World Fusion at
http://www.nwfusion.com/columnists/2000/1113bradner.html
'Net
Insider:
(Re)defining voice
By Scott Bradner
Network World,
11/13/00
After
more than a hundred years of trying, the phone world has come to a reasonable
definition of what "voice service" should be. This definition has
been tweaked a little bit of late and is about to undergo a fundamental
redefinition. The result will take a long time to determine and is not possible
to even reliably guess at from where we now sit.
The basic definition
of what a customer should get when ordering voice service hasn't changed that
much since the introduction of touch-tone and direct dialing for long-distance.
The definition was heavily constrained by the user interface available (A user
interface that has only 12 buttons limits the types of interactions
possible.).
These days, voice service is basically the ability to
place a call anywhere, plus some additional features. The normal package
includes call waiting, callback, call forwarding, caller ID, call trace and
voice mail. These features frequently come as a package on cell phones and from
alternative telephone carriers, but are generally broken out with individual
fees by the regional telephone companies.
But we are in a time of
rapid technological change that will dramatically change the possibilities for
a user interface and thus the possibilities for new basic services.
Speech
recognition has been promised for quite a while, and there are some indications
that generally useful speech-recognition technology is about to arrive. In the
past few years, start-ups specializing in speech-recognition technology have
raised hundreds of millions of dollars and are beginning to roll out services.
Most
of these start-ups think that given a chance, users will abandon the 12-button
keypad and switch over to talking to - as well as through - their phones. While
I'm not as bullish on this idea as many in the venture capital community and
worry about the safety aspects of using this type of thing while driving, it
clearly changes the user interface tools that are available.
Will the
basic voice service of the future include automatically calling your lawyer
when your cell phone hears someone call you a bad name?
The other
major change in interface tools will be the addition of Internet connectivity
to phones. Moving from 12 buttons, even augmented by speech recognition, to a
full-fledged, Java-enabled browser with a touch-sensitive screen will explode
the possibilities. What will basic voice service for such a phone consist of?
It could include all sorts of interactive directory, e-commerce and other
Internet-enabled functions.
One thing that is clear is that it will
take a while to redefine voice service, and this will give a lot of companies
the opportunity to help in the definition process. If they get it right, they
will be well rewarded for their efforts before a common definition of voice
service moves us back to commoditization and low prices.
Disclaimer:
Harvard banks on the fact that there is not a common definition of higher
education, but it has not expressed an opinion on this topic.
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