PayPerPost - Another Irrelevant Thread Nobody Cares About

There’s quite a brouhaha underway over PayPerPost sending ripples of opinion across the Net. Jeneane sums it up with a nice post of sanity here. It even got wound up enough for Shelley to chime in. I miss Shelley. She’s been too quiet lately. She’s been focused on real life, ignoring this fantasyland of blogs and such. I’ve seen posts both sane and insane on the subject. Sadly, it’s a metablogging thing that nobody cares about at all. Me included.

Yes, I find the whole PayPerPost topic less than boring. When the fight gets really good down the road, it will work up to boring. Personally, I don’t give a rabbit’s fart and I find little value it pointing out to some people who should be smarter that they’re, well full of caca actually.

I only mention it because Shelley shared this disclaimer:

Disclosure: I make money writing books for O’Reilly. Well, I make some
money writing books for O’Reilly. I’d like to make more money writing
books for O’Reilly, as well as articles and books for other companies
and publications, but right now, it’s just O’Reilly. No one else gives
me a damn dime. Bummer.

I feel compelled to also disclose. This blog is sponsored. By me. I sponsor it out of my own pocket so that I can say anydamnthingIwant. I write books, speak, consult, and do other things. And I have a day job. I’m not a fool. I’m not giving up my day job. Been there. Done that. Got the debt therapy scars to prove it. So I freely disclose that I’m not a hired gun, nor do I play one on television. I say nice things about companies and people I really like. I say nasty things about the ones I dislike. Deal with it. I don’t get paid per post. I don’t use Google AdNonsense. I don’t have popups. I use RSS so I don’t have to read them on your blog, and you people who shove ads in RSS piss me off. Consider this an advertisement free zone. If you feel I’m advertising, it’s just me talking up something I really like. And if I get paid for it, you’ll know by the shit-eatin grin because I’ll tell you.

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Why TalkPlus is Important? What Matters to You?

We bloggers unleashed a storm of information about TalkPlus today( see here, here, here, here and here for examples.If you don’t believe me, try TalkPlus as a Technorati search term and look what you get.). In reading all the stories we wrote, mine included, what none of us did is really clarify why TalkPlus matters. We didn’t explain what’s really in it for you the end user.  We gave you how it works. We told you about their funding. We told you all the things and analyst or mainstream media outlet wants to hear.

Since I’m a big fan of understanding “what’s in it for me” (the WIIFM approach to buying), I thought it was important to take a little time and explain why it is this announcement excited me more than any other at the ITExpo in San Diego. For me, this was the show stealer at the ITExpo. Not just the show stealer, but second to none. The competition wasn’t even close.

I’m going to intermingle some material from their press kit and my own explanations of why this is HOT as a way of elaborating.

First about the company -

TalkPlus was founded by Jeff Black in February, 2004, with the aim of improving the mobile user’s ability to protect their privacy and improve control over their mobile experience.  In 2006, TalkPlus received venture financing from Menlo Ventures, LLC. The company is currently private.

That doesn’t tell you about their patents. It doesn’t tell you how they’ve worked through FCC processes, but it begs a question. If they began this work in 2004, why are you only hearing about them now, nearly three years later. I’ll tell you. They’ve been working. They didn’t dream this up over the summer and throw a solution together. They’ve been diligently planning and working on a solution for quite a while now. Those efforts show in what they’re bringing to the market

Read the press kit and here’s what you see -

THE TALKPLUS NUMBER
The TalkPlus Number is a single “virtual” number that works on a mobile user’s existing mobile phone. TalkPlus subscribers can both dial out from and receive calls on their TalkPlus number, so subscribers can easily separate their business calls from their personal calls, for example.

Not only can a mobile user have two mobile numbers on a single phone, but the TalkPlus number can be selected from any city in the United States that the customer desires. In this way, professionals who conduct business in multiple regions can use their TalkPlus number to give the impression of a local presence, since callers can see that they are reaching or being reached by a local number.

SAMPLE USE CASES FOR THE TALKPLUS NUMBER

  • Small business owners/home office workers who want a separate mobile “office” number and a “personal” number.
  • Lawyers who want to separate out clients’ billed calls
  • Doctors with clinical practices who want a dedicated number for patients.
  • Socially active individuals who want to easily manage dating or activity partners.
  • Individuals concerned about privacy, who want to separate their inner circle of friends and family from their casual acquaintances and business contacts.

That sounds a lot like investor-speak, so let me translate based on really digging in and getting some firsthand demonstration. The TalkPlus number is another telephone number. It can be assignedto your cell phone. Now your cell phone can have two numbers, with CallerID working on both. That’s interesting, but not phenomenal. You can have a personal secret number on your cell phone, but there are a couple of other ways you can accomplish the same sort of thing if you’re creative.

But that virtual number can be anywhere. If you’re a foreign student attending college in the US, and recent reports say there are 674,000 of you with active VISAs right now, you can have a phone number on your cell phone in England, Japan, India, Australia. From home, your real home where mom and family are. Yes you can leverage international long distance abritrage to get the cheapest per minute cost to call home. But it also means mom can call you on a local phone call.

This isn’t limited to student. How many workers travel to other parts of the world from their home to work? I knowsome parts of the US are heavily populated with migrant workers in agriculture. I know that many professionals in the medical field come to the US from the Phillipines. I know more people that I can count who have corporate offices in their home country and another part of the world. What about a consultant in Idaho who wants a Washington, DC number to work on goverment contracts with the fed. This market is what we’d call a green field. The opportunities are limited only by our imagination.

You can have a local presence, via a local phone number anywhere. And Caller ID follows that number. Place a call from the UK number and that’s what the person receiving the call will see on their display.

What isn’t intuitive or obvious is that isn’t all. That’s a virtual number. Beyond that there’s aliasing. I’ll give you my personal exapmle for aliasing. I have phone numbers for home, home office, office, personal cell phone (Treo), business cell phone(Blackberry), and a couple of others that I use daily. With TalkPlus aliasing technology I can make them all appear on my cell phone, just like a virtual number. I can make and receive calls with the full presence of my telephone number. If I call on work business, I can place the call from my business number and that’s what the called party will see on their display. In short, the identity of my telephone number is extended to my mobile phone, complete with Caller ID information. I know I keeping mentioning Caller ID, but it’s important. Stick with me, because things are starting to get interesting.

The press kit goes on to explain some use cases, but let me share a more comprehensive vision. My view, sprinkled with thoughts from my chat with Jeff Black at TalkPlus. I’ll use professional services - consultants, doctors and lawyers - as examples.

I’ve run and independent consulting practice and there’s one mantra that underlies success in consulting - without billing, it’s just a hobby. Consultants and lawyers make their living on billable hours. Any company that bills for time does. I heard one story of a law frim in the Silicon Valley that estimates the lose $1.5 million dollars a year in billable time from attorneys talking on their cell phones while they are driving. If that attorney had a virtual number with an account code, that time could be tracked, and billed, driving back into corporate revenue.

Consultants may provide a block of hours or billable service to special clients. Many provide a dedicated phone number for the client to reach them any time. What a perfect fit! A virtual telephone number, dedicated to a client, with account code tracking for billing built right in. Are you with me?

Doctors have some different constraints. When a doctor calls a patient with test results, HIPAA regulations forbid patient test results being left in a voice mail message. The medical professional has to speak with the patient. Doctors don’t call patients from their cell phones because they don’t want patients calling them back there. If you get a call from your doctor’s cell phone, you’re likely to let it go to voice mail as an unfamiliar number anyway. But if you see the medical center number on Caller ID, you know they’re calling with test results. Everyone is assured the privacy and confidentiality of patient information, but through Caller ID, we leverage the telephone network for better efficiency.

But Wait, There’s More

Now let me touch on the enormity of this, because it’s noteworthy. Telephone numbers just became a disposable resource. Just like you have that throwaway Hotmail/Yahoo/Gmail address (or two, four, six disposable addresses for different purposes), now you have disposable telephone numbers. Who says you’re forever limited to a single virtual telephone number? I’ll bet you a dollar or two that those incredible minds at TalkPlus have already thought about dynamic virtual telephone numbers, virtual telephone numbers on demand, phone numbers preprogrammed to “die” after 30-60-90 days, and an array of other interesting things we can’t even think of today because this is brand new.

Why not have a phone number for a unique purpose? Why not a home, work, dating, softball league, PTA and church number? And if you don’t need it any more, why not throw it away and let it get recycled? Telephone numbers can be used as a fleeting resource, then cast aside when they’ve served their purpose, just like an email address.

I spent a lot of years working directly in the telecommunications industry in the US. The way I see it, TalkPlus just delivered complete liberation from the constraints of the North American Numbering Plan. The old NPA-NXX phone number mentality is dead. I say it’s DEAD. And LATA boundaries can go out the window with it. In the world of Voice 2.0 they aren’t relevant.

Beyond North America, in Voice 2.0, global boundaries don’t matter. With TalkPlus, global boundaries don’t matter. If I do business in six countries, I expect I’ll be able to get virtual telephone numbers in every country at some point. All on my mobile phone. All at once. And with the race to the bottom in long distance abritrage pricing, it’s pretty clear to me that the winner who will lose on that commodity pricing madness will delivermy calls cheaply anywhere in the world/ I’ll let them worry about whether it’s over the PSTN or IP. It doesn’t matter to me because those folks are driving the cost to nothing as fast as they can.

TalkPlus delivers a freedom in service delivery that your wireline carrier - Sprint, Verizon, Qwest - cannot deliver.

TalkPlus delivers diversity in your mobile telephone service delivery that your wireless carrier - Sprint, Verizon, AT&T - cannot deliver.

That’s why TalkPlus delivers Voice 2.0 to your mobile phone. That flurry of blog chatter today was the death toll for some old, antiquated service models that just don’t work. They haven’t worked for me for years, and I bet they don’t really work for you.

Voice 2.0 works for me. TalkPlus will work for me, and they set the bar high in Mobile Voice 2.0.

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Security vendor circumvents Windows Vista’s Patchguard

October 27, VNUNet — Security vendor circumvents Windows Vista’s Patchguard. Security researchers with Authentium have found a way to circumvent the Patchguard security technology that Microsoft has built into the 64−bit version of its forthcoming Windows Vista operating system. Over the past months the Patchguard technology has been subject of a fierce debate between security vendors and Microsoft because it prevents some anti−virus software from functioning. Authentium’s technology allows an application to effectively disable Patchguard. In a blog posting the company argued that providing kernel access to third party Websites will enable future security innovations.
Source

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Microsoft .NET framework request filtering bypass vulnerability.

October 27, Security Focus — Microsoft .NET framework request filtering bypass vulnerability. Microsoft .NET framework is prone to a vulnerability that may permit the bypassing of content filtering. An attacker can exploit this issue to perform multiple input validation attacks such as cross−site scripting, SQL−injection, and HTML−injection; other attacks are also possible. Vulnerable: Microsoft .NET Framework 2.0. Solution: Currently, Security Focus is not aware of any vendor−supplied patches for this issue.
Source: http://www.securityfocus.com/bid/20753/references

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Social Networks and Video? How many social networks do you think there are?

Peter Csathy raises a question that leads me to a very contrarian view.

Is Video Interaction a Next Big Thing in Social Networking?

Borrowing a page from Luca, today I ask a different question — is video interaction a next logical and powerful way to extend the social networking experience? Specifically, can video (including live “click to call” video interaction among members in a community, as well as video messages — i.e., click to record video to augment your member profile or send personalized video messages to others) take social networking to another level?

Every time I hear, or use, the phrase “social networking” my stomach rolls. Peter’s question is quite legitimate in the context of social networks, but having watched the YASN (Yet Another Social Network) through Friendster, Orkut, Tribe.net, LinkedIn, MySpaces, Facebook, and all the others I’ve forgotten really begs another view.

These are all contrived networks of friends, which leads me to point out that I began my online social network more years ago that I can remember. My first iteration social network involved the telephone. Rather than profiles, my friends were given numbers that I could dial and interact with them. Later it moved to computer bulletin boards. I used the telephone to “talk” to them. Still later it reached into Compuserve forums and a new tool called email. When Compuserve introduced gateways to the rest of the world, email became a global social networking tool. Usenet news groups were also a social networking tool.
 
Today we seem to rigidly define social networking in the context of which service has the most users today. I’ll taske the position that the Internet (with the big I) is the only social network that matters. The Internet isn’t about protocols and programs. It isn’t about services. It’s about the people at the ends and the connections we make.

A while back I made the observation that *my* space is much larger than MySpace. *My* space is a global Internet filled with blogs, email, wikis, usenet, discussion forums and thousands of pockets that are communities of interest. It encircles the globe and touches millions of people today. And yet the whole Internet, this global network, fits inside my Treo in my shirt pocket. Yep, it’s in there. The whole damn thing.

Video is already changing incrementally how we use my social network. Every advance in video technology becomes just one more small facet of how our real social network changes.

http://app.sightspeed.com/vm/lfqejnf7k46t9rtmcq8p4ft2pc4pvsmv/1618/en_US/1/

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Time for a Change in Government

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A Word of Advice to the Republican Party

I wish these YouTube videos would embed properly in WordPress. Then again, I don’t try very hard.

Check this one out. Pass it to a Republican near you.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cfX7SY4Y-Zw

Slam Dunk

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Growing too Fast

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Connor at Birthday Play

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Special Edition Podcast ITExpo Panel - VoIP Security Best Practices

On Friday, October 13th, I had the pleasure of moderating two panel discussions on VoIP Security at the Internet Telephony Expo in San Diego. My friend Dan York from Bluebox Podcast was one of the participants in this panel and brought his gear along to record from the audio system at the conference. With kind permission of our friends at TMCnet and the agreement of all the panel members, we recorded both the sessions I moderated for podcasting here and on the Bluebox Podcast feed.

One surprise of note was that this panel was scheduled for lunch time the last day of the Expo. Not only did we have a really engaged audience, we ran overtime taking questions and getting into all the dynamic conversation.

I’d also like to thank the folks who joined me on the panel. It’s their experitise and insights that made the panel a success. I was just along for the ride really. Dan got someone in the audience to take our picture. Here we are. From the left:

Tom Gilheany, Nortel Networks
Micaela, Giuhat, Sipera Systems
Jonathan Weiss, Lucent
Shahadat Khan, Eyeball Networks
Dan York, Mitel
I’m in the blue jacket behind the group

This is the second of these special edition podcasts from the IT Expo. Dan is also sharing them on the Bluebox Podcast.Earlier we also be pod the Introduction to VoIP Security panel session. For those of you who weren’t able to make it to the Expo, we hope this gives a sense of what you missed and that you’ll be able to join us at the next ITExpo event.

Note: The Realtime Unified Communications Community podcast is now available via iTunes and Yahoo! Podcasts

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A Press Release I Received - InterAct Announces New School Safety Starter Kit

I get lots of press releases tied to the tech sector. This one arrived from an organization I’ve never heard of for publication in my “magazine.” That tells me it just came out of the blue because I’m on some press list somewhere. Nonetheless, I know several educators who read here and while this isn’t related to network technologies I’m interested in, I thought I’d share it in case anyone’s looking for something like this.

InterAct Announces New School Safety Starter Kit

InterAct Public Safety Systems has announced the availability of a School Safety Starter Kit for enhanced security in schools (K-12). This affordable package includes the TrueSentry digital video surveillance system and MissionMode emergency notification system at a price that meets limited school budgets.

The kit comes with 4 network IP cameras and a TrueSentry NVR. Integrated motion detection triggers recording onto a hard drive eliminating the need to store or replace VHS tapes, and speeding video review times. In the event of an incident, automatic alerts can be sent to key school coordinators so they can respond quickly. Also included is the MissionMode alert notification system with an unlimited number of free “Parent Profiles”. In the event of an emergency, a pre-recorded messages can be sent to student emergency contacts within minutes with critical information.

The kit can also be integrated into local dispatch centers to quickly escalate an emergency to local law enforcement. Response teams can take control of live cameras to get a current view of the situation to plan a faster and more effective response. For more information, please visit http://www.interact911.com/school_safety or call InterAct at 1-800-768-3911.

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Revisting SightSpeed as a campaign tool

I wrote about SightSpeed’s use in the political campairng process some time ago. Peter Csathy, SightSpeed CEO just posted this:

Countdown for Politicos — Using Personalized “One-to-One” Video Campaigning Over the Internet to Make a Difference
Less than two weeks ’til election time — a pivotal election in which control of the House and Senate is simply too close to call. Significant issues abound.

So, how can national, state, and local politicians most effectively spread their “gospel”, motivate the faithful (and the hoped-for new faithful) and better their chances in the final stretch?

Tried and true methods work up to a point — hand-shaking, kissing babies, etc. But, increasingly, politicians are using the Internet, of course, to make a difference and more efficiently and effectively get the word out. Afterall, a politician’s legs and stamina can only go so far in any 24 hour period!

For friends and colleagues who are actively involved in political issues and getting the word out (yes, Frank Paynter, this means you), here’s a tool that’s free, fast and easy. I’m disappointed that more politicians, especially those at state and local levels, haven’t seized this tool for delivering video messages to constituents that actually get viewed. It’s a huge opportunity to get a candidate visually in front of people via a video email.

It’s cheap (or free). It’s simple. It works. If I were actively involved in a campaign, I’d have my candidate putting out a video email message before the end of the day. It’s that easy.

This election cycle is crucial in so many areas. There are so many people who could add value by winning office. So many important issues that need attention.

Hey politicos - use the tools!

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SightSpeed Land Distance Record

Catchy title, eh? 

I wasn’t able to capture the audio, but here’s a screen shot of the ever-on-the-road someplace Andy Abramson. Andy’s somewhere on the shore of Lake Michigan at the moment. The interesting thing about this conversation was that Andy’s using WiFi access from an access point .4 miles (four-tenths of a mile) away.

Ok, so Andy has looked better, but this is certainly a distance record for SightSpeed. Important to note that we conducted a full, two way call with audio and video with him on the distant fringe of 802.11b reachability.

SightSpeed synched and resynched but not once did the call drop and we never got a message that SightSpeed had to resize the image due to signal strength.

That’s a reslient VVoIP solution!

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Network World article - Top 10 security companies to watch

I missed this article the other day when it came out, but caught it today.

Top 10 security companies to watch
These companies aim to simplify, extend, boost security

These are tricky times for enterprise security start-ups.

Breaking into this vast and diverse technology market means more than just having a good product; newcomers need to bring revolutionary technology, an elegant resolution to a vexing problem, an offering that integrates unusually well with the world around it - something to distinguish it from the crowd. At the same time, security is such a strategic issue for enterprises that few are willing to put their money behind a young company that doesn’t already have a few Fortune 500 entries on its customer list.

Here are the companies they listed:

BitArmor Systems

Cogneto

Cryptolex Trust Systems

Declude

Exploit Prevention Labs

KoolSpan

NetworkStreaming

Savant Protection

Void Communications

Yoggie Security Systems

While I’ve heard of several, none have been on my watch list, so until I dig a bit deeper, I can’t say whether I agree or not. But could be a useful exercise in looking over these ten

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Business Week as Spammers

Here’s an excerpt from yet another SPAM message from Business Week.

At BusinessWeek we believe the best way to
keep in touch with our readers’ needs is simply to
ask a group of preferred subscribers 5 quick
questions about themselves. You are one of those
subscribers.

The information you provide greatly helps our
editors tailor articles that directly target the topics
and business news events that most interest you.


Please take a moment to complete our request by
linking to our 5 quick questions at our site.

Thank you in advance for your cooperation and I
look forward to hearing from you soon.

The problem I have isn’t that they constantly SPAM subscribers. It’s that they offer an opt out but don’t honer requests to opt out. I have unsubscribed nine times. Nine. But the crap keeps coming.

I won’t be renewing a paper subscription to these spamming idiots who are stuck in the 1950s again. And I’ve blacklisted them. What friggin losers. They may have understood the paper magazine business once upon a time, but in the electronic age of the Internet, they wouldn’t know a clue if it bit them in the ass.

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Solving Problems Instead of Building Platforms

I caught this write-up by Don Panel on Telephony World this morning, and caught myself saying “Amen brother” under my breath

VOIP OUTSIDE OF THE BOX - A NEW WAY OF THINKING?
By Don Panek, TelephonyWorld Editor
One of the parts of my job that I’ve always been fondest of is the many conversations I get to have with people from all over the world and from all manners of business. I get to discuss everything from problems setting up small office and home office phone solutions, to multi office worldwide call centers. I’ve been in heated round-table discussions about what emerging technology will have the shortest ROI and provide the longest overall cost savings for years to come. I’ve hosted webinars, seminars, demonstrations, and spent countless hours at trade show booths extolling the virtues of telephony and VoIP till my throat was raw. But I love every minute. I guess you could say that beneath everything, I have a pure desire and passion for sharing, teaching, helping and problem solving. And that’s really what selling Telephony and VoIP to businesses is all about. It’s about problem solving.

That’s the opening, but here’s where Don makes the real point -

Business owners and executives today are not sitting around board room tables discussing their existing phone systems, services, or expenses. They’re not thinking about VoIP or Telephony and what it can do for their bottom lines. They’re discussing real business problems and looking for real solutions to those problems.

And his closing drives it home yet again -

I think the time has come to stop talking about VoIP and Telephony and start talking about applications and solutions. Solving problems. And at the end of the day after the order has been signed, we can then mention that all the phone calls will be free or virtually free! And how is that done? Well the solution has VoIP built in!

I couldn’t have said it any better. There’s been an ongoing focus for some time in the VoIP sector, that started to carry as unification of commucations technologies gained momentum. Vendors and developers often get sidetracked into the idea of how their products can interoperate…how they can build a platform.

Customers don’t care about a platform, and don’t care what you’re doing under the covers. Customers care about their business problems and solutions to those business problems. And the solution providers who provide solutions rather than platforms are the ones delivering on their promises. They’re the ones who will win in the market. Don’t get distracted into platforms. Focus on solutions to real problems.

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Voice Recognition makes an advance

There’s a nice brief by Doug Mohney the VON site that raises attention to somethin we’ll see grow in the future -

Voice Recognition Technologies Heat Up
L3 Communications (www.L-3Com.com) and RSA (www.rsa.com) have released voice recognition solutions over the past two weeks.

L3 Communications was demonstrating its “WhosThere” voice recognition technology at the Association of the United States Army (AUSA) conference in Washington D.C. The software technology needs as little as 10 seconds of unformatted speech to recognize a voice print and can be scaled up from a simple laptop application to a large distributed server farm depending on the application; it can also be embedded into DSPs or FPGAs for real-time applications.  L-3 is best known for its federal government work in the defense and national security areas.

Both voice and facial recognition technologies have been making great advances in recent months. As we watch the unification of video and voice, variations on biometrics like facial and voice recognition look to be a natural fit for user authentication and increased security. L3 and RSA are leading the way.

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Talkster - Ken Revises his Assessment

I’ve mentioned T@lkster (Talkster is much friendly in my view, and how I’ll type it more frequently) a couple of times. First in T@lkster - Are they Me Too or Voice 2.0? Maybe another Voice 2.0 Entrant in the Game here, I took a somewhat dim view triggered by some nice comments from Alec Saunders in T@lkster: A New Voice 2.0 Company. I wasn’t terribly impressed by what little I could see. But they responded quickly and I noted their responsiveness in How a Startup Shows they “Get It”.

I’m here to tell you my view has changed. So maybe I’m eating my words. I haven’t read the prior posts again closely at the moment. The folks at Talkster were more than just responsive to a blog post. They made it clear they want to win my support as a positive voice, and they have. They provided me an alpha account in their pre-release system so I could play a bit and see for myself. No, I won’t share screenshots. But I’ll tell you what I saw, and what I envision down the road.

Based on Alec’s intial post, I saw another minute stealer playing the international long distance arbitrage card. That’s a business model I don’t think is sustainable. What I saw under the covers is far more than that. In fact, that’s an inconsequential byproduct of what’s really coming from Talkster.

Think IM clients one step removed. Don’t think of IM as text chat. Think of IM as a means to enable voice conversations. Now think of dumping all those piggsh think clients we install from AIM, Yahoo, MSN, Skype, et al. Think federated thin client (clientless really, via the web) access to voice calls on those networks.

Today, in alpha mode, Talkster allows me, from my cell phone, to set up calls to any phone nubmer in the world, any of my Gizmo contacts, any Gtalk contact and and MSN Live Messenger client. Not text chat - a voice call. I can have the system place the call, or set it up and ring me back when the call is ready. And like my most favorite solutions, it just works.

I spent some time on the phone today with founder James Wanless, and John (sorry John, last name escapes me) talking about what they’re doing in alpha, the beta release anticipated before the end of the year, and the logner view of what Talkster is all about.

First, Talkster isn’t about arbitrage of minutes. It’s about federating all VoIM capability into a single interface. It isn’t about consumer services, although that’s a huge byproduct as well. But the Talkster team is clearly focused on presence, telepresence, and federation of multiple, disparate systems for the enterprise. Yes, that includes the evolution for many enterprises to Microsoft’s Live Communication Server at some point. While I may pan LCS today, I have no doubt Microsoft is serious about that business. Cisco’s telepresence initiative virtually assure that Microsoft will be in the game. Neither 800 pound gorilla can tolerate an outright with by the other. Talkster tells me they already have some fairly cruicial certifications from Microsoft to ensure they work together.

Talkster will allow entperise mobile users to see presence information for their online contacts, and make voice calls. And yes, they plan on supporting text chat too, but their focus in on voice. 2.0 style voice. Big time. It means from a handheld, a road warrior will be able to see who’s available in the enterprise and set up voice calls quickly and easily. And yes, with the rules engines running behind the scenes in VoIP networks, relevance engines like iotum, and other scenarios, the calls will always choose the cheapest possible call path.

Futures? Think about the value of adding Yahoo IM, AIM, Skype and SIP URI calling functionality. Yes, all in a single think client via the web. Using the web, from the handheld, to manage presence, IM and voice in a rich user experience.

Talkster has separated the service layer from the network layer, easing integration with existing systems. I see this supporting IMS services from carriers and VoIP providers. I see integration at a variety of levels into enterprise networks. And I see this playing in a huge way as fixed mobile convergence becomes less a pipe dream and more a reality, particularly with the SIP URI support down the road. That’s a future of seamless integration of the mobile handset into the entperprise communications network in ways we just cannot accomplish today.

If I sound bullish, let’s just say they showed me the light from their view, and it’s a strong healthy view. Are they alone? I don’t think so. Not at all. I know of at least one other company, still in quiet, stealthy mode, that does something sort of similar, but quite different - approaching the problem from a totally different, but equally compelling view. Standy by for more on that in a few weeks. I know I’ll be actively involved in testing this other approach.

For the peek I saw of the alpha test, what I heard is coming right frmo the source, and again for being responsive and completely on top of their game, kudos to the Talkster team. All I can say is I’ll be watching closely, testing, and anxiously awaiting each new feature.

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Mobile Video Calling redux

A few days ago, I joined in a conversation that’s been bouncing around among some of my respected colleagues, including Jeff Pulver, Luca Filigheddu, Andy Abramson, and Peter Csathy about the future of mobile video calling,

Today Peter posted Mobile Video Calling Part III — Uniquely Capturing the Ordinary & Extraordinary. I’m not sure I have any more to add other than to agree with Peter -

Would any of us involved in this debate have believed a couple years ago that photography via mobile phones would become such a vast market and marketing opportunity for the carriers? I highly doubt it. If we had this same debate when digital cameras were first being integrated into mobile phones, my guess is that several of us would have predicted that the use cases for mobile phone photography would be limited and consumers would not embrace it.

But, then, life took over … meaning that consumers and business users alike began to play with this new easy-to-use utility … and found more and more uses for it. Sure, initially, the quality of these pictures was not very good and still is not great. But, it has steadily improved and, voila, more and more people are leaving their digital cameras behind and capturing moments (both extraordinary and ordinary) via their mobile “phones” which are with them at all times. THAT is the power of ease of use, improving quality, and broad awareness via marketing.

I look at the camera in my Treo, and find that it’s mediocre as far as cameras go. My 6 megapixel Nokon D50 is far superior. But in talknig with Peter, I pointed out that the glut of shirt pocket digital cameras are really what gave rise to the cell phone integration. Our cameras are too often at home on the shelf when a “Kodak moment” passes by. The popularity of cell phone cameras is driven, in large part, by that fact that our cell phone is always in our purse or pocket.  It’s available.

Having stood on the Mt. Whitney summit Peter decribes a time or two, I know I’d share if I had mobile video calling capability. And seeing how our expectations of quality have changed, I’m convinced we’ll use mobile video in many ways that, at the moment, seem too far downstream to be practical. Video is another disruptive technology, and one of the keys to disruption is a technology that arrives down-market with lower quality that the established norms indicate will be adopted.

I’m with Peter. Mobile video is coming and it will be bigger than even we who welcome it are imagining.

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