Speaking of the Fools of April

While the rumors of Jajah buying Vonage flew around a bit early for us here in the states,. this Jajah post is my early pick for the best of this year’e early April festivities. Absolutely splendid.

JAJAH Announces Quantum Calling
Sunday, April 01. 2007

JAJAH, the most innovative communication company in the world, today announced the ability to make two exact calls, at exactly the same time, to exactly the same person - regardless of where they are, or are not, at the time of the call.

“This is revolutionary. Way bigger than Voice 2.0″ said JAJAH spokesman, Heis Enberg “We are not only talking about connecting two calls at the same time, we are talking about exactly the same call to exactly the same person. Can you imagine what this could mean to the future of telephony? This would not only allow us to increase network capacity forever, but we also could connect people on multiple dimensions and across time horizons. In theory we could even collect for calls that won’t be made for centuries to come”
[Read full post]

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Ken Camp - Citizen Journalist, or Storyteller?

I noted recently that I was taking a break. The past couple of months have been a period of introspection. I’ve been evaluating how I spend a lot of my time. I invest a great deal of time in online work, unified communications work, security work, and exploring new technologies. It’s been a while since I set the stage and rethought what I’m doing, so this is that effort, done in the open with readers.

Many of you whom I’ve met have my personal business card. It says I am Speaker - Writer - Analyst. All those are true to some extent, but none of those is how I make my living. Those are side interests for me. And while I did operate my own private consulting practice for quite some time (off and on at different levels since 1980), that isn’t how I make my living today. I don’t talk much about my real job here, because it isn’t relevant here. People who need to know do. People who don’t need to know don’t. It’s quite simple. I’ve chosen, for good reason, to not expose that online here. I invite you to just accept that at face value.

I’m often introduced as a consultant, yet I have no clients. Not active ones. I haven’t accepted a consulting opportunity in almost three years. I don’t expect to any time soon. It’s not what I do these days, and I refer those opportunities to trusted colleagues as they arise (emphasis on trusted).

I’ve spoken at, and been fairly visible at a number of conferences. When I do so, it’s at my own expense, without expectation that I’ll “win business” there. That’s not my role. So one area I’ve been rethinking is what my future participation in those conferences might be. In the unified communications universe, I will certainly be a fixture a the O’Reilly ETel event. It hits the closest to my core interests of any conference in the unified communications space. I’ll very likely be a fixture and the TMCnet ITExpo West every year, perhaps their Developer’s Conference too. And I’ll be more than happy to speak or contribute at any of those events. Certainly I’ll be doing pictures, videos and podcast interviews. Beyond those, my personal interests will likely take me to Etech next year, and perhaps some other conferences outside the core unified communications space, like Freedom2Connect. And my actual job will have me involved in a number of security conferences from time to time, but I don’t really write about those here.

I am a Speaker - Writer - Analyst by choice, by nature, by circumstance. When I accept a speaking engagement, it is uncompensated. Much of my writing work, all of it here, is uncompensated. Yes I get royalty checks every now and again from McGraw-Hill. I’m finishing my third technology book now, an e-book. I don’t have plans to write another technology book any time soon, although I may at some point be induced to collaborate with a trusted colleague or friend down the road. That might be fun. Analyst is simply a title I gave myself because I do a lot of technical industry analysis work in the unified communications sector, again uncompensated. I advise many tech sector innovators. I do this out of passion and interest in the sector, not to make a living. Not at this point in life.

I also use those “titles” because I make no claim of being a journalist. Bloggers too often claim they’re journalists. That’s a claim I’ve never made, and unless I work employed as a journalist, I just won’t claim to be one. That’s not to say I don’t do a graet deal of journalistic work. Citizen journalist? Perhaps, but at least until now, very focused in some niche areas of the tech sector. I do interviews, podcasts, investigative reports of a form. I suppose. Am I a reporter? Not by my claim. Blogger is a new descriptor, but when I look at that broad group, that doesn’t define me in any way.

I’ve been facilitating and writing on the Realtime Unified Communications Community since 2005. I helped Realtimepublishers.com establish that community effort. They now have several other communities online that I’m not directly involved with. Each has a Resident Editor focused on the specific technical specialities. My role has remained in the original community that evolved from a pure VoIP focus to the broader realm of unified communications. I plan on continuing that effort, at the very least through the end of 2007. After that, I don’t know at the moment. I’ll reassess as time goes by. Putting the current book manuscript behind me will surely give me back some time and influence my choices.

Storyteller? That seems a reasonable fit. I find people who have interesting stories, if only interesting to me, and then help them tell their story, often in a podcast or series of podcasts. It’s proven to be a role I enjoy. So perhaps my business card will evolve accordingly. In part, Shel Israel’s business card, which reads Writer/Speaker/Nice Guy. Thanks Shel for making me think about this. And to the rest of you, he truly is a nice guy. One of the nicest any of us might hope to meet.

Were I to receive an incredible job offer, I’m at a point in life I’d give it serious consideration. But nobody’s banging on my door. That’s ok too, because I’m not open to relocation, and given that SeaTac is over an hour away, I’m not especially keen on constant travel either. An offer would have to be a very tight fit. And my role in my current real job is a very good fit with my skills and interests. It’s just sometimes less that challenging, less that rewarding, less than fulfilling. Sometimes it wears on me a bit more than I like.

I’m not unhappy. I’m not dissatisfied. I’m certainly not retiring. But I am working on refocusing my energies. There’s no way I’ll step away from here, but what I do here may change in focus ever so slightly as I make ongoing course corrections to follow not just my interests, but my passions.

We now return to whatever passes for our regularly scheduled programming here. I’ve at least taken a day or two to think about what course corrections I’m making.

Nokia Thoughts

For those who read here regularly, you know I’ve been testing the Nokia N-Series phones (N73, N93 and N80i). I confess I love them all, for very different reasons.

But watching the web, and seeing what some of the others to, I’m seriously craving the N800 Internet Tablet. And the N95. Those both look like the devices I’d keep for the long haul, even though the ones I have now are fantastic.

I’m repacking my “road warrior bag” and doing some shuffling around. I’m going to be doing some more photos and videos in the next few weeks, and expect to post them here, on Flickr, and on blip.tv.

Lifeblog post

Sun 03/25/2007 10:36 03252007705

Nokia N800s

Are sure popping up all over the place.

Is presence simply an interruption in flow?

Cross-posted here from the Realtime Unified Communications Community

Recently my friend Alec Saunders posted a piece, Couldn’t have said it better myself!, triggered by another post, Mobile Presence: The Essential Attributes from Jared Benson. Since then, Jim Courtney posted a follow up,Getting Presence Right II - A More Comprehensive Perspective, on Skype Journal.

Each piece is really emphasizing some thoughts on ten basic points. Each piece is noteworthy, readable and quite valid. It’s not my intent to detract in any way from the points that Alec, Jared and Jim make. I agree with all of them.

Here are the ten basic points:

  1. Presence should not be interruptive. 
  2. Users must set/maintain their own presence information. 
  3. Setting presence should be quick, simple, and easy. 
  4. Presence should accommodate for a contact’s different phones. 
  5. Presence should allow users to display different statuses to different groups. 
  6. Mobile presence should include communication preference. 
  7. Presence should include a universal visual/icon system for quick reference. 
  8. Presence should allow connections to other mobile services. 
  9. Presence information should be seen anywhere a contact is referenced in the mobile UI. 
  10. Presence should be maintained by a non-carrier third party.

I count Alec as both a personal friend and a master of presence (along with Howard). But over the past few months, I’ve spoken to a number of people about presence, ranging from home users, to enterprise business people to industry players to investors. And I’ve got some differing thoughts. They aren’t fully developed, but they carry some very consistent observations from my conversations.

Presence isn’t understood or appreciated. For most of people, talking in these terms and has no relevance worth speaking of. It isn’t sexy. It isn’t a feature or a function. Presence is, at best, a state attribute with multiple dynamics.

When I look at the list above, it carries some connotations that are for me, and many people, problematic.

One theme that’s clear above is that presence, as we talk about it today, is disruptive. Not a distruptive technology, but an interruptive one. It disrupts my work flow because it requires constant attention from me. It’s analogous to a mood indicator, and for it to have any value, I must continually tweak it.

If I follow Stowe Boyd’s thought on information flows and continuous partial attention, it’s another interruption flow that I must constantly monitor and alter. And while this conversation focuses on presence as it relates to mobile devices, that too is problematic. I’d perhaps argue that Twitter is a presence engine, requiring continuous partial attention to be effective, always asking “What are you doing?” In a recent presentation, Stowe asked the question “Is attention a resource?” I don’t think it is. I think attention’s simply an attribute of where I am in a given current (what Stowe calls a flow).

I see the problem, if we think of it as a problem, not to be one of presence, and not to be one of continuous partial attention and multiple information flows. The root problem we’re addressing is interruption management. Presence, as described above, is just a small facet of that.

The dichotomy is that when we think of presence this way, we use presence as yet another interruptor. It’s another item requiring attention. And while these are leading edge thoughts on presence management. I think it’s important to recognize that if presence has a maturity model, it’s in its infancy and these are very raw, very immature aspects of the role presence will play in the larger need for interruption management.

When I look at the current state of what we call presence, and compare it with the current state of VoIP, my fear is that we’ll spend too much time on presence and not evolve quickly enough to the larger need of interruption management.

I’m going to pay very close attention to Stowe and what he’s thinking because I think he’s on the right path for where we’re headed in the next generation.

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Is VoIP Past the “Best if Used By” Date? Has it peaked?

Cross-posted here from the Realtime Unified Communications Community

Last week my friend and colleague Jon Arnold posted Has VoIP Peaked? 8 Reasons Why I Think So. Jon isn’t speculating that VoIP is dead. Far from it. But has it peaked? His short answer is yes, and he gives these 8 reasons. I’ve shortened them for brevity, and encourage you to read Jon’s full post for his thoughts.

  1. Verizon/Vonage - whether this case holds up or not, Vonage is getting boxed in - or out - depending on your view, and they are no longer the threat they were early on.
  2. Order has been restored - related to Vonage, Humpty Dumpty has been put back together, and the U.S. telecom market is ruled by 2 mega carriers.
  3. Consolidation is largely done. Building on this theme, we’re down to a handful of big carriers, and a handful of big vendors. 
  4. Absence of successful IPOs. Imagine how the prospects for VoIP would have looked if Vonage’s IPO was a hit with investors. VoIP has evolved to the stage where there should be lots of successful IPOs happening now. 
  5. Jeff Pulver. Without a doubt, the most successful man in VoIP, right? And Jeff’s going to share his vision of the future this morning at VON. I don’t know what he’s going to say, but I don’t need to know. Anyone following Pulvermedia knows that Jeff’s focus - and passion - has shifted to video. 
  6. The demise of Voiceglo. They ceased operations a few days ago, and I take this as another sign of a market top. 
  7. Wireless has thrived and not been hurt by VoIP. I’ve always said that while VoIP is a big, exciting market, wireless is an even bigger, more exciting market. 
  8. Analyst firm coverage. I know of 3 well-known industry analyst firms with strong VoIP coverage that are in varying states of difficulty, and I suspect they are not alone. 

While you’re reading, be sure to also read Irwin Lazar’s response in Jon Arnold: Has VoIP Peaked? He adds some thoughts and clarity on the distinction between the consumer space and the enterprise space, two distinctly different markets.

I want to comment on Jon’s points by the numbers because, as always, he points out some really vital issues.

#1 - The Verizon/Vonage issue is both a larger and smaller issue that I think Jon states. I’ve never been a Vonage fan, and my feelings are uot for everyone’s reading. I think they’re best served by accepting Moshe Maeir’s offer, and every day they dealy, they are hurting both shareholders and customers. In the end nobody will be served well by this situation. But, Vonage’s failure signals the failure of the largest and most visible commercial consumer VoIP service. To me, more importantly, it simply signals a failure of weak management. The failure is not in VoIP at all. The failure is in leadership and management. Coincidentally, this failure took place in a highly visible VoIP company.

That said, I think Skype is floundering and doing quite poorly with their recent advances. That means I see the top two consumer VoIP services as not doing well. There’s a reason for that. I elaborate further on.

#2 - Order has been restored. I’d phrase it differently. The status quo has been protected. Jon sees two mega carriers. I see much the same. And recently Sprint was precluded from a federal contract, to the benefit of the old Bell System. As an employee of that Bell System, I’d say it’s effectively being restored to power. It’s been protected all along. Deep pockets, political powermongering and the good old boy network have kept the status quo reasonably intact throughout years of ostensible reform. Not much has reformed.

#3 - Jon says consolidation is largely done. I’m not sure I agree. Cisco buying Webex signaled to me that Cisco remains in acquisition mode rather than innovation mode. Their products continue to experience security problems. So do Microsofts. The two 800 pound gorillas in the space are both viewed with mixed reaction among enterprise customers. They claim success, but methinks the chest thumping has a hollow sound in many ways. In practical terms, a fair amount of what they speak and real world reaction to their solutions is that it’s more of the same. I wouldn’t disagree. I do not see either Cisco or Microsoft as innovators. They are followers who seize the bottom and claim leadership over ground broken by others.

#4 - I agree with Jon that the lack of successful IPOs signals something. There are exceptions like the great one Jon notes from Acme Packet. The problem I see is that, overall, the VoIP development community hasn’t done a very good job of leveraging their own technologies. My fear, my gut feeling, is that for ten years we’ve been too focused on the technology and what it can do rather than customers and what they need.

#5 - Jeff Pulver. I’m not sure that I agree or disagree with Jon. Jeff has signaled his own shift in focus to video for some time. But beyond his personal commitment to VoIP, his leveraging his position with regulators, and his own marketability as one in the know, I don’t really feel Jeff is anywhere near the root of the issue. Jeff is a spokesperson for the industry. He has served us well in that regard, and I think he continues to serve us well. He’s a strong ally to the VoIP industry and an integral part. But VoIP isn’t his only interest. And I think it’s overdue that someone else step up to standing on par with Jeff’s role in leading the industry. I don’t see that happening. Far to often, Jeff’s taken a strong stance, with support from someone like Tom Evslin, and we’ve all stood back, signed our names on a petition and said “me too” without seizing the reigns to control our own destiny. Shame on us.

#6 - Voiceglo. I can’t comment as they never caught my interest.

#7 - Wireless. Yep. Amen. Wireless is exciting, hot and visible. There’s excitement going on there that’s viral in intensity. We don’t capture that viral fever in VoIP. Not since the early days of Skype and circumventing the telcos who pissed us off have we really had a wow factor that caught any sustainable buzz. In VoIP, we talk about SIP and peering and act like it’s buzz. It’s a false buzz. A gnat when we should be buzzing like hornets.

#8 - Analyst firm coverage. Agreed. The analysts love VoIP almost as much as the VC investors do. That’s a strong signal.

I agree with Jon that VoIP has peaked, but for a different reason entirely.

VoIP = Plumbing

Nothing more than that. As an industry, we’ve talked about convergence. Talk is cheap. In ten years, we have done little or nothing to prove converence is real. VoIP is a building block. It’s a foundation, perhaps even a cornerstone.

As David Beckemeyer recently noted (Etel takeways, Better late than never), even our most emergent hot solutions don’t really embrace SIP. And SIP is the hot solution we’ve been touting for ten years. Ten years. Like David points out, we talk out of both sides of our mouth. And we don’t eat our own dog food. Shame on us.

We look at SIP and sessions, peering and trunking, codecs and quality, but the truth is that our customers, the end users, don’t give a rabbit’s fart about that stuff. They care about solutions to business problems.

VoIP is an industry suffering a glut of buzzwords and nice phrases and a dearth of real solutions that solve customer problems. We deliver some services, but they’re woefully short of what we said ten years ago we’d do with VoIP. VoIP has become simply a foundation cornerstone for something in the future.

Today we call that something unified communications. And spinning the story anew presents the same dangers. If fixed mobile convergence, software oriented architecture, software as a service and the like remain our own language for talking about the cool things we can do with technology, and we don’t actually solve customer problems, we’ll still be here saying the same things again ten years from now.

Just some rambling thoughts to wrap up the week.

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A Memo to the Mainstream Media

First, here I am at a time when I’m taking a break. I’m writing this because sometimes things should be said, and I haven’t seen anyone else say it.

To the Internet readers at large, this is my opinion. Please form your own. Express it freely. That is what the Internet, and blogging in particular is all about. If what you read makes you think we are suddenly friends, or that we are suddenly foes, you are wrong.

For those of you who will inevitably read this as malicious and spiteful, it is not. It’s straightforward, from the hip. It is my opinion written freely by choice. If you don’t like my opinion or my choice, go construct your own.

This is however, something I feel strongly about, so mainstream media, listen up. Robert Scoble does not speak for me when you talk with him. He doesn’t speak for a lot of us on the Internet. He doesn’t speak for a lot of us writing blogs. I’ll go so far as to say I do not think Robert speaks for the majority of bloggers who make up whatever absurd total Technorati claims to be tracking at this moment.

Robert and I are what I would call ephemeral connections. We have never met or spoken. We have traded email. As a person, I like Robert. I think he’d make a helluva next door neighbor most of the time. But I disagree with much of what he says. I disagree sometimes because of different values, and sometimes because of technical inaccuracies.

Robert has an enormous ego. His actual knowledge and understanding of the technologies is not as large. To his credit, sometimes, if you verbally make enough noise, Robert will revisit his thinking. Sometimes he admits when he’s wrong. Not always, but none of us do. Robert is, like all of us, human. He is not the Golden Child here to save the Internet, and is sometimes revered far beyond his due.

While he makes excellent fodder for traditional media sound bites, he does not speak for us. And when you go back to him for his opinion repeatedly, you perpetuate our greatest fear - that you, the traditional media, don’t have a clue.

There is no person who can answer your questions and give you the right answer. There are no right answers. I’d say this if you were giving too much attention to someone like Doc Searls or David Weinberger. Both are also passing connections over a number of years. They are all intelligent, even wise people. But just as Naked Conversations contained errors and mis-statements, so did the Cluetrain Manifesto. They are human, and they only have their own opinion or some subset of facts that they researched. None of us have all the facts about anything.

Remember, it’s the Internet. It isn’t based in fact to begin with. I’ll make up a stat here and say I believe that 90% of what you can find on the Internet is opinion. Or what the advertiser will call user generated content. Anyone can write anything on the Internet. Just because you read it there doesn’t make it fact. And just because you talk to someone who writes opinions there doesn’t make it fact either.

I urge you, the mainstream media, the ones who constantly beat up on bloggers about our informal place in the world as opposed to your journalistic integrity and standards, please follow those standards and demonstrate that integrity when you write about us.

Don’t talk to Robert, or Doc, or David, or me and think you have anything but one person’s opinion. Not unless we can back up a statement with factual scholarly research material. We are expressing our opinions and you too often treat them as fact. The are not.

Please seek out dissenting opinions from reputable sources. They are many. And easily found. We are not a shy bunch.

Update Sunday 12:10am - If Robert’s not spoofing for April Fools, you boneheads are going to put him on CNN on Monday. WTF is wrong with you morons in traditional mainstream media. You really are clueless, aren’t you?

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Clarifying my break

I’ve had several email messages since I posted that I was taknig a break here, so I felt a need to clarify.

I’m taking a break here, on my personal Digital Common Sense blog. A break of a few days, Perhaps a week. Perhaps less. My writing, interviews and podcasts at the Realtime Unified Communications Community are not taking a break. That work continues. I’m just taking a moment to take a breath here on this blog for a few days.

I’ll likely explain in more detail this weekend, but this isn’t a crisis. And it certainly has nothing to do with the recent uproard in blogaria that’s received far too much useless attention.

I’m just resetting some personal priorities and thinking through some future plans. While this blog has been online for a good many years, it really spun out of my consulting practice and client work I was doing in the past. Today, I have a full time job that engages most of my time and attention. I don’t gain consulting clients through this web presence any longer, nor is that my intent.

For those of you who know the conference circuit I participate in, I do that out of my own pocket, with no financial return. They’ve been my vacation time in reailty. I’m just resetting some personal benchmarks and priorities as I select the path of where my time gets spent in the future.

It’s not a big deal. Really.

Taking a Break

It’s likely I won’t post here for the next few days. We’ll see. I’m stepping back from this environment a bit as I consider what my role here might be in the future. It will be different. That much is certain. More to follow after I’ve thought it through a bit.

Skype - Relevant or Not?

I don’t have much to say about the new Skype. if you want to read trumpeting about how great it is, scan the blogs. I feel quite the naysayer. I find everything they’re doing as counter to my needs, bloating the product and devaluing it on a routine basis.

I expect within a few days I will have removed it from all my systems and probably no longer use it at all. Skype just doesn’t excite me or hold the relevance it once did.

I may just put is aside and revisit my current, quite critical thoughts, at some future point. For the moment, you won’t be finding me online on Skype.

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On current storms and events

I’ve avoided comment on the whole Kathy Sierra situation quite purposefully. I’ve done so because I didn’t want to say something that would offend a broad set of folks. In short, I didn’t wish to be sucked into it. So I’ve kept silent.

I have some passing acquaintance or friendship with every person named by their full real name in this mess. I count them all as friends, even though some of them don’t count one another as friends. I respect them all, and I trust them implicitly to do the right things. And I feel a witch hunt ensued upon the naming of names. I’m still deeply concerned about the negative impact this will have on our place in the world, as citizen journalists at times, and people with opinions in most cases.

I’m taking the liberty of posting an email message from Alan Herrell (The Head Lemur) to Doc Searls that Doc posted this morning.


Date: Wed, 28 Mar 2007 07:25:52 -0700
From: alan herrell
To: Doc Searls
Subject: Kathy Sierra
     Doc,
     (sorry I haven’t written before this as I have been doing damage control for my clients)
     I am writing this to you as the guy who can forward it to everybody that matters.
     I am writing this from a new computer, using an email address that will be deleted at the end of this.
     I am no longer me. My main machine despite my best efforts has been hacked, my accounts compromised including my email. and has been disconnected from the internet.
     How did this happen? When did this happen? shit doc, i don’t have a fucking clue. I thought i was pretty sharp. I guess not.
     just about every online account that i have has been compromised. Most importantly my digital identity and user/password for typepad and wordpress. I have been doing damage control, for my clients. How the fuck i got to be part of this mess is revolting.
     The Kathy Sierra mess is horrific. I am not who ever used my identity and my picture!!
     I am sick beyond words over this whole episode. Kathy Sierra may not be on my top 10 list , but nobody deserves this filthy character assaination.
     But everything I have written about her or anyone else has been in public.
     Jesus Doc, In the ten years I have been online, i have never used any sort of screen name or hidden behind psedonyms.
     I have always posted and written as me. I have prided myself on the fact that I stand behind everything I wrote. Blogging made it much better in keeping the dialogue public.
     That folks think that this mess is the sort they believe I would do is disheartening.
     I may not be the the most popular guy, but I like to think i have been honest. And I say again I have *always* done this publicly.
     For Kathy and Maryam and anybody else I am deeply sorry. Nobody deserves this.
     Whatever credibility I may have had is down the toilet. For this I am profoundly saddened.
     I liked being who I was warts and all.
     I have over the course of my time online met some of the brightest people that I would never have the abilty to sit across from to break bread or share coffee with from around the world. How wonderful is that.
     In 1997 I wrote that I believed that the internet was the most important invention of the human race. I believe it even more today as I write this.
     It will probably some time before I attempt to join the great conversation again, but, Please don’t let bastards grind you down.
     sincerly
     alan herrell the head lemur (retired)

I don’t care who you are, or what your opinions are. Truly. We are each entitled to our thoughts and opinions. We’re each entitled to express them. And as a veteran, I feel I’ve contributed a portion of my life to protecting those rights and freedoms. I’m saddened in ways I can’t find words to express. Those of you who know me, know I’m rarely at a loss for words, and I’m rarely shy with my opinions.

I take this message from Alan as absolute honest truth. I’ve never met him, but our online relationship goes back a ways. Enough for me to accept this without question.

I’m troubled because what will be lost in this entire shitstorm is that there are some bright lights on the Internet. Kathy Sierra is a bright light. So is Chris Locke, Alan Herrell, Frank Paynter and Jeneane Sessum. Each a bright light in their own way. Not every post written by any of them is deep or thought provoking. Each and every one has written something that was absolute crap. So have I. So have you.

I’m troubled that the bright light we knew as The Head Lemur has just winked out. And others will. Some of those directly involved will never be themselves again. And other bright lights, and lesser lights, will also just wink out because of this event and the reactions it garnered across the net.

I’m sad. The starry night sky of the Internet just grew dimmer as some of those twinkling lights flickered and went out. For many of us, this has given pause to think. To wonder if it isn’t truly better to “keep our light under a bushel” and view the world quite differently.

I rarely upload a post with commenting off, but I don’t wish to extend the life of this situation. I don’t want to feed the Google and Technorati flames in any way. So this post goes online with comments closed, no tags, no links, no trackbacks. I don’t know any other way to thoughtful express my sadness for all of us, because everyone of us is involved.

Yahoo and Infinite Mail

Yahoo. Now there’s a company that’s long lost all relevance in my world. I don’t have a relationship with Yahoo. I do have an ID, but I don’t use any Yahoo services for anything. None. Yahoo’s irrelevant.

And unlimited mail in 2007 is far too little, far too late.

Yahoo’s in decline, but I’m not sure most Yahooligans see that.

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Setting the bar for Vonage success

At the recent O”Reilly ETel conference I had a chance to sit and spend some time with Moshe Maeir from the Flat Planet Phone Company. To be clear, I don’t use Flat Planet myself, but I did name Moshe as one of the Under-recognized Heroes of the Voice Revolution in a recent post. His commitment to excellence and servcie delivery are far beyond the norm. Moshe’s one of those individuals I’ll watch closely for years to come. He’s someone I’m enormously pleased to now count as a friend.

Moshe’s friendship and commitment extend to holding out a branch to rescue a company sinking into the quicksand - Vonage. My own thoughts are posted here and here just lately.

Here’s what Moshe said today, but keep reading for more below.

I am offering $3.22 per share!

Mr. Jeffrey Citron

Vonage

Dear Sir,

I am offering to buy your company for $3.22 per share. Please do not hesitate with your answer, you will not get a better price. Between the two of us , you do not really have a choice. This offer is good until April 1st at 12pm. You can reach me at sip:moshe@flatplanetphone.net. I am sure your engineers will know how to make a sip call, though your customers can not. By the way, If you had opened up the network for your customers, maybe you would not have been in this situation. Instead you decided to let others take technology forward, while you insisted on selling a simple landline replacement.

Jeff, let me tell you what I will do once I buy the company -

  1. The waste of a  million dollars a day on advertising will cease immediately
  2. We will introduce advanced IP services for Vonage customers
  3. We will target the fast growing SMB hosted PBX market
  4. We will sell the company in 2 years for $6 a share. With a gross profit of $112.00 a year per customer, there is no reason we can’t!

Jeff, you bet the company on your strategy and you lost. On the way you invented a new industry and we are all grateful for that, but now it is time for you to go to a new venture. Good Luck. I hope to hear from you by Sunday at noon.

Best Regards

Moshe Maeir

Cheeky? Do you really think so? I do. It’s a bold, cheeky, decisive move that demonstrates vision, leadership, foresight and commitment to success. Things Vonage has been sorely lacking. Had Vonage leadership had a dash of this sort of brash boldness in their business, Vonage wouldn’t be in the situation it’s in today. They desparately need a saviour to avoid being swallowed and spit out by the legacy telecommunications industry. They have little choice and few options.

Kudos, Moshe, for a bold move. It demonstrates why you’re a market leader destined to do huge things in the industry.

I’ve never been a Vonage customer or a fan. But I’ll go on record here. If Vonage takes Moshe’s offer, I’ll sign up as a customer. And I’ll invest. Because that’s the kind of leadership that demonstrates, to customer and shareholders, that is simply isn’t enough to survive. A winning business needs to thrive.

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Let your conscience be your compass

There’s an ugly situation going on that I’ve chosen consciously to ignore. I’m just not interested in discussing it. Read into that whatever suits your fancy.

I’m going to simply let Euan Semple speak my one simple thought this morning. He’s one of the sharpest, most insightful people I’ve never met in person. Beyond the hand crafted subject line of this post, Euan says what counts.

Saying we need a blogging code of conduct to behave …

… is like saying we need the bible to be moral.

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In the course of human events…can’t we all just get along?

Apparently not. I’m not developing an opinion on what Kathy Sierra is going through. I’m not going to link to anyone’s comments on the subject. And I’m going to skip every post on this whole thing in my RSS reader. There’s too much emotion, too much paranoia and too much bullshit involved today for me to give it any thought.

I have at least passing acquaintance, online casual friendships with ever name I saw mentioned, and most go back several years. And my opinion of nobody mentioned has changed in any way. I’ll think about this more later when some facts are in. I haven’t seen anything credible enough for me to express an opinion y’all want to hear, and I’m involved in cybercrime issues every week.

Note: Comments closed. It’s not a conversation that bears fruitful purpose in my view.

FreeConferenceCall.com Resource Sets Record Straight on Call Blocking by Cingular/AT&T Wireless and Sprint/Nextel

Several days ago I posted a bit of a diatribe here talking about the action carriers have been taking against FreeConferenceCall.com (and arguably, free services of this type in general as this is setting a precedent.

I got an email message this morning from the public relations team as a follow-up to my post. I’m going to see what I can arrange regarding a phone chat with David Erickson, founder and CEO of Free Conferencing Corp (creators of FreeConferenceCall.com).

I know you have been following the recent attempts by Cingular/AT&T Wireless and Sprint/Nextel to block the conference bridges of providers such as FreeConferenceCall.com and FreeConference.com in what has emerged as an explosively-charged topic now that AT&T/Cingular has officially positioned itself as a Goliath among the Davids like my FreeConferenceCall.com client.

In response to the outpouring of support from bloggers, industry thought leaders, consumer interest groups and the media, FreeConferenceCall.com has created a special web site –http://blog.freeconferencecall.com/Default.aspx– to set the record straight on the call blocking and law suits being leveraged by the major carriers including Cingular/AT&T Wireless and Sprint/Nextel.  This site includes links to current blog postings, blocking FAQs, forum for visitors to blog, and, most importantly, a “Know your Rights” section directing people to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) web site so customers fully understand how their rights are being violated.  The Know your Rights section includes links to learning about current FCC regulations, filing a complaint with the FCC, contacting your state attorney general and reading about historic cases that refute the claims of the telecommunications carrier  Goliaths. FreeConferenceCall.com is also encouraging site visitors to subscribe to a list to join the fight in a class action suit.

It appears that my prediction of class action lawsuit material has come to pass.

If this is an issue that concerns you…if you’re concerned about your carrier dictating to whom you may place calls, in essence censoring your ability to use the PSTN, I encourage you to follow the link and get more information

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White House issues deadlines to secure Windows

March 26, Computerworld — White House issues deadlines to secure Windows. Federal agencies have until February 1, 2008 to implement a common secure configuration setting for all Windows XP and Vista systems based on standards from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and other organizations. But they only have until May 1, to provide details to the White House Office of Management and Budget on how they plan to do so. The deadlines were set by de facto federal CIO Karen Evans in a memorandum to agency CIOs Tuesday, March 20. The memo directs agency CIOs to provide details on a variety of issues, including plans to test the security configurations in nonproduction environments to identify potential problems, implementing and automating enforcement of these settings, and restricting administration of these configurations to authorized personnel only. Agencies must also be able to install Microsoft patches from DHS when new vulnerabilities are disclosed, the memo said. Evans also wants all agency IT acquisitions after June 30 to use a common secure configuration that application software vendors have certified their products will work with. Source

Legislating operationing system security?

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New Dell vs. Old Dell

The process of shifting to another computer is always somewhat traumatic. I think it’s a bit more so when the old one is going out the door right away. I’ve been shifting things around and gotten everything off the old one and either archived to CD or moved on to this one. Getting the old system prepped for return to Dell and moving on with this one from here on out.

Computer puttering, coupled with a birthday weekend and I haven’t been online or blogging much. An occasional Twitter is about all that’s surfaced lately. Shifting gears and heading back into normalcy now.

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And baby sister gives her own

As she approaches 6 months, Keira’s laughing and cooing. She loves to take her socks of and play with her feet. And she’s starting to give kisses…sweet kisses.

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