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46

Wire & Cable ASIA – March/April 2013

www.read-wca.com

But fee-based Internet usage is also fairly transparently

a pocketbook issue. An earlier Register article (21

st

November) suggested that Google fears any “plan to

make it pay for stuff.” Mr McAllister noted that, as far

back as June of last year, the ITU had been at pains to

deny any threat of an Internet takeover by the UN. In

response to the European resolution, ITU representative

Richard Hall blogged: “No proposals exist to give more

power to ITU as an institution, which does not have any

regulatory authority over any networks whatsoever.”

But, according to the Register: “Those assurances

have seemingly done little to calm those who see

sinister motives in the ITU’s proposals, including such

organisations as [the environmental group] Greenpeace

and the International Trade Union Confederation. And, of

course, Google.

The ten-digit phone number may be on

its way out, but reports of its imminent

demise are probably premature

Did AT&T’s 7

th

November announcement that it wants to get

out of the old-school telephone business and transition to

an all-Internet Protocol (IP) network bring us to a watershed

moment in telecommunications? Stacey Higginbotham

of

GigaOM

thinks so. But, “for the millions out there who

can’t tell circuit-switched voice from voice over the Internet

(VoIP),” she suggested that a bigger issue is what the

transition will mean for telephone numbers. (“In a World of

Facetime and Kik, What Happens to the Phone Number?,”

1

st

December).

Theoretically, phone numbers would not be needed in

an all-IP world in which everyone has the equivalent of a

personal URL. But this single-method contact requires

smarter services or parameters on the back end than

are currently available from traditional telecoms that still

see the service they provide as voice, data, or video.

Accordingly, while the looming end of the circuit-switched

network has revived talk of the fate of the 10-digit number,

Ms Higginbotham believes that it is here to stay at least

for another decade. She has inquired into how “digits will

transition to the digital” over that period.

According to Tom Steffans of iNetwork, the wholesale

division of

Bandwidth.com

, (Raleigh, North Carolina),

the phone number is slated for “upcycling” for use in

new ways. The sixth-largest US telecom on the basis

of the number of its telephone numbers,

Bandwidth.

com

provides the IP platforms for such clients as Pinger,

Google Voice, and Twilio. Some of its products are phone

number-based, with iNetwork offering customers an API

(application programming interface) and taking care of the

legal and mechanical logistics of finding and managing the

numbers. The clients utilise those numbers not for voice

calls but, in the case of Pinger, for an over-the-top-texting

service; or Google, which uses a phone number to deliver

a voice service of its own. Or, wrote Ms Higginbotham,

“for companies like Marchex and Flexicalls so they can pop

a phone number on a website and use it for [customer] lead

generation.”

“It’s no longer Amy calling Jim, it’s two 13-year-olds

texting each other or Jim calling Skype,” Mr Steffans

told

GigaOM

(San Francisco), which provides analysis

on new technologies and startups. “It’s advertisers

putting numbers on the Web where the lifespan may

be only two days. The dynamic, and who uses and

consumes a number, has dramatically changed. But

none of the old rules have changed.” As the rules

change the question then becomes whether the

traditional telephone providers are ready to offer

services like those available from

Bandwidth.com

.

Ms Higginbotham noted that, in the digital world coming

into being, providing access is not the service: access is

the platform on which the service is built. She wrote: “In

an all-IP world the baseline is IP and a provider can sell

that at bare-bones pricing or build up value by creating

services on top of it.

Bandwidth.com

competes with

some of its clients in a fashion, and that’s fine with it.

Will AT&T, Sprint or Verizon be able to keep up? Do they

want to?”

Manufacturing

A wire products company in failing health

saves itself with higher-tech wares – very

much higher

“What makes that all the more notable: It’s a manufacturer.

In Baltimore.”