nanog mailing list archives

Re: potpourri (Re: Clearwire May Block VoIP Competitors )


From: David Barak <thegameiam () yahoo com>
Date: Thu, 31 Mar 2005 09:45:42 -0800 (PST)



--- Paul Vixie <paul () vix com> wrote:
<snip> 
Toll-quality voice requires ...

...all kinds of things that nobody outside the POTS
empire actually
cares about.  folks just want to talk.  cell-quality
voice is fine.
(just ask anybody in panama who has relatives in the
USA!)

anecdote: one of my good friends uses Vonage, and my
wife complained to me yesterday that she has a very
hard time understanding their phone conversations
anymore.  She correctly identified the change in
quality as originating from the VoPI.

sadly, to get "voice over ip" (note, it's not
telephony over ip, it's
voice over ip), 

The difference between the two is readily apparent to
businesses: VoIP::POTS as "ToIP"::PBX/Centrex

we're going to have to integrate it
into our computers.
("dammit, i need a decent quality USB headset for
less than USD $300!")
because as long as something looks-like-a-phone, the
POTS empire can use
the NANP (or local equivilent) and 911 regulations
(or local equivilent)
to prevent newer more efficient carriers from making
money from "voice".

Please correct me if I'm mistaken, but your
implication seems to be "damn the 911, full steam
ahead."  That's great for optional voice (calls to
Panama) but not so good for non-optional voice (to the
fire dept).


the solution of course is to use computers rather
than "phones" and to
use domain names rather than "phone numbers".  

fine by me - such a service would never be confused
with POTS, and no one sensible would treat it as a
reliable/robust service.

..., the public Internet has substantial jitter
and high
coast-to-coast latency, ...

just thinking out loud here, but which "coasts" do
we mean when we talk
about the "public internet"?  my first thought was
lisbon-to-sakhalin,
rather than seattle-to-miami.

given that the public internet isn't even centered
in let alone predominated
by north america any more, 

How do you measure this?  According to Telegeography,
London has been the city with the most international
connections for about the past 5 or 6 years, but New
York (& environs) still had the highest aggregate
international bandwidth during that time.  I would
certainly say that North America is a disproportionate
source and sink of traffic relative to population.

and that some of the best
(and/or loudest) speakers
at nanog (both on the mailing list and in person)
are from outside north
america, it seems to me that the "reform party"
should be thinking of a new
name.  i'll happily turn ANOG.$CNO and/or
WORLDNOG.$CNO over to any elected
board who becomes merit's successor-in-interest over
"nanog governance"...

Well, North America does have its own issues, and
there should be a venue for that.  (side note: I'm far
more likely to have my employer send me to Seattle
than to Tokyo...)

<snip>

(if you didn't know about the nanog-futures@ mailing
list, go find out, plz.)


Thanks for the plug :)

OTOH, if you're going across a network with decent
QoS or within the same
general area of the country, you can afford a
larger transmit buffer without
risking the "walkie talkie" effect.

all it has to be is as good as a cell phone.  

Requirements differ.  To paraphrase Randy, "I
encourage my competitors to use this voice quality
standard."



David Barak
Need Geek Rock?  Try The Franchise: 
http://www.listentothefranchise.com


                
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