From: “Omegaman” <omega@bigeasy.com>
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: a6e1266bfd42d9bc5d4706fadab4a92e9bbc8d348251f76281b3d8e5f004c8cf
Message ID: <199608052330.SAA06495@betty.bigeasy.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1996-08-06 04:34:21 UTC
Raw Date: Tue, 6 Aug 1996 12:34:21 +0800
From: "Omegaman" <omega@bigeasy.com>
Date: Tue, 6 Aug 1996 12:34:21 +0800
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: NYtimes on " 'net telphony"
Message-ID: <199608052330.SAA06495@betty.bigeasy.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
An article I found on Internet Telephony today in the New
York Times.
reference:
<http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/0805telephony.html>
article also contained a diagram of a traditional Point-to-point
synchronous phone call and a packet-switched Internet call which
shoed pieces of a sentence being transferred over multiple routes.
" _ Free Long Distance
Phone Calls! (Computer Extra)_
By PETER H. LEWIS
Sometimes Internet technology moves faster than the
speed of sound.
Nearly 400 Intel Corp. engineers were waiting for Brian
Frank to stage a demonstration of Internet telephones last
week at a business meeting in Oregon, when suddenly his
laptop computer started ringing.
Frank, a summer intern, had just finished loading new
software that would let him place a phone call from his
laptop to an associate's PC backstage. But before he could
make the call, someone in Norway had seen Frank's network
connection pop up on an Internet phone directory on the
World Wide Web and dialed him up. "
[..snip..]
" For the Intel engineers, it was an industry wake-up call.
Hitherto a hacker's hobby, the use of microphones and
computers to place phone calls, send faxes and transmit
pager signals over the Internet now seems ready to emerge as
a serious business opportunity. "
[..snip..]
" Technical drawbacks still keep Internet telephony from being
a true substitute for the good old, reliable telephone
network. And yet, the number of regular Internet telephone
users is expected to rise from fewer than 400,000 last year
to 16 million by 1999, according to a forecast from the
research company International Data Corp. By that year, IDC
predicts, Internet telephony could constitute a $500 million
market.
Beyond cheap phone calls, the possible applications include:
-- Catalogue shopping on the World Wide Web, where the
customer could speak live with a sales agent.
-- Work-team software that would enable groups working
collaboratively on documents via the Internet to converse
about the project, too.
-- Adding voice capabilities to multiplayer computer games
like "Doom" or "Quake," so that teammates could coach one
another and jeer the opposition. "
[..snip..]
" In fact, Intel and Microsoft late last month jointly
announced a set of technical standards that are intended to
promote compatibility among various makes of hardware and
software used in Internet telephony. "
[..snip..]
" "A lot of people look at Internet telephony as a replacement
or alternative for long-distance service, and that's the
most obvious use for it today," said Frederic H. Yeomans,
marketing manager for Intel's Internet and communications
group in Hillsboro, Ore. But Yeomans said the technology was
advancing so quickly that new applications, possibly ones
not yet imagined, would inevitably arise. "
(hype? You make the call..)
[..snip..]
" Telephone companies appear to be divided over how to respond
to the technological challenges.
"Everyone would agree it's a compelling, alternative form of
communication, and we're excited about it," said Mark
Fisher, vice president for Pacific Bell Internet Services in
San Francisco, a unit of the regional Bell holding company
Pacific Telesis. "
[..snip..]
" Other, smaller phone companies are not as optimistic, and
are mounting a legal and lobbying challenge to try to halt
competition from the computer industry. "
[..snip..]
NYT-08-04-96 1932EDT
Copyright 1996 The New York Times Company
...
What follows is more hype about a "killer app" that will bring this
technology to the forefront.
Little is said about current bandwitdth limitations or PC
technology limitations. Nothing is said of crypto technology either.
me
--------------------------------------------------------------
Omegaman <omega@bigeasy.com>
PGP Key fingerprint = 6D 31 C3 00 77 8C D1 C2
59 0A 01 E3 AF 81 94 63
send a message with the text "get key" in the "Subject:"
field to get a copy of my public key.
--------------------------------------------------------------
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1996-08-06 (Tue, 6 Aug 1996 12:34:21 +0800) - NYtimes on “ ‘net telphony” - “Omegaman” <omega@bigeasy.com>