COMMENT The founders of the Kazaa file-sharing network have hit the headlines with an internet telephony service called Skype. Is it, asks Peter Cochrane, the shape of things to come or a lot of hot air?
The music industry rode to a zenith on wax cylinders, plastic discs, tape and CDs - and then along came MP3. The jury is still out on the ultimate impact of Napster, Kazaa, iTunes et al but it looks like a major turning point.
For telcos, many see the arrival of the internet and Voice over IP (VoIP) as a parallel situation. While there is a lot of hype, exaggerated claims and over simplification, the risks are real enough. This is an industry with over 100 years of history, an established infrastructure and a dedicated customer base often too lethargic to move. But it is also a highly competitive and deregulated sector struggling with rapid technology change - and it may be staring death in the face.
In the midst of all of this arrives Skype, presented by the founders of Kazaa. This little known service provides a simple downloadable software package that allows PC owners to make good quality telephone calls using VoIP. Users can call other Skype users for free, while connection to the telephone network and other services attracts a charge.
In addition, Mac users have iChat, which includes voice and video for free. Then there are a range of providers, software products and services offering VoIP connections of variable quality.
So, could VoIP become a serious threat to the phone companies? Well against the one billion or so fixed lined telephones and over one billion mobiles, Skype has so far seen 10 million downloads and total VoIP service estimates see less than 100 million users. However, such is exponential growth that industry estimates forecast 40 per cent of all calls will use VoIP by 2007.
Everywhere I go in the US I now see people with PDAs, laptops and headsets making VoIP calls. This has been compounded and supported by the rapid spread of Wi-Fi providing a very powerful platform for users on the move.
The mode of operation spans the normal fixed/mobile phone behaviour, plus the use of email to establish contact and prompt the use of Skype, iChat, etc.. The more adventurous are also linking screens and working cross platform - with common applications and displays - in a manner forecast a decade ago but still seldom seen on corporate networks.
I think it would be foolish for any telco to dismiss VoIP and especially Skype. It seems to me that DIY telephony is on the march and will soon be on the scale of Kazaa.
But we should also remember that there are limitations to the performance of IP networks and thus to VoIP or indeed any real time service. The reality is the internet is fundamentally ill-conceived and ill-equipped for the support of real time services of any kind. If you try VoIP you will no doubt be pleased by the quality of the voice connection for at least some of the time. The snag is that for a significant proportion of the time you can find that the quality is extremely poor.
When you make a traditional telephone call a direct and dedicated connection links two telephones for the transmission of those bits throughout the call. This is referred to as circuit switching. On the other hand, when you send an email message via the internet your bits are transmitted in discrete packets that are often routed very differently, packet by packet. So the arrival times of packets can be widely distributed and vary on a second-to-second basis.
For the internet to rival the telephone network it has to have an over-capacity to ensure that communication between two fixed points can be nailed down and held reasonably stable for the duration of a real time service such as a telephony or videoconferencing.
Is this possible? Yes. What is more, it is possible at about 10 per cent of the cost of the old telephone network. Bandwidth is the cheapest commodity we now manufacture and its provision in IP networks is trivial compared to the telco environment.
Is there enough bandwidth available on the internet to immediately replace all the telephone capacity we currently enjoy from the mobile and fixed line operators? No. But we are in transition. We are moving from a world of circuit switching to a world of packet switching and we have to invoke network design constraints to make real time services 100 per cent viable.
The most basic and fundamental is constraint is restricting the number of hops between routers and switches connecting any two points. For a successful global telephone network based on IP technology it would seem that something of the order of five hops would be a near ideal target to minimise the latency on packet delivery.
In all of this there is an existence theorem for the tolerance of customers that says: No telco engineer or manager ever anticipated that so many would pay so much for such a poor service as that provided by a mobile phone connection. The fixed line network is one of strict quality control and the maintenance of extremely high standards but 12 years saw it rejected by customers that value mobility above all else. I think the internet heralds yet another change in customer values as they seek and value a self-determined and unrestricted DIY world of low cost everything.
Is there is a downer in all this? I think there is and it comes in the shape of the virus, Trojan horse, worm and spam. Over 50 per cent of today’s in-use internet capacity is being consumed by these negative activities. For VoIP services to become universal we will have to see some constraint put on rogue activities. Alternatively, we will have to provide and waste bandwidth on a huge scale.
Will all of this happen? I think so. How come? For the simple reason that it can be done and people will demand it. Like Wi-Fi, it has become visible and useful and, what's more, it is becoming desirable and irresistible.
Draft dictated to digital voice file and transmitted to my PA via Wi-Fi from my home. Typed version collected 12 hours later in the BA lounge T4 Heathrow via my 2.5G mobile phone (I would have used Wi-Fi but not at $20 for 30 minutes). Copy revised on BA297 flying to Chicago and final text despatched via in-room high-speed LAN at a downtown Marriott.







Comments
There are 13 comments. Join the discussion
1. Fred Bloggs
that's all lovely, how to write a whole page of text and say absolutely nothing. So VoIP is going to be/is quite important but won't cure cancer? Fantastic, thanks for sharing. How about addressing some real questions in your article like... What's so great about skype, what does it do that Microsoft Messenger, ICQ, AIM, etc, don't do? What about the fact you can only phone people using skype? What about the fact that with instant messaging, you can phone telephone numbers too?
2. anonymous
Though I agree with the general comment on the article, I have just ONE specific comment re: "What is so great about Skype"
Just use it and listen... on a broadband connection the quality is unlike anything I've ever heard, yes that includes regular telephone...
Now compare that to ICQ/MSN etc. and you'll know what's so great about skype.
That said, they did NOT implement their own codecs, so there's other's with similar quality.
3. Dave Howe
First, Peter+skype
I quite like the ideas behind skype, but wish he wasn't going for a proprietary (and possibly patent pending - no way to know yet) system that no competent cryptographer has ever looked at, rather than the new internet standard for voice over IP called "SIP" (built into Windows Messenger XP) - plus of course he has a *lot* of competition, including some services that allow endpoint dialout in selected countries, and better yet in two cases, endpoint dial IN in the same countries; this is not to exclude the long established IM services that offer voice chat - although quality is poor and encryption non-existent, their huge established user base means they have an instant advantage over a startup.
Fred Blogs:
What IM client lets you dial a landline? I don't even know any that will let you dial an american phone number, never mind one here in the UK.
4. anonymous
I've been using Skype for 6 months or so since my brother (who lives in California) saw it featured on TechTV.
We use it ALL the time for personal calls. I use it to have extended calls AND conference calls (up to 5 people) with collegues in the US.
It provides instant messaging. The quality is excellent, the codecs are proprietary (although, I suspect, based on GSM phone codecs) but this is why they WORK - even on low speed links, and low spec machines. My (other) brother has Skyped over dial-up.. quality was not great but it worked, my wife has used her aging PII 266 laptop - below recommended spec but it worked just fine.
My point? Here is a technology that delivers 'more than it says on the box'... what a refreshing change. It's not overweight, it seems to be pretty reliable - and the basic services (which are pretty generous) are free.
Even heard of a collegue in Germany calling a collegue in the US using his iPaq on a wireless link....
5. Fred Bloggs
In response to the question by another poster, MSN Messenger allows you to terminate calls on fixed lines (you obviously have to sign up to a service to pay the termination fee). I believe (haven't looked in a while) that AOL IM allows it (via Net2Phone) also.
As for the quality, fair enough, but I'm sure IM clients will improve - particularly now that sk(h)ype has hopefully woken their providers out of their slumber.
6. anonymous
Many people have commented on the hype that surrounds Skype(r) and it's fair to say that to some extent this is certainly true. The media have been keen on picking up the fact that the two founders were the original developers behind Kazaa. A fact that has been cleverly used by Skyper in order to get the free publicity they desired/needed for this project.
Due to their dubious, somewhat undeserved, reputation they have mastered to put a large media spotlight on VoIP. The regular mass media have published articles that normally only would be published in specialised magazines. This is one of the benefits of the introduction of Skype for the VoIP industry. But let there be no doubt about one fact, VoIP doesn’t rise or fall with Skype. Too many other companies, Microsoft, Cisco, Intel and many others, have a stake in this too.
That said, the technology behind (Pocket)Skype is sound. The network provides for a low latency connection and thus far people have been able make high quality PC to PC voice calls for free. With help of GlobalIPsound's codec and the in-house Peer-to-Peer technology it has created a state-of-the-art application that easily surpasses most of the currently available technologies.
As of the April 8th the application has been downloaded over 10 million times. Although many of them may be the result of the same person downloading the latest version; Skyper spokespersons have admitted that there are over 3.5 million registered usernames and on average number of people logged on is between 140,000 and 400,000; depending on the time of day. Most users tend to be Europeans, since the highest number seems to be during the final hours of their working day. So, it seems safe to say that there are between 750,000 and 1.5 million active users.
Sure, bridging the PSTN-gap is a hurdle that still remains and rest assured that it will be bridged by Skyper soon. When is still a mystery, as is the complete feature list of the first full release but the present package is a pretty good teaser for what is yet to come.
Putting all of this together I can only come to one conclusion: not bad for an application that was released under a year ago. Right?
7. anonymous
I really don't think that any telco is going to be worried by this news as it is the same telco that is also providing us with network connections to use this technology. There is no doubt that circuit switched technology has had its day and I am sure that telcos are prepared for this. Toll-bypass has always been one of the major benefits for multi-site corporate customers to consider VoIP and indeed converging their internal networks. it has taken a little longer for IP Telephony to catch on than the industry expected but there is no doubt that it is here to stay. And what's more, it will be much easier and cheaper to deploy an IPT system when you no longer have to bother with messy interfaces to the PSTN network.
As far as threats from viruses, trojans, worms and malicious attacks are concerned, there are more than enough tools and products around in the market to combat all of these issues. All it requires is for IT Managers and IT budget holders to take these threats seriously enough to invest in the technology. There are even tools available that will highlight vulnerabilities in any devices connected to your network and provide details on how to fix them before they are exploited.
8. Andy Robb
I thought that IPv6 was supposed to answer the QoS issues for real-time voice and video. Although the telephone companies might use it first to replace circuit switches.
9. M Clark
It's worth mentioning that VoIP is an excellent technology within a controlled environment already. For example, if you're evaluating a phone system for your office, IP based phone systems are just as good as the TDM systems. However, once you leave the controlled environment, you are very likely to lose quality at the moment becuase many connections will have 10 or more hops..
10. anonymous
Our company spends hundreds of thousands of pounds per annum on dialup conference calls for its dispersed workforce. Skype and others have the potential to wipe out the dial in conference call business if they get the service quality piece sorted.
This post dictated to my admin assistant from my wireless PDA via Skype. Of course I could've done it direct but ask Peter wher's the fun in that.
11. Robert Howe
We use both Yahoo! and Skype for free VoIP calls: Skype has better quality but has a conference maximum of five and other limitations.
In reply to Anon of Manchester: we have abandoned the land-line for all outgoing company calls, using mobile phones when mobile or WebPhone for calling clients, both UK and USA, when connected. We did not have a fax-line at all: we use two eFax numbers for in-bound faxes and yet another web based service for sending faxes.
This is not going to suit everybody, but we have had tremendous cost savings.
12. Paul Lefevre
Skype is really something. I use it lot to call longdistance and overseas to Canada, Cote D'Ivoire and Bresil. My phone bill this year is almost ZERO.
13. Iain MacEuan
Dear Fred,
Have you checked Skype's web site lately? Have a look for SkypeOut.