Wednesday, January 20, 2010

A few minutes ago Andy Abramson pulled his Nokia N95 out of his pocket here at ITEXPO and showed me something I’ve never seen – the carrier displayed was Truphone, not T-Mobile.  Truphone has finally become a mobile carrier, and today launched the Truphone Local Anywhere SIM.  The SIM is a smart, multi-country SIM that gives local calling rates anywhere in any “Truphone” country.  So, for example, if I were to call Canada from the United States, the rate is just 10 cents per minute.  All you need is an unlocked GSM phone.

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According to the press release, Truphone Local Anywhere offers four benefits:

·     Local calling rates in Truphone countries: With Truphone Local Anywhere, international travellers enjoy rates that are a fraction of standard roaming fees. For example, AT&T subscribers roaming in the U.K. pay between 99 cents and $1.29 per minute[i], depending on their calling plans, but from only 12 cents per minute with Truphone Local Rates

·     Local contact numbers in Truphone countries: Local numbers mean people can call you on your mobile at local rates for them – at no cost to you.

·     Low-cost international calling: Great rates to make international calls at home or abroad, offering savings of up to 90 percent over standard mobile operator charges.

·     Low-cost roaming: Great rates when roaming in non-Truphone countries offering savings of up to 40 percent over standard mobile operator charges.

It sounds great, but currently the only Truphone countries are the US and the UK.  Effectively, their very low rates are available only from within those two countries, but according to Truphone you pay “competitive” local roaming rates in countries outside the Truphone network.  Data, unfortunately, is priced at roaming rates pretty much everywhere — $1/M. 

Truphone Local Anywhere’s magic is accomplished through an MVNO relationship with Vodafone in the UK.  According to company representatives, similar additional partnerships are in the works.  Naturally, we Canadians are eager to know more. 

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Fellow Canuck Randy Busch scored big today.  His company Jazinga has partnered with FREETALK to deliver FREETALK Connect, a full featured unified communications solution for small business. Announced at ITEXPO in Miami, this is the first UC system to feature Skype for SIP and Skype for Asterisk functionality. 

I’ve written about Jazinga’s appliances in the past.  These magic boxes combine telephony, WiFi access, and routing in a single unit, targeted at small business.  When first connected, they discover IP phones on the network, and self configure through the use of a clever wizard.  They truly are IP Telephony for Dummies the Rest of Us products.

FREETALK Connect enlarges upon Jazinga’s core functionality by adding Skype Buddy Lists, and the ability to connect to Skype for SIP and Skype for Asterisk services.  With FREETALK Connect, Skype can become the IP telephony service provider for any small business, saving hundreds of dollars in access and termination charges.  Moreover, small businesses can now receive calls directly from the half billion Skype users around the world.  This is a sure winner!

Today is an important day for Jazinga, FREETALK, and Skype — who have just received a strong endorsement of their push into small business. And possibly, it was an even bigger day for the IP Telephony ecosystem.  Skype brought a sea change to consumer telephony, and is now poised to do the same to business.

UPDATE:  More from Jim Courtney, who absolutely loves the product.

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IfByPhone buys Cloudvox, launches cloud telephony platform.

January 20, 2010

Irv Shapiro’s IfByPhone is an interesting company to watch.  Focused on automating sales, marketing and business processes for it’s customers, IfByPhone has grown by leaps and bounds by offering simple voice based applications that enhance small and medium businesses sales.  It’s a pretty simple idea – help your customers grow their sales, and you’ll grow [...]

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That’s pure Horse Hockey, Om.

January 20, 2010

Om Malik is advancing a new theory to explain why Apple isn’t allowing VoIP on 3G applications to be approved in the App Store.  Voice quality, he writes, may be the reason.  Citing industry figures like my good friends Andy Abramson, Karl Good, and Pat Phelan, who have all written about the quality of VoIP [...]

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