Ken Camp

What did I miss, Ken?

by alec on February 9, 2009

In Dominate Unified Communications by Thinking Small (go read it now) Ken Camp advances the viewpoint that distributed communications networks composed of many small players present fewer single points of failure than the traditional telco model of a few big monopolies. Ken’s argument is that the big players – Google, Microsoft and others – have the most to lose in this environment because of the way that they concentrate traffic.

From a network architecture point of view, Ken is absolutely right.  Networks composed of many nodes that route traffic are much more robust than networks with choke points, or a small number of potential failure points.  The interoperable world of open standards should produce a much more robust system than a closed proprietary network. 

From a business perspective, however, it seems intuitive that the big players could choose to adopt the same architectural principles and thus eliminate Ken’s objection.  After all, content delivery networks like Akamai exist solely for the purpose of distributing network content to avoid bandwidth costs and single points of failure.  Moreover, it’s well known that Google has multiple data centers globally, and that Microsoft is in the process of emulating Google’s approach.

Did I miss something, Ken?

{ 1 comment }

SquawkBox January 26 – Lee Dryburgh

by alec on January 27, 2009

We hosted Lee Dryburgh, the organizer of eComm, on the January 26th SquawkBox conference call.  A wide ranging and well attended conference call, we discussed the origins of the eComm Conference, what to expect from this year’s conference, and highlights of previous years.

Along the way, we also managed to talk about Open networks, telecom and Skype, whether interoperability really matters at all, and the communications continuum idea that folks like Jeff Pulver have been actively promoting. And we managed to convince lee to dust off his crystal ball, and prognosticate on the future of telecommunications. 

image

eComm will be March 3-5 in San Francisco.  Early bird registrations are open for just two more days – until January 30th.  If you’re in the communications industry, you owe it to yourself to attend this event.

On the Calliflower Conference Call: Jonathan Jensen, Dan York, Jim Courtney, Lee dryburgh, Martyn Davies, Mark Hewitt, Mike Pruyn, Brad Jones, James Body, Ken Camp, Sheryl Breuker, Warren Bent, Todd Spraggins, Jeanette Fisher, TJ Snell, Sergio Meinardi, and Tim Panton.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

{ 0 comments }

SquawkBox January 26 – Lee Dryburgh

January 27, 2009

eComm host Lee Dryburgh joins us on the SquawkBox to discuss eComm, the future of communications, and open networks.

Read the full article →

VoIP: “If you hadn’t nailed its feet to the perch, it’d be pushin’ up the daisies!”

December 31, 2008

Yesterday’s 2008: The Year that VoIP Died generated a slew of interesting responses. Jon Arnold and Andy Abramson wrote me in email to say that I had made the same points that they had.  While it’s true that I made many of the same points, my view of their meaning is perhaps different.  I don’t [...]

Read the full article →

Congratulations to Ken Camp

May 16, 2008

I’ve been wondering where Ken and Sheryl have been on the SquawkBox recently.  Last night I found out.  They’re moving again, just two weeks after moving the last time.  A new job in Spokane in a new (to Ken) but related industry. Congrats!  And now that I’ve outed you, Ken, we’ll be expecting the full [...]

Read the full article →

Three worthwhile pieces on "Presence"

April 5, 2007

The value of presence is one of those topics that gets lots of debate.  Three recent examples that I'd like to draw your attention to include: Gary Kim's Why "Presence" is Coming, which appears in IP business.  Gary runs through a dollars and sense analysis of why presence technologies are valuable to business, including providing [...]

Read the full article →
Alec on LinkedIn Alec on Twitter Alec on Facebook Calliflower on Youtube RSS Feed Contact me