Pulver

HD audio – can it reinvent VoIP?

by alec on June 2, 2009

I had a good chat with Jeff Pulver last week. We were long overdue.  Since the beginning of the year, Jeff’s been a whirlwind announcing no fewer than 4 events in the last six months.  Among the many things we discussed was his recent HD Communications Summit.  The event itself caused a stir.  Afterward, Jeff was on fire, talking about the people that had shown up and the enthusiasm for the technology.

Anybody who has ever experienced a Skype call will identify with the benefits of wideband audio immediately.  By increasing the spectrum of audible frequencies from the extremely limited capabilities of today’s telephone systems to something more akin to an FM radio, the experience becomes more engaging and less fatiguing. 

So far VoIP has been about cheap minutes, and not much more.  The VoIP “industry” (as opposed to the communications industry) has been a giant arbitrage play pitting toll based minutes against bandwidth.  Jeff thinks that HD voice could change that.  Now others are coming around to the same viewpoint.  IDC’s Rebecca Swensen was quoted by VoIPPlanet.com saying: “Originally, cost was the number one reason businesses moved to VoIP, with features and functionality becoming a distant second and third.  Now, features and functionality are running a tight race with costs for first place.”  And according to a recent survey by Global IP Solutions, fifty-seven percent of those surveyed felt that conference calls would be the biggest beneficiary of HD Voice. 

Welcome news. 

Today’s 3Khz audio standard dates back to 1937.  In an age of crystal clear video, and concert quality audio, all streamable across digital networks, it seems inconceivable that we wouldn’t want more from the telephone. 

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Pulver’s SocComm. Feb 10, NYC

by alec on January 26, 2009

Jeff Pulver is back at it again.  His newest venture is SocComm, the Social Communications Summit.  The topics at SocComm will span across: Media / Internet / Communications / Entertainment, something he calls the “MICE” space. SocComm will have a mixture of individual talks, on-stage interviews / conversations and a number of group chat sessions.

This one day event presents a pot-pourri of speakers ranging from David Kirkpatrick, Senior Editor at Fortune to Gary Vaynerchuck of Wine Library TV.  It deals with everything from content to policy.

Jeff’s rationale for the event? Here’s what he had to say:

We are living in a time where our phones have become social communication devices.

Presence is quickly becoming the trigger point for communication. I grew up in an era where the dial-tone on my home phone meant something to me. Today and in the future I believe that Presence is the new Dial-tone and that more and more communication sessions will happen because of presence. The evolution of presence has huge implications for a number of industries, including: advertising, media and telecom.

February 10, New York City.

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Calysto: PulverMedia reorganizing

April 10, 2008

Someone asked me the other day why I wasn’t focusing more on what has been going on with the Pulver organization.  The simple answer is that Jeff is a friend and advisor to my company; I’m a blogger, not a journalist; and I don’t attempt to disguise my soapbox, this blog, as unbiased.    I [...]

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Cage match for the future of PulverMedia?

March 28, 2008

Through an unfortunate twist of fate, it's nearly impossible to find out anything about Jeff Pulver and his company this morning in Google Blogsearch.  You see, in a bizarre twist of fate, all searches on Pulver are being eclipsed by the recently announced mixed martial arts match between Urijah Faber and Jens Pulver.  My search [...]

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Streaming video wirelessly changes the game

March 18, 2008

I had a remarkable day yesterday, defined in part by video.  At Pulver's Social Media breakfast, there were Nokia N95's in evidence everywhere and people streaming everywhere.  They were streaming others streaming others talking on Qik.  At one point I spotted a crowd of 7 or 8 people, all streaming video, standing around one speaker. [...]

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Squawk Box Preview – March 6

March 6, 2008

Today we have a special guest – Jeff Pulver.  Jeff's going to be on the show to give us a preview of what's coming at VON.X, the show previously known as Spring VON.  We'll talk a little about what's in store for voice and video on the net, wireless, and of course my favorite track [...]

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Pulver Keynote

October 30, 2007

I just exited the Pulver keynote, and heard both Tom Evslin and Jeff Pulver extolling the virtues of social communications. Evslin sees the arrival of social networks as the next phase of all communications.  As he sees it, social networks are the opt-in self administered directories we've all been talking about for a very long [...]

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Jeff’s cheque-book, out again.

July 23, 2007

  I'm full of admiration for Jeff Pulver.  Time and time again he puts his money where his mouth is.  This time he has offered to seed finance innovative new communications startups.  After speaking on an IPTComm panel last week, and gently taking the panelists to task for failure to innovate, he spent the weekend thinking about the [...]

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The "Say Everything Generation"? Old hat…

February 19, 2007

Picking through my list of favorite bloggers this morning, I came across Jeff Pulver’s Understanding the Say Everything Generation, which is commentary on a New York Times feature from February 12, titled Say Everything.  The gist?  Today’s kids are different — uninhibited in what they say and do online, they’re forging a new kind of [...]

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The Vonage of TV?

October 11, 2006

BusinessWeek’s Olga Kharif has written a short article on Jeff Pulver’s latest effort: Network2.tv.  She leads off with the provocative question of whether this will be the “Vonage” of TV, and then makes this statement: Pulver believes that, in 2007, we’ll see the rise of a new TV network that will eventually compete with the [...]

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