ribbit

Squawk Box July 30

by alec on July 30, 2008

BT Image via Wikipedia

The first topic we discussed today was yesterday’s news that Ribbit was acquired by British Telecom for $105 million.

Now, Ribbit is a pretty interesting platform, which many of us have been following for some time.  But for anybody who HASN’T followed it, it’s a softswitch in the cloud with integration between IM systems, phone systems, VoIP systems (including Skype) and a nifty API, including flash based client APIs. They’ve got a slick softphone, and a nice deal with SalesForce all of which have been announced since last December when they came out of stealth.

The acquisition sparked some interesting commentary — Om Malik gave it a huge “yawn”, asking why it was significant given how few developers they had.  At the other end of the spectrum, Thomas Howe thought it was enormously significant, and particularly meaningful to corporate developers.

We thought Ribbit was mostly for corporations and part of a strategy by BT to embed itself more deeply in the corporation.  In our opinion, other views — such as the theory that Ribbit was acquired by BT to compete with Android and Skype — are off the mark.

We also talked about some of the restrictions that are emerging on iPhone. AT&T has said no to peer to peer, but what about Pandora and streaming audio?  And how about the fact that there aren’t any VoIP applications allowed, except over WiFi?

Well, Pandora’s gone, but other streaming media and internet radio applications are still there.  It seems likely that Pandora is gone for other reasons!

And we also digressed into a discussion of Hasbro’s decision to shut down Scrabulous.  Strong feelings were expressed.

On the call: Adam Somer, Frank Abrams, Bill Volk, Jeanette Fisher, Jim Courtney, Ian Hood, Jeb Brilliant, Moshe Maeir

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This morning we had the Ribbit team on the call. Ribbit continues to be one of the more interesting voice plays in the market, as they have figured out how to build out the application platform and revenue model that allows ordinary developers (web developers, not IMS geeks!) to be able to successfully incorporate voice into their web applications.

Ted and Greg walked us through the Ribbit for Salesforce application, as well as the overall Ribbit strategy, and we had some good and very intriguing questions from the likes of Dan York and Martyn Davies.

Enjoy the podcast! Tomorrow I won’t be on the call, because I’ll be on a flight, but Dan York will lead a discussion on 2 recent developments… the recent speculation that carriers may be trying to build a Skype competitor, and the new Wimax investments by McCaw and company.

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Ribbit launches Silicon Valley's Phone Company

December 17, 2007

This morning Ribbit launches.  Billing themselves as Silicon Valley's Phone Company, they're about to launch a true Voice 2.0 phone service.  In a nutshell, they have: Built a carrier grade switching infrastructure for managing voice traffic. Added all of the other communications modalities you might us in your daily life as additional networks — that's [...]

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