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ISPhone, Updated — continued The next new edge In the beginning, ISPs themselves mainly saw the opportunity as long distance arbitrage. But as deregulation took hold, it created other impacts. ISPs began to understand that there were in fact all kinds of opportunities in telephony, including offering soft phone services, and even dial tone. And any number of models for pursuing them. Indeed, some concluded that if they wanted to compete with the phone companies moving onto their turf, if they wanted to survive long term, they would have to follow the telcos' lead and offer customers a triple playbundled broadband Internet, telephony and pay TV. "So service providers were starting to compete not just with the long distance arms of [incumbent telephone companies], but also with the local service arms," von Schlegell says. "In order to keep up with them, we realized we had to be in position to give them those services." In the telephony world, it's the distinction between services offered using Class 4 switchesthe fairly simple equipment used to route long distance callsand much more sophisticated Class 5 switches that allow phone companies to do the more complex routing required of local service and to provision call management services such as voice mail and caller ID. ISPhone has developed a complete telephony platform with Class 4 and 5 capabilities, using modern softswitch technology (software running on a computer). It's based on a mix of ingredients, mostly from Cisco, with some open source components, including SIP (session initiation protocol). And the company has built extensive infrastructure, with points of presence (POPs) in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Indianapolis, Detroit, St. Louis, and Boston. Each location houses servers, PSTN gateways, and other gear. The coastal POPs provide the overseas connections.
Results Some customers choose to build some or all of their own infrastructure and may only use ISPhone for long distance termination services. The company can still save them money just because its rates from carriers are much lower than an individual service provider could ever get on its own. Setting up to use ISPhone's interconnection services costs $250. Then the company charges per minute for usage. If the service provider uses ISPhone's billing and authentication services, per-minute charges are a couple of percentage points higher. Other customers want to start off using ISPhone's hosted servicesdoing little more than the marketing themselvesand then when they've proven their business models, bring critical infrastructure inhouse. Many, though, never want to sink capital into telephony equipment, or take on the costs and headaches associated with managing it. "A lot of them have to be in the voice business whether they like it or not," von Schlegell says. "So when they ask themselves, 'What's the least expensive, best way to do that,' usually they decide it's to use a hosted service." ISPhone wholesales local phone service to these customers for about $12 to $18 a month per subscriber, depending on the add-on services provided, such as voice mail and caller ID. "And usually, they turn around and sell that for $20 or $25," von Schlegell says. He claims not to be aware of competitors, which he says come and goexcept one in Denver, the name of which he's forgotten (that would be Global Crossing). "What distinguishes us," von Schlegell says, "is that we're more prepared to work with smaller service providers than [the competitors] we've known in the market in the past. They typically weren't interested in working with relatively high maintenance service providers. They were interested in lots and lots and lots of volume." "But that was never a problem for us. We're happy to work with people who are just getting into the business, who are small and growing."
Asterisk Asterisk is the open source telephony switching platform that many SMBs use as an IP PBX. It has also rapidly become the technology of choice for small service providers that want to maintain their own switching infrastructure. Like Linux, Asterisk is available as a free, unsupported open source download or as a fully-supported and branded product. Those service providers also needmay already haveRADIUS (Remote Authentication Dial In User Service) servers to authenticate customers on their networks, and integrated billing systems to ensure they get paid. Both are readily enough available. What was not available until the ISPhone product, von Schlegell says, is a way to integrate an Asterisk switching system with RADIUS and RADIUS-based billing. Service providers could build links themselves, but many haven't"it's still early days in the adoption of Asterisk as a service provider-type platform," he explains. The company is mainly targeting its own customers with the new product, but any service provider could use it. Price to purchase separately: $500. If customers buy it bundled with ISPhone's RADIUS billing system, the incremental cost varies based on the number of ports in the system. Some independent ISPs, of course, still don't, for whatever reason, offer voice services. If you're one but are now ready to make the move, you might want to consider ISPhone. It deserves kudos for, if nothing else, surviving and adapting in a turbulent industry in turbulent times. End
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