Update from Key International Carrier Hotels (5 of 5)
Carrier hotels provide a secure location for the interconnection of telecom networks. Traditional carriers, wireless providers, cable/ MSOs, content providers and enterprises rely on these facilities to expand the scope of their networks through interconnection. Carrier hotel value is directly derived from the occupants and the location relative to key demand points. Part 5 of 5.
Key discussion points include:
* How is the role of the carrier hotel changing with facilitation of enhanced services within its facilities?
* How is the proliferation web enabled content changing demand for carrier hotel space?
* As carrier hotels within major cities such as Los Angeles, New York, and London fill up, what are carrier hotel providers doing to satisfy growing demand in a world of limited capacity?
Recorded at Voice Peering Forum (www.voicepeeringforum.com)
(c) 2008 Stealth Communications. Send us your comments at youtube-at-stealth.net
Duration : 0:8:30
Update from Key International Carrier Hotels (4 of 5)
Carrier hotels provide a secure location for the interconnection of telecom networks. Traditional carriers, wireless providers, cable/ MSOs, content providers and enterprises rely on these facilities to expand the scope of their networks through interconnection. Carrier hotel value is directly derived from the occupants and the location relative to key demand points. Part 4 of 5.
Key discussion points include:
* How is the role of the carrier hotel changing with facilitation of enhanced services within its facilities?
* How is the proliferation web enabled content changing demand for carrier hotel space?
* As carrier hotels within major cities such as Los Angeles, New York, and London fill up, what are carrier hotel providers doing to satisfy growing demand in a world of limited capacity?
Recorded at Voice Peering Forum (www.voicepeeringforum.com)
(c) 2008 Stealth Communications. Send us your comments at youtube-at-stealth.net
Duration : 0:10:45
Open Networks, Open Platforms (1 of 5)
To some extent, leading service providers already are running networks that are partially “open,” and partially platforms for “services.” In a standard consumer “triple play,” for example, the voice and video are “walled garden” services while the broadband Internet access mostly is an “open” environment. In the future, industry executives believe “open networks” will play a more-important role. This keynote panel will take a look at some of the ways “open” networks and platforms will change the way service providers do business, how they develop and deploy new services. If service providers are to avoid becoming “dumb pipe” providers, new features, value and revenue will be created from “open” networks. What might we expect in that regard?
Recorded at Summer 2008 Voice Peering Forum
(c) 2008 Stealth Communications
Send us your comments: youtube@stealth.net
Part 1 of 5
Duration : 0:10:5
Update from Key International Carrier Hotels (3 of 5)
Carrier hotels provide a secure location for the interconnection of telecom networks. Traditional carriers, wireless providers, cable/ MSOs, content providers and enterprises rely on these facilities to expand the scope of their networks through interconnection. Carrier hotel value is directly derived from the occupants and the location relative to key demand points. Part 3 of 5.
Key discussion points include:
* How is the role of the carrier hotel changing with facilitation of enhanced services within its facilities?
* How is the proliferation web enabled content changing demand for carrier hotel space?
* As carrier hotels within major cities such as Los Angeles, New York, and London fill up, what are carrier hotel providers doing to satisfy growing demand in a world of limited capacity?
Recorded at Voice Peering Forum (www.voicepeeringforum.com)
(c) 2008 Stealth Communications. Send us your comments at youtube-at-stealth.net
Duration : 0:8:30
Update from Key International Carrier Hotels (2 of 5)
Carrier hotels provide a secure location for the interconnection of telecom networks. Traditional carriers, wireless providers, cable/ MSOs, content providers and enterprises rely on these facilities to expand the scope of their networks through interconnection. Carrier hotel value is directly derived from the occupants and the location relative to key demand points. Part 2 of 5.
Key discussion points include:
* How is the role of the carrier hotel changing with facilitation of enhanced services within its facilities?
* How is the proliferation web enabled content changing demand for carrier hotel space?
* As carrier hotels within major cities such as Los Angeles, New York, and London fill up, what are carrier hotel providers doing to satisfy growing demand in a world of limited capacity?
Recorded at Voice Peering Forum (www.voicepeeringforum.com)
(c) 2008 Stealth Communications. Send us your comments at youtube-at-stealth.net
Duration : 0:10:59
Software-based Telecoms (1 of 5)
Voice has for decades been a “service” sold by the “the line” or as an “application” created by a premises switch. Now voice also is a feature of instant messaging, Web sites, enterprise applications and email. As a result, there now are multiple business models, revenue streams and applications that use the “voice” feature. This panel will examine some of the ways this is happening, and what it means for traditional providers of voice services.
Recorded at Voice Peering Forum Summer 2008
(c) 2008 Stealth Communications
Send us your comments: youtube@stealth.net
Part 1 of 5
Duration : 0:10:48
Telecoms in Uncertain Times (1 of 7)
Today’s telecom and cable companies face an increasingly complex and uncertain world in which continual and rapid change is the norm. But different providers face distinctly unique challenges. This panel will evaluate the ways contestants operating in different geographies and customer segments; with distinct business models and products; diverse regulatory and technology environments, evaluate where they are, and where they want to go.
We’ll take a look at:
Which challenges contestants believe are most crucial
Which opportunities are most relevant
Which customer behaviors and desires offer the greatest upside
How contestants respond to the competitive environment
Where unique value can be created in their chosen markets
How core competencies can be leveraged to create more growth
Recorded at Voice Peering Forum (c) 2008 Stealth Communications
Part 1 of 7
Duration : 0:9:59
Heather Olson (Telecom Italia Sparkle) Interview on Mobile Services
Hunter Newby (Contributing Editor & Columnist of TMCNet) interviews Heather Olson (Regional Manager Mobile Services) at Telecom Italia Sparkle on Mobile Services.
Recorded on June 23 2008 at Voice Peering Forum Summer 2008, Hotel Nikko San Francisco.
Duration : 0:9:50
Update from Key International Carrier Hotels (1 of 5)
Carrier hotels provide a secure location for the interconnection of telecom networks. Traditional carriers, wireless providers, cable/ MSOs, content providers and enterprises rely on these facilities to expand the scope of their networks through interconnection. Carrier hotel value is directly derived from the occupants and the location relative to key demand points. Part 1 of 5.
Key discussion points include:
* How is the role of the carrier hotel changing with facilitation of enhanced services within its facilities?
* How is the proliferation web enabled content changing demand for carrier hotel space?
* As carrier hotels within major cities such as Los Angeles, New York, and London fill up, what are carrier hotel providers doing to satisfy growing demand in a world of limited capacity?
Recorded at Voice Peering Forum (www.voicepeeringforum.com)
(c) 2008 Stealth Communications. Send us your comments at youtube-at-stealth.net
Duration : 0:10:59
ITU TELECOM Africa 2008: Highlights
The International Telecommunication Union organized TELECOM Africa 2008 in Cairo, Egypt from 12-15 May 2008. A major showcase for cutting edge information and communication technologies (ICT) that includes an industry exhibition, ITU TELECOM AFRICA presented a unique forum for brainstorming and an important networking platform for both governments and the private sector to chart the future course of the ICT industry.
Some 200 companies from 45 countries, including several from outside the African region, exhibited products, applications and services. Around 70 heads of international companies and 50 ministers along with key regulators and investment bodies attended the event. ITU TELECOM AFRICA attracted over 5000 participants from 93 countries, marking a record since the event was opened to countries from outside the region, and included 600 Forum participants and 200 media.
Duration : 0:4:1