Next-Generation Communications Services: Issues and Opportunities John C Klensin, Ph.D. TWNIC...

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Transcript of Next-Generation Communications Services: Issues and Opportunities John C Klensin, Ph.D. TWNIC...

Next-Generation Communications Services: Issues and Opportunities

John C Klensin, Ph.D.

TWNIC Conference, 2004 March

2004.03.31 2

Looking Two Steps Ahead

• Talk is less aboutWhat is happening today or

what one should do next

• But, instead, about What to start looking at now for the steps after

the next one.

2004.03.31 3

New Services or Simulation of Old Ones in New Medium

• Is the Internet a good telephone?– VoIP in closed networks

• Equipment savings ?• Still simulating SS7 ?

– Internet Telephony• Service quality, customer support, and

expectations• Economics and tariff arbitrage

2004.03.31 4

Internet Telephony as a Substitution Service

• Dubious long-term economics

• Good short-term

• Very good for equipment providers

2004.03.31 5

Tariff Arbitrage

• Very good short-term business• In the long term, one of several things happens

– Regulators impose comparable tariffs on new activities

– Tariffs are abolished, reducing or eliminating price advantage

– New activities are prohibited– New activities are ignored; old, tariffed, way of doing

things disappears

2004.03.31 6

Terminal Signaling Capability as a Defining Characteristic

• Service models determined by twelve buttons (or worse)

• Consequences– Smart Central Switches– Intelligent Network– Menus and VRUs to increase call setup

bandwidth

2004.03.31 7

The History of Distance Communications

• Low bandwidth – High speed– Signal fires, drums, telegraph, telex– Telephone ?

• High bandwidth – Low speed– Packets of letters carried by horse or coach– Bags of letters carried by train– Tapes in the back of an automobile– Fax or other images of paper ?

2004.03.31 8

Reviewing “Convergence”

• Carry the torch onto the coach ?

• Load the horse onto the train ?

• Tapping on the telephone handset ?

2004.03.31 9

The Actual Pattern

• Parallel use until

One technology drops off

2004.03.31 10

Advanced Services in the PSTN Paradigm

• “Integrated Messaging”– Voice, voicemail, fax, pager to one phone

number– Remote pickup and intercept

• Call forwarding and similar routing

• The Instant Messaging problem

2004.03.31 11

What Are You Trying to Reach

• Surrogate for a copper pair leading to a specific terminal device?

• A person or function?

Almost always the second

2004.03.31 12

Specifying a Target

• Preferred medium ?

• Person or alternative ?

• How important ?

• Interruption levels and tracking/ forwarding

2004.03.31 13

Permitting a Source

• Receiving a connection should be a negotiation…

• Do you want to be reached? By the caller?

• With what priority ? How much are you willing to be followed around?

• What do you think of the caller’s priorities?

2004.03.31 14

Example: Phone call with forwarding and roaming

• Colleague places a call to US “office number” at 2PM.

• Phone rings at 3 am in Singapore• Obvious questions…

– Would it have been placed if destination and time were known?

– Should it be received without knowing its importance?– How does one guess at time of recipient when

country and city codes are meaningless?

2004.03.31 15

Example: Whom am I calling?

• Number reaches a terminal or surrogate. People may be widely distributed.

• Long VRU menus seem to be our best solution, but cannot be the right answer.

• So– Call person or function, not a number– If we are to number people for convenience,

E.164 phone numbers are probably the wrong model

2004.03.31 16

Can This be Done in the PSTN?

• Maybe

• Big scaling problem, high complexity

• Very difficult authentication problems– Current “four digit PIN” strategy in many

countries not good enough– Limit to setting from “home” phone provides

poor service.

2004.03.31 17

ENUM itself may be the wrong model

• E.164 is not only tied to phone system semantics but to complex regulatory politics

• While the routing environment tied to E.164 is implemented by bilateral agreements, ENUM creates the first global telephony regulation opportunity for ITU.

• Should it have been– Number.CityCode.3166-country-code.enum… ?– For example: 23411313.2.tw.enum… or even

23411313.2.886.enum… ?

2004.03.31 18

Who Needs “Internet Telephony”?

• Internet → PSTN– Yes, but for how long and at what rates?

• Internet → Internet– Not needed; use NAPTR records with names

• PSTN → Internet– Not for Central Office switches: better ways– Not for dual mode phones: Internet → Internet

or POTs → POTs devices– Smart-routing PBX switches? Maybe.

2004.03.31 19

Networks: Central Control and Edge Control

• Edge-based networks permit distribution of control functions– “My server”, “my agent”… not tied to CO

switch– Different people/ organizations can get

different functions– Lots of competitive business opportunities

• Avoid both “one size fits all” and option-complexity problems

2004.03.31 20

A Different Communications Model – Initiator

• Specifies preferences– Person or function to be reached– Preferred/ ranked contact medium

• Simultaneous voice, voicemail, fax, email, assistant,…

– Priority/ importance– Conditions

• E.g., “don’t interrupt if…”

2004.03.31 21

A Different Communications Model – Receiver

• Specifies rules for people/ groups/ defaults– Preferred/ ranked contact medium

• Simultaneous voice, voicemail, fax, email, assistant,…

– Assessment of priority/ importance statements• More priority from some people than they specify• Less for others

– Relationship between• Derived priority and• Acceptable medium

2004.03.31 22

Generalization

• Extensions are almost trivial for– Multiparty communications

“conference calls” and group discussions

– Multimedia connectionsImages, text, sound, interactive remote whiteboards

– Asynchronous and semi-asynchronous communications

Email, fax, instant messages, “push” voicemail

• The special case– Two party, not prearranged, fully synchronous, audio-

only,…

2004.03.31 23

Some Lessons from Instant Messaging

• Is being interrupted a good thing?– Maybe better than by the telephone– More choices:

• Identification of caller, not calling number• Ability to delay response somewhat, not pure real-time

• Controlled access to interrupt– Need more than

• Available or not• Friend or not

• How to divert to email, or…

2004.03.31 24

Could we do this?

• Technology basically exists• Changing styles of thinking

moving away from “make it look like a telephone”

may be harder

• Designing a rule-specifying system that is• Sophisticated enough to be useful• Simple enough for consumers to use

– Is not trivial. But not impossible either.

2004.03.31 25

What Next?

• If we build it, will anyone come?

• How bad does – information overload– Interruption overload

need to get before we do something real about it?