Sunday, July 31, 2011

New Telkom Tariffs effective 01 August 2011

The last time we reported on the movement around the new Telkom Tariffs was a few weeks ago, and so much has happened since then that we almost sure that this has been forgotten. My overall thought on the matter is that its disappointing that there isnt an overall decrease in the cost of deploying and utilising Voice Services with Telkom, but it is encouraging that there is a Decrease in the Voice Rates which shows that the Market is going in the right direction!

Here is a quick summary of the changes that affect Basic Business users.

Telkom increases fixed-line rentals
http://www.whichvoip.co.za/index.php?option=com_kunena&Itemid=28&func=view&catid=6&id=246

As initially Reported, the Fixed-Line Rental and Installation Fees have been increased.
A Business Analog Line which used to cost R 152.63, will now set you back R 168.28. The Hunting Facility per line has also been increased from R 10.77 per line to R 11.48.

Telkom to cut local call rateshttp://www.whichvoip.co.za/index.php?option=com_kunena&Itemid=28&func=view&catid=6&id=247

Local Calls (0-50km)        drop from R 0.38 to R 0.37 - connection fee of R 0.50
National Calls (0-50km)   drop from R 0.57 to R 0.50 - connection fee of R 0.50
Mobile Calls                     drop from R 1.29 to R 1.23 - connection fee of R 1.23
Calls to VoIP                     varies per VoIP provider, but a drop in the connection fee to R 0.50
                                          (Cost to call is between R 0.53 and R 0.73)

The New Telkom Pricelist can be downloaded (PDF) from the following link:
http://www.telkom.co.za/general/pricelist/downloads/tarifflist_Aug11.pdf

The Previous Call Rate Pricing is still accessible via the following link:
http://www.telkom.co.za/common/pricelist/prices/local/customer_to_automatic_exh.html

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

What's Next For Skype?



It’s been an eventful last two months for Skype. Shortly after Microsoft made the biggest deal in its history with the acquisition of Skype for $8.5 billion, the latter suffered a massive outage. To make matters worse, Efim Bushmanov - a Russian freelance researcher claimed that he has successfully been able to reverse engineer the official Skype desktop implementation in an attempt to make the service open source.

The Big Daddy of Internet Telephony subsequently announced breakthrough partnerships with Facebook, Comcast and Telus. Microsoft patented ‘‘Legal Intercept‘ thereby alleviating privacy concerns that the company could secretly intercept, monitor and record Skype calls is stoking privacy concerns.

So, what’s next for Skype?

CEO Tony Bates is bullish that the Microsoft deal will be completed by October this year. He believes that one billion Skype ‘end points’ is no longer a distant dream and hinted that Skype is open to the idea of using in-call advertisements, as the company attempts to boost its revenue.

The Microsoft-Skype deal has received the required regulatory clearance in the United States but it still awaits a green signal from European regulatory authorities. Bates said that Skype would retain its original brand and it would constitute its own division at Microsoft. He believes Microsoft will help bring in ’strong commitment’ to the brand.

Bates isn’t averse to the idea of in-call advertising in Skype. He claims that since the average length of a video call has gone up, there’s room to introduce new opportunities through advertising. And it isn’t just playing advertisements, it could even be sharing ads across participants in a Skype call. In March, Skype started rolling out unobtrusive ads from major sponsors. It was then claimed that these ads ‘won’t interrupt your Skype experience.’ With Microsoft at the helm now, you never know what’s coming next.

Skype already has a strong foothold in the smartphone user segment. The company is now trying to bring goodies of the Internet world to the TV segment. Skype is pre-installed on 50 million TVs and companies like Comcast will begin offering Skype video calling to customers next year. Of course, monetization still remains a major challenge. There’s no denying that Skype needs to find ways to better monetize free calling and video chats – whether in-call advertising is the way to do it, I’m not so sure.

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Written by: Gaurav Kheterpal. www.digitcom.ca. Follow TheTelecomBlog.comby: RSS,TwitterFacebook, or YouTube.

http://www.whichvoip.co.za/index.php?option=com_blog&view=comments&pid=159&Itemid=6