LG Ericsson, one of the world’s largest manufacturer’s of Business Telephone/Phone Systems in the world has just introduced to the North American Market a New Solution for the SMB Business. Compact, Wi-Fi, SIP Ready with built in Failover.
Courtesy: telecomtv.com
Archive for December, 2011
Phone System, Telephone System, VoIP Phone System VoIP Telephone System, IP Phone System, IP Telephone System, Business Telephone System, Business Pho
December 31st, 2011Telephone/Phone System Solutions with LG Ericsson
December 31st, 2011ATSnexgen Telephone/Phone System Solutions is one of the largest VARS for LG Ericsson in North America. Based in Dallas, Texas with offices in Fort Worth, Houston, Austin, San Antonio, Texas. Hosted, On Premise, Routers, Switches, Internet, Data Cabling, One Call does it all.
Courtesy: telecomtv.com
RIM suffers annus horribilis
December 31st, 2011Holders of shares in the Canadian maker of the BlackBerry smartphone and PlayBook tablet device have seen investment value fall by 80%
Courtesy: FT.com
Deutsche Telekom settles bribery case
December 30th, 2011The US justice department agrees not to criminally charge the German group and its Hungarian subsidiary Magyar Telekom for two years
Courtesy: FT.com
Ambani matriarch says family is ‘united’
December 28th, 2011Rare statement from Kokilaben Ambani reignites speculation about future co-operation between the feuding brothers’ divided business empires
Courtesy: FT.com
France Telecom to sell Swiss unit to Apax
December 24th, 2011The private equity group beat buy-out rivals to buy Orange Suisse, and is in exclusive negotiations on the final terms of the €1.5bn deal
Courtesy: FT.com
AT&T wins approval for spectrum deal
December 24th, 2011Just days after AT&T withdrew its $39bn bid for Deutsche Telekom’s T-Mobile USA unit, the US telecommunications group has won regulatory approval for its $1.93bn purchase of wireless spectrum from Qualcomm
Courtesy: FT.com
AT&T boss is more than a failed bid
December 24th, 2011Randall Stephenson has done much to reshape the telecoms group and drive organic growth in areas such as mobile communications and video
Courtesy: FT.com
Year in Review 2011: The stories that dominated the wireline industry
December 24th, 2011
As we say goodbye to 2011, a year that was certainly another time of change and transition in the wireline segment of the telecom industry, we wanted to take the time to look back on some of the major story lines of the past year.
During 2011, we believe there were five major subjects that are part of the wireline industry’s ongoing transformation from a voice-only network to one that supports a growing set of IP-based consumer and business services:
- 100G takes flight: Driven by new advancements in coherent optics, a growing base of service providers have decided to sidestep a migration to 40G and go straight towards 100G in their core IP and optical network infrastructure. One of the clear aggressive carriers in this domain was Verizon (NYSE: VZ) with seven additional routes updated to 100G on its IP network this fall in addition to upgrading 10 of its network routes with coherent optical technology. Outside of Verizon, other notable 100G deployments include a group of savvy Canadian (MTS Allstream and Shaw), European (BT and P&T Luxembourg), R&E networks (Internet2), and even one city (Washington, D.C.).
- IPv6 readiness ramped up: While the topic of IPv6 addressing has been around for over a decade, it was really only in 2011 when IPv4 address exhaustion began to show its head and drive service providers, vendors and industry groups to create new awareness about being ready to make the IPv6 transition. To test out IPv6 in a live Internet environment, the telecom and IT industries alike held World IPv6 Day. Held on June 8, the event was a dress rehearsal where service providers tested the effects of more than 430 Internet content providers running their websites in a dual IPv4/IPv6 mode.
- Usage Based Billing (UBB): Claiming that heavy use of a broadband line by what are sometimes referred to as “bandwidth hogs,” U.S. service providers including AT&T (NYSE: T) and Frontier (NYSE: FTR) put in place usage based billing (UBB) rules that would limit the amount of bandwidth users could consume in a given month. Likewise, in Canada, the Canadian Radio and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) initially allowed Bell Canada (NYSE: BCE) to implement a UBB plan on wholesale customers and consumers, but later revised its proposal.
- USF/ICC reform: This fall the FCC put forth its long-awaited proposal to reform its Universal Service Fund (USF) and Inter-carrier Compensation (ICC) systems. Seeing broadband as a the future, the FCC’s proposal with the $4.5 billion USF program, which had been primarily used to fund local phone service networks in rural areas, would be to use the fund to bring broadband to underserved areas. As expected, the new rules are already being challenged by large telcos, including AT&T (NYSE: T), and industry groups such as the National Telecommunications Cooperative Association (NTCA). Set to be heard in the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver (CO), the panel consolidated 13 separate lawsuits from telephone companies and state public utility commissions into one proceeding.
- Verizon’s strike woes: With Lowell McAdam taking over the keys of the Verizon (NYSE: VZ) kingdom in August 2011 as the ILEC’s CEO, one of the key goals of the former Verizon Wireless CEO was to streamline the service provider’s business and make it more entrepreneurial. In carrying out his plans, McAdam asked the service provider’s two main unions–the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) and the Communications Workers of America (CWA)–for a number of concessions on pension and healthcare contributions. What ultimately followed was a two-week strike that ended on August 14 with unions and Verizon officials still trying to hammer out a new contract.
In this special year-in-review issue, FierceTelecom looks back at all the signature headlines and events that shaped the wireline telecom sector in 2011 and set the stage for 2012. With that in mind, I encourage you to take a look and make suggestions about other trends and story lines you thought were newsworthy in 2011 and could be things to watch in 2012.–Sean
P.S. FierceTelecom will be on a publishing break for the holidays. We will be updating the website with any breaking news, but will be back in your inbox Tuesday, Jan. 3, 2012. Enjoy the holidays and have a Happy New Year!
Source:Fierce Telecom
Looking back at 2011’s FierceOnlineVideo story lines
December 24th, 2011FierceTelecom’s sister publication FierceOnlineVideo looks at how 2011 was a transformative year in the online video industry segment. Article
Source:Fierce Telecom
