[opendtv] HD voice comes to Android, but can it really save voice revenues?

  • From: "Manfredi, Albert E" <albert.e.manfredi@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx" <opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 17 Nov 2009 16:03:17 -0600

At very long last, perhaps telephones will start sounding like human voices.

To me, this is very much the same as HDTV. Which is to say, it won't be an 
extra-cost specialty item. It will become the norm, even if initially it will 
be premium, and soon enough it won't cost any more than crappy telephone voice 
costs today.

Bert

-------------------------------
http://www.rethink-wireless.com/article.asp?article_id=2153

HD voice comes to Android, but can it really save voice revenues?
By CAROLINE GABRIEL

Published: 17 November, 2009

High definition video may be one of the key applications for new networks, but 
who wants HD voice? Everybody will, once they hear it, according to Vonage 
founder Jeff Pulver, whose Free World Dial-up firm has launched a project 
called HD Connect to promote the technology. And several vendors are rising to 
the challenge of reversing the downward spiral of voice usage, luring users 
with the better quality and new IP applications enabled by HD voice.

Last week, Broadcom, the originator of the technology, put its BroadVoice 
codecs into open source in a bid to reduce the cost of HD VoIP and so encourage 
supporters, by eliminating royalties. Broadcom will offer two codecs - 
BroadVoice32 for wideband speech sampled at 16kHz, and BroadVoice16 for 
narrowband voice sampled at 8kHz.

But the real challenge is not so much to attract vendors with lower costs, but 
to encourage consumers to pay a bit extra for a higher quality call (especially 
as the highest growth voice platforms of recent years, VoIP and mobile, have 
delivered a weaker voice experience than dying wireline). However, Daniel 
Berninger, CEO of Free World Dial-up, believes there is a real market for 
premium VoIP. "Even if you think about the iPhone and how compelling that is, 
that's the same lousy voice," he said in an interview. By the end of 2010, when 
HD-enabled handsets should be readily available, it will start to be requested 
by discerning users, he argues, and by 2013 it will be ubiquitous.

And now HD voice is coming to Android, courtesy of Global IP Solutions (GIPS) 
of Norway, with its VoiceEngine Mobile. This will allow Android developers to 
build HD VoIP enabled clients, and the first company to sign up is Nimbuzz, 
maker of the free social networking app, which believes the technology could 
give it a competitive edge with no-cost, high quality calls, and could be 
integrated with other social features.

Before this, most of GIPS' efforts were focused on HD voice for the enterprise, 
promising to reduce or eliminate some of the most disliked aspects of regular 
VoIP, such as delay, jitter, packet loss, noise and echo. HD VoIP enables 
better sound quality by using voice energy outside the 3kHz frequency of 
traditional phone calls, and by using SIP and the G.722 wideband codec standard.

Most consumer HD voice has come from fixed line operators such as Cablevision 
subsidiary Optimum Lightpath, the first US provider to offer the services, and 
various European carriers. GIPS' VP of business development, Larry Golob, 
echoed Berninger's sentiments, saying that, even as the industry has moved to 
3G and on to 4G, "and devices are getting smarter and smarter, one of the 
things that hasn't changed - and in some cases has gotten worse - is voice 
quality."

GIPS already offers mobile versions of its voice engine to Symbian and iPhone 
developers. This engine is distributed on an app-by-app basis rather than at 
device or OS level, so that a developer can work with it in a consistent manner 
across platforms.
 
 
----------------------------------------------------------------------
You can UNSUBSCRIBE from the OpenDTV list in two ways:

- Using the UNSUBSCRIBE command in your user configuration settings at 
FreeLists.org 

- By sending a message to: opendtv-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with the word 
unsubscribe in the subject line.

Other related posts:

  • » [opendtv] HD voice comes to Android, but can it really save voice revenues? - Manfredi, Albert E