Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Will VoIP be a Mass Market Product?

depending on those anavoidable patterns a product is nearly ready for a certain market.

before up to date unproven work on social desires, the common point of a product invoked individual ( social ) behaviors. Now we know that these guesses aren't absolutely incorrect. The act of selecting, spread widely enough and openly enough, creates a power law distribution.

Now, courtesy of a series of breakthroughs in network theory by analysts we all know that power law distributions have a tendency to arise in social systems where many of us express their preferences among many options.

World on IP community vs the TELECOMS' monopoly or a dream about a visionary.

Without qualification, if one had to select between common phone lines or IP Telephony for carrying the voice, the 1st would be a better fit for the wants of voice communications.

In the common phone lines, this doesn't occure, because new calls are blocked from entering the network and there's no network congestion. ( awfully interesting for the states that are often penalised with high value of phone charges : India, Africa and rustic areas generally. Some will be more favored than average and some less, naturally, but which will be statistics noise. The majority of the telephony will be of average recognition, and the highpoints and lowpoints may not be too far different from this average.

If Robert ( our average mass market buyer ) likes to have a telephone in his pocket, available often anywhere, it is highly likely that Mary would like the same.

What would VOIP telephony need to be one spot in the curve?

A trustworthy Conveyable Telephone that doesn't need millions of Hot Spot's to work.

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