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Analysis from investment bank Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein shows that the effect of VoIP on incumbents' revenues will vary from country to country
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Co-sponsored feature: Syndesis. Don't limit your thinking to voice when you are planning VoIP, say Syndesis executives Mark Nicholson and Derek Bell. And don't manage VoIP systems as if they were traditional networks with traditional switches. This new technology demands a completely new approach
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Vonage is the fastest growing company offering voice over IP service to customers in the US. It's just launched in Canada and is readying its plans to set up in Europe and Asia
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Co-sponsored feature: Alcatel. Operators are replacing outdated infrastructure with new networks, and are looking forward to revenues from new services, says Alcatel's Mike Wilkinson in this interview. It will become a process of continuous evolution
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It has a staff of 30, it has raised $20 million, and 14 million people have downloaded its software, of whom 800,000 use it every day. Is Skype on the verge of undermining the world's telecoms businesses? Alan Burkitt-Gray interviews Niklas Zennström, chief executive officer and co-founder
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Co-sponsored feature: MetaSolv. As the competition for VoIP subscribers heats up, operators have to make informed choices about the OSS systems they will use, writes David Sharpley of MetaSolv Software
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From its headquarters on the island of Sardinia, internet service provider Tiscali is getting reading to offer voice over IP as a bundled service to its growing market of broadband customers. Alan Burkitt-Gray interviews chief technology officer Paolo Susnik
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