> See above - cell phones *are* the PSTN, at least so far they are.

Any IMS folks here to agree with this?  :-)

Henry


On 6/27/08 12:31 PM, "Hadriel Kaplan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> 
> 
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Henry Sinnreich [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> Sent: Friday, June 27, 2008 3:11 PM
>> To: Hadriel Kaplan; Hannes Tschofenig; Elwell, John
>> Cc: [email protected]; Paul Kyzivat; Dan Wing
>> Subject: Re: [Sip] Toward the Evolution of SIP and Related Working Groups
>> 
>>> 1) Because most of their calls still go to/from the PSTN.
>> 
>> I wonder if this may still be true:
>> - All employees have cell phones
> 
> All cell phones *are* on the PSTN, for all intents and purposes to which the
> email was about.
> 
>>> 3) Because voice means business/money for many Enterprises
>> 
>> I wonder about this too. Except for the marketing and support folks,
>> talking
> 
> And sales, and brick-and-mortar retailers, and food delivery, and repair
> shops, and hotels, and restaurants, and financial trading floors, and most
> things found in thick yellow books or on business cards.  I'm not saying
> commerce doesn't happen in other ways (duh), just that it also happens over
> voice.  I have no idea if it's more/less than email or http or whatever (and I
> bet the answer to that is regionally-specific), just that it's darn big.
> 
> 
>> Using voice at work (at some cost to the enterprise) seems to me just a
>> bad
>> habit or bad legacy, and is rather the exception, not the rule.
>> 
>> BTW: Don't you have a plain cell phone, iPhone or Blackberry?
> 
> See above - cell phones *are* the PSTN, at least so far they are.
> 
> -hadriel

_______________________________________________
Sip mailing list  https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/sip
This list is for NEW development of the core SIP Protocol
Use [EMAIL PROTECTED] for questions on current sip
Use [EMAIL PROTECTED] for new developments on the application of sip

Reply via email to