Can You Hear Me Now?Dave Russ
by Dave Russ
Way back in 1996, Congrss passed the Telecommunications 
Act. This ground breaking piece of legislation was enacted 
to loosen the death grip that incumbent Bell monopolies 
held on consumers wallets... as well as foster competition 
in the long distance and broadband arenas.
In the FCCs own modest declaration... The 
Telecommunications Act of 1996 has the potential to change 
the way we work, live and learn. It will affect telephone 
service -- local and long distance, cable programming and 
other video services, broadcast services and services 
provided to schools.
Potential being the key word here.
Oh, it started out well enough... with the usual hype and 
fanfare associated with the Internet heyday. New players, 
fueled by the 90s investment frenzy, arose like wildflowers 
in May... collectively spending billions of dollars on the 
race to blur the line between the old switched networks and 
the new IP pipelines.
Breakthrough technologies, such as VOIP 
(Voice-over-Internet Protocol), threatened to shake the 
very foundation of the telecommunications world, offering 
consumers viable new choices. Companies like Net2Phone and 
Dialpad gave anyone with a computer, microphone and dialup 
connection, the ability to do an end around the established 
long distance carriers.
Soon, VOIP went mainstream, finding its way directly to the 
telephone and bypassing the need for a computer. Pay by 
the month, not by the minute became the rallying cry of a 
new generation of long distance marketers... as the concept 
of flat-rate and unlimited long distance blossomed. 
Consumers and small businesses no longer needed to fear 
receiving a huge long distance bill come months end... as 
they stepped off the per-minute treadmill.
And all was well... or so it seemed.
But did these cutting edge Internet technologies forever 
change the telecom landscape, as promised? Was it time yet 
for high-fives at the FCC... and was a victory parade in 
order for consumers?
In a word... No.
Quality and reliability issues, indifferent customer 
service and unsound business practices... exacerbated by 
the overall telecom meltdown, wiped out most of these 
alternate providers... burying them in the dot.com 
graveyard.
Meanwhile, the Big Three (AT&T, MCI and Sprint) still enjoy 
the lions share of US long distance revenues.
And has the local market fared much better? Not really. 
The 1996 Act required the regional Bell incumbents to grant 
access to their UNE-P (Unbundled Network Element-Platform). 
 But like all good monopolies, the Baby Bells have done 
everything humanly possible to prevent this access. Just 
ask Covad, NorthPoint and Rhythms... companies that all had 
far-reaching aspirations of bringing high speed DSL to 
everyones doorstep.
So much for competition, right?
Well, dont give up quite yet. There is some good news. 
Despite the carnage, there has been a survivor or two. 
Companies that refused to be stonewalled and have remained 
true to their vision.
One in particular that stands out is a CLEC called Z-Tel 
Communications (Nasdaq: ZTEL). For the past few years, 
Z-Tel has valiantly battled the huge Bell monopolies to try 
and gain entry into the local telephone markets. And 
believe it or not, theyre succeeding... having quietly 
acquired over 350,000 paying customers in 47 states.
Even more impressive has been Z-Tels commitment to 
innovation and value. They recently introduced Z-LineHOME 
Unlimited, a bundled package ($49.99 in most states) of 
unlimited local calling, unlimited nationwide long distance 
and popular calling features like Voicemail, Caller ID, 
Call Waiting, 3-Way Calling, Find Me and Notify Me.
In addition, Z-Tel is poised to roll out their exclusive 
Personal Voice Assistant (PVA). The Personal Voice 
Assistant is a revolutionary step forward in voice 
activated communications... and will soon be included in 
the Z-LineHOME Unlimited feature set at no extra charge.
Gregg Smith, president and chief executive officer for 
Z-Tel, in recent meetings with the FCC and Congressional 
leaders, stated:
Due in large part to UNE-P, competition is generating 
improved services for consumers every day. For example, 
Z-Tel is actively investing in and developing 
next-generation dial tone services that we believe will 
change the way people communicate, like voice recognition 
technology and personalized online directories. Soon, 
instead of looking up phone numbers, our subscribers will 
be able to simply say, call Aunt Tracy on her cell phone 
and be connected.
And today, for a flat monthly fee, Z-Tel subscribers can 
call anywhere in the U.S., talk as long as they want and 
take advantage of advanced services that make their 
communications more powerful.
These are exactly the kinds of services that the 1996 Act 
sought to deliver.
Yes they certainly are. What do you know... maybe telecom 
deregulation is finally working after all.
Can you hear me now?
by Dave Russ
Way back in 1996, Congrss passed the Telecommunications 
Act. This ground breaking piece of legislation was enacted 
to loosen the death grip that incumbent Bell monopolies 
held on consumers wallets... as well as foster competition 
in the long distance and broadband arenas.
In the FCCs own modest declaration... The 
Telecommunications Act of 1996 has the potential to change 
the way we work, live and learn. It will affect telephone 
service -- local and long distance, cable programming and 
other video services, broadcast services and services 
provided to schools.
Potential being the key word here.
Oh, it started out well enough... with the usual hype and 
fanfare associated with the Internet heyday. New players, 
fueled by the 90s investment frenzy, arose like wildflowers 
in May... collectively spending billions of dollars on the 
race to blur the line between the old switched networks and 
the new IP pipelines.
Breakthrough technologies, such as VOIP 
(Voice-over-Internet Protocol), threatened to shake the 
very foundation of the telecommunications world, offering 
consumers viable new choices. Companies like Net2Phone and 
Dialpad gave anyone with a computer, microphone and dialup 
connection, the ability to do an end around the established 
long distance carriers.
Soon, VOIP went mainstream, finding its way directly to the 
telephone and bypassing the need for a computer. Pay by 
the month, not by the minute became the rallying cry of a 
new generation of long distance marketers... as the concept 
of flat-rate and unlimited long distance blossomed. 
Consumers and small businesses no longer needed to fear 
receiving a huge long distance bill come months end... as 
they stepped off the per-minute treadmill.
And all was well... or so it seemed.
But did these cutting edge Internet technologies forever 
change the telecom landscape, as promised? Was it time yet 
for high-fives at the FCC... and was a victory parade in 
order for consumers?
In a word... No.
Quality and reliability issues, indifferent customer 
service and unsound business practices... exacerbated by 
the overall telecom meltdown, wiped out most of these 
alternate providers... burying them in the dot.com 
graveyard.
Meanwhile, the Big Three (AT&T, MCI and Sprint) still enjoy 
the lions share of US long distance revenues.
And has the local market fared much better? Not really. 
The 1996 Act required the regional Bell incumbents to grant 
access to their UNE-P (Unbundled Network Element-Platform). 
 But like all good monopolies, the Baby Bells have done 
everything humanly possible to prevent this access. Just 
ask Covad, NorthPoint and Rhythms... companies that all had 
far-reaching aspirations of bringing high speed DSL to 
everyones doorstep.
So much for competition, right?
Well, dont give up quite yet. There is some good news. 
Despite the carnage, there has been a survivor or two. 
Companies that refused to be stonewalled and have remained 
true to their vision.
One in particular that stands out is a CLEC called Z-Tel 
Communications (Nasdaq: ZTEL). For the past few years, 
Z-Tel has valiantly battled the huge Bell monopolies to try 
and gain entry into the local telephone markets. And 
believe it or not, theyre succeeding... having quietly 
acquired over 350,000 paying customers in 47 states.
Even more impressive has been Z-Tels commitment to 
innovation and value. They recently introduced Z-LineHOME 
Unlimited, a bundled package ($49.99 in most states) of 
unlimited local calling, unlimited nationwide long distance 
and popular calling features like Voicemail, Caller ID, 
Call Waiting, 3-Way Calling, Find Me and Notify Me.
In addition, Z-Tel is poised to roll out their exclusive 
Personal Voice Assistant (PVA). The Personal Voice 
Assistant is a revolutionary step forward in voice 
activated communications... and will soon be included in 
the Z-LineHOME Unlimited feature set at no extra charge.
Gregg Smith, president and chief executive officer for 
Z-Tel, in recent meetings with the FCC and Congressional 
leaders, stated:
Due in large part to UNE-P, competition is generating 
improved services for consumers every day. For example, 
Z-Tel is actively investing in and developing 
next-generation dial tone services that we believe will 
change the way people communicate, like voice recognition 
technology and personalized online directories. Soon, 
instead of looking up phone numbers, our subscribers will 
be able to simply say, call Aunt Tracy on her cell phone 
and be connected.
And today, for a flat monthly fee, Z-Tel subscribers can 
call anywhere in the U.S., talk as long as they want and 
take advantage of advanced services that make their 
communications more powerful.
These are exactly the kinds of services that the 1996 Act 
sought to deliver.
Yes they certainly are. What do you know... maybe telecom 
deregulation is finally working after all.
Can you hear me now?      
    ABOUT THE AUTHOR  
  Dave Russ, Partner 
Unlimited Long Distance 4U 
Helping Smart Consumers Save Money 
With Unlimited Local Home Phone Service
and Expanding Communcation Power with the PVA 
http://www.unlimitedlongdistance4u.com
  
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