| Published November 17, 2009 |
Volume
17, Number 11
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180SQUARED® Leads
Telcos to Interactive, On-Demand Internet
Television

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180SQUARED
CEO Armand Estrada is helping telephone companies reinvent
themselves.
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By Nicole Zaro Stahl
NETWORK Editor
The advent of wireless and VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol)
phone services has brought much discussion about the place of
traditional telephone companies in the new communications landscape. A
Hacienda start-up, 180SQUARED, is working to help telcos with the
software and systems infrastructure they need to transition into a new
role as providers of interactive, on-demand television over a closed
broadband network, or IPTV.
“The phone companies are
reinventing themselves,” observes 180SQUARED’s CEO Armand Estrada.
“That’s where our name comes from. We are showing them how to do a
180-degree turn, to a complete new way of thinking. And because of
great products like ours, we are able to ‘square’ their video offerings
such that we enable even more revolutionary change. The cable companies
already offer VoIP, data, and Internet. We can help the telcos get back
in the market with way-better tv.”
The vision of this
“way-better tv” Estrada proffers is quite intriguing. For example,
viewers watching a reality show could use the remote control to vote
for a contestant, and then to order and pay for a pizza, without
missing any on-screen action. Race car fans could pick a specific
driver’s helmet camera to follow around the track. Security camera
feeds and caller ID information can be displayed on the tv, as can
widget buttons for applets featuring the weather or video games.
From
a technology perspective, Estrada explains that IPTV uses the Internet
backbone, but instead of being available to the general public, it is a
closed network. “IPTV streams to the set-top box only what the consumer
is watching, and the data pipe is left with so much room that the
information flow can be bi-directional. Users will be able to
communicate through the tv to servers at the telco, and then
communicate with others on the same system. It is real interactive tv.
Video conferencing from home will be a reality.”
Many of these
features are incorporated into AT&T’s new U-verse products.
Several
180SQUARED employees previously worked at Microsoft, where they played
an integral part in the implementation of the IPTV platform at
AT&T. As an IPTV software applications developer and
system
integrator, “our company is one of just three certified systems
integrators in the world for deploying Microsoft Mediaroom,” a common
IPTV platform, Estrada continues. “We work with telcos from the East
Coast to Hawaii and from Canada to Mexico.”
To become an IPTV
provider, a phone company has to buy new computers, switches, and a
host of network and access equipment. As part of the deployment
process, 180SQUARED designs the architecture, identifies what equipment
is needed, implements the IPTV Middleware, and integrates it into the
customer’s billing and subscriber provisioning systems.
He
also points out that, with a few thousand independent telcos throughout
North America, 180SQUARED has an extensive prospect base. Add into that
the huge consumer appetite for television, and an economy driving
at-home entertainment, and it is a very desirable market to be in, he
concludes.
For more information, visit www.180SQUARED.com.
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