Open-source toolkit aimed at telcos

20.02.2009
Although the (IMS) has become the default architecture for telcos to deliver services such as , voicemail and , president Tom Nolle thinks it's too slow to keep up with market trends.

Essentially, says Nolle, telecom providers feel as though they're being left behind in delivering services to their users by Internet companies such as Google and Skype, which he says are quicker to innovate and adapt to consumer demands. This is particularly problematic because if telecom companies are relegated solely to Web access providers, they will have significantly lower profits and will thus have less capital to invest in upgrading their networks.

However, Nolle thinks there's a simple solution for telcos who want to speed up their service innovation: go open source.

"The bit-pushing business is vanishing and it's in our interest to help the telcos become more profitable," says Nolle, whose company specializes in telecommunications consulting. "Right now it can be frustrating developing services as a telecom when the process takes years and meanwhile the whole lifespan of a Web idea is around six months."

To this end, CIMI Corporation has unveiled its ExperiaSphere open-source toolkit that Nolle says is capable of building any IMS application. Because it's based on Java 2 Standard Edition, Nolle says that programmers will be able to create services that better fit into the realm of Web-based services than traditional services offered over IMS.

CIMI's first prototype service for ExperiaSphere is a video deliver services that sends video streams onto either personal computers or smartphones. What makes this a step up from services offered over standard IMS architecture, CIMI says, is that it is done through a simple HTML exchange "that could be added to any website." Thus, the services are more easily accessible and don't require the use of application programming interfaces (APIs).