1 / 16

Voice Over Internet Protocol

Voice Over Internet Protocol. By Eric Rice. History. First telephone was patented in 1870 Rotary dialing first done in 1891 1905-Party Line 1910-5.1 million customers 1941-Attacks on Pearl Harbor cause a 100-400 percent spike in long distance nation wide. History cont.

gerd
Télécharger la présentation

Voice Over Internet Protocol

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Voice Over Internet Protocol By Eric Rice

  2. History • First telephone was patented in 1870 • Rotary dialing first done in 1891 • 1905-Party Line • 1910-5.1 million customers • 1941-Attacks on Pearl Harbor cause a 100-400 percent spike in long distance nation wide

  3. History cont. • 1949-the average calls placed in a day reach 180 million. • 1975-there are 140 million telephone lines in the US and AT&T controls 85% of them • 1993-AT&T offers Caller ID • 1995-Vocal Tec release first VOIP software • 1996-First cable modem service offered by Roger Communications • 2001-Vonage founded • March 2002-Vonage initiates service

  4. The Issues • Reliability • 911 service availability • Voice Quality • Delay • Jitter • Features • Signaling Protocol

  5. Reliability • The current standard • Five-nines (5 min of downtime a year) • “Networks go down all the time” • High Internet Traffic

  6. 911 Availability • Currently address information is linked to a number • Due to VoIP portability, locations are not defined • In order to receive 911 service it must first be set up • Mobile phones have this same problem • Alternate solutions include developing new port mapping technologies • Using GPS to locate callers

  7. Voice Quality • Goals • Make it comparable to wire line • Minimize bandwidth • Wire line Voice codec is G.711 • 64kbps • MOS 4.3 (mean opinion score) • VoIP Voice codec G.729 • 8kbps • MOS 4.0 What?

  8. Other Codecs • These codecs use a number of different compression algorithms to minimize required bandwidth

  9. Delay • Delay is measured using Round Trip Time • Keep delay less then 300ms • If greater then 300ms may seem like making an international call: take this situation

  10. Jitter • Occurs when delay changes • If the delay increases and decreases sporadically it makes conversations sound choppy • RTP (Real Time Transport Protocol) • Adds a sequence number and a time stamp to UDP packets • This allows for delay and jitter to be calculated accurately

  11. Solutions to Jitter and Delay • Add bandwidth to the entire Internet • We find ways to use up all the bandwidth we are given • Reserve bandwidth on the routers it uses • This would not be fair to the rest of the packets • Temporary solution is to simply route the calls through the current switch network.

  12. SIP (Session Initiation Protocol) • Very simple protocol to use • Allows for advanced features to be applied by the user without a subscription

  13. Features • Cheaper Service • No long distance charges • Caller ID • Call Forwarding • Call Screening • Users can do other things than just block a call • If Kitrek were to call, I would be able to forward his call to an insult hotline

  14. Features • Voicemail • Check it online with fast-forward, rewind, and pause • Check it through email • Check it over the phone • Require unknown callers to provide an intent for calling • If a telemarketer calls they would have to tell what they wanted • It would then be displayed on the caller ID

  15. Conclusion • VoIP is a technology which will eventually replace the current Switch network. • With new and fully customizable features, along with cheaper service and no long distance charges. We can expect to see VoIP much more in the future.

  16. Resources • [1] Danial Collins. (2001). Carrier Grade Voice Over IP. New York. McGraw-Hill. • [2] John Shepler. (2005). The Holy Grail of five-nines reliability. • Retrieved April 1, 2005 from http://searchnetworking.techtarget.com/generic/0,295582,sid7_gci1064318,00.html • [3] Tim Lorello, Rich Tehrani (2005). E-9-1-1. Internet Telephony, 8, (3), 40-41. • [4] FCC. (2004) VoIP: FCC Consumer Facts. Retrieved April 1, 2005 from http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/consumerfacts/voip.pdf • [5] Vonage. (2005) Features. Retrieved April 1, 2005 from • http://www.vonage.com/features.php

More Related