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Looking Beyond Network Boundaries

Looking Beyond Network Boundaries. Giuseppe Ricagni UMTS Product Solutions, Nortel Networks. People Value. The Multimedia Experience. The Freedom of Mobility. Security & Personalization. … for enhanced productivity and user experience. Eliminating the Boundaries. Services. Connectivity.

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Looking Beyond Network Boundaries

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  1. Looking Beyond Network Boundaries Giuseppe RicagniUMTS Product Solutions, Nortel Networks

  2. People Value ... The Multimedia Experience The Freedom of Mobility Security & Personalization … for enhanced productivity and user experience

  3. Eliminating the Boundaries Services Connectivity … for seamless solutions

  4. GamingConsole Transforming the Network Today • Multiple networks • Simple devices • Disparate services PDA HomeComputer BusinessMobile Home OfficePhone OfficePhone OfficeComputer • Transition • Converged packet network • Multimedia devices • Linked services TV / PVR Simplify • Transformed • Dynamic packet/optical network • Secure multimedia services • Ubiquitous broadband • Integrated functionality Network Profile

  5. ISV Apps Applications Access Voice Media Service Edge Content Switching Interactive Multimedia Services Policy Security Mobility Packet QoS IP VPN Optical Subscriber Control LAN Broadband Transformed Network Architecture

  6. ISV Apps Applications Access Voice Media Network Services Service Edge Content Switching Interactive Multimedia Services Policy Security Mobility Client VoIP Wireless Access Multiservices Packet Packet QoS IP VPN Multiservice Optical Optical Element Management Subscriber Control LAN Broadband Transformed Network ArchitecturePlatforms

  7. ISV Apps Applications Access Voice Media • SERVICE ENABLING ENVIRONMENT • Voice quality and functionality • Signaling and control spanning networks • Presence technology • Real-time software • Application integration • Server and database integrity Service Edge Content Switching Interactive Multimedia Services Policy • BROADBAND ACCESS • RF design • Intelligent antennae • Advanced coding • Hand-off • 3G wireless interworking • Packaging • MULTISERVICE PACKET EDGE • Wirespeed security • Multiservice networking • Carrier grade scaling, performance, reliability • Mobility services • Optical packaging Security Mobility COMMON OPTICAL AND PACKET FOUNDATION • Multiservice access • High speed, high density • Lambda management • Photonic switching Packet QoS IP VPN • NETWORKING ATTRIBUTES • System availability • Hardware availability • Real-time software • Scalability • Interoperability • Distributed software • Management integration • Solution integration Optical Subscriber Control LAN Broadband Transformed Network ArchitectureTechnologies

  8. How can we make this real ?

  9. Blending User Devices For communication and messaging services • PC, phone(s) and PDA end up being different user interfaces of the same network-based application • Common, network-based directory for • Phone numbers • Buddies & presence • Email address book • All applications • Unified, network-based, user profile applying to all terminals • E.g: set presence location, ( call routing preferences), etc., on either of the terminals and apply to all • Phones (and PC) presence ( call routing preferences), automatically updated • PC presence info automatically updated based on phone location Increase ARPU: the blended handset is a friendlier handset

  10. Blending User Devices For communication and messaging services • User selects a person to call on the PC from a network-based directory • Click on the person and set up a call between the user’s mobile phone and the callee

  11. Adding the desktop into the picture • Does not necessarily require providing wireline connectivity • Interaction is at the service level • User fidelization • Once the user gets used to the wireless-based services he will want to use them even when the notebook is in the docking station • Vice versa, if the user gets used to the services in the office, he will be more willing to use them when on the road • SMEs may outsource PBX services to the operator for service harmonization between external and internal calls • Big corporations will own their infrastructure and interface it with the operator

  12. Application-specific Logic Corporate DB Just one address to reach the user Call processing logic based on screening rules (E.g. reject video calls if not in buddy list/address book), Presence, location, user profile, calendar, preferences GMLC Carrier Network GWs may be needed to interface with legacy infrastructures GW Operator becomes the ultimate single point of contact for the user Just one phone number will always be used to contact a person Network takes over the complexity of reaching the user

  13. Application-specific Logic Corporate DB GW GW SIP Phone SIP Wireless Phone Just one address to reach the user Carrier Network GW Based on call processing, callee can have incoming call details displayed on PC/PDA/cellphone and choose how to handle the call (answer/voice mail) and where to answer

  14. Application-specific Logic Corporate DB GW May or may not be the same physical device SIP Wireless Phone Just one address to reach the user Carrier Network GW SIP Phone

  15. Application-specific Logic Corporate DB GW SIP Wireless Phone Just one address to reach the user Carrier Network Some of these connections may go through bit-pipes provided by 3rd Parties SIP Phone

  16. Making it real Summary • The Operator becomes the ultimate single point of contact for the user • Single phone number/address will always be used to contact a person • Receiving party then decides where to answer the call • Mobile phone(s) • PDA • PC • Wireline phone

  17. Making it real Summary • Can include ousourced PBXes for SMEs and voice VPNs for big corporates • Service may be • VoIP to the Etherphone • VoIP to the corporation’s edge – then be converted into TDM via a GW • VoIP to the operator’s edge – then converted into TDM and carried by a wireline TDM operator

  18. Making it real Further considerations • Blending PCs, wireline phone(s), wireless phone(s) and PDAs turns the presence info into the ultimate info on the availability of the person • As the operator receives all the the calls for the person: • it can provide a common busy (or free, according to user preferences) tone, regardless of where the user answers • it can automatically update the presence to “on the phone” • it can associate a complex call screening profile to the user presence states

  19. Putting it all together Joe@acme.com Joe@acme.com Joe@acme.com Joe@acme.com • One person uses one“address” for many services, many devices, many accesses • User is paged based on his preferences & presence info. • Same address can be used on the same device from many locations • Same address supports Voice, Video or Text (IM or Email) and the enhanced messaging-based services • Generic addresses can be shared by multiple users • NGN bridges the ultimate gap in person-to-person communication Joe@acme.com Joe@acme.com Joe@acme.com

  20. Backup

  21. Access Independence & WLANs • Access independence provides service ubiquity throughout WLANs and Corporations • Presence information will provide info on the specific device the user is logged in on, allowing for intelligent call routing • Wireless operators are best positioned to leverage this to become the single point of service contact to the subscriber • Wireless Operators will be the only stakeholder with direct access to key information such as the user’s location • Wireless Operators also hold a secure user identity thanks to Smartcard (SIM)-level authentication, credit information (where allowed) • Wireless operator will hold the user’s universal address and receive the call/service invocation.

  22. Beyond the one service-one platform paradigm • Generalised session establishment protocol. • Any type of session • Any end-point • Integration-Interaction • Session comprised by many types of media (integration) • Easy added or removed of each session (interaction) • Simplification

  23. Corporate service examples SIP-Based Extranet service example

  24. The SIP-Based Corporate Extranet • Most corporate processes are dealt with custom applications • Applications are available to deal with most of the common internal processes • Applications have now been developed to allow for extranet communication to wired users of most of the relevant info • Wireline extranet has standardized on HTTP/WWW to avoid distribution of custom clients • Will WAP be the wireless equivalent ? • WAP shown wireless paradigm is different from wireline - • Cannot just port all web-based services to a smaller screen

  25. SIP-Based Corporate ExtranetDrivers • Mobile users want immediate access to the information. Don’t want to: • remember and type an URI/URL • click on several links before getting to the info • remember and type a username and password • remember and type any further process codes to get to specific instances of applications • e.g. the "delivery code" to track a parcel • remember and type phone numbers • install custom application on their phone, possibly requiring connecting to the PC, or a complicated network-based procedure. • especially if they will use that app just occasionally • repeat a lengthy access to info to know if it changed • much better to see the desired info automatically updating itself Can we think of a standard, general purpose application execution environment meeting all the “don’t wants” ?

  26. The SIP-Based Corporate ExtranetThe role of the wireless operator Wireless Operator Corporation A Customer segment 1 Corporation B Customer segment 2 Corporation C Corporation D Customer segment 3 Corporation E The Operator can act as the glue connecting corporationswith their customers by providing a common AEE

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