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Assessing Carrier VoIP
Outsourcing-
by General Telecom |
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While Internet
Protocol (IP) technology has been utilized in
long-haul carrier backbone networks for a number of years,
retail Voice-over-Internet-Protocol (VoIP) services are just starting to
take hold now. As a result, established and start-up carriers increasingly
need to interconnect networks for smooth transmission of IP-based traffic,
and must regularly interface VoIP networks with traditional Time Division
Multiplex (TDM) networks. The related requirement to support multiple
network technologies within and between carrier environments is a daunting
reality. |
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Comparing alternatives for
enterprise VoIP and VoIP access
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by Quintum |
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The selection of
an enterprise VoIP solution is a major decision. Voice service is critical
to the operation of the business, so no one wants to implement a technology
that will compromise call quality or reliability in any way. On the other
hand, the cost savings and value-added functionality available with VoIP
makes it a compelling investment. |
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People Don’t Speak in Tones
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by Empirix |
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There is no
question that transmitting voice over IP based data networks will be an
enormously popular application - the cost-savings are too compelling and
compression technology is getting too good. But there remain significant
questions about the viability of having voice carried over data networks
which must contend with data and even video traffic. |
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Premise Keepers
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by Quintum |
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The future of
convergence beckons consumers and providers of technology alike. Lower
telecommunications costs, streamlined resource management, more efficient use
of available bandwidth, and the potential development of new high-value
voice/data applications are being dangled in front of the marketplace like
the proverbial carrot-on-a-stick. And everyone is drooling. |
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Quality of Service Testing
in the VoIP Environment
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by Empirix |
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In recent years,
the business world has reaped tremendous benefits from the many exciting
products and applications made possible by the marriage of data and voice
technologies. Now the efficiencies and enhanced services resulting from that
revolution are about to be eclipsed by the magnitude of change possible as
data networks become the transport for voice. IP Telephony, or Voice over IP
(VoIP), is the exploding new technology enabling voice to be carried over
IP-based, packet-switched local and wide area networks. |
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Assuring QoE on Next
Generation Networks
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by Empirix |
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As recently as
three years ago, VoIP was a dream. So were Napster downloads, streaming
media, and intelligent content servers. Gateways were hard-pressed to handle
ten simultaneous calls, and there was no such thing as a Softswitch.
(Actually, there was something called a "gatekeeper," but few people
understood exactly what that was.) H.323 looked like the de facto winner,
and SIP and H.248 were unheard of. Virtually no one had a cable modem, and
OC-3 seemed fast for the network core. |
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Proven Mediation Solutions for
VoIP Environments
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by ACE*COMM |
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Telephone networks
have been merging with IP-based data networks for some time now. In many
cases, legacy-technology voice calls are partially carried on data networks
as they traverse the lines from the originating to the destination points.
This is transparent to the user, and with the exception of some billing
issues, it is almost transparent to the service providers. |
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Avaya Korea Provides IP
Office to Olympus Korea Contact Center
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by Avaya
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Avaya Korea Ltd., the Korean subsidiary of Avaya
Inc. (NYSE:AV), a leading global provider of communications networks and
services for businesses, today announced that it won the IP contact center
project for Olympus Korea, the leading global digital camera provider, and
will provide Avaya IP Office for this project. |
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Avaya Leads the Enterprise Communications Market in Greater China
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by
Avaya |
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Avaya Inc. (NYSE:AV), a leading global provider
of communications networks and services for businesses, today announced that
it is leading the Greater China market in both enterprise telephony and call
center application areas. It has beaten the competitors in Private Branch
Exchange (PBX), IP-PBX and call center markets in 2003, with shares of 11.9
percent, 35.7 percent and 23.5 percent respectively, according to reports of
market research agency Frost & Sullivan. |
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Designing a Long-Distance
VoIP Network -
by
Cisco Systems |
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The long-distance Voice over
IP (VoIP) network solution is a set of network design and configuration
strategies that provide trunk-level transport of global switched telephone
traffic distributed over VoIP. Calls originate in the Public Switched
Telephone Network (PSTN), are routed through inter exchange carriers (IXCs),
and are handed off to a wholesale VoIP carrier for transport. To the
subscriber, the long-distance service seems like any other inexpensive
long-distance service. To the originating long-distance carrier, the
wholesale carrier is only one of a number of termination options. |
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