E-Book, Englisch, 284 Seiten, E-Book
Hersent / Petit / Gurle Beyond VoIP Protocols
1. Auflage 2005
ISBN: 978-0-470-02363-1
Verlag: John Wiley & Sons
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
Understanding Voice Technology and Networking Techniques for IP Telephony
E-Book, Englisch, 284 Seiten, E-Book
ISBN: 978-0-470-02363-1
Verlag: John Wiley & Sons
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
In 1999-2000, VoIP (Voice-over-IP) telephony was one of the mostsuccessful buzzwords of the telecom bubble era. However, in2001-2003, VoIP faced a very tough reality check. Now,manufacturers and service providers are drawing on what they havelearnt from past experience in order to prepare to participate inthe next major challenge faced by the telecommunicationsindustry.
This book offers a comprehensive overview of the issues to solvein order to deploy global revenue-generating effective "multimedia"services. Drawing on extensive research and practical deploymentexperience in VoIP, the authors provide essential advice for thoseseeking to design and implement a post-bubble VoIP network.
Beyond VoIP Protocols: Understanding Voice Technology andNetworking Techniques for IP Telephony
* Introduces the basics of speech coding and voice quality
* Demonstrates how quality of service may be built into thenetwork and deals with dimensioning aspects, e.g. multipointcommunications and how to model call seizures.
* Explores the potential of multicast to turn an IP backbone intoan optimized broadcast medium
* Includes amply illustrated, state-of-the-art practical advicefor formulating a complete deployment strategy
A companion volume to "IP Telephony: Deploying VoIP Protocols",this book takes the reader a stage deeper into how to prepare thenetwork and exploit VoIP technology to its full potential.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Glossary.
List of Abbreviations.
1. Introduction.
1.1 The rebirth of VoIP.
1.2 Why beyond VoIP protocols?
1.3 Scope of this book.
1.4 Intended audience.
1.5 Conclusion.
1.6 References.
2. Introduction to Speech-coding Techniques.
2.1 A primer on digital signal processing.
2.2 The basic tools of digital signal processing.
2.3 Overview of speech signals.
2.4 Advanced voice coder algorithms.
2.5 Waveform coders. ADPCM ITU-T G.726.
2.6 Hybrids and analysis by synthesis (ABS) speech coders.
2.7 Codebook-excited linear predictive (CELP) coders.
2.8 Quality of speech coders.
2.9 Conclusion on speech-coding techniques and their nearfuture.
2.10 References.
2.11 Annexes.
3. Voice Quality.
3.1 Introduction.
3.2 Reference VoIP media path.
3.3 Echo in a telephone network.
3.4 Delay.
3.5 Acceptability of a phone call with echo and delay.
3.6 Conclusion.
3.7 Standards.
4. Quality of Service.
4.1 Introduction: What is QoS?
4.2 Describing a data stream.
4.3 Queuing techniques for QoS.
4.4 Signaling QoS requirements.
4.5 TheCableLabs¯® PacketCable¯TM quality-of-servicespecification: DQoS.
4.6 Improving QoS in the best effort class.
4.7 Issues with slow links.
4.8 Conclusion.
4.9 References.
4.10 Packet size annex.
5. Network Dimensioning.
5.1 Simple compressed voice flow model.
5.2 Building a network dedicated to IP telephony.
5.3 Merging data communications and voice communications on onecommon IP backbone.
5.4 Multipoint communications.
5.5 Modeling call seizures.
5.6 Conclusion.
5.7 References.
6. IP Multicast Routing.
6.1 Introduction .
6.2 When to use multicast routing.
6.3 The multicast framework.
6.4 Controling scope in multicast applications.
6.5 Building the multicast delivery tree.
6.6 Multicast-routing protocols.
6.7 The mBone.
6.8 MULTICAST issues on non-broadcast media.
6.9 Conclusion.
6.10 References .
Index.