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What Is It | Benefits |
Scenarios | Architecture |
Future
What is Internet Telephony?
Definition: Internet telephony (IPT) is transport
of telephone calls over the Internet, no matter whether
traditional telephony devices, multimedia PCs or dedicated
terminals take part in the calls and no matter whether
the calls are entirely or only partially transmitted
over the Internet.
What is Internet Telephony Good
For?
The most significant benefit of IPT and driver
of its evolution is money-saving and easy implementation
of innovative services:
- In the future, Internet Telephony Service Providers
(ITSP) may use a single infrastructure for providing
both, Internet access and Internet telephony. Only
data-oriented switches could be deployed for
switching data as well as packetized voice. Multiplexing
data and voice could also result in better bandwidth
utilization than in today's over-engineered voice-or-nothing
links. Not only the providers, but also their
clients will profit of lower costs eventually.
- Now, customers may take advantage of flat Internet
rating vs. hierarchical PSTN rating and save money
while letting their long-distance calls be routed
over Internet. This is especially true in Europe,
where the prices of long-distance calls are still
higher than in US. But: according to some estimations,
the prices of the traditional and the Internet telephony
will equalize together with the convergence of quality
of services provided by them.
- The IPT users may also profit of its software-oriented
nature: software solutions may be easily extended
and integrated with other services and applications,
e.g. whiteboarding, electronic calendar, or WWW. Deployment
of new IP telephony services requires significantly
lower investment in terms of time and money than in
the traditional PSTN environment.
But: The wide business deployment is still hindered
by lower quality of voice over IP, particularly by higher
delay and jitter. Also many technical aspects of accounting,
billing, charging , roaming etc. remain open yet.
Internet Telephony Scenarios
The IPT usage scenarios are commonly classified
by the type of devices terminating an Internet
call. Because there may be either a PSTN device or a
data-oriented terminal on each side of a call, there
are 4 generic classes. Note, that although "PC" is a
well established term, any device capable of transmitting
voice over data network may apply in this context. See
for example the dedicated device Aplio/phone.
| Caller's Terminal |
Callee's Terminal |
Notes |
Costs Paid By Caller |
| PC |
PC |
This class is attractive especially
for private users who already have an Internet access
and an audio-capable PC. Necessary software is available
for free . This pure-IP scenario is likely to take
advantage of integration with other Internet services,
such as WWW, instant messaging, E-mail, etc. |
Costs of ownership and maintenance of the hardware
(PC with modem and sound or a dedicated device)
and software (IPT software
is often provided for free).
Costs of Internet access (incl. the local call).
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| PC |
telephone
(POTS/ISDN/GSM...) |
This is an extension of the previous
class in that the PC-callers may reach also the
PSTN callees. A gateway converting the Internet
call into a PSTN call has to be used and located
as near to the callee as possible to minimize the
price for the gateway-to-callee connection. This
scenario is commercially provided by
gateway operators like
iConnect. |
Costs of ownership and maintenance of the hardware
(PC with modem/dedicated device) and software
(IPT software
is often provided for free).
Costs of Internet access (incl. the local call).
Costs charged by the gateway operator. (~ 5-12
cents per minute to the U.S. in August 98) The
costs charged by the operator are determined
mainly by the costs of the call placed from the
gateway to the callee.
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telephone
(POTS/ISDN/GSM...) |
telephone
(POTS/ISDN/GSM...) |
This class is attractive for
those who want to save on long-distance call and
do not have/want to use a PC. For example, mobile
phone users certainly prefer to carry only the mobile
phone without any additional boxes. The call has
to pass two gateways: GSTN-to-Internet and Internet-to-GSTN.
This solution has been comercialy provided by gateway
operators like AccessPower,
DeltaThree.
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Costs charged by both gateway operators.(~
7-17 cents per minute to the U.S. in August 98)
The costs charged by the destination gateway are
determined mainly by the costs of the call placed
from the gateway to the callee.
Local Call Costs
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telephone
(POTS/ISDN/GSM...) |
PC |
This class is useful for those
who want to reach Internet users with an ordinary
telephone. Telenor
provides this service commercially in Norway under
the name "Interfon". |
Costs charged by a gateway operator.
Local Call Costs
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Architecture
Architecture:
the Internet telephony systems are composed of these
elements:
- end devices;
these may be either traditional telephones (analog/GSM/ISDN/...),
audio-equipped personal computers, or single use appliances
- gateways;
if a traditional telephone is used at either calling
side the call (i.e. its transmission format, signaling
procedures, audio codecs) has to be translated to/from
the format for transport over Internet; this is the
task of the gateways
- gatekeepers/proxies;
the gatekeepers/proxies provide centralized call management
functions; they may provide call admission control,
bandwidth management, address translation, authentication,
user location, etc.
- multipoint
conference units; these manage multiparty conferences
The components may be implemented
as hardware or software and may be integrated into single
units optionally.
They communicate
with each other over signaling and voice-transporting
protocols. To ensure interoperability between
products of different vendors, standardization bodies
have elaborated standards for both classes of
protocols. See the section "Players
and ..." for more details.
Future
Making predictions is difficult and
it belongs to the competence area of oracles, magicians
and marketing managers. But let us at least summarize
some important factors.
The law of supply and demand works
also in the Internet telephony. An article has been
published by Communications
Industry Researchers, which claimed the prices of
the traditional and the Internet telephony will equalize
as soon as the quality of the both standards will do
so. We believe, that the most significant obstacles
in reaching the equilibrium are the still unsatisfactory
voice quality and the lack of means
of commercial deployments. Both of them are under
investigation. The voice quality will increase with
special QoS means and generic increasing bandwidth.
The means of commercial deployments are being designed
by both, commercial and academic world. For example,
the gateway discovery architecture which enables open
market of gateway operators is being proposed by IETF.
IPT may also become a subject to government
regulations. Such efforts are very welcome to traditional
telcos - a good example is the action brought by Czech
Telecom against Paegas'
"Internet call" service. According to Bruce
Jacobs, some governments intend to regulate
even the PC-based telephony (India, Pakistan), other
have indicated they will treat IPT as simple resale
(Canada) and others have recognized that action is premature
(see the decision by EU
and FCC).
Look at the VON Coalition's pages
for additional information on the regulations.
Another legal issue is wiretapping.
A pretty contraversial discussion about the justification
and standardization of wiretapping took place on the
Raven
mailing list of IETF. Eventually, IAB and IESG issued
a RFC 2804
which justifies why IETF does not include such a functionality
in its standards-track.
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