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Sascha Kylau

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What is VoIP and how can it effect your business? Sascha Kylau Business Development Manager, Central Station & Communication Products - Global Sascha Kylau Business ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Sascha Kylau


1
What is VoIP and how can it effect your business?
  • Sascha Kylau
  • Business Development Manager, Central Station
    Communication Products - Global

2
What is VoIP?
  • Voice over IP or VoIP is a term used in IP
    telephony for a set of facilities that use the
    Internet Protocol (IP) to deliver voice
    information
  • In general, this means sending voice information
    in digital form in discrete packets rather than
    in the traditional circuit-committed protocols of
    the public switched telephone network (PSTN)
  • A major advantage of VoIP and Internet telephony
    is that they avoid the tolls charged by ordinary
    telephone service

3
Different Types of VoIP
  • ATT/Verizon IP Flex circuits (IP T1s)
  • Verizon FIOS (Fiber to the premises)
  • Packet Switched Networks
  • UK (CN21), Spain, Canada
  • Cable (Digital Phone) Facilitated VoIP
  • Internet VoIP (Vonage) Non-Facilitated VoIP

4
ATT/Verizon IP Flex Circuits
  • IP Flex T1
  • IP Flex T1 is specifically designed for small
    businesses that are looking for a cost-effective
    way to carry voice and data over the same
    connection and require only standard voice
    telephony features.
  • Can be custom built with specific features and
    codecs

5
Verizon FiOS
  • Fiber circuit right to the premise
  • Get bundled service (TV, Internet, Phone)
  • Digital to the outside of the house
  • Software upgrades are routinely performed (No
    service during this time)

6
Packet Switched Networks
  • Some countries are switching their entire phone
    network to an IP backbone and switches
  • UK (CN21)
  • Spain
  • Canada (Bell Canada)

7
Cable Digital Phone
  • Cable companies have their own voice over data
    product
  • They call it digital phone
  • They convert voice in to data packets using their
    own proprietary protocol (DOCSIS)
  • Data Over Cable Service Interface Specification
    is an international standard developed by
    CableLabs

8
Internet VoIP
  • There are many different types of VoIP
    applications that use the Internet
  • There are peer to peer PC applications such as
    Skype
  • Applications that use MTAs such as Vonage
  • IP PBX applications that use the
    Internet/Intranet to make virtual extensions
    available to companies with multiple offices
    without having to buy a switch for each office

9
Facilitated VoIP
The above figure shows the communication path
through a facilitated Voice over IP provider. In
this example the alarm panel has a POTS
connection from the MTA. The MTA then converts
the call into IP packets and sends the
information across the provider network through a
cable modem to a server that is connected to an
SS7 switch. The call is then converted back to
analog and sent across the public switch
telephone network to the receiver in the central
station.
10
Non-Facilitated VoIP
The above figure shows the communication path
through a Non-facilitated Voice over IP provider.
In this example the alarm panel has a POTS
connection from the MTA. The MTA then converts
the call into IP packets and sends the
information through the DSL modem to the Internet
using and then onto the VoIP provider network to
a server that is connected to an SS7 switch. The
call is then converted back to analog and sent
across the public switch telephone network to the
receiver in the central station.
11
What is a Codec?
  • Codec
  • A codec is a device or program capable of
    encoding and/or decoding a digital data stream or
    signal.
  • Codecs are used to convert an analog voice signal
    to digitally encoded version.
  • Codecs vary in sound quality, the bandwidth
    required, the computational requirements etc.
    There many different types of codes that encode
    analog signals such as G711, G722, G723, G726,
    G729 etc.

12
How can a Codec effect alarm transmission?
  • There are many different types of codecs and
    their characteristics differ as well for example
  • G.711
  • G.711 is an ITU-T standard for audio compounding.
  • It is primarily used in telephony
  • G.711 emulates the circuit switched network and
    works best with alarm communication
  • G.711 also uses the most bandwidth of any of the
    codecs which also makes it the least cost
    effective

13
How can a Codec effect alarm transmission?
  • G.729
  • G.729 is mostly used in Voice over IP (VoIP)
    applications for its low bandwidth requirement.
  • G.729 is an audio data compression algorithm for
    voice that compresses voice audio in chunks of 10
    milliseconds.
  • Music or tones such as DTMF or fax tones can only
    be transported reliably with this codec using the
    RTP payload for DTMF Digits, Telephony Tones, and
    Telephony Signals as specified in RFC 2833, and
    thus use G.711 or out-of-band methods to
    transport these signals

14
Alternate Alarm Transmission Methods
  • GSM
  • GPRS (DSC, Honeywell)
  • SMS (Tellular, Uplink)
  • Radio
  • Licensed/ Unlicensed (AES, KP Electronics)
  • Internet/Intranet
  • TCP/IP (Honeywell, GE)
  • UDP/IP (DSC, Bosch, DMP)
  • VOIP Gateway products (NextAlarm.com, LoBeen
    etc.)

15
Using IP for Alarm Signaling
  • Pros for using IP
  • Supervision of an alarm panel can be accomplished
    when using IP signaling
  • Higher level of security
  • Alarms can be received much quicker when using IP
    for communication than over traditional POTS
  • Much faster upload/download of the panel
  • Cons for using IP
  • If there is a power outage then a UPS on all
    network equipment that the communicator is linked
    to is required
  • The premise connection to the Internet/Intranet
    is only as good as the ISP being used

16
Using Digital Cellular or Radio for Alarm
Signaling
  • Pros for using Cellular
  • Can be run off of a battery so it will work
    during power outages
  • Not effected by phone line cuts
  • Cons for using Cellular
  • Signal strength and coverage maybe an issue in
    certain areas
  • Additional Cost
  • Not conducive for all building environments and
    may require an external antenna

17
Using VoIP Gateway Technologies
  • Pros for using VoIP Gateway products
  • Use existing panel in the premise
  • Acts like a phone line
  • Upload/download the panel
  • Cons for using VoIP Gateway products
  • Cost
  • Power outages
  • Reliability of ISP
  • Added potential point of failure (Clearing
    center/software receiver)

18
Wrap Up
  • The Phone networks are changing
  • Increasing amount of technology options for
    sending alarms
  • POTS communication will not always work

19
Questions?
20
Glossary
  • VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol)
  • A technology for transmitting ordinary telephone
    calls over the Internet using packet linked
    routes.
  • Internet
  • The vast collection of inter-connected networks
    that all use the TCP/IP protocols and that
    evolved from the ARPANET of the late 60's and
    early 70's. The Internet now (July 1995) connects
    roughly 60,000 independent networks into a vast
    global internet
  • Intranet
  • A private network inside a company or
    organization that uses the same kinds of software
    that you would find on the public Internet, but
    only for internal use
  • NOC (Network Operations Center)
  • NOC is the organization responsible for the
    day-to-day operations of the Internet',
    telecommunications or cable company component
    networks
  • ISP (Internet Service Provider)
  • A business that provides subscriber-based access
    to the Internet. Subscribers can be individuals
    or businesses. ISPs operate at the fourth or
    lowest level of the Internet.
  • Packet Switching
  • A means of economically sending and receiving
    data over multiple network channels. Packet
    switching takes data and breaks it down into
    packets-small bundles of information containing
    the payload and routing information. The packets
    are then transmitted to the receiving end, where
    they are converted back to the original data

21
Glossary
  • Circuit Switching
  • In telecommunications, a circuit switching
    network is one that establishes a fixed bandwidth
    circuit (or channel) between nodes and terminals
    before the users may communicate, as if the nodes
    were physically connected with an electrical
    circuit. The bit delay si constant during the
    connection, as opposed to packet switching, where
    packet queues may cause varying delay
  • Signaling System 7 (SS7)
  • The basis for routing traffic with out-of-bound
    signaling. SS7 in itself is not a network
    service offering, but rather the underlying
    infrastructure upon which many existing and
    proposed offerings are based.
  • Codec
  • A codec is a device or program capable of
    encoding and/or decoding a digital data stream or
    signal. Codecs are used to convert an analog
    voice signal to digitally encoded version.
    Cedecs vary in sound quality, the bandwidth
    required, the computational requirements etc.
  • ITU (International Telecommunication Union)
  • Established to standardize and regulate
    international radio and telecommunications. It
    was founded as the International Telegraph Union
    in Paris on May 17, 1865. Its main tasks include
    standardization, allocation of radio spectrum,
    and organizing interconnection arrangements
    between different countries to allow
    international phone calls
  • RFC (Request for Comments)
  • In computer network engineering, a request for
    comments is a memorandum published by the
    Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) describing
    methods, behaviors, research, or innovations
    applicable to the working of the Internet and
    Internet-connected systems.

22
Glossary
  • Cellular
  • In Wireless communications, cellular refers most
    basically to the structure of the wireless
    transmission networks which are comprised of
    cells or transmission sites.
  • GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications)
  • GSM is the most popular standard for mobile
    phones in the world. Its promoter, the GSM
    association, estimates that 82 of the global
    mobile market uses the standard
  • GPRS (General Packet Radio Service)
  • GPRS is a packet oriented mobile data service
    available to users of (GSM) mobile phones. It
    provides data rates from 56 up to 114 Kbits'.
  • SMS (Short Message Service)
  • SMS is a communications protocol allowing the
    interchange of short text messages between mobile
    telephone devices
  • AMPS
  • The analog cellular mobile phone system in North
    and South America and more than 35 other
    countries. AMPS is the cellular equivalent of
    POTS.
  • Radio
  • A communications device allowing the wireless
    transmission through space of audible signals
    encoded in electromagnetic waves in the
    approximate frequency range from 10 kilohertz to
    300,000 megahertz.
  • Clearing House
  • an organization that exists to gather information
    from a variety of sources and distribute it to
    individuals and organisations according to their
    different needs
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