VoIP technology uses the Internet's packet-switching capabilities to
provide phone service. VoIP has several advantages over circuit switching.
For example, packet switching allows several telephone calls to occupy the
amount of space occupied by only one in a circuit-switched network. Using PSTN, that 10-minute phone call we talked about earlier consumed 10 full
minutes of transmission time at a cost of 128 Kbps. With VoIP, that same
call may have occupied only 3.5 minutes of transmission time at a cost of
64 Kbps, leaving another 64 Kbps free for that 3.5 minutes, plus an
additional 128 Kbps for the remaining 6.5 minutes. Based on this simple
estimate, another three or four calls could easily fit into the space used
by a single call under the conventional system. And this example doesn't
even factor in the use of data compression, which further reduces the size
of each call.
Let's say that you and your friend both have service through a VoIP
provider. You both have your analog phones hooked up to the
service-provided ATAs. Let's take a look at that typical telephone
call, but this time using VoIP over a packet-switched network:
- You pick up the receiver, which sends a signal to the ATA.
- The ATA receives the signal and sends a dial tone. This lets you know that you have a connection
to the Internet.
- You dial the phone number of the party you wish to talk to. The
tones are converted by the ATA into digital data and temporarily stored.
- The phone number data is sent in the form of a request to your
VoIP company's call processor. The call processor checks it to ensure that it is
in a valid format.
- The call processor determines to whom to map the phone
number. In mapping, the phone number is translated to an IP address. The soft switch connects the two devices on either end of the call.
On the other end, a signal is sent to your friend's ATA, telling it to ask the
connected phone to ring.
- Once your friend picks up the phone, a session is
established between your computer and your friend's computer. This means that
each system knows to expect packets of data from the other system. In the
middle, the normal Internet infrastructure handles the call as if it were e-mail
or a Web page. Each system must use the same protocol to communicate. The
systems implement two channels, one for each direction, as part of the session.
-
You talk for a period of time. During the conversation, your system and your
friend's system transmit packets back and forth when there is data to be sent.
The ATAs at each end translate these packets as they are received and convert
them to the analog audio signal that you hear. Your ATA also keeps the circuit
open between itself and your analog phone while it forwards packets to and from
the IP host at the other end.
- You finish talking and hang up the receiver.
- When you hang up, the circuit is closed between your phone and the ATA. The ATA sends
a signal to the soft switch connecting the call, terminating the session.
Probably one of the most compelling advantages of packet switching is that data
networks already understand the technology. By migrating to this technology,
telephone networks immediately gain the ability to communicate the way computers
do.
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