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VOIP Voice Over IP System Overview

VoIP (Voice over IP) allows users to make voice calls using an Internet connection instead of a regular phone line. It works by converting voice signals into digital data packets that are transmitted over the Internet or IP networks. Key components of a VoIP system include encoders, packetizers, networks, depacketizers, decoders, and playout buffers. While VoIP provides advantages like lower costs and new features, challenges remain around quality of service due to packet loss and delay over best-effort IP networks. VoIP is primarily used within intranets currently but has the potential for wider commercial use.

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Muhammad Umer
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
40 views16 pages

VOIP Voice Over IP System Overview

VoIP (Voice over IP) allows users to make voice calls using an Internet connection instead of a regular phone line. It works by converting voice signals into digital data packets that are transmitted over the Internet or IP networks. Key components of a VoIP system include encoders, packetizers, networks, depacketizers, decoders, and playout buffers. While VoIP provides advantages like lower costs and new features, challenges remain around quality of service due to packet loss and delay over best-effort IP networks. VoIP is primarily used within intranets currently but has the potential for wider commercial use.

Uploaded by

Muhammad Umer
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Voice Over IP (VoIP)

Mayoor Savla
Vitaliy Zavesov
What is VoIP?
 VoIP is a term used in IP telephony to
describe a set of facilities for managing the
delivery of voice information using the
Internet Protocol.
 This means sending voice information in digital
form in discrete packets rather than in the circuit
committed protocols of the Public Switched
Telephone Network (PSTN).

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Components of a VoIP System (1)

Talk Silence

Encoder Decoder &


Concealment

talkspurt Depacketizer &


Packetizer playout buffer
silence
Network
Receiver
Sender

 Speech is an analog signal that is converted to a digital signal at


the sender using encoding schemes such as PCM.
 Signal alternates between talkspurts and silence periods
 CELP based encoders provider rate reduction
 Encoded Speech is packetized into packets of equal size

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Components of the VoIP System (2)
 Packets are sent over an IP network using a UDP
Protocol
 TCP is usually too heavy for voice applications
 A playout buffer is used to smooth playout at the
receiver
 Content of received voice packets is delivered to the
decoder which reconstructs the speech signal
 May implement various packet loss concealment techniques
to replace lost packets

01/07/21 4
Technical Advantages of VoIP
 With circuit-switched technology, capacity is allocated for the
length of the call, regardless if voice is being transported at any
time. VoIP technology uses bandwidth more efficiently
 VoIP is perceived to be open and flexible, allowing providers to
take advantage of equipment and technology at a higher level of
productivity and cost savings
 Offer customers exciting new phone features
 Unified Messaging
 Personal Portals
 Caller ID on TV set
 Point, Click and call personal directories
 Talking email
 Need a single line to talk on the phone and surf the Internet at the
same time

01/07/21 5
Business Advantages of VoIP
 Cost Reduction: There can be a real savings in long distance telephone
costs which is extremely important to most companies – especially
those with International markets
 Regionalize functions and equipment associated with delivering phone
service – and spread costs across multiple markets
 Simplification: Integrated Voice/Data Network allows more
standardization and reduces total equipment needs.
 Telecom providers can look to leverage their experience and infrastructure
(i.e., existing nationwide backbone network)
 Consolidation: Consolidation of accounting systems and combining
operations leads to efficiency
 Expand phone services into new markets (developing nations – Asia,
Latin America)
 No existing telephone/cable network and Costs are too high
 VoIP Over Satellite - Use of VSATs

01/07/21 6
Quality of Voice Issues(1)
 Transmission of voice packets over a network is subject to
packet loss due to network elements - causing degradation in
voice quality at the receiver
 Additional loss is incurred in the playout buffer at the receiver
caused by network delay jitter
 Interactivity between the communicating parties is affected by
the delays incurred in the network
 Large delay may lead to collisions whereby participants can talk in
turns
 Should be maintained below a certain maximum – NTE 150ms –
possibly shorter for conversations with stringent interactivity delays
 No control over how the packets are routed to reach their
destination

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Quality of Voice Issues (2)
 Voice Encoding affects the Quality of Speech
 Presence of echo - a major source of quality
degradation in voice communication
 Reflection of signals at the four to two wire hybrids
(combination of VoIP segment and a circuit segment)
 PC-based phones – microphone at remote end picks up the
voice played on the loud-speakers and echoes it back to the
speaker

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Packet Loss
 Loss Concealment Techniques
 Insert Silence, Noise or a previously received packet
 Interpolate, regenerate based on structure of codec and
exploit decoder state
 <5 consecutive packets
 Increase in background noise as long as percentage of
speech loss remains relatively low
 Use of loss concealment techniques to mitigate packet loss
 > ~20 consecutive packets
 Cannot be concealed due to loss of intelligibility
 Improve Network Reliability and decrease network
configuration time when failures occur

01/07/21 9
Packet Delay
 Delay variations (Jitter)
 Use of a playout buffer at the receiver to achieve a smooth
playback of speech
 Fixed Scheduling of packet playback – constant end-to end
delay on all packets.
 packets exceeding target delay are dropped
 Adaptive Scheduling of packet playback – delay constant
within a talkspurt but varies from one talkspurt to another.
 Schemes are ineffective as it is impossible to have an
apriori determination of variation in delay
 Pattern of packet loss
 Magnitude of delay variations
 Rate at which variations take place

01/07/21 10
Present Day Commercial Deployment
 Presently used in Intranets to support full-duplex,
real-time voice communications since they have
more predictable bandwidth available than public
network
 Corporations limit their Internet voice traffic to half-
duplex asynchronous applications such as voice
messaging
 Enterprise positions a VoIP device at a gateway

01/07/21 11
VoIP Gateways
 A gateway converts telephone conversation into the correct
format as data packets to enable it to travel across a data
network.
 Gateways can be used with standard phone and fax equipment,
connected to it through a PBX (Private Branch Exchange -
private telephone switchboard)
 Gateways contain such devices as signal translators, protocol
translators, fault isolators, and other devices needed to
implement VoIP communication.
 Current gateway implementations include cable, DSL, wireless,
and satellite (VSAT) gateways.

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Drawbacks of Current Internet
Telephony Solutions
 Voice Transmission are treated the same as data
transmissions and providers have little control over
the quality of the transmissions once they hit the
public Internet
 Internet Telephony does not offer emergency 911,
operator services or QoS guarantees
 Lack of standardized protocols imply that Internet
Telephony products do not interoperate with each
other or with PSTN

01/07/21 13
Potential Future Markets for VoIP
 Equipment developers and manufacturers see a window of
opportunity to innovate and compete. They are busy developing
new VoIP-enabled equipment attempting to break into the
market in time.
 3Com NBX Solutions
 Cisco Unity Bridge
 Avaya ECLIPSE product suite
 SysMaster VoiceMaster products
 Alloptic GEAR family of products
 Internet service providers see the possibility of competing with
PSTN for customers
 Users are interested in the integration of voice and data
applications in addition to cost savings

01/07/21 14
Issues for VoIP to be
commercialized
 Technology is not fully developed to the point where it can
replace the services and quality provided by PSTN
 Must be clear that VoIP is indeed cost-effective.
 Protect its investment in circuit switched telecom operations since
VoIP would be complementary to its existing technology
 Significant costs to setup networks and other pieces of transport
architecture
 There must be significantly lower total cost of operation compared
to today’s PSTN
 Service Providers are awaiting the development of the
remaining pieces of technology that will ensue quality transport
in the last mile
 Connection from homes and businesses to the IP back-bone

01/07/21 15
References
 Assessing the Quality of Voice Communications over Internet
Backbones by A. Markopoulou, F. Tobagi, M. Karam
 Is the Internet ready for VoIP by F. Tobagi, A. Markopoulou, M.
Karam
 Assessment of VoIP Service Availability in the Current Internet
by W. Jiang and H. Schulzrinne
 Whitepaper: Preparing for the Promise of Voice-over Internet
Protocol (VoIP) – Cox Communications
 http://www.nwfusion.com/research/voip.html

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