voip pbx
OIP Gateways Are Still Alive and Well in Many Service Provider Networks, New Report Finds The need to converge TDM and IP-based voice traffic makes VOIP gateways asterisk voip hosted pbx indispensable for many network operators, according to Light Reading Insider Although they were earmarked for obsolescence with VoIP Main Page
the arrival of softswitches, VOIP gateways continue to play a key voip pbx system role in many carrier networks and will continue to attract spending from network operators as they converge VOIP and TDM voice services, according to a new report from pbx voip vs the subscription research service Light
Reading Insider. VOIP Gateways: Surviving the Softswitch Revolution details how different classes of network operators are using carrier-class VOIP gateways in their networks voip pbx phone system and assesses those operators' long-term VOIP gateway deployment strategies and business models for delivering VOIP services to consumers, enterprises, and wholesale users. VoIP Main Page
The report analyzes VOIP network architectures pbx virtual voip and strategies now in place at eight leading carriers, including AT&T, Global Crossing, and Level 3 Communications. The report also provides a competitive analysis of the VOIP gateway pbx virtual voip vs products and
strategies of more than a VoIP Main Page
dozen equipment manufacturers, including major incumbent vendors such as Alcatel, Cisco Systems, Huawei Technologies, Lucent Technologies, and Nortel Networks, as well hosted voip pbx as VOIP specialists such as Sonus Networks. The big divide in the VOIP gateway arena appears to be in who gets to have
a product that qualifies as gateway pbx voip a carrier-class gateway -- Cisco and its competitors, or large vendors scaling back softswitches to get distribution in networks, the report notes. At the core of this fight voip versus pbx VoIP Main Page
is the desire to sell standalone VOIP gateways. In an installation such as Level 3 or Global Crossing, being the vendor of
choice could mean sales of dozens equipment pbx voip of large platforms -- a tempting opportunity for many vendors. Key findings of the report include: VOIP gateways are taking over some of the functions of softswitches, including pbx service voip routing, call building, SS7 interconnection, and feature server application support. The VoIP Main Page
core economic driver for VOIP gateways' higher
profile is VOIP traffic volume. The centralized call control offered voip pbx solution by softswitches has grown unprofitable, and thus unfashionable. Eventually, VOIP gateways will look more like large computers and less like carrier telecom equipment. VOIP Gateways: Surviving the Softswitch ip pbx voip Revolution, a VoIP Main Page
16-page report, is available as part of an annual subscription
(12 monthly issues) to Light Reading Insider, priced at $1,350. Individual reports are available for $900.
OIP Gateways Are Still Alive and Well in Many Service Provider Networks, New Report Finds The need to converge TDM and IP-based voice traffic makes VOIP gateways asterisk voip hosted pbx indispensable for many network operators, according to Light Reading Insider Although they were earmarked for obsolescence with VoIP Main Page
the arrival of softswitches, VOIP gateways continue to play a key voip pbx system role in many carrier networks and will continue to attract spending from network operators as they converge VOIP and TDM voice services, according to a new report from pbx voip vs the subscription research service Light
Reading Insider. VOIP Gateways: Surviving the Softswitch Revolution details how different classes of network operators are using carrier-class VOIP gateways in their networks voip pbx phone system and assesses those operators' long-term VOIP gateway deployment strategies and business models for delivering VOIP services to consumers, enterprises, and wholesale users. VoIP Main Page
The report analyzes VOIP network architectures pbx virtual voip and strategies now in place at eight leading carriers, including AT&T, Global Crossing, and Level 3 Communications. The report also provides a competitive analysis of the VOIP gateway pbx virtual voip vs products and
strategies of more than a VoIP Main Page
dozen equipment manufacturers, including major incumbent vendors such as Alcatel, Cisco Systems, Huawei Technologies, Lucent Technologies, and Nortel Networks, as well hosted voip pbx as VOIP specialists such as Sonus Networks. The big divide in the VOIP gateway arena appears to be in who gets to have
a product that qualifies as gateway pbx voip a carrier-class gateway -- Cisco and its competitors, or large vendors scaling back softswitches to get distribution in networks, the report notes. At the core of this fight voip versus pbx VoIP Main Page
is the desire to sell standalone VOIP gateways. In an installation such as Level 3 or Global Crossing, being the vendor of
choice could mean sales of dozens equipment pbx voip of large platforms -- a tempting opportunity for many vendors. Key findings of the report include: VOIP gateways are taking over some of the functions of softswitches, including pbx service voip routing, call building, SS7 interconnection, and feature server application support. The VoIP Main Page
core economic driver for VOIP gateways' higher
profile is VOIP traffic volume. The centralized call control offered voip pbx solution by softswitches has grown unprofitable, and thus unfashionable. Eventually, VOIP gateways will look more like large computers and less like carrier telecom equipment. VOIP Gateways: Surviving the Softswitch ip pbx voip Revolution, a VoIP Main Page
16-page report, is available as part of an annual subscription
(12 monthly issues) to Light Reading Insider, priced at $1,350. Individual reports are available for $900.
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