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Voice Over Internet Protocol (VoIP) |
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IP Telephone for Home & Business
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Internet telephony isn't a new technology — it's been around for many years in one form or another, but only fairly recently has it become reliable and ubiquitous enough to be a serious choice for business.
While Internet telephony was once an oddity often plagued for garbled and dropped calls, these days a well-planned and implemented VoIP system can provide call quality and reliability that rivals mobile phone or landline calls. |
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How VoIP Works
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To understand how VoIP, short for Voice over Internet Protocol, works, it's helpful to compare it to how conventional phone calls operate. When you place a "regular" phone call using the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN), also known as Plain Old Telephone Service (POTS) you use what's called circuit-switched telephony.
This system works by setting up a dedicated channel , (or circuit) between two points for the duration of the call.
These telephony systems are based on copper wires carrying analog voice data over the dedicated circuits.
This is in contrast to newer Internet telephony networks based on digital technologies. VoIP, in contrast to PSTN, uses what is called packet-switched telephony.
Using this system, the voice information travels to its destination in countless individual network packets across the Internet.
This type of communication presents special TCP/IP challenges because the Internet wasn't really designed for the kind of real-time communication a phone call represents. |
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2008
Soft Launch for Company 1st solution in ADSL
with a partnership with TE Data.
2009 New Partnership with NOL and
Microsoft.
2010
Partnership with ETISALAT smart and HP
Partnership.
2011
Hard Launch for Easy2Connect Web Solutions
module and New Partnership with Vodafone. |
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