Voip Systems - A Short Review
Voip hardware are available from many carriers and range from simple vop phones to complex routers and controllers. VoIP is not really a new concept and is now available on the market for many years, it’s no more in testing mode. People don’t know that much about a Voip solutions. What are they, how do they work? Here is some information that can help.
Voip solutions can be classified in three general categories:
<ul> <li>end stations (such as phones), </li> <li>and controllers.</li> <li>gateways and routers, </li> </ul>
Like everything else in the IT domain, every category has a specific function that it performs. And if you combine all the functions you will get a complete VoIP system.
VoIP controllers
VoIP controllers, also called IP PBXs, manage the VoIP network. IP PBX controllers are PC-based, running a standard OS (such as Microsoft Windows, Linux or Sun Solaris, but very different) with additional software to control the VoIP systems. Plus they are performing all the functions of a traditional PBX. These systems can provide APIs to extend vendor-provided or user-written features and functionality.
Hardware and software vop phones
There are two types of vop phones: hardware and software.
<ul> <li> A hardware phone is a physical device, very similar to your common phone; it has a handset, dialpad, etc. The only thing that is different from your ordinary phone is that it connects to an Ethernet network rather than a telephone network. vop phones are built with all the necessary hardware (and software) to digitize your voice (i.e., codecs) as well as setup and make calls (i.e., signaling and transport). <li> Software-only phones, or “soft” phones, use the PC’s capabilities to communicate with other PC’s over the Internet, by using the PC’s sound card, CPU and network card as part of the phone’s hardware, and thus, enable a PC to become an IP phone. </ul>
VoIP gateway
With so many options available today, gateways are also capable of transcoding (changing the signal from one codec version to another so that the voip device can communicate with the rest of the network). A VoIP gateway is a voip device that connects the VoIP network to your public telephone network (PSTN). For example, a gateway uses G.729 codec, while your PTSN network uses a G.711 codec.
VoIP Routers
Routers are inter-network equipments that help a LAN connect to a WAN; therefore the router’s capability to ensure correctly handled high-priority traffic is very important. Since WAN speeds have generally less bandwidth than a LAN, proper packet queuing and priorization is in order to ensure good voice quality across the path.
Jim Francisto
reverse cell phone lookup






