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It could be quite
intimidating for the new person to Voice Over Internet Protocol (VoIP)
with most articles or literature using significant amounts of jargon.
This article will provide an overview of the terminology used in the
VoIP arena but will not go into the actual detail of how VoIP works.
Other articles by this author have been written in relation to basics of
VoIP.
The first crucial term is VoIP which is the acronym for Voice
Over Internet Protocol or Voice Over IP being the ability to make
telephone calls over the internet. Other relevant terms are included
below along with a layman's explanation:
ATA - Analog Telephone Adaptor - A
device which converts analog telephone signal into a digital format for
transmission over the Internet.
Codec - A
compression/decompression algorithm used in IP telephony.
Ethernet - Used for Local Area
Networks (LANs) and is a packet based transmission protocol.
PSTN - Public Switched Telephone
Network - that is the standard landline based phone system.
QoS - Quality of Service - Refers
to performance of the transmission system. For example is there any echo
or delay.
SIP - Session Initiation Protocol
- An application layer protocol that manages multimedia communications
sessions.
VoIP Phone - Telephone device that
looks like an ordinary telephone that connects to the Public Switched
Telephone Network (PSTN) however has an Ethernet port to allow
connection to a TCP/IP computer network.
So next time you are reading some literature or articles on VoIP
where the writers or authors do not define the acronyms, you will know a
little more about what exactly they are trying to say. Whilst there are
obviously many more acronyms and jargon associated with VoIP,
this article provides a starting point.
Article Information
by Andrew Johnson
source: goarticles.com
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