There are many companies with branch offices scattered across the country who already have data circuits in place. Why not use those circuits, which in many cases are data T1's, for sharing both voice and data? Long distance rates are so low now-a-days, it is hard to justify voip for that reason alone anymore. But voip on circuits between branch offices allows the capability of uniform dialling plans, user extension between branch offices, traffic management, access to messaging systems, etc, etc. For corporate communcations, when mixed with other technologies, voip is a very powerful tool. And in some contexts, converts in the realm of IP Telephony. Ray Burkholder
-----Original Message----- From: Jim Cabe [mailto:tex@dcne.net] Sent: February 10, 2003 15:31 To: Ray Burkholder Cc: Charles Youse; Bill Woodcock; nanog@nanog.org Subject: RE: VoIP QOS best practices
Its better to use TDM when trying to share a line anyway. VOIP is only practical for a mobile work force.
On Mon, 10 Feb 2003, Ray Burkholder wrote:
QoS is important on T1 circuits and makes voice higher
can even be done on sub T1 circuits with excellent results. In this regard, there are some additional packet sizing and fragementation issues to worry about in order to make voice packet timing constant, but nothing impossible to over-come. There are commonly accepted industry practices for this. Old hat for many practitioners in the Voip world.
Ray Burkholder
-----Original Message----- From: Charles Youse [mailto:cyouse@register.com] Sent: February 10, 2003 14:09 To: Bill Woodcock Cc: nanog@nanog.org Subject: RE: VoIP QOS best practices
My main concern is that some of the sites that will be tied with VoIP have only T-1 data connectivity, and I don't want a surge in traffic to degrade the voice quality, or cause disconnections or what-have-you. People are more accustomed to data networks going down; voice networks going down will make people shout.
C.
-----Original Message----- From: Bill Woodcock [mailto:woody@pch.net] Sent: Monday, February 10, 2003 1:05 PM To: Charles Youse Cc: nanog@nanog.org Subject: RE: VoIP QOS best practices
> That doesn't seem to make a lot of sense - is it that QoS doesn't work as advertised?
That's generally true as well. But why would you need it? What's the advantage to be gained in using QoS to throw away
priority. Voice packets, when the
packets don't need to be thrown away?
> As someone who is looking to deploy VoIP in the near future this is of particular interest.
Go ahead and deploy it. It's easy and works well. It certainly doesn't need anything like QoS to make it work.
-Bill