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to integrate telephone systems and data networks but the functionality of
VoIP in this area far exceeds anything previously developed. For example,
when a caller leaves a voice-mail message for a VoIP user the voice mail can
be automatically digitized as an audio file, attached to an email and sent
to the user. A user can listen to and/or file the voice-mail message on their
personal computer or other receiving device.
Another example is a customer using a company’s web page to obtain cus-
tomer service; if customers decide that they need to talk with a customer ser-
vice agent, they can do so by just clicking on an icon and instantly engaging
in a voice-to-voice customer service chat.
Many VoIP telephones are capable of being easily relocated. Relocation
only requires network or Internet access. Phones connected to an organiza-
tion’s VoIP system can move from an office to a home or to a hotel room
through the use of a virtual private network (VPN) established over an
Internet connection. The VoIP system can track where the VoIP telephone
is and forward calls, providing the appropriate calling privileges and
features with the telephone always operating in the same manner as if it were
in the office.
Issues related to VoIP are primarily concerned with the ability to deliver
voice transmission in real time. Conventional TDM systems essentially estab-
lish a circuit between the caller and the party being called with the circuit
reserved solely for that particular voice call. The VoIP world is different.
VoIP encodes voice into data packets. Data packets are then transmitted
over the network in which the data packets compete for network resources
and bandwidth. The competition of the data packets for network resources
can produce delays in the transmission and even loss of or errors in the data
packets. The result of such effects is degradation of voice transmission. To
compensate, the data network must provide a certain “quality of service”
(QoS) for the voice transmission. This is accomplished by the data network
determining which packets are for voice transmission and prioritizing them,
then dedicating network resources through hardware or software for the
voice packets.
VoIP technology essentially takes voice (an analog signal) and encodes it to a
digital signal to transmit over the network. You hear the person you are conver-
sing with through the reverse process, which is the digital signal decoded into
analog. The signal is encoded and decoded and compressed through software
or hardware called a “codec,” and then packetized in IP or Ethernet packets.
Encoding analog to digital signals occurs at different rates, trading off the
quality of the voice signal with the network bandwidth to carry the signal.
The International Telecommunication Union’s G.711 is the most widely used
standard, compressing voice at 64 Kbps.


Voice Networks and Distributed Antenna Systems 115
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