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1. Introduction

The possibility of voice communications traveling over the Internet, rather than the PSTN, first became a reality in February 1995 when Vocaltec, Inc. introduced its Internet Phone software. Designed to run on a 486/33-MHz (or higher) personal computer (PC) equipped with a sound card, speakers, microphone, and modem (see Figure 1), the software compresses the voice signal and translates it into IP packets for transmission over the Internet. This PC-to-PC Internet telephony works, however, only if both parties are using Internet Phone software.

Figure 1. PC Configuration for VoIP

Figure 1

In the relatively short period of time since then, Internet telephony has advanced rapidly. Many software developers now offer PC telephony software but, more importantly, gateway servers are emerging to act as an interface between the Internet and the PSTN (see Figure 2). Equipped with voice-processing cards, these gateway servers enable users to communicate via standard telephones.

Figure 2. Topology of PC-to-Phone

Figure 2

Figure 3. Sequence of VoIP Connection: PC-to-Phone

Figure 3

A call goes over the local PSTN network to the nearest gateway server, which digitizes the analog voice signal, compresses it into IP packets, and moves it onto the Internet for transport to a gateway at the receiving end (see Figure 4). With its support for computer-to-telephone calls, telephone-to-computer calls and telephone-to-telephone calls, Internet telephony represents a significant step toward the integration of voice and data networks.

Figure 4. Sequence of VoIP Connection

Figure 4

Originally regarded as a novelty, Internet telephony is attracting more and more users because it offers tremendous cost savings relative to the PSTN. Users can bypass long-distance carriers and their per-minute usage rates and run their voice traffic over the Internet for a flat monthly Internet-access fee.

Figure 5. PC-to-Phone Connection

Figure 5

Figure 6. Phone-to-Phone Connection

Figure 6

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TABLE OF CONTENTS:
Definition and Overview
1 Introduction
2 Intranet Telephony Paves the Way for Internet Telephony
3 Technical Barriers
4 Standards
5 Future of Voice-over-Internet Protocol (VoIP) Telephony
Self-Test
Correct Answers
Glossary
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FonoSIP.com. We provide Internet phone service with free Internet calling and unlimited US, Canada, Europe and World plans. We offer prepaid phone service using our voice over IP system and an analog telephone adaptor. The solutions are designed for home phone service, business phone service, call shops and cyber cafes. FonoSIP.com supports Xten / Counterpath SIP softphones and Internet telephony equipment such as Sipura 2000, Sipura 3000, Cisco 186, Linksys PAP2 and RT31P2. D-Link DVG-1402SL, UTstarcom F3000. We also support Asterisk PBX and offer VoIP PBX software for businesses, resellers, ITSPs and campus applications.