Velocity Reviews - Computer Hardware Reviews

Velocity Reviews > Newsgroups > Computing > UK VOIP > ISDN over IP

Reply
Thread Tools

ISDN over IP

 
 
Barney
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      09-02-2006
I've been using VOIP for a while now, but there is a possibility I may have
to do some ISDN audio sessions soon.

ISDN is a bit pricey for the amount of time I'd use it. Is it possible to
run an ISDN session over some kind of ata type device? So virtual ISDN here
to real ISDN somewhere else...

Cheers,

B


 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
 
PhilT
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      09-02-2006

Barney wrote:

> I've been using VOIP for a while now, but there is a possibility I may have
> to do some ISDN audio sessions soon.


presumably by this you mean "plug in some proprietary codec unit that
talks to another one at the other end"

> ISDN is a bit pricey for the amount of time I'd use it. Is it possible to
> run an ISDN session over some kind of ata type device? So virtual ISDN here
> to real ISDN somewhere else...


the short answer is probably "no". VoIP is packetised audio, ISDN is a
circuit switched system. A VoIP to VoIP call using a high bandwidth /
quality code is probably the closest thing if you can persuade the
other end to accept it.

Phil

 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
 
Tester
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      09-02-2006
Hey, check this site on VOIP, it looks fine to me. May be helps to
answer a few of your questions:

http://voiponline.bravehost.com/
Ankit Arora
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Barney wrote:
> I've been using VOIP for a while now, but there is a possibility I may have
> to do some ISDN audio sessions soon.
>
> ISDN is a bit pricey for the amount of time I'd use it. Is it possible to
> run an ISDN session over some kind of ata type device? So virtual ISDN here
> to real ISDN somewhere else...
>
> Cheers,
>
> B


 
Reply With Quote
 
R. Mark Clayton
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      09-03-2006

"Barney" <> wrote in message
news:HgmKg.12620$ .uk...
> I've been using VOIP for a while now, but there is a possibility I may
> have
> to do some ISDN audio sessions soon.
>
> ISDN is a bit pricey for the amount of time I'd use it. Is it possible to
> run an ISDN session over some kind of ata type device? So virtual ISDN
> here
> to real ISDN somewhere else...
>
> Cheers,
>
> B
>
>


In principle this should be OK, but there are two problems you would need to
worry about: -

Throughput class. Actually an issue from X.25 days, what it means is that
you have to be guaranteed a minimum amount of bandwidth an a second to
second basis.

Transit delay - all the nodes and packetisation mean that it can be a long
time before data from one end pops out at the other. Not only that but the
end station will need to keep a reasonable size buffer in case of glitches,
especially on long haul.


 
Reply With Quote
 
Tim
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      09-04-2006
Barney wrote:
> I've been using VOIP for a while now, but there is a possibility I may have
> to do some ISDN audio sessions soon.


Do you mean a wideband audio ISDN session for something like a radio
interview?

Tim
 
Reply With Quote
 
Barney
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      09-04-2006
"Tim" <> wrote in message
news:44fc4015$0$640$...
> Barney wrote:
> > I've been using VOIP for a while now, but there is a possibility I may

have
> > to do some ISDN audio sessions soon.

>
> Do you mean a wideband audio ISDN session for something like a radio
> interview?


Indeed but it won't be used that often, hence why I'd rather try something
IP based than the expense of getting ISDN installed.

B


 
Reply With Quote
 
Barney
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      09-04-2006
"R. Mark Clayton" <> wrote
>
> In principle this should be OK, but there are two problems you would need

to
> worry about: -
>
> Throughput class. Actually an issue from X.25 days, what it means is that
> you have to be guaranteed a minimum amount of bandwidth an a second to
> second basis.
>
> Transit delay - all the nodes and packetisation mean that it can be a long
> time before data from one end pops out at the other. Not only that but

the
> end station will need to keep a reasonable size buffer in case of

glitches,
> especially on long haul.


Assuming that the potential problems could be overcome, is there any
equipment on the market to achieve it?

B


 
Reply With Quote
 
R. Mark Clayton
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      09-05-2006

"Barney" <> wrote in message
news:7d0Lg.13552$. uk...
> "R. Mark Clayton" <> wrote
>>
>> In principle this should be OK, but there are two problems you would need

> to
>> worry about: -
>>
>> Throughput class. Actually an issue from X.25 days, what it means is
>> that
>> you have to be guaranteed a minimum amount of bandwidth an a second to
>> second basis.
>>
>> Transit delay - all the nodes and packetisation mean that it can be a
>> long
>> time before data from one end pops out at the other. Not only that but

> the
>> end station will need to keep a reasonable size buffer in case of

> glitches,
>> especially on long haul.

>
> Assuming that the potential problems could be overcome,


Former yes, latter not really*.

> is there any equipment on the market to achieve it?


see http://www.westlake.co.uk/voip_gateway.htm or google a bit.
>
> B
>
>



 
Reply With Quote
 
JW
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      09-05-2006
Barney wrote:
> "Tim" <> wrote in message
> news:44fc4015$0$640$...
>
>>Barney wrote:
>>
>>>I've been using VOIP for a while now, but there is a possibility I may

>
> have
>
>>>to do some ISDN audio sessions soon.

>>
>>Do you mean a wideband audio ISDN session for something like a radio
>>interview?

>
>
> Indeed but it won't be used that often, hence why I'd rather try something
> IP based than the expense of getting ISDN installed.
>


There are wideband audio codes available for IP telephony.
These give similar quality to the ones used on ISDN
terminals. A proprietary one is used by the Skype service,
which is relatively easy to set up - the studio end would
need to interface to a PC sound card.

Note that any public Internet connection is liable to
impairment, given there's no dedicated circuit like ISDN.
 
Reply With Quote
 
Tim
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      09-05-2006
Barney wrote:
> Indeed but it won't be used that often, hence why I'd rather try something
> IP based than the expense of getting ISDN installed.


All the Snom phones will support wideband audio using G.722 at 64kbs of
audio.


But I suspect that your application requires some other wideband codec
running at 128kbs.

You would need compatible equipment at both ends.


What do they have at the other end? I don't know of any IP to ISDN
gateways that will pass through G.722 audio.


If you are trying to avoid the cost having an ISDN line installed, can
you not use somebody elses? If it was for audio, I'd try a local
radio station - if audio quality is important then a sound proof room,
decent microphones etc come into play.

Tim
 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
Reply

Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
VoIP to ISDN (to use old ISDN phones over VoIP) ? Martin Maurer UK VOIP 5 11-07-2008 02:35 PM
VOIP over VPN over TCP over WAP over 3G Theo Markettos UK VOIP 2 02-14-2008 03:27 PM
pc with isdn modem not connecte isdn 1841 router with isdn module sync Cisco 0 06-05-2007 10:10 AM
Cisco ISDN to Windows RAS ISDN SkY Cisco 0 03-31-2005 08:06 AM
Can you have failover to ISDN in a bridging environment with a standalone ISDN box? BobCov Cisco 3 11-21-2003 06:11 PM



Advertisments
 



1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57