2.4. Types of PhoneSince the title of this book is Asterisk: The Future of Telephony , we would be remiss if we didn't discuss the devices that all of this technology ultimately has to interconnect: telephones !
We all know what a telephone isbut will it be the same five
As an introduction to this exciting concept, we will
2.4.1. Physical Telephones
Any physical device whose primary purpose is terminating an on-demand audio communications circuit between two points can be
This section takes a brief look at the various
2.4.1.1. Analog telephones
Analog phones have been around since the invention of the telephone. Up until about 20 years ago, all telephones were analog. Although analog phones have some technical differences in different
When a human being speaks, the vocal cords, tongue, teeth, and lips create a complex variety of sounds. The purpose of the telephone is to capture these sounds and convert them into a format suitable for transmission over wires. In an analog telephone, the transmitted signal is analogous to the sound waves produced by the person speaking. If you could see the sound waves passing from the mouth to the microphone, they would be proportional to the electrical signal you could measure on the wire.
Analog telephones are the only kind of phone that are commonly available in any retail electronics store. In the
2.4.1.2. Proprietary digital telephonesAs digital switching systems developed in the 1980s and 1990s, telecommunications companies developed digital Private Branch eXchanges (PBXs) and Key Telephone Systems (KTSs) . The proprietary telephones developed for these systems were completely dependent on the systems to which they were connected and could not be used on any other systems. Even phones produced by the same manufacturer were not cross-compatible (for example, a Nortel Norstar set will not work on a Nortel Meridian 1 PBX). The proprietary nature of digital telephones limits their future. In this emerging era of standards-based communications, they will quickly be relegated to the dustbin of history.
The handset in a digital telephone is
The
2.4.1.3. ISDN telephones
Prior to VoIP, the
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While ISDN was widely deployed by the telephone companies, many consider the standard to have been a flop, as it generally failed to live up to its promises. The high costs of implementation, recurring charges, and lack of cooperation amongst the major players
BRI was intended to service terminal devices and smaller sites (a BRI loop provides two digital circuits). While a wealth of BRI devices have been developed, BRI has largely been deprecated in favor of faster, less expensive technologies such as ADSL, cable modems, and VoIP. BRI is still very popular for use in video-conferencing equipment, as it provides a fixed bandwidth link. Also, BRI does not have the type of quality of service issues a VoIP connection might, as it is circuit-switched. BRI is still sometimes used in place of analog circuits to provide trunking. Whether or not this is a good idea depends mostly on how your local phone company prices the service, and what features it is willing to provide. 2.4.1.4. IP telephones
IP telephones are heralds of the most exciting change in the telecommunications industry. In the very near future, standards-based IP telephones will be available in retail stores.
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The revolution that IP telephones will spawn has nothing to do with a new type of wire to connect your phone to, and everything to do with giving you the power to communicate the way you want. The early-model IP phones that have been available for several years now do not represent the future of these exciting appliances. They are merely a stepping-stone; a familiar package in which to wrap a fantastic new way of thinking.
The future is far more
2.4.2. Soft Phones
A
soft phone
is a software program that provides telephone functionality on a non-telephone device, such as a PC or PDA. So how do we recognize such a
The term "soft phone" can be expected to evolve
As standards evolve and we move away from the traditional telephone and toward a multimedia communications culture, the line between soft phones and physical telephones will become blurred indeed. For example, we might purchase a communications terminal to serve as a telephone, and install a soft phone program onto it to provide the functions we
Having thus muddied the waters, the best we can do at this point is to define what the term "soft phone" will refer to in relation to this book, with the understanding that the meaning of the term can be expected to undergo a massive change over the next few years. For our purposes, we will define a soft phone: any device that runs on a personal computer,
2.4.3. Telephony AdaptorsA telephony adaptor (usually referred to as an ATA, or Analog Terminal Adaptor) can loosely be described as an end-user device that converts communications circuits from one protocol to another. Most commonly, these devices are used to convert from some digital (IP or proprietary) signal to an analog connection that you can plug a standard telephone or fax machine into. These adaptors could be described as gateways, for that is their function. However, popular usage of the term telephony gateway would probably best describe a multi-port telephony adaptor, generally with more complicated routing functions.
Telephony adaptors will be with us for as long as there is a need to connect incompatible standards and old devices to new networks. Eventually, our reliance on these devices will disappear, as did our
2.4.4. Communications Terminals
Communications terminal
is an old term that disappeared for a
First, a little history. When digital PBX systems were first released, manufacturers of these machines realized that they could not refer to their endpoints as telephonestheir proprietary nature prevented them from connecting to the PSTN. They were therefore called
terminals
, or
The renewed relevance of the term "communications terminal" has nothing to do with anything proprietaryrather, it's the
The point is simply this: we'll probably always be "phoning" each other, but will we always be using "telephones" to do so? |