What is SIP Trunking? Part 2 – How do SIP-based trunks work?

What is SIP Trunking

SIP trunking is an alternative way of connecting on premise customer equipment (such as PBX, communication gateway, etc.) to the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) or telephone network in short.

SIP trunks differ from the traditional network by leveraging internet protocols to create a flexible and cost effective highway between a customer’s PBX and the global telephony network without the need for new infrastructure. SIP trunking is built based on widely accepted Internet Protocol (IP) technology and utilizes Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) to control connection management.

As an IP based solution, SIP trunking benefits from the underlying technology, existing IP infrastructure and cost models. It offers:

  • Easy and flawless integration with other IP/SIP based applications.
  • Simplification of deployment and management of solution.
  • Rich set of new capabilities and features (Instant Messaging, Multimedia Conferencing, Presence info, etc.); high redundancy, high availability and location independence (often called disappearance of distance).
  • Lower cost of voice transport.

Switching to a SIP network allows for the deliverance of many features between the on-site PBX and the telephony network. You are no longer limited to the infrastructure you have on-site.

As the SIP trunk provides an alternative connection of customer’s PBX to the PSTN, it is totally transparent to end users, which continue to use their existing telephones and favorite business features they are so used to.

What is SIP Trunking Part 1 – The Traditional Network:

Alexander Graham Bell with a Phone

Clear telephone conversations have been around since 1876 when  Alexander Graham Bell said “Mr. Watson, come here! I want to see you!”  Since then, the technology has evolved into the digital age. What is important to note, before understanding current technology, is how it worked in the past.

If you go back to the days of the manual switchboard, it is easy to understand how the larger phone system works. In the days of the manual switchboard, there was a pair of copper wires running from every house to a central office in the middle of town. The switchboard operator sat in front of a board with one jack for every pair of wires entering the office.

When someone picked up the handset on his or her telephone, the hook switch would complete the circuit and let current flow through wires between the house and the office. This would light the light bulb above that person’s jack on the switchboard. The operator would connect his/her headset into that jack and ask who the person would like to talk to. The operator would then send a ring signal to the receiving party and wait for the party to pick up the phone. Once the receiving party picked up, the operator would connect the two people together in exactly the same way the simple intercom is connected.

When comparing this to the current age, the role of the human operator was replaced by specialized computer located in the Central Office of telecommunication company or Private Branch Exchange (PBX) in case of a business. If you are calling someone connected to the same office, then the switch simply creates a loop between your phone and the phone of the person you called. If it’s a long-distance call, then the loop between your phone and remote location is created using a long-distance network.

The costs for this network connection, however, have been extremely high. For businesses with multi-site operations, in addition to high connection costs, creation of unity between parties located in separate offices may pose a significant challenge. This leads us into the second part of this series: “How has SIP trunking changed the network?”

Website Evolution and its Impact on Business

The world’s first website turned 21 this month >> encouraging us to reflect on the internet as a whole and what it has meant for the business world.

The world’s first website was created by CERN physicist Tim Berners-Lee in the Swiss Alps. The site’s original purpose was to explain just what the internet was and explained how users could create their own websites. Berners-Lee continued on to develop a number of tools necessary for the functionality of the World Wide Web and are still used today: HyperText Transfer Protocol (HTTP) and HyperText Markup Language (HTML).

Today, the indexed web contains at least 8.09 billion indexed pages and continues to grow.

World Wide Web Size >>

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Relocating Your Business

Every business, whether in real estate, finance, or marketing will need to add and drop employees throughout their lifecycle. Many businesses will get to the point that they have run out of space in their current building and need to look elsewhere for a good location to expand to. This requires a lot of research, planning, and expenses.

Why it is complicated:
A business can either keep their headquarters location and set up a field office where a division of their team can go or move the company entirely. The first can create hurdles such as difficulty communicating and a separation between departments. If a business moves their entire office then the company is able to stay together, but there are some logistical issues that need to be dealt with.

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How Virtual Servers Save Money

When it comes to virtual servers, people think of hosting websites, storing documents, and daily tech operations. Many people, however, do not know exactly what a virtual server is. To answer that question, think of the ability to have multiple servers on a single machine. A virtual server is a server that shares computer resources with other servers. This means you don’t need to have a complete server dedicated to running the server software.

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