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Saturday, 06 September 2008
Article Index
Voice Over Internet Protocol (VoIP)
What is VoIP?
The Benefits of VoIP
The VoIP market
VoIP Solutions - Getting Started
PC-to-PC Connections
Software
Hardware
PC to Phone Connections
Phone-to-Phone Connections
VoIP Solutions - Going Further
VoIP enabling your switchboard
VoIP between switchboards
Voice-data Integration
Mobile Communications
VoIP Implementation Guide
Quality of Service
Reliability
Security
Support
VoIP Implementation Checklist
Consult
Plan
Act
Glossary
Further Help

Voice Over Internet Protocol (VoIP)

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VoIP Implementation Guide

Reliability

Next, you need to look at the robustness of the networks you are using. Losing telephony services as well as access to data could be catastrophic. Ask yourself:

  • If one or more of your servers fail, is the network able to recover in sub-second time? If not, do you need to build in redundancy and/or mirrored servers?
  • The standard ('five 9s') benchmark for telecom network availability is 99.999%, which is equivalent to less than five minutes of downtime a year. How does this compare to the network your VoIP will be working on?
  • If you intend to switch all phone calls over to VoIP, you could end up in a situation where you can't use the phones because there's a power cut. Make sure you have a backup solution.
  • You need to ensure that you always have phone access to the emergency services, if your hardware or software fails. Landline and mobile phone service providers guarantee access to 999 services, but internet telephony providers are not currently bound by the same regulations.
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