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To: Techplayer who wrote (7138)4/10/1999 4:29:00 PM
From: Jorj X Mckie  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 21876
 
I think that the acquisition to which you refer is the Lightspeed acquisition.

Elmatador,

CSCO is working on SS7 with their acquisition of Summa Four last year. I am not certain of the progress made. Summa four was in Manchester, NH.

Brian



To: Techplayer who wrote (7138)4/11/1999 1:11:00 PM
From: The Phoenix  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 21876
 
A touch more perspective on the subject of SS7 and it's importance.

From Network World on 3/22/99

nwfusion.com

MINNEAPOLIS - The Internet Engineering Task
Force (IETF) is working on specifications that will
ensure IP networks of the future will be able to handle
voice calls as reliably as today's public switched
telephone network (PSTN).

At last week's Minneapolis meeting, IETF members
debated whether to preserve the PSTN's native
signaling protocols, including SS7, or create new IP
control protocols.

Specifically, the Signal Transport Working Group
struggled with how to send SS7 signals over IP
networks, while the Media Gateway Control
Work-ing Group heard arguments for a new protocol
that could let media devices, such as PBXs, interact
without PSTN signaling. SS7 is a switch-to-switch
protocol that lets telephone switches set up calls,
manage circuits and perform intelligent network
functions.

Cisco and other router vendors would have customers
believe that widespread voice-over-IP service is just
around the corner. But telco equipment makers, such
as Nortel Networks, are quick to point out that every
company has a long row to hoe to get to that point.
Therefore, interim standards are needed for IP
networks and the PSTN to communicate with each
other.

The IETF's Signal Transport Working Group is
developing a standard that will let IP switches or
gateways understand SS7.

The Signal Transport Work-ing Group is developing
protocols that will let two switches that are
transporting voice traffic over an IP network
communicate, says Scott Bradner, transport area
director for the IETF. "It's a way to replace the wires
in the phone network with IP connectivity," he says. In
the long run, this is the IETF's goal.

"Some people would like to see SS7 go on forever,"
says Fred Baker, IETF chair and Cisco engineer:
"That's very unlikely."

The IETF's Media Gateway Control Working Group
is operating under the assumption that SS7 networks
will morph into pure IP. The pending media gateway
control protocol defines how media devices should
control packets.

The media gateway control protocol, for which two
drafts were presented at the meeting, will determine
how calls are manipulated and forwarded. For
instance, if a company is supporting voice over its
extranet, those calls would pass through a gateway
that supports the media gateway control protocol.

The protocol gives the device the ability to determine
if a call should be sent over the company's intranet,
over the Internet or over the PSTN. The working
group will define its own signaling protocol specific to
IP.

Both working groups say their specifications will be
ready by year-end, but multinetwork interoperability is
still 18 to 24 months off, says Krishna Sai, a network
software engineer at IETF member ECI Telecom in
Jacksonville, Fla.

Service providers are not only depending on the IETF
for voice-over-IP standards; they are looking to the
International Telecommunication Union and vendor
driven forums such as iNow to address billing and
voice traffic exchange specifications that promise
interoperability.

PSINet, one of only a few ISPs offering a
business-oriented voice-over-IP service, is looking for
interoperable settlement systems so multiple carriers
can handle voice traffic.

Today, PSINet only offers its customers an intranet,
PBX-to-PBX voice-over-IP service: The ISP says it's
the only service that can be supported with strong
service guarantees. As technology and standards
develop, PSINet plans to expand its PSIVoice
service offerings.