The rise of SIP and IMS
- 19 July, 2005 10:30
- Comments
Today we'll continue our retrospective on the past five years in the world of convergence, this time looking at what has evolved in the core network. When we started this newsletter five years ago, we defined one of the faces of convergence as "network convergence" - defining it as the integration of data and voice networks' transport and signaling infrastructures in a carrier's core network.
While it was pretty clear back then that the core was going be running on an optical infrastructure with an IP overlay, we weren't quite sure how the many demands of multimedia session control would be provided. Although Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) work had begun in the IETF in 1999, since then SIP has clearly emerged as the protocol of choice for VoIP.
What we didn't foresee was the introduction of IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) as an emerging architecture to provide further session control. IMS has its roots in the wireless world, and was created as a concept in 2000. IMS was designed to give 3G wireless providers a more effective way to offer applications and content services in multi-vendor, open-standards networks.
It hasn't taken long for both wireless and wireline service providers to embrace IMS. We expect that wireline operators will actually be among the heaviest users of IMS, because as they move forward to offer applications-level support (running on IP) they will have many millions of simultaneous IP sessions to control.
Another emerging trend is for fixed and mobile networks to converge. While mobile networks still carry more voice than data traffic, broadband access to mobile devices is evolving, and this evolution will encourage more data applications on mobile networks. In the next few years mobile networks will have to transition to an IP-centric core and will look more like today's fixed-line core networks.
The bottom line: core networks have undergone significant change in the last five years, enabling more efficient multimedia services support.
Nominations for the 2012 ARN IT Industry Awards open on Tuesday, June 12.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email ARN
- Follow ARN on twitter
- Aberdeen Group: Building Business Resilience Through Active Archive
- Red Light In the Control Centre Saves Hours of Chaos
- Spectra Logic and Australian National University Success Story - March 2012
- Premier Media Group Fast Study
- In Search of the Long-Term Archiving Solution —Tape Continues to Be a Major Player
-
World’s eyes on Aussie NBN: Conroy
-
iPhone 5 rumour rollup for the week ending May 27
-
PRODUCTS: Aranez announces K-Leather iPad 2 case
-
Italian mathematician prepares to challenge Google
-
Facebook could buy Nokia to build 'FacePhone', expert claims














Comments
Post new comment