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A new Class of Service for DSL

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Up to eight Classes of Service are now available in the IPVPN product portfolio. CoS is also now available on ADSL access to IPVPN.

 

Our converged solutions portfolio has recently been upgraded and is now able to provide our IPVPN customers with options for up to eight Class of Service (CoS), This is a first for UK telecommunications providers.


A new CoS offering is also now available on ntl:Telewest Business IPVPN DSL services, which range in speed up to 8 Megabits per second (Mbps). The service has been optimised for real-time traffic, such as voice over IP. The upgrade ensures that staff in smaller offices and other smaller business premises can also now benefit from the application performance improvements that traffic prioritisation can provide.


With Next Generation Networks (NGNs) now enabling more sophisticated converged data and voice technologies, the need for businesses to ensure that their network is delivering the speed and performance required is becoming increasingly more important. The availability of eight CoS means organisations have far greater flexibility than previously in the way in which they protect  their most critical or performance-sensitive network traffic, such as voice and video, from other less crucial data.

“For the first time, businesses can exert the same control over traffic on their DSL lines as the rest of the network,” said Stephen Beynon, MD of ntl:Telewest Business. “This makes the use of IP voice and other performance-sensitive applications a reality to all users of the network, not just those on the core. It will mean businesses really can capitalise on these applications for their home workers and smaller offices.”

 

“This level of sophisticated traffic prioritisation puts us head and shoulders above other UK telcos in our ability to offer next generation traffic controls. By responding to the fast-changing needs of our customers, we hope to provide them with the flexibility and agility they need to support the applications required for collaborative working in an increasingly mobile workforce, now and in the future,” said Mr Beynon. 

 

The eight Classes of Service are:

 

  • Real Time 1: Voice media (real time). These are typically variable rate applications that require low jitter and packet loss, plus very low delay. Normally these are Voice over IP (VoIP) and sensitive video applications that do not have the ability to change encoding rates, or to mark packets with different importance indications.

  • Real Time 2: Video media (real time). This is recommended for delay-sensitive and jitter-sensitive video applications such as IPCCTV.

  • Customer Control: This is best suited for peer-to-peer and client-server signalling and control functions, using protocols such as SIP, SIP-T, H.323, H.248 and Media Gateway Control Protocol (MGCP).

  • Application 1: Multimedia video streaming, which are not purely real-time in nature, or business-critical applications.

  • Application 2, 3 and 4: Business-critical applications. These three classes are best suited for applications that require bandwidth and loss guarantees but have a reasonable level of tolerance for jitter and latency. The application classes are equivalent to each other in terms of priority; however each can be guaranteed bandwidth independently of one other.

  • Standard: The Standard service class is for applications that have not been identified as requiring differentiated treatment and is often referred to as best effort.



 

 

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