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Re: [Sipping] draft-sinnreich-sip-tools-03
We have been discussing this on the rai list, but I think it might be
more appropriate on the sipping list, so with Henry's permission I'm
moving it here.
Paul
Henry Sinnreich wrote:
Paul,
Many (most?) deployments work in
this way - the (dumb) phones connect to a B2BUA. It then handles all the
harder stuff.
Aha! You have pinpointed it very well.
Thanks.
* We are looking here at the opposite of dumb phones that handle only voice
* I also don't suppose you support SIP networks based on B2BUA to handle
"harder stuff"
Eunsoo Shim wrote:
I don't see a reason emergency calls cannot be supported with the
tools listed in the document.
Correct. There is no reason an endpoint cannot use a 911-like phone number,
SOS or any other SIP address and also communicate its location.
This presumes the phone can *get* its location in the correct form.
Aren't there more standards that are needed to sort that out?
Also, the emergency services folk, and the governmental agencies, have
all sorts of rules about the behavior of the device when making an
emergency call. If the device being constructed is subject to such
rules, then more standards are required.
A point of *my* comments was that the draft itself wasn't entirely clear
about what it was asserting these tools are capable of providing.
There is no limit in what applications in the endpoint can provide.
Its great that *more* can be provided. I'm just looking for the basic
minimum that this tool set is supposed to enable. Without that, how can
someone decide if this tool set is good for them?
I guess its possible to simply state: this is an interesting set that
you might find useful. Take a look and see if it is sufficient for your
needs before looking further. But I got the impression it was claiming
more than that.
Though we seem to focus in this discussion mostly on voice (with some rare
SIMPLE mentions), smart phones and Rich Internet Applications (RIA) on the
web are a proof from real life. Most smart phone vendors report 1,000's of
applications from independent developers. I could not count for example the
number of SIP UA and SIP services for the iPhone alone and my apology for
not mentioning all the other excellent smart phones.
Are you saying that these are done with just the set of standards
mentioned in this draft???
(One cannot also avoid seeing all these reports out showing the diminishing
numbers or plain disappearance of dumb landline phones - service providers
for sure are looking to overcome this, possibly using our I-D :-) )
Question: Do you think the use cases with examples of RIA and smart phone
applications should be mentioned in the Introduction?
Perhaps, *if* you know for certain that those things can be accomplished
with just this set of sip standards.
Thanks,
Paul
Henry
On 10/21/08 10:56 AM, "Paul Kyzivat" <pkyzivat at cisco.com> wrote:
Eunsoo Shim wrote:
Many phone adapters that are widely used in the market, certainly by
some major VoIP service providers I know of, support just a few SIP
related RFCs. One of the largest phone adapter vendors implemented
just RFC 3261, 3262, 3263, 3264 and 4566. And those VoIP service
providers support emergency calls. In the deployments I know of, all
you need is routing emergency calls to a gateway that interfaces with
databases and the PSTN infrastructure for emergency calls. The end
users have to register the addresses where the phone adapters are used
(often on web sites) and the addresses are relayed to and stored in
databases with the corresponding phone numbers.
One *piece* of the overall system can get by with limited functionality
*if* other pieces pick up the slack. Many (most?) deployments work in
this way - the (dumb) phones connect to a B2BUA. It then handles all the
harder stuff.
But that isn't the point of the draft. It is trying to define an
environment that doesn't require servers in the cloud to handle the hard
stuff.
I don't see a reason emergency calls cannot be supported with the
tools listed in the document.
If you have nothing between you and the PSAP then you are going to need
more.
I think it would help us a lot if you define "what are required to be
universally deployable".
A point of *my* comments was that the draft itself wasn't entirely clear
about what it was asserting these tools are capable of providing. I
think it is insufficient to say "these tools are sufficient" without
stating *what* they are sufficient for.
Thanks,
Paul
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