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Voice over IP (VoIP) and Unified Messaging (UM) -- NETS testing update

Voice over IP (VoIP) and Unified Messaging (UM) -- NETS testing update. SCD Exec Presentation 12-Feb-2002 Jeff Custard Teresa Shibao Jim VanDyke. Outline for today’s presentation. Current System Phone Voice Mail VoIP Review Compare current system to VoIP Messaging

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Voice over IP (VoIP) and Unified Messaging (UM) -- NETS testing update

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  1. Voice over IP (VoIP) and Unified Messaging (UM) -- NETS testing update SCD Exec Presentation 12-Feb-2002 Jeff Custard Teresa Shibao Jim VanDyke

  2. Outline for today’s presentation Current System • Phone • Voice Mail VoIP • Review • Compare current system to VoIP Messaging • Review voice messaging and unified messaging • Compare current VM to new VM/UM options Futures • Deployment • Remaining tests, etc.

  3. Review of current phone and voice mail system

  4. Current telephone system • 5 systems with over 2500 active ports (phones, trunks) • Siemens 9751 v6.4 • Components and software are proprietary • Redundant telephony processors at ML and FL only • Using “Classic” ROLM phones from previous systems, some purchased w/original system in 1984

  5. Current system life • Current PBXs scheduled replacement for FY‘04, ‘05, ‘06, and ‘07 • Next generation traditional? • VoIP solution? • Telephony vendor’s platforms are hybrid VoIP/traditional systems

  6. Current voice messaging • ROLM PhoneMail v6.3 • PC/DOS-based systems • 386/33mhz processors • 1200 subscribers • Backups only save database tables, no messages/greetings • ML and FL purchased 1991, due for replacement this year

  7. Voice over IP (VoIP)

  8. VoIPreview

  9. Phone basics

  10. Data port on phone • Data port included on phone, keeps port count down • Changed physical infrastructure requirements • Two VLANs—1 for data; 1 for voice • 10/100 port; auto-negotiate or hard-set

  11. VoIP – a typical migration

  12. Our deployed VoIP • NETS configuration • Cisco Call Manager • Cisco Unity • IP Phones • PBX connectivity • Marshall Field Site (MFS) network

  13. Marshall Field Site (MFS) • 4 analog lines on FXS ports on a Cisco 3640 • 2 Cisco 7960 IP phones • 1 in data closet • 1 over MFS WLAN • Current diagram:

  14. Lessons learned so far • FXS ports only “drive” (i.e., ring) one analog phone (with mechanical ringer) • Echo cancellation settings require some tweaking • We’ve learned a lot about dial-peers and call-legs (VoIP call troubleshooting) • For better perceived voice quality, turned “Voice Activity Detection” (VAD) off • QoS testing • Early Field Test code is risky business!

  15. IP phones tested • 7910 (2x24 LCD display) “lobby phone” – can get with or without switch • 7935 (conference phone) – initial test results unsatisfactory • Will try again on ISDN PRI PBX connection to see if perceived voice quality improves • Cisco “Soft Phone” • 7960 (6 line phone with larger LCD screen) • testing a 7914—14 line expansion module

  16. Call Manager • Compaq Proliant DL380 server • Windows 2000 Server • Internet Information Server 5 • Cisco Call Manager software

  17. VoIP vs. traditional PBX • What’s the difference?

  18. System administration

  19. System administration

  20. System redundancy

  21. CM administration • Done via web interface

  22. 7960 user interface • Basic interaction with phone menus • User configuration option on CM web page • Speed dial button updates • Password changes • Service subscription • Personal directory (links to this in next release of CM)

  23. Phone feature comparisons

  24. Voice Mail (VM)andUnified Messaging (UM)

  25. Unified Messaging (UM) – what is it? • “Converged” email, voice, and fax messaging • email, voice and fax messages accessed from PC or telephone • Text-to-speech module can read email over the phone • Fax server allows centralized fax management • view, print, or forward via email client • Browser-based personal administration • allows users to make their own customizations

  26. UM benefits: • Centralized communications control • Browser-based administration • Decentralized user-enabled tasks • Scalable, redundant, fault-tolerant system tools

  27. Cisco Unity overview • Cisco Unity (formerly Active Voice) • Compaq Proliant DL380 server • Windows 2000 Server • Exchange 2000 mail store • SQL 2000 data store • Internet Information Server 5

  28. Cisco Unity • Heavily reliant on Microsoft products (Windows 2000 server, Exchange 2000, SQL 2000 server, Outlook client, Internet Explorer for maintenance, etc.) • Would need to purchase anti-virus software for email server(s) • Would need to purchase backup software for server(s) • Current vendor (Siemens) uses same setup

  29. Unity user interface overview • Basic voice-mail functionality (via the phone) • “Active Assistant” web interface to change phone mail options • Email send/receive for voice mail messages • Outlook available via Exchange web interface (not the same feature set as standard Outlook client) • Fax send/receive • LDAP server connectivity

  30. Unity admin overview • Web interface for most tasks • Standardized “digit interfaces” coming • numbers used for various functions will change

  31. Next testing steps • Install/test ISDN PRI T-1 • Digital lines between gateway and PBX will replace current E&M analog lines • Continued CM and UM testing • interaction with existing email servers • Continued QoS investigation/testing • Continued fax server testing

  32. Future • “Proof of concept” complete • Should we work toward a deployment phase now? • Implies additional redundancy requirements not present in our test bed • Traditional PBX • “forklift” upgrade of everything at once • VoIP • Incremental upgrade as ready

  33. Future • Various approval processes (for which options)? • Voice-mail only (already approved and budgeted)? • Unified messaging? • Fax server? • If done separately now, may not merge well later—proceed now with unified solution? • What is the next step?

  34. Wrap-up • NETS VoIP project page • Cisco 7960 IP Phone tutorial • Questions?

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