Date:03/10/2010 URL: 
http://www.thehindu.com/2010/10/03/stories/2010100362510800.htm


An initiative to promote real-time text technologies 

T. Ramachandran 
They will help users read and respond to messages as they are typed in a device 

RTT compatible with protocols used to facilitate voice and video communication 
over Internet

It provides immediacy to text-based communications

KOCHI: A global initiative is under way to promote real-time text (RTT) 
technologies, which make it possible for users to read and respond to text 
messages
even as they are being typed or input into a device.

An open forum and centre of excellence was launched some months ago to provide 
engineers, experts, companies and others interested with opportunities to
push for the adoption of this mode of communication, based on 
character-by-character streaming in real time. It was launched by Foundation 
Real-Time Text
Taskforce, a non-profit organisation based in Oss, The Netherlands.

The Internet Society had assisted the Real-Time Text Taskforce by giving 
coordination assistance, technical expertise and implementation support during
the early stages of its development. This paved the way for it to become an 
independent organisation last year.

RTT is compatible with the protocols used to facilitate voice and video 
communication over the Internet or in certain other digital environments. "RTT 
can
be used on any network. In the past, RTT on the public telephone network used 
TTYs (or text telephones), but as we move to completely Internet Protocol
(IP)-based telecommunications, we are actually talking about IP RTT," 
Foundation director Arnoud van Wijk explained to The Hindu.

Those involved in the initiative agree that RTT provides "immediacy to 
text-based communications, similar to what the telephone service provides for 
voice."

Though originally developed for people with hearing and speech problems, it 
could have global appeal, given the immense popularity of SMS and chatting.
Texting becomes more interactive, immediate and faster with RTT technologies, 
which are based on Internet Engineering Task Force and International 
Telecommunications
Union standards.

At the heart of RTT is the Session Initiation Protocol and the Real-Time Text 
transport standard, and it is designed to be compatible with voice over IP
(VoIP) and video over IP environments.

Ensuring interoperability and standardisation of the technologies used is an 
objective of the taskforce as is creating awareness of RTT among organisations,
industry, end-users and governments.

Real-Time Text can be used in isolation or along with other real-time 
communication modes such as voice telephony and videoconferencing to enhance 
their
effectiveness. It can also be used in situations which do not permit the use of 
voice - such as meetings or noisy environments.

It could be an important communication option for those who are aurally 
challenged because the exchanges are more conversational, with increased scope 
for
quick interaction both ways, compared with the kind of responses that are 
possible with Instant Messaging and SMS.

"When the mobile phones finally switch over to VoIP, RTT will be more supported 
out of the box. But it is now possible to use RTT on more and more mobile
phones. Blackberry, iPhone, Android Phones are all able to install the RTT 
program and use this directly. It is advised to use a smartphone that allows
the user to install applications and also allows text input using a [virtual] 
keyboard," Mr. van Wijk explains.

While 3G phones come equipped to support RTT, even 2G networks can support it, 
says Mr. van Wijk. "If the network supports IP, RTT can be used. 2G networks
that support GPRS can also use RTT, assuming that the phones/terminals allow 
UDP support [User Datagram Protocol, a technical Internet protocol]. All 3G
phones support UDP, so, for those it is just a matter of downloading the IP RTT 
software." Telecom operators in Sweden, The Netherlands and France are
offering different kinds of RTT services, he says.

E RENUKA,
SECTION OFFICER,
ICT CENTRE FOR VISUALLY CHALLENGED,
CHMK LIBRARY,
UNIVERSITY OF CALICUT
CALICUT, UNIVERSITY P O,
MALAPPURAM DISTRICT,
KERALA.
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