Dear IETF:
I am following up on my April 23, 2009 email (please see below) to see if there has been any feedback on my question regarding the distinction between native and non-native SIP. Please let me know. Thank you for your assistance. Sincerely, Stella Gnepp ________________________________ From: Stella Gnepp Sent: Thursday, April 23, 2009 3:20 PM To: '[email protected]' Subject: Native-SIP vs. Non-native SIP Dear IETF: I am looking for industry standards related to the definition of native-SIP and non-native SIP voice communication. Specifically, I am trying to determine whether a call is still considered native-SIP if a call originates as TDM, but is converted from TDM to data before leaving the customer's premises. I am hoping that there is a standard definition that states the point of origination (whether it is at the point of where the call leaves the customer premises, or before then-at the equipment level) for determining whether a call is native-SIP. Any assistance is greatly appreciated. Thank you, Stella Gnepp Stella Gnepp TNCI - Regulatory Affairs Manager 2 Charlesgate West Boston, MA 02215 Phone: 617.369.1163 Efax: 617.369.1187 Email: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> Web: www.tncii.com <http://www.tncii.com/> The information contained in or attached to this email is confidential and subject to the terms of any contractual agreement between you, your Company and TNCI. Please also note that the information contained in this email is provided for discussion only; it is not an offer, is not contractually binding on TNCI, and must be separately agreed-to in a written contract duly negotiated and executed by both parties in order to bind TNCI.
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