It can be delayed, and when it happened you experience dropped packets which is 
choppy audio and drop outs momentarily.

Jay Stewart
NextOS Sr. Systems Administrator
(480) 426-0099 | [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
8800 E. Chaparral Road, Suite 300 | Scottsdale, AZ 85250

From: VoiceOps [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Colton Conor
Sent: Thursday, July 31, 2014 6:28 AM
To: Paul Timmins
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [VoiceOps] Multi Tenant Commercial Softswitch Besides Broadsoft

So I agree that you IP address might not change jumping from tower to tower 
when driving, but isn't there a delay from jumping from tower to tower with 
data? I know GSM/CDMA has voice handoffs timeframes timed in the ms mark, so 
the user never hears/notices that they jumped from one tower to another. But I 
was under the impression that data connections don't jump as fast? Kind of like 
then you go from a 3G to 4G area. It takes your phone a second or two to switch 
technologies. A second or 2 of loss is too long in a voice call conversations 
using SIP over data.

On Wed, Jul 30, 2014 at 5:41 PM, Paul Timmins 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
I've used mobile data heavily since 2002. And I've never seen it switch IPs 
based on towers. The only time I see it change (other than while roaming) is 
usually if you go from 1xRTT to 3G, or 3G to 4G (and that last part varies 
depending on whether you're using 3G in a 4G enabled area, which doesn't 
typically switch IPs) (that's CDMA centric, but my experience was similar with 
GSM (CSD/EDGE/HSDPA/LTE). Of course, Nextel's packetstream service never 
changed IPs (in mid session, anyway) for the most part that I can remember, but 
that was 12 years ago and who knows, my memory could be fuzzy here. I think 
they actually would end up changing IPs if you roamed to a different nextel 
region (there were several that I can recall)

I have had very few problems maintaining long term data connections over 
cellular networks over the years, at least not ones related to something other 
than signal reception or changes in what region of the network you were in, or 
what access technology was being used by the handset or device).

-Paul


On 07/30/2014 04:52 PM, Colton Conor wrote:
Jay,

Our provider has partially deployed UC-One. They don't support call 
through/mobility/SMS functionality though, so we find it limiting so far. 
Correct me if I am wrong but SMS though Broadsoft is still done the Message Now 
application that is separate and not integrated with UC-One right?

I like the idea of using cellular minutes as SIP clients on smartphones don't 
work well especially when traveling. Cellular voice calls jump between towers 
when traveling in a call, but data does not. I have heard some Broadsoft 
providers have integrate with Sprint's wireless solution.

On Wed, Jul 30, 2014 at 3:12 PM, Jay Stewart 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Have you tried BroadSoft’s UC One BroudTouch Business Communicator Solution 
(BTBC).  I don’t know of ones that can top Mobile & Desktop effectively and 
still deliver an application rich technology.  They also support Mobile Link 
integrating the cell phone service as well as SMS.  We have deployed he full UC 
One solution.

Jay Stewart
NextOS Sr. Systems Administrator
(480) 426-0099<tel:%28480%29%20426-0099> | 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
8800 E. Chaparral Road, Suite 300 | Scottsdale, AZ 85250

From: VoiceOps 
[mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>] On 
Behalf Of Colton Conor
Sent: Tuesday, July 29, 2014 7:42 AM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: [VoiceOps] Multi Tenant Commercial Softswitch Besides Broadsoft

What carrier and service provider multitenant softswitch and pbx systems are on 
the market today besides Broadsoft? We use a Broadsoft solution today. We like 
the redundancy that Broadsoft offers, and the fact that it just works. However, 
they are starting to seriously lack features, and there are too many Broadsoft 
competitors. We are finding that our Broadsoft offering is no different than 
Comcast, Verizon, or other local providers that offer Broadsoft services to.

We are really looking for something that integrates well for the mobile worker. 
The ability to use their cell phone with the service is key for us. The day's 
of clients buying $300 Polycom IP phones are slowing down. However, people 
understand the value and are willing to spend $600 on a smartphone.

What commercial solutions are there?



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