Feeling the need to jump in here... Telchemy’s VQmon technology does integrate 
acoustic effects into its quality prediction…. When integrated into audio and 
video endpoints – like Polycom, Cisco, Yealink and Avaya have done (and whose 
technology I believe a number of list subscribers leverage on a daily basis) - 
VQMon incorporates analog metrics including signal, noise, and echo levels, 
which are not available using mid-stream analysis alone.  

 

Which then obviously relieves you from the need to listen to every / all calls. 
  It really is the better mousetrap.

 

Here’s a writeup we did a long while back on this:  
<http://www.lovemytool.com/blog/2008/02/telchemy-1.html> 
http://www.lovemytool.com/blog/2008/02/telchemy-1.html 

 

Happy to answer more questions – if there are any.

 

-anthony

 

Anthony Caiozzo

Telchemy -  <http://www.telchemy.com> www.telchemy.com 

m: 617-312-5189 f: 678-387-3008

e:  <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]

support: 1-866-TELCHEMY or  <http://www.telchemy.com/custportal> 
www.telchemy.com/custportal to open a ticket

Skype: acaiozzo

 

 

From: VoiceOps [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Richard 
Jobson
Sent: Tuesday, May 23, 2017 10:58 PM
To: Mark Wiater <[email protected]>; Voiceops.org <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [VoiceOps] VoIP Testing

 

So assuming it’s not packet loss or jitter, it’s a problem associated with the 
endpoint? No tool monitoring packets is  going to alert you to this problem 
because it only appears in the audio .  you could take the time to listen to 
every suspect call. Or you could take your customers’ time and ask him to 
specify which calls are problematic and listen only to those

 

What does audio sound like if a softphone  is squeezed on CPU resources? Or 
maybe it’s echo or maybe it’s static or maybe it’s problems associated with 
Wi-Fi or maybe it’s cabling or connectors?  If You can ascertain the root cause 
simply by listing to the audio, then that’s fine.

 

It depends on the objectives.  If all you need to do is to be able to point to 
suspect equipment  and tell the customer to replace it and move on,  then above 
is fine. If you need to isolate this specific systematic problem in a 
population of endpoints,  demonstrate it to external vendor or  partner or 
provide best practices for call center Endpoints and setup, then  perhaps more 
investment in troubleshooting  to root cause might be justified.

 

“Horses for courses “ ☺

 

From: VoiceOps <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > on behalf of Mark Wiater 
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >
Date: Tuesday, May 23, 2017 at 2:37 PM
To: "Voiceops.org" <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >
Subject: Re: [VoiceOps] VoIP Testing

 

 

On 5/23/2017 4:18 PM, Richard Jobson wrote:

If the speech quality impairment is associated with the endpoint itself or any 
part of their headset gear, cabling etc. then monitoring on the IP packet 
network will not  analyze this


Of course you're right. But heck, if the problem doesn't manifest at the 
monitoring system in the clients local network, then you kinda know where the 
problem is, right? :-)

I don't argue your points about POLQA and such, but voipmonitor makes it pretty 
easy for me to identify root causes of client complaints kinda quickly. 


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