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Mpls and Its Role With VoIP


Perhaps the biggest success thus far for MPLS is its deepening of the VoIP (Voice-over Internet Protocol), which is a leading candidate for the future of doing business via telecommunications.


VoIP essentially allows for a computer network to double as a telephone line. VoIP is typically cheaper than even the best unlimited call plans for digital telephone connections.


For the last few years, it has been expected that with the ever-increasing prevalance of WANs and VoIP networks, MPLS would provide a natural evolution toward even greater and more widespread implemenation of VoIPs.


With the MPLS network's layer 2 to layer 3 connectivity power, VoIP service providers such as leading provider Vonage, ATT, Sprint, and so on and so forth can now give the benefit of their core infrastructure over to their business VoIP clients, making their service faster, clearer, more reliable, and more robust than the kind of connection normally achieved by the public Internet.


A lot of businesses that are realizing the growing need for real-time application prioritization and end-to-end connectivity and are using VoIP are seeing how perfectly it work in concert with MPLS.


One business in particular which has already benefitted from MPLS' convergence with VoIP is the Inheritance Funding Company (IFC).


IFC currently has over 160 telephone in its business VoIP system, which it implemented two and a half years ago because "Maintenance and reliability became pressing issues. It was time to consider an alternative" to the status quo business phone system, according to IFC CIO Jim Norman.


By the middle of 2006, IFC tech saw the need to enhance the taxed VoIP with an MPLS network to make calls more robust and reliable so that there weren't transmission hiccups, dropped calls, echoes in the ear, voices suddenly going distant, and other problems.


Says Norman, "If we wanted to get the quality that we wanted, we had to go with MPLS, " Norman said. "We wanted reliability, convenience and efficiency...From an administrative standpoint, we now have control of the phone system from here for all branches, and from anywhere, really."


According to Robbie Harrell of Unified Communications, an online company serving IT and business professionals, "MPLS is useful as an enabler for VoIP because it provides Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM)-like capabilities with an IP network.


Unlike the expensive ATM links that would be required to support VoIP, MPLS provides guaranteed services utilizing IP quality of service on the carrier's backbone. This service and the ability to converge VoIP onto the data network present a tremendous opportunity to reduce operational costs and consolidate infrastructures."



Article done by Bradley James, he has a site dedicated to business information, including small business loans

Article Source: ArticlesBase.com


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Hi, I am due to enter negotiations regarding my salary. I have around 8 years experience in IT from a career point of view, and have trained towards an MCSA (waiting for exams). I am looking after 14 servers in 3 locations. We are opening another office down south which I will be expected to support The servers include 4 DC'c, 2 Exchange servers, 1 SQL Server, File Servers, FTP Servers; as well as the company phone system, copiers, software licencing and 3 netscreens and 1 WiFi bridge and to support approx 45 staff I am also expected to source new technology like media players, etc for the work the company actually does. We are increasing the servers to around 20 in the next fews months as well implementing company wide VoIP technology and better WAN comms. What I need to know is should I be asking for more than the £25,000 plus car I am currently on? My TItle is IT Manager and I am in the East Midlands area Cheers

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Salary Expectations?
Hi, I am due to enter negotiations regarding my salary. I have around 8 years experience in IT from a career point of view, and have trained towards an MCSA (waiting for exams). I am looking after 14 servers in 3 locations. We are opening another office down south which I will be expected to support The servers include 4 DC'c, 2 Exchange servers, 1 SQL Server, File Servers, FTP Servers; as well as the company phone system, copiers, software licencing and 3 netscreens and 1 WiFi bridge and to support approx 45 staff I am also expected to source new technology like media players, etc for the work the company actually does. We are increasing the servers to around 20 in the next fews months as well implementing company wide VoIP technology and better WAN comms. What I need to know is should I be asking for more than the £25,000 plus car I am currently on? My TItle is IT Manager and I am in the East Midlands area Cheers Incedently I did study and gain a Computer Science HND (Could not afford the extra two years!!) I consider the title more Management of IT rather than "IT Manager", but I do attend the main management meetings, and am considered a senior member of staff. I only ask the question after a conversation I had with someone who said that people he had intervoed and knew in my area, and in similar sized businesses were earning better packages than me. It is sometimes difficult to measure yourself against the industry standard when working for an SME as you are expected to wear so many hats. In repsonse to some of the questions, yes I do support all the Server applications, although I do require more specialised support for SQL. I also do basic front line support for the end user applications like 3D max, Microstation and Solidworks.

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