IMS- heralding the era of
new communication services
IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS), which is the evolution of all converged
networks, is emerging as the very "core" for the majority of NGN
deployments and at the same time heralding a new world of services
for wireless, cable, IP-Telephony and next-generation fixed line service
providers. A TIMES GLOBAL JOURNAL primer...
The evolution of the Next Generation Networks is
bringing about a number of chain-lined
sequences of activities spanning standards, networks,
architectures and applications. This is brne out of
the premise and the known potential of new, converged
networks offering an array of voice, data and
multimedia services over IP core network architecture.
The move towards convergence is being influenced by
the thrust towards ubiquity and universality of accessing
services across any kind of networks and the
changed expectations of consumers. This need for open standards compelled fixed line providers to look
anew at their existing business models and explore
new revenue streams and wireless operators to explore
new markets being shaped by the world of convergence.
In effect, IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS), which is
the evolution of all converged networks, is emerging
as the very "core" for the majority of NGN deployments
and at the same time heralding a new world
of services for wireless, cable, IP-Telephony and nextgeneration
fixed line service providers. It is a set of
core network functional entities- built on Internet
Engineering Task Force (IETF) protocols -that support access to operator provided SIP (SessionInitiation Protocol )-based services. SIP-acknowledged
for its simplicity and availability- will help establish IP
connections and interactive user sessions and will be IMS's open interface.
Says Jaikishan Rajaraman, Director, Product and
Service Development, GSM Association, "Clearly,
there is a huge demand for new communication services
fuelled by market dynamics, changing user demands and expectations, and the role played by
standards organizations. The widespread adoption of a
robust and complete multi-media system will be the
key to the very success of converged and ubiquitous
services and the accessibility through any kind of enduser device. An all-IP core network because of the
inherent interoperability will allow service providers to
mix and match both hardware and software elements.
Furthermore, carriers will need enhanced network
capabilities to migrate to IMS."
IMS is a new and evolving industry standard or a
framework that defines how communications technologies
can work together to deliver new services to
enrich communications for end-users. IMS defined
and developed by 3GPP (Third Generation
Partnership Project) and 3GPP2 organizations -anagglomeration of standards bodies from Europe,
North America and Asia- provides an enabling architecture
that is access independent. IMS was introduced for the first time in Release 5 specification of
3GPP. Critically, this access independence (irrespective
of existing or emerging technologies) is central in
the move towards supporting converged services and
to become the standard of choice for a number of
industry leaders. This versatility will ensure IP-based
services over Wi-Fi, WiMax, DSL, cable, optical,
WLAN, GPRS and other types of existing as well as
futuristic networks.
Elaborates V.K. Budhraja, President and CEO,
Clovis, "It is pertinent to note that service offerings
commoditization has increased quite dramatically in
the communications industry. So, the interoperability premise is what will fundamentally change the way
telecommunication carriers and equipment vendors
operate and drive innovations. Of course, there will
be many critical technical challenges pertaining to adoption and migration to the new generation architecture
before the full realization of richer, multimedia
services and applications like multi-party
video-conferencing, Instant Messaging (IP), video-ondemand, video sharing etc. Software innovation will result in more new services and applications. This
interoperability will have enormous potential to support
business services as well. The very nature of
innovative applications in next-generation or smart
phones that support VoIP over Wi-Fi networks will
support these services."
Undoubtedly IMS while being a reference architecture
describing a set of logical functions and inter-network
gateways provides a workable framework for a
scalable and distributed IP-based environment. The
various advantages and certain synergy elements will
far outweigh the "teething" issues of migration that
some wireline operators with legacy networks and
complex interconnected environments are wary about.
Many of the challenges will also center around engaging
and familiarizing existing customers with the
unique strengths of IP to deliver a "bouquet" of new,
exciting multimedia services.
Rajaraman avers that the various advantages of
converged networks based on an all-IP core would
hasten the adoption of IMS by a large number of
players. "Notably, a single converged network-based
on IP and the very nature of open standards propagation
will streamline management and result in reduced maintenance and operations costs. Expectedly, a unified service environment will lead to
rapid deployment of new services across geographies
and also present users the luxury and option of
choosing the network that provides the best services
consistently," he adds.
Budhraja highlights the other inter-related variables
that will drive the forces of building converged
networks. "The number of opportunities that will
accrue for players in the ecosystem capable of making
the right moves will be plentiful. Of course, standards
and their adoption will play a key role in unifying the
new service levels that will emerge. Pricing structures,
billing systems, revenue sharing, acceptance levels by
a new class of consumers will be other key issues."
The newness of IMS technology and the various
adaptability and interface testing parameters still to
be implemented will deter a number of players from
fast-paced adoption. All players will have to realign themselves to a new set of challenges that will be
purely dictated by the "pull-push" effect of consumers
hungry for a range of ubiquitous services. However,
the very dynamics of operations and capabilities to offer new services and applications are going to
change the sweepstakes for telecommunication carriers
and services providers. So whether, they are major
wireline or wireless network service providers, large equipment vendors or handset manufacturers, all
influential players are looking towards IMS as the
'enabler' and the common service environment of a
new generation of communication services.
IMS- A SNAPSHOT |
| As a service delivery mechanism, IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) framework, provides the broad-based telecom industry with a modular, standards-based IP/SIP service delivery infrastructure and enables service providers to leverage the advantages of IP to deliver faster, more flexible, and more costeffective deployments of a range of differentiated multimedia communication services over both wireline and wireless networks. |
| IMS is an open standard with the underlying important principle being that the IMS core is independent of access technology. |
3GPP terms IMS as the evolution of all converged networks, providing a suitably welldefined framework for a scalable and distributed,
IP-based environment. |
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TESTING CHALLENGES- A Note |
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Amir Aghdaei,
Vice-President and
General Manager,
Measurement Systems Division,
Agilent Technologies on Testing
Challenges in the new millennium |
“Two major trends in the wireless industry are dictating the way the industry looks at testing and measurement challenges. Integration or convergence of various technologies is one major challenge. And smart phones having the capability of allowing video broadcasting, web browsing etc. are a prime example of the exciting changes happening in the wireless space. The second challenge is based around offering low-cost solutions to companies.
In today's volatile wireless market, the only constant is change. A multitude of new standards for cellular phones are emerging, but their deployment plans continue to change, making it difficult to predict what the market will demand next. Two sets of challenges require two sets of solutions. Moreover, on the convergence side, devices are becoming far more complicated and therefore the tests that are required are also becoming complicated. It requires companies like Agilent to stay on top of these rapid developments, stay abreast of the latest technologies defined by the market makers, and work closely with chipset providers, OEMs, reference design houses, test houses and the bodies which actually verify devices and protocols. The challenges have always been two dimensional - the dimension of technology and that of cost. Further, due to different standards in place, the test capabilities are also becoming complicated. Agilent has tremendous amount of measurement and test expertise and by working with the market makers and through various partnerships and collaborations, we develop rapid test capabilities for design verification, quality assurance, performance monitoring, interoperability and certification.
Agilent also offers test solutions with a wide range of measurement capabilities and flexible configuration parameters. On the other hand, entities in the wireless value chain also look to us to reduce the costs of tests- a very crucial factor- and the only way to do that is to look at not only capital expense but also the operator’s cost, the test time cycles and defects and then trying to see how one can continuously bring about a 5-10 % reduction year after year." |
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