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Chapter 15 Voice
Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8802T User’s Guide
221
15.10 Technical Reference
This section contains background material relevant to the VoIP screens.
VoIP
VoIP is the sending of voice signals over Internet Protocol. This allows you to
make phone calls and send faxes over the Internet at a fraction of the cost of
using the traditional circuit-switched telephone network. You can also use servers
to run telephone service applications like PBX services and voice mail. Internet
Telephony Service Provider (ITSP) companies provide VoIP service.
Circuit-switched telephone networks require 64 kilobits per second (Kbps) in each
direction to handle a telephone call. VoIP can use advanced voice coding
techniques with compression to reduce the required bandwidth.
SIP
The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) is an application-layer control (signaling)
protocol that handles the setting up, altering and tearing down of voice and
multimedia sessions over the Internet.
SIP signaling is separate from the media for which it handles sessions. The media
that is exchanged during the session can use a different path from that of the
signaling. SIP handles telephone calls and can interface with traditional circuit-
switched telephone networks.
SIP Identities
A SIP account uses an identity (sometimes referred to as a SIP address). A
complete SIP identity is called a SIP URI (Uniform Resource Identifier). A SIP
account's URI identifies the SIP account in a way similar to the way an e-mail
address identifies an e-mail account. The format of a SIP identity is SIP-
Number@SIP-Service-Domain.
phone port
This is the phone port on which you received the call.
Missed means the call was unanswered.
phone number
This is the SIP number that called you.
duration
This displays how long the call lasted.
Table 79
VOIP > Call History > Incoming
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Summary of Contents for P8802T
Page 10: ...Table of Contents Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8802T User s Guide 10...
Page 11: ...11 PART I User s Guide...
Page 12: ...12...
Page 58: ...Chapter 2 User Setup Guide Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8802T User s Guide 58...
Page 59: ...59 PART II Technical Reference...
Page 60: ...60...
Page 74: ...Chapter 3 Device Info Screens Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8802T User s Guide 74...
Page 120: ...Chapter 6 Network Address Translation NAT Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8802T User s Guide 120...
Page 150: ...Chapter 10 DNS Setup Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8802T User s Guide 150...
Page 160: ...Chapter 11 UPnP Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8802T User s Guide 160...
Page 168: ...Chapter 12 USB Services Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8802T User s Guide 168...
Page 200: ...Chapter 14 Wireless Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8802T User s Guide 200...
Page 204: ...Chapter 15 Voice Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8802T User s Guide 204...
Page 240: ...Chapter 16 Diagnostic Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8802T User s Guide 240...
Page 244: ...Chapter 17 Settings Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8802T User s Guide 244...
Page 248: ...Chapter 18 Log Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8802T User s Guide 248...
Page 252: ...Chapter 19 TR 069 Client Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8802T User s Guide 252...
Page 254: ...Chapter 20 Internet Time Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8802T User s Guide 254...
Page 256: ...Chapter 21 Access Control Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8802T User s Guide 256...
Page 260: ...Chapter 23 Reboot Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8802T User s Guide 260...
Page 268: ...Chapter 24 Troubleshooting Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8802T User s Guide 268...
Page 272: ...Appendix A Legal Information Basic Home Station VDSL2 P8802T User s Guide 272...