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Contents
This chapter provides information about Cisco Unified Communications. Multiple communication networks exist as entirely separate entities, each serving a specific application. The traditional public switched telephone network (PSTN) time-division multiplexing (TDM) network serves the voice application; the Internet and intranets serve data communications.
Business requirements often force these networks to interoperate. As a result, deploying multiservice (data, voice, and video) applications such as unified messaging or web-based customer contact centers requires expensive and complex links between proprietary systems, such as private branch exchanges (PBXs) and standards-based data networks.
The traditional enterprise communication takes place on two separate networks:
Over time, the Internet (and data networking technology in general) encompassed the traditional traffic types. This convergence recently started to absorb voice and video as applications into the data network. Several large Post, Telephone, and Telegraph (PTT) carriers use packet switching or voice over ATM as their backbone technology, and enterprise customers accept virtual trunking, or connect their disparate PBXs via their wide-area data network, to avoid long-distance charges.
Converging these previously disparate networks into a single, unified network realizes savings in multiple areas, including lower total cost of ownership, toll savings, and increased productivity.
Cisco Unified Communications Manager (formerly Cisco Unified CallManager) and Cisco Unified IP Phones provide an IP telephony solution that operates on an IP infrastructure.
The clustering architecture of Cisco Unified Communications Managers allows you to scale to a highly available voice-over-IP (VoIP) network.
Cisco Unified Communications support encompasses the following components:
Converged client devices
Hardware/software
Directory services
Call processing
Telephony/data applications
Network management
Service and support
Cisco Unified Communications solutions enable you to
Deploy IP-enabled business applications
Implement a standards-based open architecture
Migrate to a converged network in your own time frame
Cisco Unified Communications support enables you to move from maintaining a separate data network and a closed, proprietary voice PBX system to maintaining one open and standards-based, converged network for all your data, voice, and video needs.
The following list includes the major Cisco Unified Communications voice and video applications:
Cisco Unified Communications Manager-This software-only call-processing application distributes calls, features, phones, regions, and groups over an IP network.
Cisco Unity-The Cisco Unity messaging application provides voice messaging to enterprise communications.
Cisco Unity Connection-For more information about Cisco Unity Connection, see the applicable Cisco Unified Communications Manager SCCP Integration Guide for Cisco Unity Connection or the Cisco Unified Communications Manager SIP Trunk Integration Guide for Cisco Unity Connection.
Video-IP-TV and IP-video conferencing products enable distance learning and workgroup collaboration.
Cisco Unified IP-IVR-As an IP-powered interactive voice response (IVR) solution, Cisco Unified IP-IVR, combined with Cisco IP Auto-Attendant, provides an open and feature-rich foundation for delivering IVR solutions over an IP network.
Cisco IP Communicator-The Cisco IP Communicator, a software, computer-based phone, provides communication capabilities that increase efficiency and promote collaboration.
Cisco Unified Communications Manager, a software-only call-processing application, distributes calls and features and provides scalability.
Cisco Unified Communications Manager provides signaling and call-control services to Cisco-integrated applications, as well as to third-party applications.
The following list shows the components of the infrastructure layer of Cisco Unified Communications:
Cisco Unified Computing System servers or Cisco-approved third-party servers to support virtualized deployments
General voice products for Cisco Unified Communications Solutions
Switches
Integrated IP telephony solution
Voice trunks
Voice gateways
Toll bypass products
IP protocols such as MGCP, H.323, and SIP
Cisco delivers the following IP-enabled communication devices:
Cisco Unified IP Video Phone 7985-supports SCCP
Cisco Unified IP Conference Station 7936
Cisco Unified IP Conference Station 7935
Cisco also supports various third-party phones that are running SIP. Contact your Cisco representative for more information.
The Cisco Unified Communications network includes the following components:
IOS platforms
Power Over Ethernet (POE) switches
Digital gateways and trunks
Analog gateways
Transcoders
Conferencing (hardware/software)
Media Termination Point (MTP)
Music On Hold (MOH)
Annunciator
Inline power modules (10/100 Ethernet switching modules)
Control from the Cisco Unified IP Phone to Cisco Unified Communications Manager uses SCCP client control protocol and, independently, desktop computer to Cisco Unified Communications Manager, as an H.323 gatekeeper that is using H.225/H.245 over transmission control protocol (TCP).