Cisco CallManager System Guide, Release 3.1(1)
Cisco IP Telephony Overview

Table Of Contents

Cisco IP Telephony Overview

Internet Ecosystem

Cisco Architecture for Voice, Video, and Integrated Data (Cisco AVVID)

Applications

Call Processing

Infrastructure

Clients

Cisco IP Telephony Network

Where to Find More Information


Cisco IP Telephony Overview


Multiple communication networks today are entirely separate, 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:

Voice

Data

Internet Ecosystem

Over time, the Internet (and data networking technology in general) encompassed the traditional traffic types. This convergence has 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 connecting their disparate PBXs via their wide-area data network to avoid long-distance charges.

By converging these previously disparate networks into a single, unified network, you can begin to realize savings in multiple areas, including lower total cost of ownership, toll savings, and increased productivity.

Cisco CallManager and Cisco IP phones provide an IP telephony solution that operates on an IP infrastructure. The clustering architecture of Cisco CallManagers allows you to scale to a highly available Voice over IP (VoIP) network.

Cisco Architecture for Voice, Video, and Integrated Data (Cisco AVVID)

Cisco AVVID encompasses the following components:

Converged client devices

Hardware/software

Directory services

Call processing

Telephony/data applications

Network management

Service and support

Cisco AVVID 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 AVVID 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.

Applications

The following list gives some voice and video applications in the application layer of Cisco AVVID:

Cisco Unity—The Cisco Unity messaging application provides voice-messaging to enterprise communications.

Video—IP-TV and IP-video conferencing products enable distance learning and workgroup collaboration.

Cisco IP IVR—As an IP-powered interactive voice response (IVR) solution, Cisco IP IVR combined with Cisco IP AutoAttendant, provides an open and feature-rich foundation for delivering IVR solutions over an IP network.

Cisco WebAttendant—This flexible and scalable application replaces the traditional PBX manual attendant console.

Cisco IP SoftPhone—The Cisco IP SoftPhone, a software, computer-based phone, provides communication capabilities that increase efficiency and promote collaboration.

Personal Assistant—Personal Assistant selectively handles calls and helps you make outgoing calls. Personal Assistant provides rule-based call routing, speech-enabled directory dialing, voice mail browsing, and simple ad-hoc conferencing.

Call Processing

Cisco CallManager, a software-only call-processing application, distributes calls and features; and clusters phones, regions, groups, etc., over an IP network; allowing scalability to 10,000 users and triple call processing redundancy.

Cisco CallManager provides signaling and call control services to Cisco-integrated applications, as well as third-party applications.

Infrastructure

The following list shows the components of the infrastructure layer of Cisco AVVID:

Media convergence servers

General voice products for Cisco IP Telephony Solutions

Switches

Integrated IP telephony solution

Voice trunks

Voice gateways

Toll bypass products

Clients

Cisco delivers the following IP-enabled communication devices:

Cisco IP Phone 7960

Cisco IP Phone 7940

Cisco IP Phone 7910

Cisco IP Conference Station 7935

Cisco IP SoftPhone

Cisco Sidecar 79xx

Cisco IP Telephony Network

The Cisco IP Telephony network includes the following components:

Cisco CallManager

Cisco IP phones

IOS platforms

Digital gateways

Analog gateways

Transcoders

Conferencing (hardware/software)

Media Termination Point

Music On Hold

Inline power modules (10/100 Ethernet switching modules)

Cisco IP SoftPhone

Control from the Cisco IP phone to Cisco CallManager uses Skinny Station Protocol and, independently, desktop computer to Cisco CallManager, as an H.323 gatekeeper using H.225/H.245 over TCP.

Where to Find More Information

Related Topics

Introduction

System Configuration Overview

Device Support, page 9-1

Understanding Voice Gateways

Transcoders

Conference Bridges

Additional Cisco Documentation

Cisco CallManager Configuration, Cisco CallManager Administration Guide

Device Defaults Configuration, Cisco CallManager Administration Guide

Cisco IP Phone Configuration, Cisco CallManager Administration Guide

Gateway Configuration, Cisco CallManager Administration Guide

Transcoder Configuration, Cisco CallManager Administration Guide

Conference Bridge Configuration, Cisco CallManager Administration Guide

Cisco IP Telephony Network Design Guide

http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/voice/ip_tele/network

Cisco IP phones documentation on CCO

http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/voice/c_ipphon

Gateways documentation on CCO

http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/voice/c_access