Many research institutions are facing investment decisions with respect to replacing or expanding their existing telephony infrastructure, which currently mainly consists of large PBXes with proprietary phones and interfaces. As there is a clear industry trend of replacing old-style (TDM) PBXes by IP telephony, it is important that there is a guide on how to attach such an IP telephony solution to the research network. The existing IP connectivity can be used as the basis for establishing good communication between scientists that might not use traditional, still relatively expensive long distance calls as extensively as they could use IP telephony. In addition, the potential for enhancing IP telephony by additional services that support scientific cooperation makes IP telephony an attractive solution even where financial constraints are not as tight.
IP telephony can provide a number of benefits beyond replacing existing PBX/PSTN telephony:
As regards as the economic aspects, the packetization of voice using Voice over IP has given rise to new international telecommunications carriers. These carriers have distributed network architectures using the Internet as a platform. VoIP networks have an architecture offering the most efficient way to implement multilateral telecommunications agreements, thus eliminating the need for carriers to engage in hundreds of bilateral traffic agreements as is required between traditional circuit switched PSTN carriers. Moreover, since packet networks are software driven, they can be configured more dynamically than traditional PSTN can. For example, with a global voice over packet network, new destinations are available to all users on the network, without the need for additional investment every day.
IP telephony telecommunications companies may expand the availability of services to a wider audience. IP telephony technologies can be used to build out voice networks more rapidly and at a lower cost than legacy PSTN systems. Easier deployment of Voice over IP networks can bring the benefits of telecommunications to more people in a much shorter time frame than would be possible with conventional PSTN networks. At the same time, not having to build extensive infrastructure gives many companies a motivation in migrating to IP telephony architectures.