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Mastering FreeSWITCH

You're reading from   Mastering FreeSWITCH Advanced tips and tricks for advanced multimedia communication

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781784398880
Length 300 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
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Authors (8):
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Darren Schreiber Darren Schreiber
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Darren Schreiber
Russell Treleaven Russell Treleaven
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Russell Treleaven
Kalyani Kulkarni Kalyani Kulkarni
Author Profile Icon Kalyani Kulkarni
Kalyani Kulkarni
Seven Du Seven Du
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Seven Du
Charles Bujold Charles Bujold
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Charles Bujold
Ken Rice Ken Rice
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Ken Rice
Florent Krieg Florent Krieg
Author Profile Icon Florent Krieg
Florent Krieg
Mike Jerris Mike Jerris
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Mike Jerris
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Typical Voice Uses for FreeSWITCH 2. Deploying FreeSWITCH FREE CHAPTER 3. ITSP and Voice Codecs Optimization 4. VoIP Security 5. Audio File and Streaming Formats, Music on Hold, Recording Calls 6. PSTN and TDM 7. WebRTC and Mod_Verto 8. Audio and Video Conferencing 9. Faxing and T38 10. Advanced IVR with Lua 11. Write Your FreeSWITCH Module in C 12. Tracing and Debugging VoIP 13. Homer, Monitoring and Troubleshooting Your Communication Platform Index

ITSPs – what they do

An Internet Telephony Service Provider brings to its customers SIP trunking connections that allow for outbound and inbound calls to/from the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN), to/from the Public Land Mobile Network (PLMN), and to/from other SIP users.

ITSPs don't need to own a physical Internet backbone, nor the "last mile" of cables going from the backbone to their customers' premises. ITSPs connect to the public Internet and operate their own SIP servers and (optionally) their own gateways from SIP to PSTN (from now on we'll write only PSTN, for brevity's sake, meaning both PSTN and PLMN).

ITSP business is to sell minutes of PSTN communication to their SIP end users: Both communication coming from PSTN (a caller from PSTN wants to reach a number connected to the SIP device of an ITSP's customer) and communication going to PSTN (ITSP's customer from his/her SIP device wants to call a number connected to the PSTN...

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