to the customer and then handed off as analog. The ATA sort of concept.
This is what Comcast does when it sells VoIP lines. They don't really
tell you it's VoIP, they just include "phone service" in their
triple-play bundle. They've sold 10M+ lines this way, while we're busy
evangelising the merits of VoIP as such.
If you have an ATA, then you just need a VoIP service delivery platform
on the ISP side. No need for any "partitioning" per se unless you are
looking to do channelised/fractional circuits (why?) or operate a
separate overlay voice network.
C. Savinovich wrote:
> Analog POTS?... don't think so because that would imply having to use dslams
> (pardon me if I am wrong)... they already purchased the cable modems and lo
> and behold, the cable modems don't have telephony ports. Definitely the
> medium is IP, where we can probably use 3 devices (one router, one cable
> modem, and one ata). The part where I am not too clear is on the provider
> side, what equipment handles the partitioning, et al.
--
Alex Balashov
Evariste Systems
Web : http://www.evaristesys.com/
Tel : (+1) (678) 954-0670
Direct : (+1) (678) 954-0671
Mobile : (+1) (678) 237-1775
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