Home arrow Hardware
Hardware
Dialogic Adds New IP Functionality to Converged Services Platform Print E-mail

Dialogic (www.dialogic.com) has added several new features to the company’s Converged Services Platform (CSP), including a host-based SIP stack for added design flexibility and more robust mediaprocessing capabilities to support IPbased applications and services such as voice and signaling services. Additional hardware includes a new Dialogic IP Network Interface Series 3 card (IPN3), which transcodes PCM-coded voice traffic (in legacy networks) to any of the most common IP codecs in IP networks and a Dialogic Digital Signal Processing Series 2 Plus card (DSP2 Plus) with robust mediaprocessing capabilities.

 
Performance Technology Launches New Voice-Processing Modules Print E-mail

Performance Technologies (www.pt.com) has launched two new voiceprocessing modules. Using Centillium Communication’s Entropia III processor, the PMC531 and PMC532 provide a flexible set of options for building bladebased solutions for voice-coding applications. Integrated with Performance Technologies’ existing CompactPCI base boards, the new modules can be utilized in media gateways, wireless infrastructure gateways, lawful intercept, and Class 4 and 5 telecommunications switching subcomponents, all supported under the company’s NexusWare Linux operating system and development environment.

 
Elma Offers 1U MicroBox Integrated MicroTCA Solution Print E-mail

Elma Electronics (www.elma.com) is now offering its 1U MicroBox as a fully integrated solution. The solution features up to 10 mid-sized single-width modules in a compact 1U height, including six AMCs, a power module, a J-TAG Switch Module from MicroBlade and one MicroTCA carrier hub. Redundant star signaling and redundant cooling modules provide extra reliability.

 
<< Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next > End >>

Results 1 - 11 of 139

Spotlight On

Securing the IP Enterprise

Mobility is one of the hot buzzwords in IP networking spaces. Mobile workers, mobile devices, and ubiquitous service coverage present the holy grail of the workanywhere professional. This broadening of access, coupled with integration of VoIP and video services, creates a problem for enterprise security managers. Deperimeterization of the network has raised the bar on what it takes to effectively protect an enterprise. Enterprise businesses have implemented traditional security mechanisms ranging from firewalls and session border controllers to intrusion detection and prevention systems. They worked when the perimeter was a single connection to the Internet. In today's business environment, with highly mobile professionals connecting via all manner of devices, the perimeter is both nowhere and everywhere. But it's no longer a fixed, visible point in the network topology.