The First Rule of VoIP
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@NashBrydges said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@scottalanmiller Out of curiosity, how can call quality be guaranteed at all? Once your call reaches the open internet, there isn't anything the ISP can do to control anything downstream.
Using the ISP or a dedicated link means that the call never hits the open internet at all, that's the difference. Which is handy for call quality, but takes out that whole "calls over the Internet" advantage.
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@scottalanmiller Right. That makes sense.
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@NashBrydges said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@scottalanmiller Right. That makes sense.
But the reality is, the Internet doesn't have call quality issues. Not realistically. Your WAN link is always where there are issues. The open Internet is so fast and vast, yes latency can hit you there, but it's not where people actually get issues.
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@scottalanmiller said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@NashBrydges said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@scottalanmiller Right. That makes sense.
But the reality is, the Internet doesn't have call quality issues. Not realistically. Your WAN link is always where there are issues. The open Internet is so fast and vast, yes latency can hit you there, but it's not where people actually get issues.
Exactly - and that WAN link is the piece that I'm always personally concerned about - and to which Scott will say - if you are that worried, then you should have a second ISP delivering you service.
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@Dashrender said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@scottalanmiller said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@NashBrydges said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@scottalanmiller Right. That makes sense.
But the reality is, the Internet doesn't have call quality issues. Not realistically. Your WAN link is always where there are issues. The open Internet is so fast and vast, yes latency can hit you there, but it's not where people actually get issues.
Exactly - and that WAN link is the piece that I'm always personally concerned about - and to which Scott will say - if you are that worried, then you should have a second ISP delivering you service.
That's the brute force method. QoS and a bigger pipe normally work as well, if you are really saturating it. And the second pipe approach works almost always BECAUSE the Internet itself is not a bottleneck.
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@scottalanmiller said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@Dashrender said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@scottalanmiller said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@NashBrydges said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@scottalanmiller Right. That makes sense.
But the reality is, the Internet doesn't have call quality issues. Not realistically. Your WAN link is always where there are issues. The open Internet is so fast and vast, yes latency can hit you there, but it's not where people actually get issues.
Exactly - and that WAN link is the piece that I'm always personally concerned about - and to which Scott will say - if you are that worried, then you should have a second ISP delivering you service.
That's the brute force method. QoS and a bigger pipe normally work as well, if you are really saturating it. And the second pipe approach works almost always BECAUSE the Internet itself is not a bottleneck.
Well I was more talking about the main link being down for whatever reason.
I've had cable internet at locations where 1+ hrs a month outage would be normal. Luckily that hasn't been the case for 4+ years.
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@Dashrender said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@scottalanmiller said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@Dashrender said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@scottalanmiller said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@NashBrydges said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@scottalanmiller Right. That makes sense.
But the reality is, the Internet doesn't have call quality issues. Not realistically. Your WAN link is always where there are issues. The open Internet is so fast and vast, yes latency can hit you there, but it's not where people actually get issues.
Exactly - and that WAN link is the piece that I'm always personally concerned about - and to which Scott will say - if you are that worried, then you should have a second ISP delivering you service.
That's the brute force method. QoS and a bigger pipe normally work as well, if you are really saturating it. And the second pipe approach works almost always BECAUSE the Internet itself is not a bottleneck.
Well I was more talking about the main link being down for whatever reason.
I've had cable internet at locations where 1+ hrs a month outage would be normal. Luckily that hasn't been the case for 4+ years.
That may not be the problem, but we can all point to your posts about your shitty phone service which was bought through your ISP and has had multiple, hours long, outages.
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@JaredBusch said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@Dashrender said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@scottalanmiller said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@Dashrender said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@scottalanmiller said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@NashBrydges said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@scottalanmiller Right. That makes sense.
But the reality is, the Internet doesn't have call quality issues. Not realistically. Your WAN link is always where there are issues. The open Internet is so fast and vast, yes latency can hit you there, but it's not where people actually get issues.
Exactly - and that WAN link is the piece that I'm always personally concerned about - and to which Scott will say - if you are that worried, then you should have a second ISP delivering you service.
That's the brute force method. QoS and a bigger pipe normally work as well, if you are really saturating it. And the second pipe approach works almost always BECAUSE the Internet itself is not a bottleneck.
Well I was more talking about the main link being down for whatever reason.
I've had cable internet at locations where 1+ hrs a month outage would be normal. Luckily that hasn't been the case for 4+ years.
That may not be the problem, but we can all point to your posts about your shitty phone service which was bought through your ISP and has had multiple, hours long, outages.
Hey I'm not defending my setup - you know that decision was NOT made by me!
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@Dashrender said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@JaredBusch said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@Dashrender said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@scottalanmiller said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@Dashrender said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@scottalanmiller said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@NashBrydges said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@scottalanmiller Right. That makes sense.
But the reality is, the Internet doesn't have call quality issues. Not realistically. Your WAN link is always where there are issues. The open Internet is so fast and vast, yes latency can hit you there, but it's not where people actually get issues.
Exactly - and that WAN link is the piece that I'm always personally concerned about - and to which Scott will say - if you are that worried, then you should have a second ISP delivering you service.
That's the brute force method. QoS and a bigger pipe normally work as well, if you are really saturating it. And the second pipe approach works almost always BECAUSE the Internet itself is not a bottleneck.
Well I was more talking about the main link being down for whatever reason.
I've had cable internet at locations where 1+ hrs a month outage would be normal. Luckily that hasn't been the case for 4+ years.
That may not be the problem, but we can all point to your posts about your shitty phone service which was bought through your ISP and has had multiple, hours long, outages.
Hey I'm not defending my setup - you know that decision was NOT made by me!
True. I should have said your employer's shitty phone service.
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@Dashrender said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@scottalanmiller said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@NashBrydges said in The First Rule of VoIP:
@scottalanmiller Right. That makes sense.
But the reality is, the Internet doesn't have call quality issues. Not realistically. Your WAN link is always where there are issues. The open Internet is so fast and vast, yes latency can hit you there, but it's not where people actually get issues.
Exactly - and that WAN link is the piece that I'm always personally concerned about - and to which Scott will say - if you are that worried, then you should have a second ISP delivering you service.
Which you can't do if your phone service is tied to your ISP! So that is one of the biggest deals is that you give up ISP redundancy.
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@scottalanmiller is right. The bottleneck is always the customer router. And not so much bandwidth as much as packets per second. Your dropbox sync is killing your phone calls 50 to 1 over bandwidth 99% of the time. Your $50 linksys router can't handle a million pps.
Most ISP's are little more than Broadsoft resellers with no interconnects in their local market. Even on the WISP side speeds are so good now that bundling voice isn't relevant.