F I X E D - L I N E
The Camiant Difference for Fixed-line Networks
Camiant-enabled fixed-line networks produce high-performance, highly rewarding multimedia experiences that encourage customer longevity and support market-differentiating services. At broadband speed.
The Market
Fixed-line telephone providers have raced to the forefront of the broadband revolution. Today more than 164 million DSL connections account for a wide majority of worldwide residential broadband accounts*, making fixed-line DSL the primary conduit for the new broadband era across the globe. Now, with telephone providers investing in next-generation, deep-fiber architectures that deliver unprecedented data throughput rates, the stage is set for an even more stunning revolution in fixed-line multimedia content delivery and interaction.
* DSL Forum, from Point Topic data, September 2006
The Fixed-line Future
Convergence is here, and it's riding revved-up fixed-line networks straight toward the future. Bold new initiatives orchestrated by fixed-line industry organizations aim to propel the next generation of broadband services growth. From the BroadbandSuite™ to new work being done by ETSI/ TISPAN, fixed-line broadband providers are focusing on the increasing interplay between a "quadruple play" of voice, video, data and mobile communications services. By embracing next-generation architectures including the IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS), providers are retooling their networks to support adventurous new multimedia services — from high-definition TV to video-enabled telephony.
Camiant-powered fixed-line IP networks deliver quality of service and policy control features that enable next-generation providers to elevate the performance and appeal of these new multimedia applicationsˇ and more.
Network diagram of Camiant's policy solution in fixed-line environment
* The IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) standard defines a generic architecture for offering Voice over IP (VoIP) and multimedia services. It is an internationally recognized standard, specified by the Third Generation Partnership Project (3GPP/3GPP2) and embraced by other standards bodies including ETSI/TISPAN. The standard supports multiple access types including GSM, WCDMA, CDMA2000, fixed-line broadband access and WLAN. |