Options
SIP vs. VoIP
fredmoogie
Member Posts: 80 ■■□□□□□□□□
in Off-Topic
can someone explain to me the main difference? i read a few articles online however i am still a bit confused. thanks!
Comments
-
OptionsTrifidw Member Posts: 281SIP is a signalling protocol that tells phones what to do and doesn't carry any voice traffic.
VoIP traffic is carried in a RTP packet and usually contains 20ms (can be adjusted) of audio per packet with a codec such as g.711 (64Kbps).
You need both a signalling protocol (can be SIP, might be SCCP if using Cisco CUCM) and RTP for a phone call to work between 2 phones and the voice server. -
Optionsdeth1k Member Posts: 312Voip is just a term whereas sip is signalling protocol, there is no comparison between the two.
-
Optionsit_consultant Member Posts: 1,903fredmoogie wrote: »can someone explain to me the main difference? i read a few articles online however i am still a bit confused. thanks!
SIP is more like a PRI. As others indicated it is a signalling protocol. Often a provider will offer a "SIP trunk" which will take the place of the older PRI though to my knowledge there are no providers which are certified by the major manufacturers (Avaya, Cisco, Shoretel, etc) to provide a SIP trunk directly to the phone switch from the POTs network.
If you have site to site connections, you may connect your remote office phone switches by the vendor implementation of a SIP trunk. Normally though, they have an option (like Avaya's small community networking) which is specific to the manufacturer and it will normally work a heck of a lot better.
Actual VOIP is similar to a regular digital handset except instead of delivering the voice packets over a 4 pin connector you use ethernet. You get some encapsulation options like H.262 etc.