Importance Of A VOIP Router!
Posted under SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, VOIP on Dec 2, 2008
A new way to talk to your phone is through voice over internet protocol with your broadband internet connection.
To use the phone you have been using before your VOIP connection, a VOIP router is needed.
If you have voice over internet protocol available to you, you’ll need a VOIP router to sort of make it all happen.
What is a VOIP router?
A VOIP router is a small device that will take a little time to get used to, but once you’ve used it just a couple of times, you’ll be able to use the whole system without a second though.
Without a VoIP router, your phone will not be able to figure out where the datagram should go from source to destination, so information will be lost.
Necessity of VOIP routers:
VOIP routers will help control phone traffic, controls and maintains bandwidth, and ensures a good voice quality for each and every phone call. Basically, a VOIP router is responsible for routing all the information in and out of your home so that you can get the services you are supposed to get.
VOIP routers will no longer be needed because of the ever expanding technology. The invention of digital telephones, regarded the need for a separate router unnecessary. But, until this newer technology becomes more widespread and cost efficient, the majority of VOIP users will need a VOIP router to use the voice over the internet protocol features.
Because of this newer technology, having VOIP service will become easier and more accessible to everyone in the very near future. But, don’t let the idea of a routing device scare you off, as VOIP is very easy to use!
A VOIP router is a computer networking device that forwards data packets across an internetwork toward their destinations, through a process known as routing. Routing occurs at layer 3 (the Network layer) of the OSI seven-layer model.
Function of a VOIP router:
The function of a VOIP router in no technical terms is that, it acts as a junction between two networks to transfer data packets among them. A VOIP router is essentially different from a switch that connects devices to form a Local Area Network (LAN).
One easy illustration for the different functions of routers and switches is to think of switches as neighborhood streets, and the router as the intersections with the street signs.
Each house on the street has an address within a range on the block. In the same way, a switch connects various devices each with their own IP address (es) on a LAN. However, the switch knows nothing about IP addresses except its own management address.
Routers connect networks together the way that onramps or major intersections connect streets to highways and freeways, etc. The street signs at the intersection (routing table) show, which way the packets need to flow.
So for example, a VOIP router at home connects the Internet Service Provider’s (ISP) network (usually on an Internet address) together with the LAN in the home (typically using a range of private IP addresses) and a single broadcast domain. The switch connects.
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