VoIP Calls Double In Quality 116
anthm writes "From Newsforge and
LinuxPR
FreeSWITCH, an open source soft-switch and IVR platform, have announced that they can support 16khz audio calls thus doubling the potential voice quality. They have had successful tests with a conference bridge, a pass-through SIP call and an IVR that reads RSS news feeds with the Cepstral Text-To-Speech Engine."
FreeSWITCH, an open source soft-switch and IVR platform, have announced that they can support 16khz audio calls thus doubling the potential voice quality. They have had successful tests with a conference bridge, a pass-through SIP call and an IVR that reads RSS news feeds with the Cepstral Text-To-Speech Engine."
Voip-Info.org has a good list of business VoIP providers.
Please get the rest of the telcomms to follow. (Score:4, Informative)
Still, its a good piece of news, onward and upwards.
*crosses fingers* Please nobody mention video phones. *crosses fingers*
Re:Please get the rest of the telcomms to follow. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Please get the rest of the telcomms to follow. (Score:2)
Re:Please get the rest of the telcomms to follow. (Score:2)
Re:Please get the rest of the telcomms to follow. (Score:2)
The real reason we're making fun of him? In the words of John Stewart, "Maybe it's because you don't know jack-shit about the Internet."
Re:Please get the rest of the telcomms to follow. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Please get the rest of the telcomms to follow. (Score:2)
Re:Please get the rest of the telcomms to follow. (Score:2)
Re:Please get the rest of the telcomms to follow. (Score:1)
Re:Please get the rest of the telcomms to follow. (Score:2)
Re:Please get the rest of the telcomms to follow. (Score:1)
Oh, just like 640k ought to be enough for anybody
I know, I know, he never said it.
Re:Please get the rest of the telcomms to follow. (Score:2)
Re:Please get the rest of the telcomms to follow. (Score:2)
Personally I'm disappointed that this is considered impressive. Since it's limited to pure VOIP calls, it should be as simple as selecting a bitrate when you encode an MP3 or record a show on your PVR.
Let me be the first to say... (Score:2)
Speex Wideband Codec (Score:2)
Re:Please get the rest of the telcomms to follow. (Score:1)
Re:Please get the rest of the telcomms to follow. (Score:1)
Nobody does videeo conferencing over analogue lines [wikipedia.org] anymore - if they aren't sent over the internet, then they use some sort of leased line or ISDN connection, etc. Incidentally, and this probably will confuse the issue, but TV broadcasts use ~6mHz over analogue connections for one
Re:Please get the rest of the telcomms to follow. (Score:1)
Re:Please get the rest of the telcomms to follow. (Score:1)
Re:Please get the rest of the telcomms to follow. (Score:1)
sorry, seen such dumb things of late here (there are eight bits in a byte! [slashdot.org]) it's hard to tell anymore.
Re:Please get the rest of the telcomms to follow. (Score:2)
Even more worrying is that you will get progressively worse audio quality through the telephony chain as the audio undergoes several up and down conversions in sample rate.
One of the really neat things about the common exiting audio codecs in use for telephony (G
Multiple codec conversions *are* really bad (Score:2)
Good Work (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Good Work (Score:2, Insightful)
I need it (Score:2)
Now imagine that it responds to button presses so you can change songs.
"Operator... oh won't you help me make this call..."
So what? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:So what? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:So what? (Score:2)
Get foobar 2K and grab the free mp4+SBR codec from nero. You can turn a cd quality stereo signal (mp3, whatever) into a svelte, 16kBIT/s 44khzs/stereo (!) signal without much quality loss (well at least compared to current telephony anyway...)
Re:So what? (Score:1)
Re:So what? (Score:1)
Re:So what? (Score:1)
Re:So what? (Score:1)
Re:So what? (Score:1)
Re:So what? (Score:1)
Higher frequency from the source, then less aggre
Re:So what? (Score:1)
Thanks for your comment - whoever designs and buys phones and voice networks should obviously give more weight to your opinion than mine.
Re:So what? (Score:1)
No doubt there is a significant perceptible difference, it's just that in terms of *intelligibility* (what really matters for a voice phone call) there isn't THAT big a difference between 8kHz and 16kHz, certainly not a doubling.
Put it another way, if 95% of listeners can understand a sentence uttered by a speaker at the other end at 8kHz, maybe 96% can understand at 16 kHz. And yes, I just pulled those numbers out of my posterior, but hopefully you get the
Re:So what? (Score:1)
Re:So what? (Score:2)
So what? If you're going to up the sampling rate why not go directly to 44khz stereo
Because stereo would be a complete waste of bandwidth and processing power (one microphone, one speaker), and the human voice doesn't get anything near 22khz in frequency. Normal speaking voices have an even lower cutoff frequency. The CD standard is great for music, but complete overkill for sending voice.
Re:So what? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:So what? (Score:1)
Because it covers almost all of the human voice (Score:3, Informative)
Re:So what? (Score:1)
Re:So what? (Score:2)
Re:So what? (Score:2)
16kHz is pretty similar to analog FM radio transmissions and people have been listening to music on that medium for a long time quite satisfactorily. Besides, if you want to have high fidility transmission of music over the internet, there is already pretty decent solutions with streaming ogg/mp3.
IM
Define: IVR (Score:4, Informative)
So I knew what one was, I just didn't know there was a TLA for them. This inane personal revelation brought to you by the captcha "accuse".
-theGreater.
Doubling? hardly (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Doubling? hardly (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Doubling? hardly (Score:2)
Re:Doubling? hardly (Score:2)
I'm pretty sure his point is that it's only one more octave. What the phone companies consider an "ideal" response for a telephone line is a bandwidth from about 180 Hz to 3-4 KHz or so, with a signal to noise ratio of about 45 dB. That means an ideal POTS line starts with about 4.5 octaves of bandwidth, and this increases that to about 5.5 instead. IOW, even though it doubles the maximum frequency, the perceived c
It's for the consonants, not the vowels (Score:2)
Of course vowels aren't going to have a lot of content in the upper frequencies. Now try saying "This is the eighth utterance" into a microphone and see what doesn't happen. I did it myself, using a crossover at 4 kHz to split the signal into low-pass left and high-pass right channels. Listen to the Ogg Vorbis file [jk0.org] and play with the balance. Notice how the phoneme /s/ comes through three times clearer when you have both speakers on (8 kHz bandw
Re:Doubling? hardly (Score:1)
Re:Doubling? hardly (Score:2)
You're thinking 8bit audio to 16bit audio.
CMIIW
Re:Doubling? hardly (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Doubling? hardly (Score:2)
The bigger proble
Re:Doubling? hardly (Score:2)
Re:Doubling? hardly (Score:1)
What's wrong with the current implementation? (Score:2)
Re:What's wrong with the current implementation? (Score:2)
It would make understanding people who mumble, have poor english skills, lispers, etc, etc, significantly easier. 44KHz would be ideal, but 16 would be an improvement. I'm pretty sure however that many VoIP soft sw
PING Ted Stevens (Score:5, Funny)
Re:PING Ted Stevens (Score:1)
Oh wait...
High-Def Telephony with Open Source Soft-Switch! (Score:2)
definition
4. a. The clarity of detail in an optically produced image, such as a photograph, effected by a combination of resolution and contrast.
b. The degree of clarity with which a televised image or broadcast signal is received.
Of course, what do I know... I didn't realize wireless networking equipment had fidelity, either (ie. WiFi).
Re:High-Def Telephony with Open Source Soft-Switch (Score:1)
Re:High-Def Telephony with Open Source Soft-Switch (Score:2)
"Definition" is a video term, it has NO application at all to audio. It makes no sense.
Re:High-Def Telephony with Open Source Soft-Switch (Score:2)
Apparently audio can have "definition"...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_Definition_Radi
Of course, that's only in the same as networking equipment has fidelity...
Only a slight improvement (Score:5, Informative)
In theory a SIP server doesn't need to know all of the codecs a client supports - the clients themselves negotiate any compatible protocol.
Of course, if the sip server puts itself in the path (such as when it needs to pass through to PSTN or firewalled clients), then 8KHz is the (till now) maximum supported rate.
Re:Only a slight improvement (Score:2)
Care to provide more info on this. Speex is *not* optimized for 24 kHz so it would probably sound worse than 16 kHz or 32 kHz. If the devs are indeed using 24 kHz, it's probably a bad idea that would be fixed. (BTW, I know what I'm talking about -- I wrote Speex)
Re:Right... (Score:2)
Re:Right... (Score:2)
Umm... I'm running at 64 bits right now, and I don't even HAVE an MS OS (assuming you mean MS == Microsoft). Nor did I have to buy any special OS at all. I just downloaded it. Legally, even.
Get off the Internets and turn off your hard drive before you hurt yourself.
The telemarketers (Score:1)
can we say astroturf? (Score:1)
Move along, nothing to see here yet
Big Whoopie (Score:3, Insightful)
Skype has been running their softphones at higher than 8Khz/8bit so their softswitch obviously was the first widely deployed one to leave 64kbit max quality behind.
Yes, someday all telephony (except legacy telco stuff that will never change, which will be a shrinking market) will offer higher quality audio and an option for video. But not for a few more years until the saturation of next gen telephony products gets better.
Ugh, Don't get me Started (Score:2)
The VOIP to PSTN scene kind of sucks at the moment anyway. There are a lot of fly-by-night op
I don't think this is the real problem (Score:2)
Nothing special here... (Score:1, Informative)
The phone people (probabably AT&T) chose that standard since it gave pretty good voice quality given the limitations of current technology.
People are generally happy with the voice quality of the phone system - which is different from the voice quality of the last mile - the analog copper loop to your house, or CDMA/GSM/TDMA to your cell phone.
It's highly unlikely this new codec will catch
Marketing BS (Score:4, Insightful)
If anything, this feature reduces end-to-end quality by doubling the amount of data being sent down the pipe, as you'd need to buffer more data at the same transmission speed to correct for jitter. Brillant!
Re:Marketing BS (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Marketing BS (Score:2)
Re:Marketing BS (Score:2)
There's more to VoIP than the Internet, you know. Some of us work with lines which are guaranteed big enough or have QoS.
Is it.. (Score:1)
Re:Is it.. (Score:1)
Re:Is it.. (Score:1)
Bits is Bits (Score:2)
Speex is a CELP (code excited linear prediction) codec that is far more complex than the simple PCM system used by the telephone company. The resultant bit rate can be fixed or variable, and is not rigidly tied to the sampling rate used for data acquisition.
My voice bandwith runs at 80 KHz! (Score:2)
And my software puts a green stripe around the edge of the data too... sucka!
Moore's Law (Score:2)
(Going from 8 kHz to 16 kHz isn't a "doubling of quality"
Re:Moore's Law (Score:1)
First, PSTN is a 4 kilohertz bandwidth (Score:2)
Second, this is enough to capture most of a human voice. Can you hit a high "C"? That is about one kilohertz.
Everything above 1kHz is being used to carry ever-dimishing harmonics that provide resolution for fast-rising sounds like "k" and "p". There's a slight loss of detail at 4kHz and very little at 8kHz. There is no honest way to refer to a move from 8 to 16 as "doubling the quality". Sycraft-fu's post has it right. In fact, if I were designing the system I'd put i
16KHz is nothing. (Score:1)
Re:16KHz is nothing. (Score:1)
16 kHz (Score:2)
poor choice of demo (Score:1)
Re:Not really free? (Score:1)
Please send us your name and email address and we will
send you instructions on how to download our unquestionably
open source code without having to provide any information.
Re:Virtually pointless (Score:1)