VoIP from around the net: May 21, 2009 Introducing: The RADVISION Developer Community

 
Anatoli Levine

HD Voice is Here?

Guest post by Anatoli Levine
May 26th, 2009

[Anatoli just returned from the HD Communications Summit with some interesting insights about HD Voice. As I am pushing him to become a regular guest blogger here, he was kind enough to write about it for me here. He also has his own twitter account, so you can follow him @Anatoli1]

To follow up on my previous post, “Can You Hear Me Now?“, I would like to continue talking about HD Voice. However, now I’m armed and dangerous – with the knowledge, that is. HD Communications Summit which took place on Thursday, May 21st, in New York City, brought together an outstanding line up of speakers with an amazing depth of knowledge on the subject. The event was organized by Jeff Pulver and Dan Berninger – both can be regarded as VoIP pioneers and experts on the subject.

So what did I learn? A lot.

One thing for sure – HD Voice is here. The technology is here. Yep, we know how to make everyone sound better, juicier, more vivid and live. Challenge is – “we” is a small technical community. Nobody else knows – and nobody asks for it – therefore, it is not happening.

HD Voice Sounds Great

Two excellent presentations, one by Jeff Rodman, Polycom CTO, and another one by Martyn Humphries, GM of VoIP Group at Broadcom, explained and demonstrated the differences between regular telephone speech and HD Voice coming with all the live nuances. Nevertheless, many years of bad mobile calls taught us to ask for only two things – first, that your call will actually connect – and second, that it will not drop in the middle (and if it does drop – start from the “first” again). Great quality voice – sure, we’ll take it – but don’t ask us to pay for it – and again, the technology is not happening. It will require quite a bit of effort to educate and convince – Jeff Pulver’s idea to petition for “HDV” campaign with FCC is good – still, just don’t drop my calls, please…

HD Voice Is More Than Just a Codec

Another interesting revelation for me was the fact HD Voice is more than just a codec. Having spent many years at RADVISION, where video is king, the screen by itself is practically always good, the key to the good quality video is really in the mathematical wonders of the codec (and all software layers around it in the media system). Not the case with audio – while codec is important, what can be described by single word acoustics is equally or more important – it is choice of materials and actual mechanical design of the earpiece or a headset, or speakers that will actually determine if HD voice will be actually HD. I guess this actually make sound delivery more of an art compared to video delivery? Huh, I’m working for the video company in the end of the day, so I guess I need to be more careful with conclusions.

So What Do We Have?

So for the quick recap:

  • Technology is ready
  • We mastered the art of sound
  • There is no demand

Am I missing anything else? Yeah, technology is ready, and the problem is – too much of it.

There are at least twice as many wideband codecs than narrow band codecs. Great selection of non-interoperable codecs! Of course that makes transcoding very important, but also prevents us from leaping forward, as we can’t achieve a level of deployable interoperability. G.722 everyone, please!

Recap (2)

Well, time to conclude. Here is another recap:

  • Technology is ready
  • We mastered the art of sound
  • There is no demand
  • Interoperability is not where it should be

Ok, as I’m wearing two hats here, what it all means?

For RADVISION, we will continue to make the picture better and brighter – it worth thousand words anyway, right? Don’t get me wrong, of course clear Voice (HD, it is) greatly enhances the picture, so we gladly embrace the “complete HD experience” momentum in the industry.

For the IMTC, it sounds like a textbook case of “what IMTC does the best” – we can get together all the players in the industry, create base profile and test plan, run interoperability testing, create excitement with amazing clarity of the voice, educate the market and declare a victory! Sounds simple? I hope it is. Let’s start…

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Comments and trackbacks

  • 1. Michael S Collins  |  June 2nd, 2009 at 7:09 am

    I find it somewhat frustrating that the HD Summit overlooked what is probably the single most important piece of software for making HD voice work: FreeSWITCH. I say this because it’s the only piece of software out there that will transcode between different codecs *AND* sampling rates, do it well, and do it for free. I challenge anyone to find a piece of software that does more for HD VoIP than FreeSWITCH. If you want HD voice for the masses then spread the word about FS. It can render the codec proliferation issue completely moot. What else can transcode sampling rates of 8k, 16k, 32k, and 48k? What else can do CELT, WB Speex, G722/722.1, and Skype, among others?

    If you know of something more versatile than FreeSWITCH then please let me know. If not, go check out FreeSWITCH – you’ll be glad you did.

    -MC
    See you in Chicago at ClueCon, http://www.cluecon.com

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