Session Initiation Protocol/Related Articles
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- See also changes related to Session Initiation Protocol, or pages that link to Session Initiation Protocol or to this page or whose text contains "Session Initiation Protocol".
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- Asynchronous Transfer Mode [r]: A technology for the transfer of fixed-length "cells" of digital information through specialized cell switches built on top of optical transmission networks; increasingly obsolescent [e]
- Computer networking session protocols [r]: A communication protocol for computer to computer networking. [e]
- Convergence of communications [r]: Technical specifications and infrastructure to allow all types of communications (e.g., telephone, web, television) to interface over a common set of information transfer technologies [e]
- Facsimile [r]: A means of sending copies of paper documents, over conventional telephone networks or over Internet protocol [e]
- Public Switched Telephone Network [r]: Network of the world's public circuit-switched telephone systems, the is now almost entirely digital and includes mobile as well as fixed telephones. [e]
- Telephone Number Mapping [r]: A suite of protocols to unify the telephone numbering system E.164 with the Internet addressing system DNS by using an indirect lookup method, to obtain NAPTR records. [e]
- Mashup [r]: A data visualization created by combining data with multiple computer applications. [e]
- BGP connection establishment [r]: used to establish a TCP connection and a BGP session between two routers before they can exchange exterior routing information. [e]
- Session border controller [r]: Devices for computer networks involving applications that use multiple, variable TCP/UDP port numbers for sessions of applications such as multimedia services or Voice over Internet Protocol, to provide security services including firewall and encryption gateway-like functions, as well as certain types of voice call switching [e]
- Telephone [r]: Telecommunications device that transmits and receives sound, most commonly the human voice, by converting the sound waves to pulses of electrical current, and then retranslating the current back to sound. [e]