nanog mailing list archives

Re: Cost-effectivenesss of highly-accurate clocks for NTP


From: Lamar Owen <lowen () pari edu>
Date: Mon, 16 May 2016 12:02:04 -0400

On 05/15/2016 01:05 PM, Eric S. Raymond wrote:
I'm not used to thinking of IT as a relatively low-challenge environment!

I actually changed careers from broadcast engineering to IT to lower my stress level and 'personal bandwidth challenge.' And, yes, it worked. In my case, I'm doing IT for radio and optical astronomy, and at least the timing aspect is higher-challenge that most IT environments.

You're implicitly suggesting there might be a technical case for replacing these T1/T3 trunks with some kind of VOIP provisioning less dependent on accurate time synch. Do you think that's true?

While I know the question was directed at Mel specifically, I'll just say from the point of view of a T1 voice trunk customer that I hope to never see it go to a VoIP solution. VoIP codecs can have some serious latency issues; I already notice the round-trip delay if I try to carry on a conversation between our internal VoIP system and someone on a cell phone. And this is before codec artifacting (and cascaded codec scrambling) is counted. Can we please keep straight μ-law (A-law if relevant) lossless DS0 PCM timeslices for trunklines so we get at least one less lossy codec cascade? Or have you never experimented with what happens when you cascade G.722 with G.729 with G.726 and then G.711 and back? Calls become mangled gibberish.

I would find it interesting to see how many carriers are still doing large amounts of SONET, as that is the biggest use-case for high-stability timing.


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