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Most enterprises today support at least three separate networks (LAN, WLAN, and
voice) to support static and mobile data and voice (Figure 1). Each network was
optimally designed to meet different requirements but with the convergence of
services the cost and support burden associated with upholding three separate
networks are becoming prohibitive. The unification of voice, video, and data
service infrastructures for both stationary and mobile devices is inevitable and
already termed "quadruple play" by the industry. Specifically the
equipment to provide voice services is going to migrate from today's vertically
oriented PBXs to IP-based telephony servers supporting call, registration, and
enhanced calling services. It is anticipated that core telephony services will
integrate and blend with video and text-oriented layered services where network
service infrastructure convergence is feasible from an operational and cost
perspective. Since voice infrastructure will ride over IP, its quality will
depend on QoS-enabled IP core network services for delivery of real-time
transport. User and operational advantages are anticipated through a more
flexible system based on a PC or server-based model for rapid evolution via
voice and data service integration.
The development and integration of rich and integrated applications over a
common set of layered services will also enable the unification of electronic
mail, voice and text messaging (e.g., IM) over common users' devices and a
converged network infrastructure. Nevertheless, matching the scalability, cost,
and reliability advantages which the enterprise maintains with its current
environment, will be the single biggest challenge in realizing a voice and data
convergent communication vision.

Figure 1: Existing separate LAN, Voice, and WLAN
click image for larger view
In order to support voice and video, which are delay sensitive services, data
services networks have to address and support basic scheduling capabilities.
Since voice is considered by most users and the regulatory domains to be a more
critical service than data, securing voice is an important factor. One of the
biggest security problems in the enterprise network is the standard "permit
all" paradigm of the LAN. While this openness was a catalyst to the growth
of computer networks, it also allows devices with security issues to freely
connect to the network and potentially compromise other devices. Traditionally
LANs have also paid no attention to admission control and cannot separate users
with different access rights such as company employees and visitors. As more and
more mission-critical services are added to the LAN, steps must be taken to
enforce those rights through comprehensive security and QoS mechanisms.
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