Post by account_disabled on Jan 22, 2024 4:07:34 GMT
In an ideal world, communications are always flawless, electricity is never lost, and the Internet is stable under all circumstances. But in reality, force majeure happens, and businesses sometimes have to operate during accidents or natural disasters, when the power supply is cut off, the Internet or mobile communications are lost. Our experience as a Ukrainian company proves that even in extreme conditions a business can work productively. We tell you what the advantage of virtual telephony is and how it helps to maintain communication when the power goes out. Reading time 3 minutes Why does the quality of communication drop when the power goes out? 5 ways Ringostat provides reliable communication even when there is no light What to do if you urgently need to improve communication Why does the quality of communication drop when the power goes out? Many times, Ringostat clients have become companies that were previously dissatisfied with the communication quality of other virtual PBXs and were looking for a more reliable solution.
Why Fax Lists does it happen that telephony, which seemed stable just yesterday, begins to work intermittently or even disappears when there is a power outage? After all, if it works via the Internet, then it does not depend directly on the power supply? The trouble is that businesses still often use SIP-GSM gateways - devices that are the connecting link between IP and GSM networks. Ordinary SIM cards are inserted into the gateways, but telephone communication occurs via the Internet. Thus, the gateway serves as a “crutch” so as not to connect SIP numbers. Although it is the latter that are intended for calls directly via the Internet. communication during power outages, SIP-GSM gateway You can read more about the operation of devices in the article SIP-GSM gateways - saving on communications or “shooting yourself in the foot”? The goal of “technology” is banal - saving. But in the event of a power outage, this advantage becomes meaningless, because communication through SIM cards becomes unstable.
Mobile operator towers that provide such “virtual” telephony become overloaded for a number of reasons. The number of mobile calls is growing. For example, people are trying to find out if there is electricity at the nearest coworking space, at a neighbor's or relative's house. People use mobile Internet, because the regular one no longer works. Everyone noticed how this affects the quality of the connection - it decreases or disappears altogether. A large concentration of SIP-GSM gateways in one place can “put down” the nearest operator tower . But some telephony services are serviced by not just a few, or even dozens of gateways - there are entire premises where gateways with tens of thousands of customer SIM cards are installed. Even if you use your own small gateway in a business center office, your neighbors may well operate in the same way. Stations can also turn off, because due to periodic outages, the batteries of uninterruptible power supplies simply do not have time to charge.
Why Fax Lists does it happen that telephony, which seemed stable just yesterday, begins to work intermittently or even disappears when there is a power outage? After all, if it works via the Internet, then it does not depend directly on the power supply? The trouble is that businesses still often use SIP-GSM gateways - devices that are the connecting link between IP and GSM networks. Ordinary SIM cards are inserted into the gateways, but telephone communication occurs via the Internet. Thus, the gateway serves as a “crutch” so as not to connect SIP numbers. Although it is the latter that are intended for calls directly via the Internet. communication during power outages, SIP-GSM gateway You can read more about the operation of devices in the article SIP-GSM gateways - saving on communications or “shooting yourself in the foot”? The goal of “technology” is banal - saving. But in the event of a power outage, this advantage becomes meaningless, because communication through SIM cards becomes unstable.
Mobile operator towers that provide such “virtual” telephony become overloaded for a number of reasons. The number of mobile calls is growing. For example, people are trying to find out if there is electricity at the nearest coworking space, at a neighbor's or relative's house. People use mobile Internet, because the regular one no longer works. Everyone noticed how this affects the quality of the connection - it decreases or disappears altogether. A large concentration of SIP-GSM gateways in one place can “put down” the nearest operator tower . But some telephony services are serviced by not just a few, or even dozens of gateways - there are entire premises where gateways with tens of thousands of customer SIM cards are installed. Even if you use your own small gateway in a business center office, your neighbors may well operate in the same way. Stations can also turn off, because due to periodic outages, the batteries of uninterruptible power supplies simply do not have time to charge.