Wednesday, August 1, 2007

World's largest carpet


The world's largest hand-woven carpet was produced by Iran Carpet Company (ICC) at the order of the Diwan of the Royal Court of Sultanate of Oman to cover the entire floor of the main praying hall of the Sultan Qaboos Grand Mosque (SQGM) in Muscat. The carpet measures over 70×60 meters, and covers the 4343 square meter area of the praying hall, all in a single piece.
The central medallion is inspired by the ceiling of the Sheikh Lutfullah Mosque in Isfahan. The original design elements of the medallion were somewhat adjusted to match the enormous size of the carpet. The growing size of each succeeding oval motifs gives the illusion of a concave dome harmoniously reflecting the Grand Mosque's inner dome just above the medallion.
The carpet's field is skillfully adorned with Shah Abbasi florals gracefully set in arabesque (Islimi) patterns.
The contract for weaving was awarded in 1996 and the completed carpet was shipped to Muscat in December 2000. The installation and linking works took some four months and was completed in April 2001. The newly built Grand Mosque was inaugurated by His Majesty the Sultan of Oman on May 4, 2001.
Those who visit the Grand Mosque marvel at this Persian carpet as a manifestation of a genuine traditional art- an art that has remained, and will continue to remain, a perennial phenomenon always loved and admired in every corner of the world.


The Largest Hand – made Carpet in History
A Statistical Profile
• Size : 70.50×60.90 m
• Area : 4343m2
• Density: 40 knots (Persian knotting)
• Place woven: Nishabour, Khorasan province
• Duration of weaving : 3 years
• Number of weavers in two shifts: 600 (women) , 12 million person/ hours
• Number of knots : 1700 million
• Number of colours: 28 colours from herbal origin
• Dyeing : pre-spun system
• Warp and weft: pure cotton yarn,
• Pile : fine wool
• Design: central medallion: inspired by the internal dome of Sheikh Lutfullah Mosque, Isfahan, field: overall Shah Abbasi floral set amid arabesque (Islimi) patterns.
• On-completion weight : 22 tons
• Shipment to Muscat: December 2000
• Installation on the site:31.12.2000-22.04.2001


The design, weaving and installation on the site of this carpet involved a series of inventive and innovative processes and techniques for which Iran Carpet Company has applied intellectual property rights in order to provide protection against any infringing acts.

Complaints on iPhone Battery


Officials in New York state asked Apple Inc. on Monday to change its iPhone design to allow consumers to replace their own batteries, just days after lawyers in Illinois filed a class-action lawsuit over the same complaint.


Apple charges customers a US$79 fee to replace the iPhone battery, which is sealed inside the phone instead of being attached by a removable latch, like most other consumer electronics. The company also charges an additional $29 to rent the user a temporary replacement phone to use during the repair.
Apple should revamp those policies and set cheaper fees for the service, according to a
letter sent to Apple CEO Steve Jobs by Mindy Bockstein, the chairperson of New York's Consumer Protection Board.


"A high-end cell phone shouldn't have to have low-end customer service," Bockstein wrote. She also demanded that Apple reveal its contract terms more clearly in its stores and online sites.
Apple did not return calls for comment. An AT&T spokesman referred all battery questions to Apple. AT&T is the sole mobile-phone service provider for the iPhone.
The product has already helped to create new profit at Apple, although it launched just two days before the end of the company's third quarter. Apple reported an US$818 million profit for that term, and expects that revenue will continue to rise, with an estimated 1 million iPhones sold by the end of the next quarter.


The New York complaint was similar to a class-action lawsuit filed Thursday in the Circuit Court of Cook County, in Chicago. That suit charges both Apple and AT&T with hiding the battery replacement cost from customers until they had already purchased an iPhone. It also alleges that users will have to pay that charge once every year, since the iPhone battery is rated for 300 recharging cycles.



Both the letter to Apple and the lawsuit echo another consumer complaint
, submitted to Apple in June by the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights, a nonprofit advocacy group in California. The foundation said that Apple had already created controversy when it designed its popular iPod music player with an integrated battery, so the company has had ample time to find a more user-friendly design.
The iPod's permanent battery has not generated many complaints because users are more willing to live without music than phone service, according to comments on several Apple blogs, and to the foundation's letter.
"Unlike the iPod, the iPhone is obviously intended and marketed as a device to be utilized for a broad range of business-related purposes, and on a constant basis," the letter said. "We can only assume that Apple and/or AT&T intend to provide a replacement battery at no charge for the actual life of the phone."
Unless Apple changes its marketing or design strategies as a result of the mounting complaints, the foundation is bound to be disappointed that its assumption will prove wrong.

IP TELEPHONY TERMINOLOGY


Accounting
A service which records the actions of an authenticated user.


Admission Control
A service (like COPS+) that controls which users or systems can request Quality of Service features.


Analog feature phone


An analog phone, which has extra buttons (sometimes programmable) that correspond to tones understood by the telephone switch or other equipment. (e.g. Bellcore ADSI).


Analog or 2500 set
A traditional analog telephone.


Analog Transmission
A way of sending signals--voice, video, data--in which the transmitted signal is analogous to the original signal.


Analog Trunk
A single FXO or analog E&M circuit.


ATM


Asychronous Transfer Mode. A high bandwidth, low-delay, connection-oriented, packet-like switching and multiplexing technique.


Authentication
A service which verifies who is communicating.


Authorization


A service which defines what an authentication user may do.


Automated Attendant
A device which answers callers with a digital recording, and allows callers to route themselves to an extension through touch-tone input in response to a voice prompt.


Billing
A system of using accounting information to generate a bill for services.


Call
A conversation of 2 or more parties, which consists of 1 or more call segments. Any demand to set up a connections.


Call Appearance Mapper
A service which translates a telephony identity (telephone number or username) to native telephony addresses (i.e. IP address and port number information, phone number on the PSTN, ATM NSAP address, or Frame Relay DLCI).


Call Leg
A unidirectional or bi-directional part of a call between two telephony devices endpoints (as defined by SGCP) on the same IP, DS0, Frame Relay, or ATM network

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Call Quality
A measure of the expected quality as affected by the MOS of the codec (with or without voice activity detection), and the delay, jitter, and congestion on the network.


Call Route Quality
A measure of the best quality available across a call route.


Call Segment
A full duplex connection between a pair of telephony parties. A call segment consists of one or more call legs. A "conference call" normally consists of several call segments. A call segment may share multicast call legs with other call segments.


Call Segment Path
Two 1-way connections that may take different routes.


Capacity Monitor
A service which counts the number of timeslots available in a TDM network, and the amount of bandwidth available on an IP, Frame Relay, or ATM network. The Capacity Monitor must be directly or indirectly (using another service) aware of the layer 3 topology of the IP networks.


Channel or Timeslot
A single, bi-directional, direct connection between two TDM devices.


Codec
Short for COder/DECoder. An algorithm to represent speech, music, or video as a stream of bits and vice versa.


Codec quality
The best quality expected using a specific codec.


Conference
A single conversation consisting of 2 or more call segments. In a DS-0 network, a conference is typically setup as call segments radiating outward in a star from the party that setup the conference call.End Point Selection.


Conference Bridge or MCU
A device responsible for merging audio (and optionally other media) from many callers in a conference.


Desk set
Another name for "Telephone Set".


Digital Signal
A discontinuous signal. One whose state consists of discrete elements, representing very specific information.


DLCI
Data Link Connection Identifier. A frame relay term defining a 10-bit filed of the address field.


"Dog Bone"
A very traditional, popular, and comfortable handset design.


DS-0
Digital signal, level 0 is 64 kilobits. It is equal to one voice conversation digitized under PCM.


E1
The European equivalent of the North American 1544 million bits per second (T1) except that E1 carries information at the rate of 2.048 million bits per section

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E&M Transmission
(Ear and Mouth Transmission) 4-wire analog line type. One pair is used for transmit (goes to the user's ear), the other pair is used for receive (comes from the users mouth).


End Point Selection
The process of selecting one or more telephony devices (telephone set or daemon) associated with a telephony address.


Four-wire Circuit
A high performance circuit which offers lots of bandwidth and which is capable of multi-channel communications.


Ethernet phone
A phone that connects directly to an Ethernet network. Also referred to as an IP-phone.


Frame Relay


An access standard defined by ITU-T. Frame relay services employ a form of packet switching analogous to a streamlined version of X.25 networks. The packets are in the form of "frames" which are variable in length.


FXO
Foreign Exchange Office. Foreign Exchange is a service that provides local telephony service from a central office which is outside the subscriber's exchange area.


G.711
ITU-T u-law and A-law compression. Pulse Code Modulation (PCM). A simple waveform codec that uses 64kbits/sec. There are two variations u-law used in T1 and J1 countries, and A-law used in E1 countries.


G.7323.1
ITU-T 5.3 kbps and 6.3 kbps ACELP/MPMLQ coders. Dual rate speech coder designed for H.323 and H.324 audio and video conferencing /telephony standards over regular phone lines.


G.728
Low Delay Code Excited Linear Predictive (LD-CELP). A 16k codec. G.728 is primarily intended for Digital Circuit Multiplication Equipment (DCME) and so features a low transcoding delay in order to avoid the creation of telephony sidetone echo. It is also becoming a defacto standard for videoconferencing audio.


G.729 and G.729a
Conjugate Structure Algebraic CELP (CSA-CELP). An 8k codec. The G.729A specification uses a Conjugate-Structure Algebraic-Cod-Excited Linear Prediction algorithm.


G.723 and G.723.1
Codecs that operate at from 5.3k to 6.3k.


Gateway
A functional unit that interconnects a local area network (LAN) with another network having different higher layer protocols.


H.323
Serves as an "umbrella" for a set of standards defining real-time multimedia communications for packet based networks.


H.323 terminal
Any telephone that connects with H.323.


Handset
The part of a telephone you hold in your hand.


IEEE Std. 312-1977


IEEE Standard Definitions of Term for Communication Switching


IVR
Interactive Voice Response


IP
The internet protocol. The IP protocol is a standard describing protocol that keeps track of the Internet's addresses from different nodes, routes outgoing messages, and recognizes incoming messages.


IP Phone
A phone that sends traffic over a TCP/IP network (often an H.323 or terminal).


ITU-T


International Telecom Union telephony. (Previously the CCIT-T) The standards body that deals with telecommunications standards.


J-Tapi
Java Telephony API. A set of modulerly designed application programming interfaces for Java based application development.


LDAP
Lightweight Directory Access Protocol. An emerging standard which acts as an Internet-based solution to the DAP.


Link
A layer 2 network segment (typically in the WAN). For example, a Frame Relay link (native), an ATM link (native), or an IP link running any layer 2 protocol). An IP tunnel is not a link.
Link quality


The ability of a link to reliably deliver guaranteed bandwidth without dropping packets, and therefore to deliver good sounding audio.


Low Bandwidth Codec
A codec which uses 16k of bandwidth or less.


MAC Address

An address that identifies a particular medium access control (MAC) sublayer service access point (SAP).


MOS
Mean Opinion Score. A subjective measure of sound quality from 1 to 5.


Multicast Call Leg

A call leg which (in one or both directions ) carries (audio, video, or data) traffic for any number of parties.


Native Address
A MAC address on Ethernet. A TCP/IP address or DNS hostname plus a port number on an IP network, a DLCI on Frame Relay, or an NSAP address on ATM.


Native mode phone
A phone that maintains state information.


NBX phone
A stateless Ethernet phone developed by NBX Communication. It sends PCM encoded audio over Ethernet frames. State for many NBX phones is maintained by an standalone chassis on the same Ethernet network.


NSAP
Network Service Access Point. The point at whithc the OSI Network Service is made available to a Transport entity.


Path
The set of links through an IP network which corresponds to an IP call leg.


PSTN or GSTN

Public (or General) Switched Telephone Network. The public telephone network.


Router
A functional unit that interconnects two computer networks that use a single network layer procedure but may use different data link layers and physical layer procedures.


SoftPhone
A PC or PC-type device that emulates the telephone with prompts and commands appearing on the PC's screen instead of the phone.


Soft set
Provides the features of a telephone using software on a computer (Internet Phone, etc.)


Subscriber Line

A connection to an analog, BRI, or proprietary digital telephone set.
Tapi
Telephone Application Programming Interface. A term that refers to the Windows Telephony API.


T1
A digital transmission link with a total signal speed of 1544 Mbps. T1 is a standard for digital transmission in North America.


TCP/IP
Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol. The networking protocol that provides communication across interconnected networks between commuters with diverse hardware architectures and various operating systems.


TDM
Time Division Multiplexer--A device that manages DS-0s. Also a network which uses DS-0s.


Telephony Address

An address in one of many forms a Telephony Identity on any voice transport or a Native Address on the appropriate transport.


Telephony Gateway
Translates either from one transport to another (Vox to Vox) or one codec to another, or both.


Telephony Identity
An email address in the form "user@domain", or an E.164 address (phone number).


Trunk
1)A single DS-0 circuit between TDM switches 2) T1 or E1 consisting of several DS-0s 3) One hop of a TDM path, with one or more DS-0s. 4) One analog circuit between the central office and the PBX.


Trunk group
Multiple DS-0 circuits between TDM switches (1st sense of trunk).


Unified Communications
Provides integrated messages in a single in-box (voice, fax, email, images and video).


Voice over Dial-up
Voice sent over a standard phone line between a pair of V.80 modems.


Voice over DS-0
Voice over a 64k DS-0 channel of the traditional phone network.


Voice over Ethernet or NBX
Voice encapsulated in Ethernet frames at layer 2.


Voice over Frame Relay
(VoFR) Voice encapsulated in Frame Relay.


Voice over IP (VoIP)
Voice encapsulated in TCP/IP.


Voice over ATM
Structured (Nx64) or unstructured circuit emulation services on ATM.

What Is Unified Communications?



Unified communication is bridge the gap between telephone and computing to deliver the realtime messaging voice and conferencing to the desktop environment








Unified communications can help address the challenge today's organizations face as they contend with increasingly complex environments that feature a wide array of communications methods.
Employees, business partners, and customers now conduct business using seemingly infinite combinations of phones, voice messaging, e-mail, fax, mobile clients, and rich-media conferencing. Without unified communications, however, these tools are often not used as effectively as they could be. The result is information overload and misdirected communications that delay decisions, slow down processes, and reduce productivity.




Unified Communications Evolves



As precursors to unified communications, IP telephony and IP communications solutions have proven their ability to help solve such problems, enabling organizations to streamline business processes and reduce costs. For years, companies have realized the benefits that carrying voice, data, and video communications across a common, IP infrastructure can bring.



From these, unified communications solutions have evolved and offer even greater benefits. Unified communications applications are actually integrated within an IP network to provide structure and intelligence that can help organizations integrate their communications more closely with business processes, and ensure information reaches recipients quickly, through the most appropriate medium.
Unified communications allows businesses to collaborate in real time using advanced applications from an integrated, easy-to-use interface.






These applications include:
Video conferencing
Integrated voice and Web conferencing
Mobile IP soft phones
Voicemail, and more
Unified Communications Benefits
Unified communications solutions can save time and help control costs, while improving productivity and competitiveness:


Security

Microsoft unified communications technologies have built-in protection for your business communications to help ensure protection against spam and malicious attacks, address compliance and privacy concerns, and ensure business continuity.

Advanced spam and virus defenses


Microsoft Exchange Server 2007 delivers integrated antivirus, anti-spam, and anti-phishing technologies that are automatically updated to help stop the latest threats before they impact your business and employees. This includes multiple-engine virus scanning and advanced anti-spam with Microsoft Forefront Security for Exchange Server.

Hosted filtering services
Additional security is available through flexible off-premise protection from Microsoft Exchange Hosted Services, which provides filtering service before spam and viruses can get to your infrastructure. Microsoft Exchange Server 2007 also includes enhanced encryption features to help maintain the message confidentiality and instill confidence in communication.


Compliance support
New compliance capabilities help lower risk by making internal and regulatory compliance easier for the entire organization. Sophisticated transport rules, message retention, and flexible journaling capabilities allow for better enforcement of policies without disrupting employees' ability to get their work done.


Business continuity
New continuous replication capabilities continually back up data so systems can recover in minutes, even between geographically separate sites. This helps ensure that your system can stay up and running should the unexpected happen. Internet-based messages help protect the confidentiality of messages in transit.


More than 60% reported savings of three or more hours per week for each mobile worker.
Such studies confirm that migrating to a unified communications system provides a substantial return on investment (ROI) and a reduced total cost of ownership.





Millions of Iwatsu users know first-hand that we provide reliable, flexible business systems for unified communications. Here on the Unified Communications channel, you can learn more about our portfolio of North American business telecom systems available through a nationwide network of 250 authorized distributors. Here's something to get you thinking: our unified communications solutions have an out-of-box failture rate of .0007 percent. Now that's reliable!




email to shravan.1258@yahoo.com