
How Much Bandwidth To Buy
The PictureTel Concorde videoconferencing system that we set up for our tests performed admirably, but any modern H.320 standards-compatible system capable of 30 frames per second (fps) operation would likely perform just as well over a 384-Kbps channel. We used 396-Kbps CIR (committed information rate) to allow for frame relay packet overhead.
The value differences in room-based videoconferencing systems depend largely on the camera(s), monitor(s) and microphone system(s) placed ahead of the codecs. Manufacturers distinguish their products with features such as intelligent audio noise cancellation or automatic "camera follows voice." Some offer supplemental collaboration services: whiteboarding software, fax channels and data file transfers over the conference connection. But all of this is multiplexed within the videoconferencing system.
The network video framing device gets a constant bit rate stream, which is clocked at a preset speed.
A videoconferencing application can afford little to no loss. Beyond compressed audio and video frames, there may be T.120-standard information for collaboration and remote camera control. In the H.320-related signaling scheme, audio gets top priority, any T.120 traffic comes next and video gets whatever is left over.
When you negotiate your network service-level agreement with your carrier, you must look at everything likely to be carried within the CBR stream and sent to the network video framing device.
In our tests, we sent only audio and video. The ACT AVI 2000 framer with SDM 9300 FRAD, which had a speed limit of 256 Kbps, constrained the video only slightly--down to 26 fps. The Memotec Video Framer, running on a 384-Kbps connection to the CX900e FRAD, supported 30 fps. Modern H.320 codecs producing 30 fps need all of this bandwidth. If you want to ensure that video won't freeze momentarily when camera controls or collaboration traffic is also on the line, consider a 496-Kbps payload and buy a 512-Kbps CIR.
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