From the UMA perspective, VCC or Voice Call Continuity, is an emerging specification designed for a fixed line operator to hold on to a mobile call when the phone is operating over Wi-Fi/IP in the home, then transfer the call to the mobile operator when the subscriber leaves the home.
VCC is also touted at the “alternative” to UMA. VCC proponents are quick to point out that the specification will be finalized “shortly” and devices are “coming soon”. Of course UMA is shipping and deployed today and is already the de-facto standard to which any VCC service must measure up.
However, I wanted to take a moment to comment on a piece that came out in Oct 2006 around the
IMS World Forum in San Diego.
The piece was released by the
IMS Forum, a recognized industry organization leading the charge to drive standards and lead interoperability testing, and gives a view of the challanges of developing the new specification.
Read it here.
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I think the piece is interesting because it’s one of the first honest assessments of the state of VCC from the “inside”. It was developed by an organization ostensible focused on helping VCC come to market.
IMS Forum chairman Michael Khalilian comments: “It is well recognized that the handover is a technical challenge for convergence solutions of two drastically different networks, i.e. Wi-Fi SIP and cellular.”
Finally we get an inkling of the enormous task VCC is out to solve, bridging call control between two completely independent and technically different (packet/SIP vs circuit/GSM).
The article “warns of significant hurdles [that] must first be addressed before the opportunity [of VCC] can be realized.”
Tops on the list:
- Supplementary Services. This means everything your phone can do beyond making a call. It includes SMS, MMS, ringtones, games downloads, as well as telephony services like conference calling and 3 way calling. Yes, none of that is supported in VCC today or tomorrow. It all needs to be defined.
Beyond supplemental service support, the article lists:
- the reliance on CAMEL for handover
- dealing with multimedia session mobility
- setting realistic timeframes for rollouts.
There is some real work to be done to get
VCC to the same level as UMA.
And this is just a drop in the bucket. On his blog, industry pundit Dean Bubley wrote about the next hurdle facing the IMS world, asking what exactly is an “
IMS handset”? It’s not defined and an industry standard is a very long ways off.
It's easy to believe the hype that VCC will be able to magically maintain service transparency and service quality balancing between two completely different and independent networks. Oh and it will all be buttoned up and deployed in less than a year. A realistic VCC service is much farther off than anyone can predict.