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SMS Traffic Control

 

Introduction

When the first SMS (short message service) was sent by Neil Papworth in December, 1992, it was hard to imagine the impact it would have, not only on the mobile industry, but on our day-to-day lives as well. SMS is permeating nearly every area of our lives - not just as a quick and cheap way for two people next door or across the world to communicate with each other easily, discreetly, and almost instantly - but SMS is also the technology that more than anything else is making TV interactive.

 

The widespread consumer acceptance of SMS shows just how quickly new technologies can be embraced: SMS marketing, stock price updates, SMS parking schemes, traffic alerts, ticketing and voting and competitions, travel alerts, outpatient medication reminders, field-worker updates and alerts, shipping data, package tracking, just to name a few - along with endless other new applications on the horizon for SMS.

 

Challenges

The success of SMS poses a challenge for many mobile operators. Global SMS traffic is growing nearly exponentially. This growth is expected to continue to almost three trillion messages by 2011 (Mobile Messaging Futures 2007-2012, Portio Research, February 2007). Many mobile operators have seen the capacity of their underlying network infrastructure become severely over-burdened. The resulting congestion can have serious business consequences for the operator:

  1. less than instantaneous SMS transmission times-which can lead to customer dissatisfaction and higher churn, or customer loss;
  2. constraints on the operator's ability to add new customers to a successful, revenue-producing service;
  3. constraints on the operator's ability to add new SMS-based services such as televoting.

Traditional SMS architecture Figure 1 below illustrates a traditional SMS architecture in which every message is stored and forwarded to its destination using a Short Message Service Center (SMSC). The SMSC includes a gateway to all the SMS content-based services offered in the network. This architecture represents some significant challenges to the mobile operators when SMS traffic volume rises:

  • The TDM SS7 network needs to be expanded, but it is expensive, time-consuming, and there are technology limitations
  • The entire network (including the SMSC as well as the SS7 network) has to be dimensioned for the peak volume situation. With the growing popularity of high peak-volume applications such as the mass voting required by popular television programs - carriers have seen participation rates of up to 10 percent of their subscriber base - the mobile operator costs increase significantly and the network has to be over-dimensioned.

 

Solution

To address these problems mobile operators can take advantage of some of the initiatives from the IETF (Internet Engineering Task Force), and move the SMS traffic from TDM-based transport to IP-based transport. In doing so, the mobile operator can take advantage of cheaper, more flexible IP transport technology and reduce some of the constraints inherent in more expensive, time-consuming TDM transport technology.

 

In addition, the mobile operator can separate traditional SMS traffic from content-based SMS services traffic before it reaches the SMSC. Since traditional SMS traffic must be sent to a service node, there is no need to route it to the SMSC. The separation of traffic in this way not only lowers the load on the SMSC, but it also effectively moves high peak volume traffic for various SMS services (for example, American Idol televoting) out of the SMSC.

 

Ulticom nSignia

eSTP nSignia® eSTP can be used very effectively to offload the SMS traffic on IP, and also to identify the SMS services traffic (like televoting), and route it directly to the service node handling that particular service.

New Network Architecture

In Figure 2, a new network architecture is introduced where Ulticom's nSignia eSTP is positioned close to the MSCs in order to identify the ordinary and specialized SMS traffic as early as possible.

 

Key Business Benefits

  • Delivers increased SMS capacity with less cost. SMS traffic can be routed in a separate IP network without changing the signaling network infrastructure
  • Provides the protection of existing SMSC investments by redirecting service SMS traffic directly to the service nodes rather than to the SMSC
  • Improved peak-volume handling through the use of IP technology and not being restricted by limited TDM bandwidth
  • Reduces the cost for TDM links. Adding IP technology will reduce the need for additional TDM links

 

Related Links

 

nSignia eSTP Data Sheets

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nSignia eSTP Product Sheets

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Service Optimization:

 

Server Farm

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Softswitch SG

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Switch Migration

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Network Optimization:

 

Cross Network Services

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Network Border Element

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Network Security

PDF download  PDF

 

SMS Traffic Control

PDF download  PDF

 

Virtual Signaling Network

PDF download  PDF

 

 

Transport Optimization:

 

Long Haul Link Replacement

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Signaling Hub

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