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CA2303392C - Apparatus and method to use a conventional telephone set to make telephone calls on a packet network - Google Patents

Apparatus and method to use a conventional telephone set to make telephone calls on a packet network Download PDF

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Publication number
CA2303392C
CA2303392C CA002303392A CA2303392A CA2303392C CA 2303392 C CA2303392 C CA 2303392C CA 002303392 A CA002303392 A CA 002303392A CA 2303392 A CA2303392 A CA 2303392A CA 2303392 C CA2303392 C CA 2303392C
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CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
telephone
interface
packet
routing rule
local area
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
CA002303392A
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
CA2303392A1 (en
Inventor
Francois Menard
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Mediatrix Telecom Inc
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Mediatrix Telecom Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from CA002215681A external-priority patent/CA2215681A1/en
Application filed by Mediatrix Telecom Inc filed Critical Mediatrix Telecom Inc
Priority to CA002303392A priority Critical patent/CA2303392C/en
Publication of CA2303392A1 publication Critical patent/CA2303392A1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of CA2303392C publication Critical patent/CA2303392C/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04MTELEPHONIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04M7/00Arrangements for interconnection between switching centres
    • H04M7/006Networks other than PSTN/ISDN providing telephone service, e.g. Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP), including next generation networks with a packet-switched transport layer
    • H04M7/0066Details of access arrangements to the networks
    • H04M7/0069Details of access arrangements to the networks comprising a residential gateway, e.g. those which provide an adapter for POTS or ISDN terminals
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04MTELEPHONIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04M7/00Arrangements for interconnection between switching centres
    • H04M7/0024Services and arrangements where telephone services are combined with data services
    • H04M7/0057Services where the data services network provides a telephone service in addition or as an alternative, e.g. for backup purposes, to the telephone service provided by the telephone services network
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04MTELEPHONIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04M1/00Substation equipment, e.g. for use by subscribers
    • H04M1/253Telephone sets using digital voice transmission
    • H04M1/2535Telephone sets using digital voice transmission adapted for voice communication over an Internet Protocol [IP] network
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04MTELEPHONIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04M2203/00Aspects of automatic or semi-automatic exchanges
    • H04M2203/20Aspects of automatic or semi-automatic exchanges related to features of supplementary services
    • H04M2203/2066Call type detection of indication, e.g. voice or fax, mobile of fixed, PSTN or IP

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Telephonic Communication Services (AREA)
  • Data Exchanges In Wide-Area Networks (AREA)

Abstract

An apparatus and a method to use a telephone set to place telephone calls on a packet network and to route telephone calls between a telephone set, a telephone line, Local Area Network and packet network interfaces of the apparatus. More specifically, the apparatus may include one or more telephone set interfaces, one or more telephone line interfaces, a Local Area Network interface and packet network interfaces. Use is made of an embedded software agent located inside the apparatus to, among other things, select which interfaces to use on the apparatus to make telephone calls. The software agent takes decisions based on a set of pre-established routing rules that are computed by the apparatus or obtained from a network server.

Description

TITLE OF THE INVENTION
Apparatus and method to use a conventional telephone set to make telephone calls on a packet network.
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to packet networks. More specifically, the present invention is concerned with a method and an apparatus to use a conventional telephone set to make telephone calls on a packet network.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The prior art is replete with software enabling a first user to establish a telephone-like conversation with a second user running the same software via a packet network, such as, for example, the Internet.
These softwares usually run on personal computers equipped with microphones to capture the sounds and with sound cards to reproduce the sounds from the other user. The software therefore captures the sound from a first user, digitises it, compresses it, and forwards it to the Packet Network address (Internet Protocol address or IP address) of the second user. The sounds is then uncompressed, transferred back to analog sound by the sound card and reproduced on the premises of the second user. Of course, these steps are performed bidirectionally to result in a full duplex connection.
2 The drawbacks of the above mentioned software system are multiple. For example, a dedicated PC must be used as a telephone, both users must be similarly equipped and running the same software and it is not possible to reach users equipped with conventional telephones.
OBJECTS OF THE INVENTION
An object of the invention is to provide an apparatus and a method to use a conventional telephone set to make telephone calls on a packet network.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
More specifically, in accordance with the present invention, there is provided a telephone to packet adapter comprising:
a telephone line intertace configured to be connected to a telephone line;
a telephone interface configured to be connected to a telephone set;
a Local Area Nefinrork interface configured to be connected to a packet network;
a controller circuit interconnecting the telephone line interface, the telephone interface and the Local Area Network interface;
the controller circuit being so configured as to route the telephone intertace to one of the telephone line and the Local Area Network interfaces depending on at least one preestablished routing rule
3 According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a telephone to packet adapter comprising:
a telephone line interface configured to be connected to a telephone line;
a telephone interface configured to be connected to a telephone set;
a Local Area Network interface configured to be connected to a Local Area Network;
a packet network interface configured to be connected to a packet network; and a controller circuit interconnecting the telephone line interface, the telephone interface, the Local Area Network interface and the packet network interface; the controller circuit being so configured as to either a) route the telephone interface to one of the telephone line and the packet network interfaces and b) route the Local Area Network interface to one of the telephone line and the packet network interfaces depending on at least one preestablished routing rule.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method for routing telephone calls to a packet network via a telephone to packet adapter provided with a telephone line interface, a telephone interface, a Local Area Network interface and a controller circuit interconnecting the telephone line, telephone and Local Area Network interfaces; the method comprising the steps of:
connecting a telephone line to the telephone line interface;
connecting a telephone set to the telephone interface;
4 connecting a packet network to the Local Area Network interface;
running an agent software for routing the telephone interface to either the conventional telephone line interface and the Local Area Network interface depending on at least one preestablished routing rule.
According to yet another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method for routing telephone calls to a packet network via a telephone to packet adapter provided with a telephone line interface, a telephone interface, a Local Area Network interface, a packet network interface and a controller circuit interconnecting the telephone line, telephone, packet network and Local Area Network interfaces; the method comprising the steps of:
connecting a telephone line to the telephone line interface;
connecting a telephone set to the telephone interface;
connecting a Local Area Network to the Local Area Network interface;
connecting a packet network intertace to the packet network interface;
running an agent software for routing either a) the telephone interface to one of the conventional telephone line interface and the packet network interface, and b) the Local Area Network interface to one of the conventional telephone line interface and the packet network interface, depending on at least one preestablished routing rule.

It is to be noted that the term "telephone call" is to be construed as meaning any calls conventionally made via telephone lines such as, for example, voice calls, fax calls and modem calls.
Accordingly, the term "telephone set" is to be construed as meaning any
5 device that produces signals capable of being understood by PSTN
equipment expected signals from a conventional telephone set (also known as a POTS (Plain Old Telephone System) telephone set).
Therefore, the term "telephone set" includes any POTS devices such as, for example, fax machines, modems and even more advanced devices such as H.324 video phones.
Other objects, advantages and features of the present invention will become more apparent upon reading of the following non restrictive description of preferred embodiments thereof, given by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
In the appended drawings:
Figure 1 is a schematised block diagram illustrating the various components of a telephone to packet adapter according to a first embodiment of the present invention.
Figure 2 is a schematised block diagram illustrating a packet network where users are provided with telephone to packet adapters according to an embodiment of the present invention;
6 Figure 3 is a flow diagram illustrating the general steps taken to establish a communication between user 2 and one of users 1 or 3 of Figure 2;
Figure 4 is a flow diagram illustrating the general steps taken to establish a communication between user 1 and user 2 of Figure 2;
Figure 5 is a flow diagram illustrating the general steps taken to establish a communication between one of users 1 or 2 and user 3 of Figure 2; and Figure 6 is a schematised block diagram illustrating the various components of a telephone to packet adapter according to a second embodiment of the present invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Figure 1 of the appended drawings illustrates a block diagram of a full duplex telephone to packet adapter 10 according to a first embodiment of the present invention.
The adapter 10 includes a telephone input/output (10) port 12 to which a conventional telephone (not shown) may be connected, a Local Area Network (LAN) 10 port 13 trough which connectivity to a LAN or to a Personal Computer (PC) (not shown) is obtained, a telephone line 10 port 14 to which a telephone line (not
7 shown), part of the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN), may be connected and a packet network interface 10 port 16 to which a packet network (not shown) may optionally be connected.
The adapter 10 electronic circuitry generally includes an analog to digital (AID) and a digital to analog (DIA) full duplex interface 18 interconnecting a controller circuit 20 and the 10 port 12, a Local Area Network interface 23 interconnecting the controller circuit 20 and the 10 port 13, a speech encoderldecoder 22 connected to the controller circuit 20, a telephone line intertace 24 interconnecting the controller circuit 20 and the 10 port 14 and a packet network interface 26 interconnecting the controller circuit 20 and 10 port 16.
The controller circuit 20 is' provided with a central processing unit (CPU) and sufficient memory to store a software agent program and other data stored in databases as will be further described hereinafter.
The speech encoderldecoder 22 includes the required circuitry to perform digital speech andlor data encoding and decoding to decrease the bandwidth required to transfer the information from one user to another and to recuperate the complete information after the transfer.
It is believed within the 'reach of one skilled in the art to provide adequate electronic circuitry for the elements 18-26 described hereinabove.
8 Turning now briefly to Figure 6 of the appended drawings; a telephone to packet adapter 400 according to a second embodiment of the present invention will be described.
The telephone to packet adapter 400 is very similar to the telephone to packet adapter 10 described hereinabove. Thus, for concision purposes, only the differences between these adapters will be described herein.
As can be seen from Figure 6, the telephone to packet adapter 400 is designed to be connected to a packet network 30 via a Local Area Network 31. Thereby, the telephone to packet adapter 400 does not require a packet network interface 26 (Figure 1 ). It is to be noted that the Local Area Network 31 therefore includes a packet network LAN gateway as is very well known in the art.
Figure 2 of the appended drawings illustrates a packet network 30, for example, the Internet, to which the users are connected via telephone to packet adapters 10 or 400. It is to be noted that Figure 2 will be further described hereinafter with a view to illustrate some of the various possibilities of the telephone to packet adapters 10 and 400.
A first user 32 is connected to the packet network 30 via a first service provider 34 and a telephone line 36. The first service provider 34 has a conventional Network Access Server 38 provided with conventional modems (not shown) to interconnect its clients, for example first user 32, to the packet network 30. The first user 32 has a telephone to packet adapter 10a, a conventional modem 40 connected to the packet
9 PCTICA98/00879 rietwork 10 port 16a, and a telephone set 42 connected to the telephone port 12a. It is to be noted that both the Local Area Network port 14 (not shown) and the Local Area Network port 13a of the adapter 1 Oa are not used.

It is to be noted that the telephone set 42 could be replaced by a Local Area Network (not shown) connected to the Local Area Network port 13a to therefore enable telephone calls, for example, modem calls, from the Local Area Network to be routed to the packet
10 network 30.
Figure 2 also illustrates a second service provider 44 connected to the packet network 30 via an Internet server 46 and including a telephone to packet adapter 400b interconnecting the Internet server 46 and a telephone line 48, the purpose of which will be described hereinafter with reference to Figure 5. More specifically, the server 46 is connected to the Local Area Network 10 port 13b of the telephone to packet adapter 400b and the telephone line 48 is connected to the 10 port 14b of the telephone to packet adapter 400b. It is to be noted that the 10 port 12b is not used.
Of course, the telephone to packet adapter 400b of Figure 2 could advantageously be provided with more than one telephone line 10 ports 14b allowing the telephone to packet adapter 10b to be connected to more than one telephone line. Indeed, this would allow the second service provider 44 to interconnect more than two users simultaneously.

It is also to be noted that the telephone to packet adapter 400b of Figure 2 could be replaced by a telephone to packet adapter 10 as illustrated in Figure 1. If this is the case, the packet network 10 port 16 will not be used.

The packet network 30 is also connected to a server 50 of a cable company 52 providing Internet services to its clients, for example second user 54, via a conventional television cable 58 connected to the server 50 via adequate circuitry (not shown) known in 10 the art.
The second user 54 is equipped with a cable modem 60 connected to the conventional television cable 58 and a telephone to packet adapter 400c interconnecting the cable modem 60 and a telephone set 62. The telephone to packet adapter 400c is also connected to a telephone line 64. More specifically, the cable modem 60 is connected to the Local Area Network 10 port 13c, the telephone 62 is connected to the t0 port 12c and the telephone line 64 is connected to the 10 port 14c. The telephone to packet adapter 400c therefore considers the cable modem 60 as a Local Area Network interconnecting the telephone to packet adapter 400 to the packet network 30 Finally, Figure 2 also illustrates a third user 66 equipped with a telephone set 68 connected to a conventional telephone line 70.
Turning now to Figures 3-5, three different methods of use of the telephone to packet adapters 10 and 400 will be described.
11 Figure 3 generally illustrates the steps taken when the second user 54 wants to reach another person.
After the telephone to packet adapter 400c is started (step 100) and initialised (step 102), the system waits until the second user 54 picks up the handset of the telephone set 62 and dials a telephone number (step 104).
The agent software of the telephone to packet adapter 400c then verifies if the dialled telephone number is present in a database contained in the controller circuit 20 (Figure 6) (Step 106). This database contains a list of the telephone numbers that may be accessed via the packet network 30.
If the dialled telephone number may not be accessed via the packet network 30, the agent software of the telephone to packet adapter 400c routes the telephone set 62 to the telephone line 64 and dials the telephone number (step 108). The telephone number must therefore be conventionally dialled over a telephone line to establish the connection. This will be the case, for example, when the number dialled is local or when there is no service provider similar to the second service provider 44 in the area of the number dialled.
If the dialled number is present in the database, the agent software then determines if the iP address corresponding to this telephone number is in its database (step 110). If it is not the case, the agent software interrogates the Internet server 50 of the cable company 52 (or any other server having a correspondence table between IP
12 addresses and telephone numbers) to find the required IP address (step 112). When this is done, the agent software establishes the connection between the second user 54 and the other user (for example the first user 32) (step 114).
The two connected users may then communicate normally in full duplex since the conversation is bidirectionally digitised, transformed into packets and transferred via the packet network 30 to the other user where it is converted back into an analog signal and supplied to the handset. Indeed, if the second user 54 is in communication with the first user 32, the telephone to packet adapter 10a will convert back the packets to an analog signal. Similarly, if the second user 54 calls the third user 66, the telephone to packet adapter 400b will do the required conversion.
The telephone to packet adapter 400c then waits until the communication is broken (step 116) and then returns to step 104.
An advantage of the above mentioned set of preestablished rules is that the second user 54 may either be transparently in communication with conventional telephone users and users of the present invention. Another advantage, is the possibility to route all the calls to the telephone line 64 should the connection to the packet network 30 via the cable company 52 be inactive, therefore providing a PSTN fallback.
It is to be noted that instead of using the telephone set 62, the second user could connect a LAN (not shown) to the 10 port 13c
13 arid connect the cable modem 60 to the LAN to therefore call another user similarly equipped through the steps described hereinabove.
Figure 4 of the appended drawings generally illustrates the steps taken when the first user 32 wants to reach another user.
Each step 200, 202, 204, 206, 208, 210, 214 and 216 is respectively identical to corresponding step 100, 102, 104, 106, 108, 110, 114 and 116 of Figure 3. Thus, for concision purposes, the description of these steps will not be repeated hereinbelow.
Since the first user is not connected to the Internet via a cable company, the Internet server 38 of the first Internet service provider 34 (or any other server having a table of the IP addresses vs telephone numbers) is interrogated in step 212.
A step 218 has been added between step 206 and 210 to instruct the modem 40 to connect to the service provider 34.
Therefore, according to the above-described set of rules, the telephone line interface 24 is routed to the PSTN if the dialled number is not in the database and routed to the packet network if the dialled number is in the database Again, it is to be noted that instead of using the telephone set 42, the first user could connect a PC (not shown) or a LAN
(not shown) to the 10 port 13 and call another user similarly equipped through the steps described hereinabove.
14 Finally, Figure 5 of the appended drawings illustrates another use of the telephone to packet adapter 10 of Figure 1. This application is advantageous to reduce the long distance costs of the user.
The general principle is to detect if the telephone number dialled by the user is a long distance number and to do a routing of the call to a service provider (for example the second service provider 44 in Figure 1 ) in the area of the telephone number to therefore prevent any long distance charges to the user if it is so. Of course the service provider 44 is equipped with a telephone to packet adapter 400b that may dial a local number via a telephone line 48.
Again, each step 300, 302, 304, 308 and 316 is identical to the corresponding step 100; 102, 104, 108 and 116 of Figure 1 and described hereinabove. Thus, for concision purposes, the description of these steps will not be repeated hereinbelow.
In step 306, the telephone to packet adapter determines if the telephone number dialled is a long distance number. If this is not the case, step 308 is done as mentioned above.
If the telephone number dialled is a long distance number (for example the telephone number of the third user 66), the software agent of the telephone to packet adapter searches a database (located in the controller circuit 20 or in an Internet server) to find the IP
address of a service provider equipped with a telephone to packet adapter (for example the second service provider 44) in the area of the telephone number dialled (step 320).

The telephone to packet adapter then connects with this service provider 44 gives its own IP address and the telephone number of the third user 66 (step 322).
5 The telephone to packet adapter 400b of the second service provider 44 then takes the telephone line 48 and dials the received telephone number to establish the communication with the third user (step 324).
10 Again, the use of the telephone to packet adapter 400 is transparent to the user since only one number is dialled. Also, the above-described set or preestablished rules enables the user of the present invention to communicate with a user of a conventional telephone.
It is to be noted that it would also be possible to make a local call to a user of a conventional telephone by using a local service provider equipped with a telephone to packet adapter to do local calls.
This way, the second user 54, for example, would not require a conventional telephone line to either receive or place local calls since these calls could reach the second user 54 via the cable 58.
It is to be noted that modems could be integrated with the telephone to packet adapter 10.
It is also to be noted that the controller circuit 20 of the telephone to packet adapters 10 and 400 may generate a dial tone to locally simulate the conventional dial tone sent to the AID DIA Full duplex interface 18. The aforementioned controller circuit 20 can also generate other types of dial tones such as, for example, audio files.
As will be easily understood by one skilled in the art, the agent software running in the controller circuit 20 of the telephone to packet adapters 10 and 400 may advantageously include supplementary features. For example, once an Internet server is interrogated to link an IP address to a telephone number, the control circuit 20 may keep this information in a database for future references in view of decreasing the required connection delays. Similarly, speed dial numbers may be assigned to such kept IP addresses.
Also, it is to be noted that the flow diagrams illustrated in Figures 3-5 are schematised and that actual flow diagrams would be a lot more complex and would include other rules for routing the calls.
For example, if the telephone to packet adapter detects that an emergency number (911 in North America) has been dialled, it will automatically take the telephone line and dial this emergency number.
Furthermore, it is to be noted that the flow diagrams ' illustrated in Figures 3-5 are not mutually exclusive. Indeed, the software agent may determine how to route a call depending on the interfaces that are connected to external devices and on users preferences, for example.
Therefore, the software agent embedded in the controller circuit 20 is used to compute a route based on information acquired or stored locally as welt as information acquired from a network server. A calling method is derived from these rules and is used to WO 99/14929 PCTlCA98100879 determine which interfaces will be involved in the process of completing the call. The appropriate route is triggered from the embedded software agent running in a central processing unit of the controller circuit 20. The embedded software agent may decide to exchange route information with an intelligence server located on the network in order to make optimal routing decisions. The embedded software agent will decide when it is appropriate to select whether to use the packet network interface or the telephone network interface to carry through a call. This method permits of using a dedicated connection to a packet network in the home as a mean for automatically diverting some telephone calls through a least cost route.
As will be easily understood by one skilled in the art the above-described invention provides many advantages, such as, for example:
the use of an alternative packet-switched network instead of a conventional telephone line to make telephone calls;
it does not impose on the end user a different usage habit;
it is fully transparent to the end user;
it is possible to concurrently transmit many types of data between users. For example, two users could be in a conversation via telephone sets hooked to respective 10 ports 12 and transfer data from Personal Computers connected to respective 10 ports 13; and it provides a PSTN fallback.
It is also to be noted that the telephone set hooked up to the apparatus sees the apparatus as its first telephone switch, which WO 99/14929 PCT/CA98l00879 can potentially provide more services than the PSTN telephone switch, due to its connectivity to the packet network, the services offered in the packet network and due to the level of programmability that is possible in the apparatus.
As will be apparent to one skilled in the art, the telephone to packet adapters 10 and 400 may be designed to operate with any type of PSTN telephone line such as, for example, ISDN, HFC
Cable Telephony, Wireless Local Loop, wireline, wireless digital or analogue.
Although the telephone to packet adapter 10 of Figure 1 is shown provided with only one of each interfaces 18, 23, 24 and 26, it would be within the reach of one skilled in the art to design a telephone to packet adapter provided with more than one of these interfaces if required by a particular application.
Although the present invention has been described hereinabove by way of preferred embodiments thereof, it can be modified, without departing from the spirit and nature of the subject invention as defined in the appended claims.

Claims (32)

WHAT IS CLAIMED IS:
1. A telephone to packet adapter for routing an outgoing call issued by a telephone set, said adapter comprising:
a telephone line interface configured to be connected to a telephone line;
a telephone interface configured to be connected to the telephone set;
a packet network interface configured to be connected to a packet network;
a controller circuit interconnecting said telephone line interface, said telephone interface and said packet network interface; said controller circuit being so configured as to route said outgoing call to one of said telephone line and said packet network interface depending on at least one preestablished routing rule.
2. A telephone to packet adapter as recited in claim 1, wherein said packet network interface is a Local Area Network interface configured to be connected to said packet network via a Local Area Network.
3. A telephone to packet adapter as recited in claim 1, wherein said packet network interface is a Local Area Network interface configured to be connected to said packet network via a Local Area Network packet network gateway.
4. A telephone to packet adapter as recited in claim 1, wherein said controller circuit includes an embedded agent software controlling the routing of the outgoing call.
5. A telephone to packet adapter as recited in claim 1, wherein said at least one preestablished routing rule is such that a) said outgoing call is routed to said telephone line interface when a dialled telephone number is a local call and b) said outgoing call is routed to said packet network interface when the dialled telephone number is not a local call.
6. A telephone to packet adapter as recited in claim 1, wherein said at least one preestablished routing rule is such that said outgoing call is routed to said telephone line interface when no packet network address corresponding to a dialled telephone number exist.
7. A telephone to packet adapter as recited in claim 1, wherein said at least one preestablished routing rule is such that said outgoing call is routed to said telephone line interface when a dialled telephone number is an emergency number.
8. A telephone to packet adapter as recited in claim 1, wherein said controller circuit includes a telephone number database of telephone numbers that may be reached via the packet network; said at least one preestablished routing rule is such that a) said outgoing call is routed to said telephone line interface when a dialled telephone number is nat present in said telephone number database and b) said outgoing call is routed to said packet network interface when the dialled telephone number is listed in said telephone number database.
9. A telephone to packet adapter as recited in claim 1, wherein said at least one preestablished routing rule is such that said outgoing call is routed to said telephone line interface when said packet network is inactive.
10. A telephone to packet adapter as recited in claim 1, further including a speech encoder/decoder associated to said controller circuit to encode and decode data routed by said controller circuit.
11. A telephone to packet adapter comprising:
a telephone line interface configured to be connected to a telephone line;
a telephone interface configured to be connected to a telephone set;
a Local Area Network interface configured to be connected to a Local Area Network;
a packet network interface configured to be connected to a packet network; and a controller circuit interconnecting said telephone line interface, said telephone interface, said Local Area Network interface and said packet network interface; said controller circuit being so configured as to either a) route said telephone interface to one of said telephone line and said packet network interface and b) route said Local Area Network interface to one of said telephone line and said packet network interface, depending on at least one preestablished routing rule.
12. A telephone to packet adapter as recited in claim 11, wherein said controller circuit includes are embedded agent software controlling the routing of said telephone and Local Area Network interfaces.
13. A telephone to packet adapter as recited in claim 11, wherein said at least one preestablished routing rule is such that a) one of said telephone interface and said Local Area Network interface is routed to said telephone line interface when a dialled telephone number is a local call and b) one of said telephone interface and said Local Area Network interface is routed to said Local Area Network interface when the dialled telephone number is not a local call.
14. A telephone to packet adapter as recited in claim 11, wherein said at least one preestablished routing rule is such that one of said telephone interface and said Local Area Network interface is routed to said telephone line interface when no packet network address corresponding to a dialled telephone number exist.
15. A telephone to packet adapter as recited in claim 11, wherein said at least one preestablished routing rule is such that one of said telephone interface and said Local Area Network interface is routed to said telephone line interface when a dialled telephone number is an emergency number.
16. A telephone to packet adapter as recited in claim 11, wherein said controller circuit includes a telephone number database of telephone numbers that may be reached via the packet network; said at least one preestablished routing rule is such that a) one of said telephone interface and said Local Area Network interface is routed to said telephone line interface when a dialled telephone number is riot present in said telephone number database and b) one of said telephone interface and said Local Area Network interface is routed to said Local Area Network interface when the dialled telephone number is listed in said telephone number database.
17. A telephone to packet adapter as recited in claim 11, wherein said at least one preestablished routing rule is such that one of said telephone interface and said Local Area Network interface is routed to said telephone line interface when said packet network is inactive.
18. A telephone to packet adapter as recited in claim 11, further including a speech encoder/decoder associated to said controller circuit to encode and decode data routed by said controller circuit.
19. A method for routing a telephone call issued by a telephone set via a telephone to packet adapter provided with a telephone line interface, a telephone interface, a packet network interface and a controller circuit interconnecting the telephone line, telephone and packet network interfaces; said method comprising the steps of:
connecting a telephone line to the telephone line interface;
connecting the telephone set to the telephone interface;
connecting the adapter to a packet network via the packet network interface;
running an agent software for routing the telephone call to either the telephone line interface or the packet network interface depending an at feast one preestablished routing rule.
20. A method for routing a telephone call as recited in claim 19, wherein said packet network connecting step includes the substep of connecting a Local Area Network to the packet network interface.
21. A method for routing a telephone call as recited in claim 19, wherein said at least one preestablished routing rule includes a local call routing rule; said local call routing rule dictates that the telephone interface is to be routed to the telephone line interface when a number dialled onto the telephone set is a local call.
22. A method for routing a telephone call as recited in claim 19, wherein said at least one preestablished routing rule includes a long distance call routing rule; said long distance call routing rule dictates that the telephone interface is to be routed to the packet network interface when a number dialled onto the telephone set is a long distance call.
23. A method far routing a telephone call as recited in claim 19, wherein said at least one preestablished routing rule includes a default routing rule; said default routing rule dictates that the telephone interface is to be routed to the telephone line interface when either a) a number dialled onto the telephone set has no corresponding packet network address or b) the packet network is inactive.
24. A method for routing a telephone call as recited in claim 19, wherein said at least one preestabiished routing rule includes an emergency call routing rule; said emergency call routing rule dictates that the telephone interface is to be routed to the telephone line interface when a number dialled onto the telephone set is an emergency number.
25. A method for routing a telephone call as recited in claim 19, wherein said at least one preestablished routing rule includes a database determined routing rule; said database determined routing rule dictates that a) the telephone interface is routed to the packet network interface when a number dialled onto the telephone set is present in a database of the controller circuit; and b) the telephone interface is routed to the telephone line interface when a number dialled onto the telephone set is not present in the database.
26. A method far routing outgoing telephone calls to a packet network via a telephone to packet adapter provided with a telephone line interface, a telephone interface, a Local Area Network interface, a packet network interface and a controller circuit interconnecting the telephone line, telephone, packet network and Local Area Network interfaces; said method comprising the steps of:
connecting a telephone line to the telephone line interface;
connecting a telephone set to the telephone interface;
connecting a Local Area Network to the focal Area Network interface;

connecting a packet network interface to the packet network interface;
running an agent software for routing either a) the telephone interface to one of the telephone line interface and the packet network interface, or b) the Local Area Network interface to one of the telephone line interface and the packet network interface, depending on at least one preestablished routing rule.
27. A method for routing outgoing telephone calls as recited in claim 26, wherein said at least one preestablished routing rule includes a local call routing rule; said local call routing rule dictates that one of the telephone interface and the Local Area Network interface is to be routed to the telephone line interface when a number dialled onto the telephone set is a local call.
28. A method for routing outgoing telephone calls as recited in claim 26, wherein said at least one preestablished routing rule includes a long distance call routing rule; said long distance call routing rule dictates that one of the telephone interface and the Local Area Network interface is to be routed to the Local Area Network interface when a number dialled onto the telephone set is a long distance call.
29. A method for routing outgoing telephone calls as recited in claim 26, wherein said at least pane preestablished routing rule includes a default routing rule; said default routing rule dictates that one of the telephone interface and the Local Area Network interface is to be routed to the telephone line interface when either a) a number dialled onto the telephone set has no corresponding packet network address or b) the packet network is inactive.
30. A method for routing outgoing telephone calls as recited in claim 26, wherein said at least one preestablished routing rule includes an emergency call routing rule; said emergency call routing rule dictates that one of the telephone interface and the Local Area Network interface is to be routed to the telephone line interface when a number dialled onto the telephone set is an emergency number.
31. A method for muting outgoing telephone calls as recited in claim 26, wherein said at least one preestablished routing rule includes a database determined routing rule; said database determined routing rule dictates that a) one of the telephone interface and the Local Area Network interface is routed to the Local Area Network interface when a number dialled onto the telephone set is present in a database of the controller circuit; and b) one of the telephone interface and the Local Area Network interface is routed to the telephone fine interface when a number dialled onto the telephone set is not present in the database.
32. A programmable telephone switch, comprising:
a telephone interface for connecting a telephone set;
a telephone line interface configured to be connected to a telephone line;
a packet network interface configured to be connected to a packet network; and a controller circuit interconnecting said telephone line interface, said telephone interface and said packet network interface; said controller being so configured as to switch a telephone call issued by said telephone set through one of said telephone line and said packet network depending on at least one routing rule programmed in said controller circuit.
CA002303392A 1997-09-16 1998-09-15 Apparatus and method to use a conventional telephone set to make telephone calls on a packet network Expired - Lifetime CA2303392C (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
CA002303392A CA2303392C (en) 1997-09-16 1998-09-15 Apparatus and method to use a conventional telephone set to make telephone calls on a packet network

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

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CA002215681A CA2215681A1 (en) 1997-09-16 1997-09-16 Apparatus and method to use a conventional telephone set to make telephone calls on a packet network
CA2,215,681 1997-09-16
CA002303392A CA2303392C (en) 1997-09-16 1998-09-15 Apparatus and method to use a conventional telephone set to make telephone calls on a packet network
PCT/CA1998/000879 WO1999014929A1 (en) 1997-09-16 1998-09-15 Apparatus and method to use a conventional telephone set to make telephone calls on a packet network

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CA2303392C true CA2303392C (en) 2004-04-06

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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8077844B2 (en) 1996-08-26 2011-12-13 Xugave Holding De Llc Dial up telephone conferencing system controlled by an online computer network

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8077844B2 (en) 1996-08-26 2011-12-13 Xugave Holding De Llc Dial up telephone conferencing system controlled by an online computer network
US8855278B2 (en) 1996-08-26 2014-10-07 Xugave Holding De Llc Dial up telephone conferencing system controlled by an online computer network

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