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Digerati Networks, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of ATSI Communications, Inc., is an emerging global VoIP carrier serving rapidly expanding markets in Asia, Europe, the Middle East, and Latin America, with an emphasis on Mexico.
Through its strategic partnerships with established foreign carriers and network operators, interconnection and service agreements, and its unique concession license, Digerati has clear advantages over its competition.
While the advantages of VoIP are well documented, the Internet must be successfully harnessed for carrier-grade voice transport to reap these rewards on a truly global scale. Digerati has realized this vision. Digerati delivers voice quality over the Internet that is equal to or better than voice over the Public Switched Telephone Network.
Today there are many carriers who are either migrating their networks from circuit-based to VoIP or are building new networks with VoIP technology. Carriers new to VoIP could simply be using stand-alone gateways to bridge their circuit network to VoIP. Many other carriers are relying heavily on VoIP and have built large distributed VoIP networks controlled by gatekeepers or softswitches.
VoIP inter-networking with Digerati provides these carriers with significant savings in capital and operating expenses, while dramatically reducing the time and costs required to add capacity and new destinations. Earlier generation VoIP to VoIP interconnections required case-by-case custom engineering because of equipment vendor and call control differences and also involved an ongoing technical interdependency that limited independent and secure evolution of each individual network. With Digerati’s VoIP inter-networking capability, carriers using VoIP are now able to easily exchange traffic directly with Digerati, independently of the VoIP vendor or call control protocol used.
Digerati has the ability to interconnect using standards-based VoIP protocols such as H.323 and SIP, allowing internetworking and operability to multi-vendor gateways, gatekeepers, proxy servers, session border controllers, softswitches, and even IP Phones.
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