To quote:
"The motivation of the small cell size was the reduction of jitter in the multiplexing of cell streams.
and
" (This is much less important today (2001) given the increase in backbone speeds: see note above)."
Yes an no. Its not the only thing that affects latency (and therefore delay on voice calls). When dealing with voice traffic the time taken to fill a cell is also a factor. Standard voice band still runs at a 8Khz sampling rate. If you fill a typical 1500 byte IP packet at that rate you still introduce a lot of delay. Of course you could sub-fill a cell but then you defeat the whole point.
I've also cut out my:
"The larger the payload, the more efficent the transport of packet traffic (like IP) however the larger the latency in transport (which affects Voice telephony)."
Until we have a consensus.
I could be wrong but do I detect a slight bias against ATM?
The VoIP argument: yes, use ATM on the access ADSL link (see my comments there) - but not in the backbone.
Alas, I have extensive ATM experience (up to and including building one of the first international switched virtual circuit ATM networks, and later ripping it all out in favour of Ethernet/IP). Really, I am striving for NPOV. -- The Anome
Ok. I suggest we move the bits about Telco addopation and its intended goals etc, outside the article for now and just concentrate on consolidating the facts on ATM. Once the main article is straight we can tackle the ATM Part, present and future bit (mainting NPOV :-)
For the record I'm probably quite pro-ATM, although I can understand the headaches SVC's have caused you! Alex