학술논문

TINA as a virtual market place for telecommunication and information services: the VITAL experiment
Document Type
Conference
Source
TINA '99. 1999 Telecommunications Information Networking Architecture Conference Proceedings (Cat. No.99EX368) Telecommunications Information Networking Architecture Conference - TINA'99 Telecommunications Information Networking Architecture Conference Proceedings, 1999. TINA '99. :96-106 1999
Subject
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Subscriptions
Business
Educational institutions
Optical wavelength conversion
Irrigation
Project management
Nonhomogeneous media
Telecommunication services
Prototypes
Language
Abstract
The VITAL (Validation of Integrated Telecommunication Architectures for the Long-Term) project has defined, implemented and demonstrated an open distributed telecommunication architecture (ODTA) for deploying, managing and using a set of heterogeneous multimedia, multi-party, and mobility services. The architecture was based on the latest specifications released by TINA-C. The architecture was challenged in a set of trials by means of a heterogeneous set of applications. Some of the applications were developed within the project from scratch, while some others focused on integrating commercially available applications. The applications were selected in such a way as to assure full coverage of the architecture implementation and reflect a realistic use of it. The VITAL experience of refining and implementing TINA specifications and challenging the resulting platform by a heterogeneous set of services has proven the openness, flexibility and reusability of TINA. This paper describes the VITAL approach when choosing the different services and how they challenge and interact with the architecture, focusing especially on the service architecture and the Ret reference point definitions. The VITAL adjustments and enhancements to the TINA architecture are described. This paper contributes to proving that the TINA-based VITAL ODTA allows for easy and cost-effective development and deployment of advanced end-user and operator services, and can indeed act as the basis for a virtual market place for telecommunications services.