Explain NGN Communication Between Administrative Domains
waqqas1 15-November-2008 11:12:31 AM

Comments


I think:
NGN Communication Between Administrative Domains takes place when a user registered in one administrative domain is able to contact (establish a session to) an user registered in a different administrative domain by using a Public User Identity (Address-of-Record, E.164 Number) preferably via IP.
Posted by crouse


NGN Communication Between Administrative Domains takes place when a user registered in one administrative domain is able to contact (establish a session to) an user registered in a different administrative domain by using a Public User Identity (Address-of-Record, E.164 Number) preferably via IP.
Posted by HamidAliKhan


yep sagitraz right
Posted by Hash007


NGN communication takes place when a user registered in one administrative domain is able to contact (establish a session to) an user registered in a different administrative domain by using a Public User Identity (Address-of-Record, E.164 Number) preferably via IP.

Posted by sagitraz



Posted: 16-November-2008 07:07:02 AM By: sagitraz

NGN communication takes place when a user registered in one administrative domain is able to contact (establish a session to) an user registered in a different administrative domain by using a Public User Identity (Address-of-Record, E.164 Number) preferably via IP.

Posted: 22-November-2008 03:17:59 AM By: Hash007

yep sagitraz right

Posted: 31-December-2008 01:48:40 PM By: HamidAliKhan

NGN Communication Between Administrative Domains takes place when a user registered in one administrative domain is able to contact (establish a session to) an user registered in a different administrative domain by using a Public User Identity (Address-of-Record, E.164 Number) preferably via IP.

Posted: 01-March-2009 07:20:36 AM By: crouse

I think:
NGN Communication Between Administrative Domains takes place when a user registered in one administrative domain is able to contact (establish a session to) an user registered in a different administrative domain by using a Public User Identity (Address-of-Record, E.164 Number) preferably via IP.