|
NASA's Simulated Mars Mission Uses Shoreline IP PBX
for Voice Communications
SUNNYVALE, Calif.
Shoreline's Voice System Exceeds Expectations with
its Easy Deployment, Transparent Usability,
Flexibility and Reliability
Voice communication is
essential to any manned exploration of Mars, and the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
has already completed a successful test involving IP
telephony. A distributed IP PBX from Shoreline
Communications, the specialist in enterprise IP
voice systems(TM), provided the infrastructure
linking the Utah desert test site with
NASA Ames Research Center in Mountain View, Calif.
and NASA Glenn Research
Center in Cleveland, Ohio.
"Watching the Mars
rover Spirit explore the Red Planet is incredibly
exciting, but a manned mission will require voice
communication," said Tom van
Overbeek, Shoreline president and CEO. "While
an actual manned flight is years away, today's IP
voice technology gave a very good accounting of
itself in the recent Mars Mobile Agents test."
The Mobile Agents
project conducts field simulations of planetary
exploration to develop operational concepts,
software and technology that can be used for future
missions, including manned trips to Mars. In the
recent Mars Mobile Agents pilot, the voice system
was used to call for emergency service, to provision
replacements for faulty equipment, to troubleshoot
problems, and for general day-to-day communications
with the NASA home offices. Cell phone coverage is
non-existent at the remote desert test site, so NASA
needed a voice system that could use
less-than-optimal data links.
"Only the Shoreline
system met all of NASA's requirements," said Scott
Strochak, president and
CEO of Xtelesis, the
Shoreline channel partner that worked with NASA to
select and implement the voice solution. "Shoreline
exceeded expectations, and the test was a great
success."
The test site was one
of the desert and arctic habitat facilities
maintained by the Mars Society -- a private
international organization dedicated to the
exploration of the Red Planet -- to simulate harsh
conditions on such remote planetary surfaces. Any
voice system used by NASA in the Mars Mobile Agents
pilot faced a number of challenges, including:
-- The system had to
be deployed in a very short time by a staff with no
special telephony or VoIP
expertise.
-- The configuration
of the voice network was very unusual and highly
distributed, with the server at the
NASA Ames Research Center in Mountain View, the
interface to the telecommunications service provider
at the Ohio facility, and phone extensions at the
Utah test site.
-- The IP voice
traffic had to run over a satellite link and
short-haul microwave connections powered by
generators.
-- The voice system
needed to leverage traditional handsets and
interoperate with borrowed equipment.
Strochak
said installing and configuring Shoreline's software
and hardware across the three locations was quite
simple. The equipment deployed in the field was
rugged and non-intrusive and transparently easy to
use. NASA has purchased the Shoreline voice system
and incorporated it into a transportable earth
station that carries scientific instruments into the
simulated planetary environments.
About Shoreline
Communications
Shoreline
Communications, Inc. is the specialist in enterprise
IP voice systems. Thousands of enthusiastic users
worldwide are taking advantage of the company's
award-winning distributed IP PBX technology,
leveraging expertise and resources across multiple
sites to improve customer service, increase employee
productivity and lower operational costs. Shoreline
has a select group of global channel partners that
provide top-notch service and support. For more
information, visit
http://www.shorelinecommunications.com or call
1-877-80SHORE. |