Santo,
This is an interesting problem.
However, as the E164 alias is a user dialed number, it will include such thing as "011" for international calls. However, if the call uses a foreign gateway, the gateway will not understand "011" as it is expecting "00" to indicate an international call so it will treat "0" as a national call and try to send the call to "11+". The structured values in partyNumber indication the unique number without any identification or routing information. Therefore a number indicated as an international number is valid anywhere in the world.
Bob
------------------------------------------------------------------ Robert Callaghan Siemens Information & Communication Networks Tel: +1.561.997.3756 Fax: +1.561.997.3403 Email: Robert.Callaghan@ICN.Siemens.com ------------------------------------------------------------------
-----Original Message----- From: Santo Wiryaman [mailto:swiryaman@VIDEOSERVER.COM] Sent: Wednesday, April 14, 1999 1:13 PM To: ITU-SG16@mailbag.cps.intel.com Subject: Re: e164 vs. partyNumber aliases
I like to see e164 alias being used. In order for an EP to send the new V2 aliases, it has to know that the destination is a V2 or higher. How does the caller know the callee is V2 or higher? Any thoughts?
---------------------------------------- Santo Wiryaman VideoServer, Inc. Phone:+1.781.505.2348 Fax:+1.781.505.2101 email:swiryaman@videoserver.com http://www.videoserver.com
-----Original Message----- From: Paul Long [SMTP:Plong@SMITHMICRO.COM] Sent: Wednesday, April 14, 1999 12:38 PM To: ITU-SG16@mailbag.cps.intel.com Subject: e164 vs. partyNumber aliases
What is the difference between an e164 alias and a partyNumber alias? Was e164 found lacking, and does partyNumber now supercede it? Are we supposed to stop using e164? If not, how do we decide which form to use?
Paul Long Smith Micro Software, Inc.