Search /
Docfinder:
Advanced search  |  Help  |  Site map
RESEARCH CENTERS
SITE RESOURCES
Click for Layer 8! No, really, click NOW!
Networking for Small Business
TODAY'S NEWS
Online users becoming less anxious over security, privacy
Windows exploit code coming
Patch Tuesday: What the experts say
Cisco says it may drop Tandberg
Cisco crafting telepresence Rosetta Stone
Facebook groups disrupted but not hijacked, Facebook says
NASA brings chemical sensor to iPhone
Cisco warns UC users of limited support for Windows 7
Novell adds debugger to Mono to help Windows apps get to Linux
Firefox, five years out of Phoenix's ashes, aims at mobile, video, offline
Twitter, LinkedIn link up on tweets
Microsoft, Novell say alliance still bearing fruit
VMware bolsters desktop virtualization product
Microsoft Exchange set; SharePoint, OCS to follow
Veterans agency looks beyond EMC for multi-million storage deal
Applications /

Threat to 'Net

Today's breaking news
Send to a friendFeedback


The Internet engineering community has run into a significant technical hurdle in the development of an industry standard to support instant messages with multimedia attachments, such as audio or video clips.

If leading instant messaging service providers such as AOL and Microsoft offer multimedia instant messaging services to their millions of users, Internet communications could ground to a halt. Service providers now support only text-based instant messages.

The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), which identified the multimedia instant messaging problem, is soliciting potential fixes from its participants and plans to debate these fixes at its meeting in March.

IETF leaders say protocols being developed to support text-based instant messaging won't handle multimedia instant messaging attachments. They say a new communications protocol is needed to transport those files. This new protocol must provide congestion-control mechanisms to prevent instant messaging users from overwhelming the Internet's backbone with MP3 music files, photos or voice clips.

"There would be a potential for an AOL usage [of multimedia instant messaging] to either swamp out the rest of the Internet or to require major engineering to stop what we call a congestion collapse, where you cannot send new traffic into the network," says Allison Mankin, co-chair of the IETF's transport area. "This is a big enough problem to need urgent attention."

Demand for multimedia instant messaging is expected to be strong. Text-based instant messaging is popular on the Internet and private, corporate intranets. With multimedia instant messaging, users could send attachments along with chat sessions.

"Our researchers would love to have voice chat integrated with instant messaging, mainly to kill the international long-distance calls," says Ross McKenzie, director of IS at Johns Hopkins University. "Our dean has a research center in Nepal. I know that if I offered that service, he'd be on it tomorrow."

Johns Hopkins began offering regular instant messaging services to 4,000 faculty and staff members in August. Today, instant messaging is the most popular application on the university's Web portal, with more than 1,500 users racking up 60,000 minutes of instant messaging messages per month.

"If we offered [instant messaging] attachments, our faculty would be exchanging chapters out of books. But what they'd really like is voice," McKenzie says. "Our researchers want ad hoc, integrated voice and chat. They want it in Katmandu, at home, at Starbucks or wherever."

Today's instant messaging services use what's called a paging mode, where the signaling information that initiates the chat session is carried along with the text of the chat session using a single protocol.

After four years of effort, the IETF is finalizing a protocol dubbed SIMPLE (SIP for Instant Messaging and Presence Leveraging Extensions) that will let the paging mode work across different instant messaging service providers' offerings. Once deployed, SIMPLE will let AOL users exchange text-based instant messages with users of rival instant messaging services from Microsoft, Yahoo and others. Both AOL and Microsoft have vowed to support SIMPLE.

SIMPLE uses Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) to initiate an instant message and to transport it on a hop-by-hop basis across the Internet. While SIMPLE can handle short, text-based messages of up to 1,000 characters, IETF participants have discovered that it cannot carry attachments to instant messaging sessions. This is because of an inherent problem in SIP, which runs on TCP or User Datagram Protocol (UDP). While TCP features built-in congestion controls, UDP does not.

So UDP should not be used for sending large files. And SIP can't be adjusted to eliminate the possibility that large files would be sent over UDP. That scenario would be catastrophic, Mankin says. "Imagine the after-school surge, with millions of teenagers online and sending MP3s to each other," she says. "We're talking about volumes of traffic that may be half of the backbone."

Mankin says even if AOL were to offer multimedia instant messaging attachments only to its own users, that could still cause congestion problems across the Internet if this issue isn't resolved.

"We can't tell AOL what to do, but they use all the major backbone providers," she says. "If UDP could be used by their [multimedia instant messaging] service, that would be a serious problem."

The IETF is working on a solution that will use SIMPLE to initiate multimedia instant messaging sessions but will rely on a different protocol with built-in congestion control to transport attachments. So far, the IETF has identified several options for that transport protocol, which will use what's called a session mode rather than a paging mode.

The co-chairs of the IETF's SIMPLE working group are asking participants to submit additional proposals for the session-mode transport protocol this month. The group hopes to select one of the proposals by June.

Jon Peterson, co-chair of the SIMPLE working group and a senior technical industry liaison with NeuStar, says the new transport protocol will scale better to carry large volumes of instant messages and multimedia attachments.

"If the No. 1 and No. 2 [instant messaging] providers were going to interconnect, this would be really useful to handle the high volumes of messages," he says.

Meanwhile, government regulators could prevent AOL - the largest instant messaging service provider - from offering multimedia instant messaging services until this technical glitch is resolved. To get approval for its merger with Time Warner, AOL agreed to delay the release of multimedia instant messaging services until it opens its instant messaging system to rival services.

AOL failed to return multiple calls seeking clarification of its multimedia instant messaging plans. But AOL vowed last summer to use SIMPLE to provide interoperability with other instant messaging service providers.

The rest of the instant messaging industry is expected to adopt SIMPLE too, with Microsoft already shipping SIP support in the latest release of its MSN Messenger software.

In related news, the SIMPLE working group. plans to submit documents that detail how the paging mode works to the IETF leadership for approval in the next few weeks. A draft standard could be approved by March.

The multimedia instant messaging hurdle "is not a show stopper" for SIMPLE, says Robert Sparks, co-chair of the IETF's SIMPLE working group and a senior software architect with Dynamicsoft. "It's new functionality that a lot of people really, really want. But the [SIMPLE] method is sufficient to replicate the [instant messaging] services we have right now."

RELATED LINKS

Contact Senior Editor Carolyn Duffy Marsan

Other recent articles by Marsan

IETF SIMPLE drafts

Breaking instant-messaging news

No results were found for your search.

NWFusion offers more than 40 FREE technology-specific email newsletters in key network technology areas such as NSM, VPNs, Convergence, Security and more.
Click here to sign up!
New Event - WANs: Optimizing Your Network Now.
Hear from the experts about the innovations that are already starting to shake up the WAN world. Free Network World Technology Tour and Expo in Dallas, San Francisco, Washington DC, and New York.
Attend FREE
Your FREE Network World subscription will also include breaking news and information on wireless, storage, infrastructure, carriers and SPs, enterprise applications, videoconferencing, plus product reviews, technology insiders, management surveys and technology updates - GET IT NOW.
* HOME    * RESEARCH CENTERS     * NEWS     * EVENTS

Contact us | Terms of Service/Privacy | How to Advertise
Reprints and links | Partnerships | Subscribe to NW
About Network World, Inc.

Copyright, 1994-2006 Network World, Inc. All rights reserved.