Handbook on Networked Multipoint Multimedia Conferencing and Multistream Immsersive Telepresence using SIP: Scalable Distributed Applications and Media Control over Internet is the first book to put together all IETF request for comments (RFCs), and the internet drafts standards related to the multipoint conferencing and immersive telepresence.
This book includes mandatory and optional texts of all standards in a chronological and systematic way almost with one-to-one integrity from the beginning to end, allowing the reader to understand all aspects of the highly complex real-time applications.
It is a book that network designers, software developers, product manufacturers, implementers, interoperability testers, professionals, professors, and researchers will find to be immensely useful. Practitioners and engineers in all spectrums who are concentrating on building the real-time, scalable, interoperable multipoint applications, can use this book to make informed choices based on technical standards in the market place, on all proprietary non-scalable and non-interposable products. This book will provide focus and foundation for these decision makers.
Radhika Ranjan Roy has been an electronics engineer, United States Army Research, United StatesCommand, Control, Communications, Computers, Combat Systems, Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance (C5ISR)-S&TCD Laboratories (previously known as CERDEC), AberdeenProving Ground (APG), Maryland, United States since 2009. Dr. Roy is leading research and developmentefforts in the development of scalable large-scale SIP-based VoIP/Multimedia networks andservices, cybersecurity, artificial intelligence and machine/deep learning (AI/ML/DL) architecture, mobile ad hoc networks (MANETs), Peer-to-Peer (P2P) networks, cybersecurity detecting applicationsoftware and network vulnerability, jamming detection, supporting an array of the Army/Department of Defense's Nationwide and Worldwide Warfighter Networking Architectures andparticipating in technical standards development in Multimedia/Real-Time Services Collaboration, IPv6, Radio Communications, Enterprise Services Management, and Information Transfer ofDepartment of Defense (DoD) Technical Working Groups (TWGs). He received his PhD in ElectricalEngineering with Major in Computer Communications from the City University of New York(CUNY), NY, United States in 1984 and his MS in Electrical Engineering from the NortheasternUniversity, Boston, MA, United States in 1978. He received his BS in Electrical Engineering fromthe Bangladesh University of Engineering & Technology (BUET), Dhaka, Bangladesh in 1967. Hewas born in the renowned country town of Derai, Bangladesh.Prior to joining CERDEC, Dr. Roy worked as the lead system engineer at CACI, Eatontown, NJ from 2007 to 2009 and developed Army Technical Resource Model (TRM), Army EnterpriseArchitecture (AEA), DoD Architecture Framework (DoDAF), and Army LandWarNet (LWN)Capability Sets, and technical standards for Joint Tactical Radio System (JTRS), Mobile IPv6, MANET, and SIP, supporting Army Chief Information Officer (CIO)/G-6. Dr. Roy worked as seniorsystem engineer, SAIC, Abingdon, MD from 2004 to 2007, supporting Modeling, Simulations, Architectures, and System Engineering of many Army projects: WIN-T, FCS, and JNN.During his career, Dr. Roy worked in AT&T/Bell Laboratories, Middletown, NJ as senior consultantfrom 1990 to 2004 and led a team of engineers in designing AT&T's Worldwide SIP-basedVoIP/Multimedia Communications Network Architecture, consisting of wired and wireless, fromthe preparation of Request for Information (RFI) to the evaluation of vendor RFI responses andinteractions with all selected major vendors related to their products. He participated in and contributedto the development of VoIP/H.323/SIP multimedia standards in ITU-T, IETF, ATM, andFrame Relay standard organizations.Dr. Roy worked as senior principal engineer in CSC, Falls Church, VA from 1984 to 1990 andworked in the design and performance analysis of the US Treasury nationwide X.25 packet-switchingnetwork. In addition, he designed many network architectures of many proposed U.S. Governmentand Commercial Worldwide and Nationwide Networks: Department of State TelecommunicationsNetwork (DOSTN), U.S. Secret Service Satellite Network, Veteran Communications Network, andFord Company's Dealership Network. Prior to CSC, he worked from 1967 to 1977 as deputy director, Design, in PDP, Dhaka, Bangladesh.Dr. Roy's research interests include the areas of artificial intelligence, machine/deep learning, blockchain cloud and fog computing, mobile ad hoc networks, multimedia communications, peer-topeernetworking, and quality-of-service. He has published over 60 technical papers and is holding orpending over 35 patents. He also participates in many IETF working groups. Dr. Roy authored threebooks Handbook on SDP for Multimedia Session Negotiations: SIP and WebRTC Telephony (CRCPress/Taylor & Francis, 2018), Handbook on Session Initiation Protocol: Networked MultimediaCommunications for IP Telephony (CRC Press/Taylor & Francis, 2016), and Handbook of MobileAd Hoc Networks for Mobility Models, Springer, 2010. He lives in the historical district of HowellTownship, New Jersy, with his wife Jharna.