 |
| Industry standard measuring equipment and mobile handsets (not simulators) are used to make real calls between two phones. Once a call is established we play audio in the form reference speech across the call then a comparison is made against what is received to what was sent. The end result is a call speech quality measurement known as PESQ. Click the links for more information about PESQ. (Wikipedia or PESQ or Opticom). The PESQ score and all data referring to the test call that was made is then unloaded to the mobile monitoring site for comparative use by site users. |
|
|
 |
| If you are a mobile phone user, and lets face it, most of us are, we can tell you the quality that we have measured of a real mobile phone call for a given area and provider. This will allow you to compare the measured call quality for multiple providers in a given location. Not only or where you are now but where you plan to be in the future. |
|
|
 |
| The mobile phone service providers supply coverage maps based on the range of the radio equipment they use. These maps do not take into account factors such as Geography, Interference and Urban Sprawl, all of which can have an adverse effect on not only the ability to make or receive calls but also have a debilitating effect on the voice quality of the call itself making the conversation hard to understand. |
|
|
 |
| Below are links to the demo site for you to explore, to show how our data is displayed
This is just a small example of the type of data that we can supply you based on real time data which will give you the complete picture of the type of call quality you can expect
|
|
|