Skip to main content

Kapsch CarrierCom achieves functional addressing for railway communications

Kapsch CarrierCom’s Vienna lab has successfully carried out the first functional addressing call utilising SIP signalling based on the IP multimedia subsystem (IMS). The functional addressing service, also called ‘follow Me’, is one of the key operational features in railway communication networks and is the process of placing a call using a number that refers to the function which a user is performing at a certain time, as opposed to simply identifying the terminal equipment used. The achievement com
June 10, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
81 Kapsch CarrierCom’s Vienna lab has successfully carried out the first functional addressing call utilising SIP signalling based on the IP multimedia subsystem (IMS).

The functional addressing service, also called ‘follow Me’, is one of the key operational features in railway communication networks and is the process of placing a call using a number that refers to the function which a user is performing at a certain time, as opposed to simply identifying the terminal equipment used.

The achievement combines soft phone-based user equipment, IMS capabilities and the service logic hosted within the Service Control Point release 5 (SCP5) application server. Kapsch’s new SCP5 uses standard commercial off-the-shelf hardware and is a convergent Service Delivery Platform (SDP). It enables service centralisation, functional transparency against the underlying network architecture and a smooth transition between current networks and the future full-IP system and is fully enabled for virtualisation, allowing flexible and cost-efficient deployment in railway data centres.

Overall, the system used for the demonstration of functional calls is aligned with the concepts discussed in the ETSI TC RT working group NG2R and the vision outlined in the user requirements and system architecture defined by the UIC project, Future Railway Mobile Communication System (FRMCS).

It acts as a building block for the additional activities planned within the European SHIFT2RAIL project. The proposed transition of the Global System for Mobile Communications – Railway (GSM-R) core systems to IP-based systems offers a number of benefits. It is primarily targeted to be radio technology-independent and offers multi-bearer support. In addition, it will increase reliability and availability, improve safety and reduce costs.

Within the next few years, European railway operators are expected to start to migrate to IP-infrastructure by adopting new technologies and prepare for the migration towards the future railway communication system.

In December 2015, Kapsch became associated member of SHIFT2RAIL and undertook responsibility for carrying out the analysis, specification and implementation of a prototype for a future communication system emergency call under the Innovation Programme 2.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Developing new detection and monitoring technologies
    November 21, 2012
    Established detection and monitoring technologies continue to evolve, but is it time to challenge their supremacy and take a serious look at less conventional ITS? Andy Graham considers the options with Jason Barnes. For ITS system providers, the most potentially lucrative markets over the next few years are going to be the BRIC (Brazil Russia India and China) group of countries, all of which are building many miles of new roads, applying tolling to existing ones (8,000km in China alone) and implementing w
  • Kapsch completes successful trial of EETS
    May 28, 2013
    Kapsch TrafficCom has completed a successful trial of European Electronic Toll Service (EETS) in Poland and demonstrated its capacities to a group of the key European toll providers. This demonstration is the first time that all the EETS standards, including the standards for the on-board unit (OBU), security, the system architecture and the back office, from the European Commission’s own EETS Application Guide, have been implemented in a single system and work seamlessly.
  • Siemens Mobility wins traffic management contract in Northern Ireland
    March 8, 2019
    Siemens Mobility has been chosen by the Department of Infrastructure in Northern Ireland to maintain and develop existing traffic management systems, which are mainly located in Belfast. The scope of the four-year contract includes the maintenance of local systems and the ongoing delivery of a dedicated IP-communications network, which connects 328 urban traffic control (UTC) sites to the central Siemens Mobility UTC and split cycle offset optimisation technique system. The deal is expected to migrate the
  • Do buses need subsidies in congestion charging areas
    June 20, 2016
    David Crawford takes a look at the debate surrounding bus subsidies. Subsidies for public transport are a well-known and frequently-used policy tool directed at reducing the high environmental and social costs of peak-period traffic congestion. But at the end of last year the Swedish Centre for Transport Studies published a working paper entitled ‘Should buses still be subsidised in Stockholm?’ This concluded that the subsidy levels currently being applied in Stockholm could be nearly halved by setting bus