I have been in UC for almost a decade now , stratted off when CUCM was Version 6.x or 7.x now its the time for WebEx could to provide Call control ( time flies) I have been a Cisco Tac Engineer, then moved to UC design and implementation and now I am a UC Pre-sales Solution Engineer talking both Cisco and Microsoft. I can vouch for your explanation regarding the complex issue of Bandwith and different means to address it from PBxs point of view. The thing I liked the most about your content is ,your calmness while delivering the Technical aspects and the clarity of thoughts you have while explaining. Eminnence !!
Great work. Thanks. Little addition from manual. "The location that is configured in a device pool takes precedence over the location configured in the device when the location in the device is set to Hub_None. If the device location is set to any other user-defined location !!! , standard rules apply and the device parameter takes priority."
Great content. Great voice with very good flow of demonstration. I feel engaged by the short videos and keep watching more videos. I subscribed and appreciate the time you spent making these videos.
OUTSTANDING JOB-I mean, really, really well done. Thank you-I have an interview with Cisco next week for a tier 2/3 UC Engineer position. I will donate a few bucks if you want to provide a means to do so. Please note that I will NOT use PayPal.
Huge thanks for your comment, and I appreciate the offer, but I am honestly just happy that you found the video helpful. Good luck on your interview. Let me know how it goes!
Haven't had time to make any new videos lately, but I'll add it to the list for when I'm able to make more content. It'd be a great topic to cover. Thanks for watching.
Yes, good catch... that should be 1024kbps. (Unfortunately, I used the same slide on another video, and I got the same comment. LOL...) anyway, good eye. thanks for pointing that out.
Sorry, I still don't fully understand the difference between Regions and Locations, they both seem to do the same thing. Can someone please clarify these concepts thank you.
REGIONS is used to control the maximum bandwidth PER CALL. In other words, what is the *maximum* amount of bandwidth you're going to allow each *individual* call to use. This is done via codecs. So for regions, think BIT RATE. However, LOCATIONS is used to control total bandwidth of ALL calls on your network. In other words, if there were five calls going on at the same time, how much total bandwidth will all five calls together be allowed to use. This is essentially CAC (Call Admission Control). For Locations, think BANDWIDTH. Hope that helps.
@@CollabCrush You have made this much clearer than the study guide I am using thank you. However, I feel like my struggle is understating the purpose. I understand that Region is PER CALL based and Location Per Network based. My question is if Location controls the calls together for CAC why would you then need to control the bandwidth per call ?
I have been in UC for almost a decade now , stratted off when CUCM was Version 6.x or 7.x now its the time for WebEx could to provide Call control ( time flies) I have been a Cisco Tac Engineer, then moved to UC design and implementation and now I am a UC Pre-sales Solution Engineer talking both Cisco and Microsoft. I can vouch for your explanation regarding the complex issue of Bandwith and different means to address it from PBxs point of view. The thing I liked the most about your content is ,your calmness while delivering the Technical aspects and the clarity of thoughts you have while explaining. Eminnence !!
Wow, thank you very much for your comment. It's always great to hear someone with so much experience vouching for these videos. Thank you!
Excellent content. Amazing explanation and the voice of in this video is quite clear. Congrats
Glad you liked it!
One of the best videos I've ever seen. Thanks!
Thank you very much!
Great work. Thanks. Little addition from manual. "The location that is configured in a device pool takes precedence over the location configured in the device when the location in the device is set to Hub_None. If the device location is set to any other user-defined location !!! , standard rules apply and the device parameter takes priority."
Brilliantly Explained
Loved it :)
Thank you very much!
Great content. Great voice with very good flow of demonstration. I feel engaged by the short videos and keep watching more videos. I subscribed and appreciate the time you spent making these videos.
Thank you so much. Glad you enjoy the videos. More to come soon.
OUTSTANDING JOB-I mean, really, really well done. Thank you-I have an interview with Cisco next week for a tier 2/3 UC Engineer position.
I will donate a few bucks if you want to provide a means to do so. Please note that I will NOT use PayPal.
Huge thanks for your comment, and I appreciate the offer, but I am honestly just happy that you found the video helpful. Good luck on your interview. Let me know how it goes!
More specific and detailed with clear explanation . . Great video Thank you so much!
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you so much for this video, it was really helpful to understand this complicated topic - Region and Location.
Thanks for your comment! You are very welcome!
Great video
Thanks for the detailed video.
My pleasure!
This is great, I watched couple great videos about this topic, by far yours is more clear, at least to me.
Thanks so much, Abdul. Glad it was helpful!
Really helpful video, can you do one for MGCP and Route pattern, route list and route groups please
Haven't had time to make any new videos lately, but I'll add it to the list for when I'm able to make more content. It'd be a great topic to cover. Thanks for watching.
Wall done ! Great Video
Lucid !!!
I believe that there is an error in the video, you are stating that the bandwidth is 1mbps but the picture is showing 1024mbps instead of 1024kbps.
Yes, good catch... that should be 1024kbps. (Unfortunately, I used the same slide on another video, and I got the same comment. LOL...) anyway, good eye. thanks for pointing that out.
@@CollabCrush thanks for putting those type of videos on youtube, i (and i am sure many others) really appreciate that
Sorry, I still don't fully understand the difference between Regions and Locations, they both seem to do the same thing. Can someone please clarify these concepts thank you.
REGIONS is used to control the maximum bandwidth PER CALL. In other words, what is the *maximum* amount of bandwidth you're going to allow each *individual* call to use. This is done via codecs. So for regions, think BIT RATE. However, LOCATIONS is used to control total bandwidth of ALL calls on your network. In other words, if there were five calls going on at the same time, how much total bandwidth will all five calls together be allowed to use. This is essentially CAC (Call Admission Control). For Locations, think BANDWIDTH. Hope that helps.
@@CollabCrush Thank for elaborating on this subject.
@@CollabCrush You have made this much clearer than the study guide I am using thank you. However, I feel like my struggle is understating the purpose. I understand that Region is PER CALL based and Location Per Network based. My question is if Location controls the calls together for CAC why would you then need to control the bandwidth per call ?