The physical meet-me room.
One interconnect to Dial Peer is the whole project — but you choose its shape: public-internet SIP, SIP over TLS, direct NNI at carrier hotels on three continents, or a VPN tunnel. The exchange meets your network where it is.
Four ways to bring up the same trunk.
Public-internet SIP
The default: standards-based SIP over UDP or TCP to the exchange SBCs, IP-authenticated, dimensioned to your forecast. Live in days.
SIP over TLS
The same trunk with encrypted signaling end to end — for members whose security policy requires encryption over public transport.
Direct NNI
Private, low-latency interconnection at 22 carrier-neutral locations across the Americas, Europe, and Asia-Pacific — traffic never touches the public internet.
VPN tunnel
Secure tunnels where network topology or policy rules out the other options. Same exchange, same tech prefix routing.
22 NNI points. 5 POPs. Three continents.
High-volume members interconnect privately at the carrier hotels where their networks already live. Points of Presence in five global hubs anchor the exchange fabric.
What your NOC will ask.
- Standards-based SIP (RFC 3261); G.711a/u and G.729 as the working codec set, transcoding available at the exchange
- DTMF via RFC 2833/4733
- Redundant trunk pairs available; capacity grows without re-engineering
- Member trunks terminate on hardened SBCs — topology hiding, per-member capacity policing
- IP-based authentication; traffic accepted only from registered member addresses
- 24×7 network operations center with human escalation paths
Full interconnect specifications are exchanged during technical onboarding — if you run something unusual, raise it then; the answer is usually yes with configuration.
