Patent #2 - Full Utility Patent - Novel Claim - Session Based Media Controller - AKA PathFinder SBMC.
So, a week after the AI fully utility patent submission, I submitted for my second invention, which is being called the Session-Based-Media-Controller. When the last two are submitted this week and next, they all together encompass a full vision for the next wave of business communications (and guess what, it's not Microsoft Teams).
The PathFinder SBMC will be the thing that allows craziness to happen in the most desirable way. There is the CEP engine (Common Endpoint) which allows B2BUA encoding, decoding, and transcoding between incompatible endpoints, and allows all manner of connections to take place via a very special utility application baked into the solution, full federal mandate compliance, and a tool called the breadcrumb engine which is where we turn outbound strategies for high risk of spam organizations or those with poor network reputations around. This tool will be used by every telecom, enterprise, and most SMBs in the next 3-5 years. It will obsolete several key technologies, remove the need for external media servers, TURN/STUNNEL, Proxy, and other relay-based services, become the gatekeeper for public-facing and vulnerable VoIP systems, endpoint registrar, and Trunk termination point + a bunch of other things I will be talking about soon.
It is also of note that this is not pipedream technology, it is being built. A full ground-up design, happening as we speak. Instead of trying to build off the work of others and using legacy designs in media handling and brokering, I decided to go a different, much more direct route that will allow some of the coolest features available in a Media Controller. I know everyone thought it was just pretty words and platitudes when I said "We are building the future of communications.", I can assure you it is not, and we are doing precisely that, once the next two things are announced it will show you the direction things are going. The next 10-20 years is going to be a wild time for communications, especially those clinging to old technology and want to compete in this brave new world.