Patent Publication Number: US-8995430-B2

Title: IC processor reconstucting two consecutive lost packets from secondary information

Description:
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS 
     This application is a divisional of prior application Ser. No. 13/240,512, filed Sep. 22, 2011, now abandoned; 
     Which was a divisional of prior application Ser. No. 12/883,591, filed Sep. 16, 2010, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,050,254, issued Nov. 1, 2011; 
     Which was a divisional of prior application Ser. No. 12/636,463, filed Dec. 11, 2009, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,822,021, granted Oct. 26, 2010; 
     which was a divisional of prior application Ser. No. 10/885,911, filed Jul. 6, 2004, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,653,045, granted Jan. 26, 2010; 
     which was a divisional of prior application Ser. No. 09/461,159, filed Dec. 14, 1999, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,765,904, granted Jul. 20, 2004; 
     which claims priority from Provisional Application No. 60/148,191, filed Aug. 10, 1999. 
     “Processes, Articles and Packets For Network Path Diversity In Media Over Packet Applications,” now U.S. Pat. No. 6,496,477, issued Dec. 17, 2002. 
     “System for Dynamic Adaptation of Data/Channel Coding in Wireless Communications” by J. DeMartin, A. McCree, and K. Anandakumar, Ser. No. 60/086,217 filed May 21, 1998, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,421,527, issued Jul. 16, 2002. 
     “PC Circuits, Systems and Methods” by John L. So, Ser. No. 60/014,734 filed Apr. 2, 1996, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,978,590, issued Nov. 16, 1999. 
     “Devices, Methods, Systems and Software Products for Coordination of Computer Main Microprocessor and Second Microprocessor Coupled Thereto” by John L. So, Jeffrey L. Kerr, Steven R. Magee and Jun Tang, Ser. No. 08/833,267 filed Apr. 4, 1997, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,179,489, issued Jan. 30, 2001. 
    
    
     FIELD OF THE INVENTION 
     The present invention relates to the fields of integrated circuits, networking, systems and processes for packet communications, and especially communication of real time information such as voice, audio, images, video and other real time information over packet. 
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     The Internet has long been usable for Internet file transfers and e-mail by packet switched communication. A different technology called circuit switched communication is used in the PSTN (public switched telephone network) wherein a circuit is dedicated to each phone call regardless of whether the circuit is being communicated over in silent periods. Packet switched networks do not dedicate a channel, thereby sharing a pipe or channel among many communications and their users. Packets may vary in their length, and have a header for source information, destination information, number of bits in the packet, how many items, priority information, and security information. 
     A packet of data often traverses several nodes as it goes across the network in “hops.” In a stream of data, the packets representative thereof may, and often do, take different paths through the network to get the destination. The packets arrive out of order sometimes. The packets are not only merely delayed relative to the source, but also have delay jitter. Delay jitter is variability in packet delay, or variation in timing of packets relative to each other due to buffering within nodes in the same routing path, and differing delays and/or numbers of hops in different routing paths. Packets may even be actually lost and never reach their destination. Delay jitter is a packet-to-packet concept for the present purposes, and jitter of bits within a given packet is a less emphasized subject herein. 
     Voice over Packet (VOP) and Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) are sensitive to delay jitter to an extent qualitatively more important than for text data files for example. Delay jitter produces interruptions, clicks, pops, hisses and blurring of the sound and/or images as perceived by the user, unless the delay jitter problem can be ameliorated or obviated. Packets that are not literally lost, but are substantially delayed when received, may have to be discarded at the destination nonetheless because they have lost their usefulness at the receiving end. Thus, packets that are discarded, as well as those that are literally lost, are all called “lost packets” herein except where a more specific distinction is made explicit or is plain from the context. 
     The user can rarely tolerate as much as half a second (500 milliseconds) of delay, and even then may avoid using VOP if its quality is perceptibly inferior to other readily available and albeit more expensive transmission alternatives. Such avoidance may occur with delays of 250 milliseconds or even less, while Internet phone technology hitherto may have suffered from end-to-end delays of as much as 600 milliseconds or more. 
     Hitherto, one approach has stored the arriving packets in a buffer, but if the buffer is too short, packets are lost. If the buffer is too long, it contributes to delay. 
     If the network is very congested, and the packet is routed by a large number of hops, the ratio of lost packets to sent packets in a given time window interval can rise not just to 5-10% but even to 25% or more, and the real-time communication becomes degraded. VOP quality requires low lost packet ratio measured in a relatively short time window interval (length of oral utterance for instance, with each packet representing a compressed few centiseconds of speech). By contrast, text file reception can reorder packets during a relatively much longer window interval of reception of text and readying it for printing, viewing, editing, or other use. Voice can be multiplexed along with other data on a packet network inexpensively over long distances and internationally, at low expense compared with circuit-switched PSTN charges. 
     A Transport Control Protocol (TCP) sometimes used in connection with the IP (Internet Protocol) can provide for packet tags, detection of lost and out-of-order packets by examination of the packet tags and retransmission of the lost packets from the source. TCP is useful for maintaining transmission quality of e-mail and other non-real-time data. However, the delay inherent in the request-for-retransmission process currently may reduce the usefulness of TCP and other ARQ (automatic retransmission request) approaches as a means of enhancing VOP communications. 
     RTP (Real Time Transport Protocol) and RTCP (RTP Control Protocol) add time stamps and sequence numbers to the packets, augmenting the operations of the network protocol such as IP. However, these do not provide QoS (Quality of Service) control. 
     For real-time communication some solution to the problem of packet loss is imperative, and the packet loss problem is exacerbated in heavily-loaded packet networks. Also, even a lightly-loaded packet network with a packet loss ratio of 0.1% perhaps, still requires some mechanism to deal with the circumstances of lost packets. 
     A conventional speech compression algorithm has a portion that samples, digitizes and buffers speech in a frame buffer in frame intervals (e.g. 20 milliseconds), or frames, and another portion that compresses the sampled digitized speech from one of the frames while more speech is being added to the buffer. If the speech is sampled at 8 kiloHertz, then each 20 millisecond example frame has 160 analog speech samples (8×20). If an 8-bit analog to digital converter (ADC) is used, then 1280 bits (160×8) result as the digitized form of the sampled speech in that 20 millisecond frame. Next the compression algorithm converts the 1280 bits to fewer bits carrying the same or almost the same speech information. Suppose the algorithm provides 8:1 compression. Then 1280/8 bits, or 160 bits of compressed or coded speech result from compression. The compressed speech is then put in the format of a packet, thus called packetized, by a packetizer process. 
     For every frame of compressed speech in a packet, loss of that packet means loss of each frame in that packet. There then arises the problem how to create 160 bits or more of lost compressed speech. One known approach simply repeats the most recent previous frame that is available at the receiving destination. Another known approach fills the output frame with silence (zeroes). Reduction of packet loss and packet loss handling strategy are very important challenges in advancing VOP technology. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     In one form of the invention, a process of sending packets of real-time information at a sender includes steps of initially generating at the sender the packets of real-time information with a source rate greater than zero kilobits per second, and a time or path or combined time/path diversity rate, the amount of diversity initially being at least zero kilobits per second. The process sends the packets, thereby resulting in a quality of service QoS, and optionally obtains at the sender a measure of the QoS. Another step compares the QoS with a threshold of acceptability, and when the QoS is on an unacceptable side of said threshold increases the diversity rate and sends not only additional ones of the packets of real-time information but also sends diversity packets at the diversity rate as increased. Also, rate/diversity adaptation decision may be performed at receiver. 
     Increasing the diversity rate while either reducing or keeping unchanged the overall transmission rate is an important new improvement in even solely-time-diversity embodiments. 
     Further forms of the invention involve new criteria for initiating adaptation transitions, and new types of transitions including number of packets-per-second transitions, diversity transitions, source rate transitions and mixtures thereof. 
     In another form of the invention a single-chip integrated circuit includes a processor circuit, and a source rate/diversity control. Here again, the diversity is contemplated to be time diversity, path diversity and combined time/path diversity in various embodiments. 
     Other forms of the invention encompass other processes, improved packets and packet ensembles, integrated circuits, chipsets, computer add-in cards, information storage articles, systems, computers, gateways, routers, cellular telephone handsets, wireless base stations, appliances, and packet networks, and other forms as claimed. 
    
    
     
       BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
         FIG. 1  is a state transition diagram for a process embodiment of adaptive control of combinations called states, of source rate and diversity rate in a media over packet sending computer; 
         FIG. 2  is a diagrammatic representation of packets in different states of  FIG. 1 , wherein time extends horizontally as successive columns in  FIG. 2 , and the different states correspond to different rows of differently labeled packets in  FIG. 2  wherein overall transmission rate is kept limited to less than or equal to that of an s 11  state; 
         FIG. 3  is a block diagram of a system embodiment of a sender computer, a network cloud, and a receiver computer showing improvements for rate/diversity adaptation; 
         FIG. 4  is a family of curves of packet loss rate in percent versus number of users N, each curve having a different source rate in kilobits per second; 
         FIG. 5  is graph of residual packet loss rate in percent versus speech activity for two curves in a media-specific redundancy example, a first curve corresponding to a source rate and no diversity, and a second curve having a lower source rate and with diversity introduced; 
         FIG. 6  is a diagrammatic representation of packets in 5 transmission processes, wherein time extends horizontally as successive columns in  FIG. 6 , and the different transmission processes correspond to five different rows of differently labeled packets in  FIG. 6 ; 
         FIG. 7  is a family of curves of residual packet loss rate in percent versus speech activity for four curves in a multiple description example, two of the curves corresponding to a source rate and no diversity, and two more curves having a respectively lower source rate and with diversity introduced; 
         FIG. 8  is a family of curves in a multiple description example of residual packet loss rate in percent versus number of users N, each curve having a different source rate in kilobits per second, and two of the curves having diversity as well; 
         FIG. 9  is a diagram of a RTP packet; 
         FIG. 10  is another state transition diagram for a process embodiment with a media-specific redundancy example of adaptive control of combinations called states, of source rate and diversity in a media over packet sending computer; 
         FIG. 11  is a diagrammatic representation of packets in different states, wherein time extends horizontally as successive columns in  FIG. 11 , and the different states correspond to different rows of differently labeled packets in  FIG. 11  wherein overall transmission rate is allowed to exceed that of an s 11  state; 
         FIG. 12  is a block diagram of a simulated network, called a single bottleneck link simulation having voice sources each described by a state transition diagram inset depicting a two-state Markov voice source; 
         FIG. 13  is a graph of simulated network usage by number of users N versus time t, which is input to the  FIG. 12  bottleneck link simulation; 
         FIG. 14  is a graph of overall transmission rate showing various states of  FIG. 1 , versus time, which states are output from the  FIG. 12  bottleneck link simulation; 
         FIG. 15  is a block diagram of a combined sending/receiving process, integrated circuit device and system embodiment with adaptive rate/diversity improvements; 
         FIG. 16  is a flow diagram of a process embodiment of rate/diversity adaptation; 
         FIG. 17  is partially pictorial, partially block, diagram of integrated circuits and subsystems for gateways, private branch exchange (PBX) units, wireless base stations, and routers in various embodiments; 
         FIG. 18  is a block diagram of an improved software system having the improved integrated circuit device of  FIG. 15  as a digital signal processor DSP; 
         FIG. 19  is a partially pictorial, partially block, network diagram with edge devices improved as described herein, for analysis of different paths having different selections of improved and unimproved devices at different sites along each of the different paths; 
         FIG. 20  is a diagram of an RTCP packet for QoS-related reporting from a receiver computer back to a sender computer; 
         FIG. 21  is a timing diagram of time from left-to-right for sending two RTCP packets, packet I and packet I+1, and a time interval for a QoS computation process; 
         FIG. 22  is a state transition diagram for a process embodiment of adaptive control of combinations called states, of source rate and diversity in a media over packet sending computer, wherein criteria for making various transitions indicated by arrows in  FIG. 22  are different from the criteria for making various transitions indicated by the arrows in  FIG. 1 ; 
         FIG. 23  is a state transition diagram for a process embodiment of adaptive control of combinations called states, of source rate and diversity in a media over packet sending computer, wherein criteria for making various transitions indicated by arrows in  FIG. 23  are different from the criteria for making various transitions indicated by the arrows in  FIG. 1 , and suitably supplement the process of  FIG. 1 ; 
         FIG. 24  is a flow diagram of a process embodiment of rate/diversity adaptation for multicasting, conferencing or other multiple destination services which uses part of the process of  FIG. 16 ; 
         FIG. 25  is a flow diagram of further substeps detailing each of steps  1621 ,  1623  and  1629  of  FIG. 16 ; 
         FIG. 26  is a flow diagram of further substeps detailing step  1631  of  FIG. 16 ; 
         FIG. 27  is a block diagram of an embodiment combining adaptive multipath routing with adaptive rate/diversity processes, in integrated circuits, devices, computers, systems and networks; 
         FIG. 28  is a block diagram of software for implementing a networking protocol stack useful with the software and system of  FIG. 18 ; 
         FIG. 29  is a state transition diagram for a process embodiment of adaptive control of combinations called states, of source rate and first and second diversity rates in a media over packet computer; 
         FIG. 30  is a histogram of frequency of consecutive packet losses versus number of consecutive packet losses; 
         FIG. 31  is a state transition diagram for a process embodiment of adaptive control of combinations called states, of source rate and first and second diversity rate controlled according to the histogram of  FIG. 30  in a media over packet computer; 
         FIG. 32  is a diagrammatic representation of packets in three states of differing numbers of frames per packet combined with a process embodiment of adaptive control of those states in a media-over-packet computer; and 
         FIG. 33  is a state transition diagram for a process embodiment of adaptive control of combinations called states, of differing numbers of frames per packet and of source rate and diversity rate, in a media-over-packet computer. 
     
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS 
     Various embodiments provide adaptive, robust VoIP/VOP/media over packet (including real time signals over packet) solutions. They provide approaches to packet network improvements for incorporation into VoIP/VOP/media-over-packet IETF, TIPHON, and ITU standards. Packet loss resilience encoding and packet loss handling are improved. Adaptive delay and delay jitter handling contribute to efficient playout and congestion detection. An adaptive delay and/or delay jitter handling mechanism is integrated with speech, audio, video and image coders. Constrained rate/diversity adaptation processes and systems embodiments control congestion robustly. 
     In packet loss resilience encoding and packet loss handling, sender based diversity embodiments improve G.729 and Texas Instruments code excited linear prediction (TI-CELP) codec among other coders. The following document is hereby incorporated herein by reference for use where G.729 is referred to herein: International Telecommunication Union ITU-T G.729 (03/96) Telecommunication Standardization Sector of ITU, General Aspects of Digital Transmission Systems, Coding of Speech at 8 kbit/s Using Conjugate-Structure Algebraic-Code-Excited Linear-Prediction (CS-ACELP), ITU-T Recommendation G.729. 
     For example, information about packet n is sent in packets {n+k: k&gt;0} in a packet sequence: 
     
       
         
         
             
             
         
       
     
     Computationally-efficient CELP based important information redundancy schemes are provided. 
     Computationally-efficient multiple description CELP coding is provided. 
     Adaptive delay and adaptive delay jitter handling advantageously compensate delay variation in arriving packets, detect delay-spikes of delay value due to congestion, and increase playout delay and send congestion notification. 
     Adaptive delay and adaptive delay jitter handling process is suitably integrated with G.729 codec and other codecs. 
     Combined adaptation on both source rate sij and packet network diversity rate dij, a process called rate/diversity adaptation herein, robustly controls congestion. Some embodiments herein use source rate adaptation alone, with advantageous simplicity and QoS improvement compared to approaches hitherto. Also, further embodiments use diversity adaptation alone or combined with source rate adaptation with the following advantages for real-time traffic:
         overcome distributed congestion   handle heterogeneous traffics   overcome packet losses due to bit errors (as in modem/satellite links)   compensate for packet losses due to processing limitations, late-arrival, etc.   recognize that during DTX (discontinuous transmission), feedback is not provided.       

     To handle congestion, TCP reduces the number of packets transmitted and uses retransmission which often introduces unacceptable delay and delay jitter for real-time traffic. In rate/diversity adaptation for real-time communication, diversity is advantageously introduced. 
     As is described herein, rate/diversity adaptation for robust congestion control offers features in one or another of the embodiments, such as
         Overall transmission rate is reduced during congestion   Increases source rate through multiple stages   Avoids oscillations between states by incremental changes based on different thresholds or other transition criteria   Robust adaptation mechanism or process   Adaptation mechanism takes into account loss, high delay and delay jitter   Combines adaptive delay/delay-jitter handling, for congestion detection and playout adaptation   Works with multiple description (MD) packets improved with diversity processes, devices and systems   Works with Important Information (I-I) based redundancy packets improved with diversity processes, devices and systems   Improves other redundancy packet networking techniques both with new temporal diversity and path diversity processes, devices and systems.       

     Important areas of improvement for VoIP/VOP technology involve minimizing delays inside computers and their software, lowering network latency, and tightening network jitter. One or more of these advantages are conferred by some of the embodiments described herein. 
     By adapting transmission rate and the amount of time or path or combined time/path diversity in VoIP/VOP applications, robust solutions advantageously handle network impairments and congestion, while utilizing network resources efficiently. 
     Improvements in VoIP/VOP processes, integrated circuits and systems utilizing path diversity are described in the coassigned U.S. Pat. No. 6,496,477 “Integrated Circuits, Systems, Apparatus, Packets and Processes Utilizing Path Diversity for Media Over Packet Applications,” which is incorporated herein by reference. In one category of embodiments, the skilled worker uses the circuits and methods described in the incorporated material and adds the adaptive features further described herein. 
     RTP/UDP/IP protocols do not offer QoS control mechanisms. Hence, VoIP applications, if they were to use RTP/UDP/IP protocols, suffer from fluctuations in network conditions and poor voice quality can result. One approach for QoS control involves source rate control, with no diversity, wherein one approach for QoS control is to adapt the source rate to the fluctuations in network conditions, per “Reducing bandwidth requirements,” Micom Whitepaper, 1998; D. Sisalem et al., “The loss-delay based adjustment algorithm: A TCP-friendly adaptation scheme,” NOSSDAV, (International Workshop on Network and Operating System Support for Digital Audio and Video), July 1998. However, this approach may not handle short-term network fluctuations well, and is complicated as VoIP/VOP applications often involve multiple links of heterogeneous characteristics. First, there is a need to locate the “bottleneck” link, and, second, all users of the bottleneck link may not reduce their transmission rate. 
     In time diversity, information about packet n is also transmitted in packet n+1 and sometimes in even further packets where packets having at least some information in common with each other are called dependent packets. 
     Path Diversity sends dependent packets over two or more paths in the network, thus increasing the probability of recovering the information that was coded to produce the dependent packets. 
     Combined Time/Path Diversity approach uses both processes of Time Diversity and Path Diversity in innovative ways. 
     “Diversity packet,” where the term is used herein sometimes means a self-contained packet with its own header and diversity information. However, the term “diversity packet” can also mean diversity bits and extra header bits put in a packet that already has a header and a payload. 
     Time diversity schemes provide inter-packet diversity, by including information about the nth packet in succeeding packets {n+k: k&gt;=1}. They may employ redundancy schemes (media-specific redundancy, forward-error correction FEC) and multiple-description schemes, for instance. 
     In the example sequence of four packets just below, bits P(n) represent primary packets, and P(n)′ and P(n)″ each represent instances of diversity. This packet sequence has a number of diversity stages (here 3 namely P(n), P(n)′ and P(n)″) and a diversity length of 4. Diversity length is the minimum number of packets in a symbol sequence needed to define the diversity used. 
     
       
         
         
             
             
         
       
     
     The diversity length is greater than the number of diversity stages because of diversity offset, which is one here. Diversity offset corresponds in this case to absence of P(n) or any primed P(n) in the third packet. 
     Redundancy schemes piggyback a version/function (media-specific redundancy/FEC) of nth packet to (n+k)th packet, k&gt;=1, as shown hereinbelow. The following sequences of packets are examples of media-specific redundancy schemes: 
     
       
         
         
             
             
         
       
     
     where Pn denotes nth packet, and Pn′ and Pn″ denote versions of the nth packet. “Version” here means a dependent datum in a packet having at least some information included or encoded therein which corresponds to another packet. Thus, the juxtaposition of symbols used above signifies concatenation in the description of a given packet, and any possible sequence of concatenation in every packet is contemplated, as well as the order of concatenation literally shown for each packet. 
     Multiple-description (MD) schemes break the input stream into multiple descriptions, for instance, using MD quantizers [V. A. Vaishampayan et al., “Asymptotic analysis of multiple description quantizers,” IEEE Trans. On Inform. Theory, January 1998}. Here none of the descriptions have the full information intended for reception, and instead each of the descriptions has less than that full information, and the descriptions which are received (even if some be lost) then have their information combined in the decoder to obtain what information is available in them collectively. The following packet sequences symbolize examples of embodiments of process and systems 
     
       
         
         
             
             
         
       
     
     where Pn, Pn′ and Pn″ denote multiple descriptions of the nth packet. 
     One type of embodiment uses plural types of time diversity concurrently so that Redundancy is applied concurrently with Multiple-Description. 
     Among other advantageous things herein, the present application describes path diversity processes, integrated circuits and systems whereby VoIP/VOP software applications open multiple (two or more) flows between the same source and the destination. The packets in each flow traverse separate paths from packets in other flows (for at least some of the hops between the source and destination). By having multiple paths, or causing multiple network paths to be accessed, used and traversed, such path diversity processes, integrated circuits and systems reduce, as between the diverse flows, the correlation of packet loss, delay, jitter and other less than desirable metrics of performance which are ameliorated herein. 
     Some examples of combined time/path diversity embodiments for VOP that confer advantageously efficient bandwidth utilization are described next. 
     1. Combined time/path diversity. The time diversity is redundancy, multiple description, FEC forward error correction, or other suitable process. 
                         
(In embodiment 1(b), the packet stream of Path  2  is time-delayed relative to the packet stream of Path  1 .)
 
     Path switching diversity randomizes bursty packet losses without increasing bandwidth utilization. First create multiple connections/paths (e.g. 2 connections) between the source and the destination. Then transmit as follows: 
     VOP packet stream: P 0  P 1  P 2  . . . P(n−1) P(n) P(n+1) P(n+2) . . . 
     
       
         
         
             
             
         
       
     
     Generally speaking, a set of n respective packets are directed into a corresponding number n of respective diverse network paths whereupon the process repeats for the next set of n packets, and so on. 
     Combined path-switching diversity/redundancy embodiments combine path-switching diversity and redundancy processes, and advantageously achieve good voice quality with efficient bandwidth utilization. In a two-path embodiment 
     
       
         
         
             
             
         
       
     
     In this approach, n respective redundancy packets are directed into a corresponding number n of respective diverse network paths whereupon the process repeats for the next set of n packets, and so on. 
     Combined path-switching diversity/multiple-descriptions embodiments combine path-switching diversity and multiple-description processes, and advantageously achieve good voice quality with efficient bandwidth utilization. In a two-path embodiment 
     
       
         
         
             
             
         
       
     
     In this approach, n respective multiple-descriptions packets are directed into a corresponding number n of respective diverse network paths whereupon the process repeats for the next set of n packets, and so on. 
     5. In an embodiment of incorporated coassigned U.S. Pat. No. 6,496,477, the original voice packet stream (P 0  P 1  P 2 ) is sent in its entirety, on path  1  and on path  2 . 
     
       
         
         
             
             
         
       
     
     The following Performance Table summarizes performance for a two-path system of the above four embodiments. The symbols R, H and R′ refer to source bit rate, header bit rate, and redundancy bit rate, respectively. Concealment processes such as interpolation are suitably used to recover missing parts of a media stream. In G.729, a frame erasure concealment method specified in G.729 spec is suitably used when the path diversity feature herein is not being used. 
     
       
         
           
               
            
               
                   
               
               
                 PERFORMANCE TABLE 
               
            
           
           
               
               
               
            
               
                 EMBODIMENT 
                 BANDWIDTH 
                 QUALITY 
               
               
                   
               
               
                 1(a), 1(b) 
                 2(R + H + R′) 
                 Full quality when any of the 
               
               
                   
                   
                 paths is good. Acceptable 
               
               
                   
                   
                 quality when even both 
               
               
                   
                   
                 paths are bad. 
               
               
                 2 
                 (R + H) 
                 Packet-loss concealment, 
               
               
                   
                   
                 when any of the paths is 
               
               
                   
                   
                 bad. 
               
               
                 3 
                 (R + H + R′) 
                 Full quality, when both 
               
               
                   
                   
                 paths are good. Acceptable 
               
               
                   
                   
                 quality, when any of the 
               
               
                   
                   
                 paths is good. Packet-loss 
               
               
                   
                   
                 concealment, when both 
               
               
                   
                   
                 paths are bad. 
               
               
                 4 
                 (R + H + R′) 
                 Full quality, when both 
               
               
                   
                   
                 paths are good. Acceptable 
               
               
                   
                   
                 quality when any of the 
               
               
                   
                   
                 paths is good. Packet-loss 
               
               
                   
                   
                 concealment, when both 
               
               
                   
                   
                 paths are bad. 
               
               
                 5 
                 2(R + H) 
                 Full quality, when both 
               
               
                   
                   
                 paths are good. Packet-loss 
               
               
                   
                   
                 concealment, when both 
               
               
                   
                   
                 paths are bad. 
               
               
                   
               
            
           
         
       
     
     In a similar manner, the skilled worker analyzes various embodiments and selects for implementation whichever one(s) are most suitable for the particular needs at hand. 
     Media-specific redundancy schemes piggy-back a version of nth packet to (n+k)th packet. In VoIP/VOP heretofore a separate encoding scheme generated the redundancy version of the nth packet, or piggybacked the entire nth packet to the (n+k)th packet. Herein computationally-efficient CELP (code-excited linear prediction) based diversity embodiments for VoIP/VOP are described, such as for generating media-specific redundancy information. These are herein called “Important Information” based diversity embodiments. Some Important Information based diversity embodiments use base information, or Important Information, from CELP encoding as redundancy information, to achieve diversity. Below, two embodiments are described in more detail for G.729. These embodiments are given for two stages (primary stage plus one secondary stage), with no diversity offset. Embodiments include extensions based on more than two stages, and diversity offsets. 
     Embodiment 1: With no pulses in secondary stage. Using G.729, the secondary stage (redundancy stage) has these Important Parameters—LPC (Linear Predictive Coding) parameters, LTP (Longterm Prediction) lags, parity check, and adaptive and fixed codebook gains—according to the sequence 
     
       
         
         
             
             
         
       
     
     1A. Reconstruction with single packet loss is shown in the next sequence below. The LPC parameters, LTP lags, parity check, and adaptive and fixed codebook gains are obtained from the secondary stage. The excitation reconstruction mechanism is suitably made to be the replacement excitation generation scheme described in the G.729 standard section 4.4.4 with the following modification. For lost-frames considered as nonperiodic, the adaptive codebook contribution is set to zero only if the absolute value of the adaptive codebook gain (obtained from the secondary stage) is less than 0.4, otherwise the adaptive codebook contribution is reconstructed from the adaptive codebook gain and LTP lag obtained from the secondary stage. 
                         
(where “excitation” shown above refers to reconstruction of the dashed part of the packet symbols)
 
     1B. Reconstruction with two or more consecutive packet losses is shown in the next sequence below. Now the packet (n+2) is reconstructed as described in the paragraph 1A just above. The packet (n+1) is reconstructed by the G.729 frame erasure concealment scheme specified in the G.729 standard section 4.4, used for packet loss concealment. The steps of section 4.4 are repetition of synthesis filter parameters (4.4.1) attenuation of adaptive and fixed-codebook gains (4.4.2), attenuation of the memory of the gain predictor (4.4.3), and generation of the replacement excitation (4.4.4). 
     
       
         
         
             
             
         
       
     
     Embodiment 2: With pulses in secondary stage. Using G.729, the secondary stage (redundancy stage) has LPC parameters, LTP lags, parity check, and adaptive and fixed codebook gains, and first few or all fixed codebook pulses. 
     2A. In reconstruction with single packet loss, the LPC parameters, LTP lags, adaptive and fixed codebook gains, and the included pulses are obtained from the secondary stage. The remaining fixed codebook pulses are set to zero. 
     2B. Reconstruction with two or more consecutive packet losses reconstructs the packet (n+2) as described in the paragraph 2A just above. The packet (n+1) is reconstructed by the G.729 frame erasure concealment scheme specified in the G.729 standard section 4.4, used for packet loss concealment, when there is no diversity. 
     Multiple-description data partitioning based diversity embodiments are described next. 
     It is believed that heretofore there has been no CELP-based multiple description process. Herein are described computationally-efficient, CELP-based multiple description embodiments using multiple-description data partitioning. Parentheses are used in the next few sentences to point out certain significant combinations of information. 
     These embodiments send (the base or important information+a subset of fixed excitation) in one packet and (the base or important information+the complementary subset of fixed excitation) in another packet. Below, two embodiments are described in more detail for G.729. These embodiments are given for two stages, with no diversity offset. Embodiments include extensions based on more than two stages and, diversity offsets. 
     Definition: Multiple description data partitioning: In this approach, (the base information+a subset of enhancement information) is sent in one packet, and (the base information+the complementary subset of enhancement information) is sent in another packet. Here, when only one of the packets is received at the receiver, to produce acceptable quality that packet is reconstructed. When both packets are received at the receiver, they both are combined to produce better quality. 
     Embodiment 3: with no pulses in the base or important information. Using G.729, the first stage has LPC parameters, LTP lags, parity check, adaptive and fixed codebook gains, and every other fixed codebook pulses. The second stage has LPC parameters, LTP lags, parity check, adaptive and fixed codebook gains, and the remaining fixed codebook pulses. See sequence below: 
     
       
         
         
             
             
         
       
     
     3A. In reconstruction with single packet loss, for packet n and packet (n+1), only one stage is used for reconstruction, and the remaining fixed codebook pulses are set to zero (note that these pulses include the fixed codebook pulses from the lost diversity stage). See reconstruction below: 
                         
(The plus (+) sign refers to combination of information for reconstruction).
 
     3B. Reconstruction with two or more consecutive packet losses reconstructs the packet n and the packet (n+2) as described in the paragraph 3A just above. The packet (n+1) is reconstructed by the G.729 frame erasure concealment scheme specified in the G.729 standard section 4.4, used for packet loss concealment. See reconstruction below: 
     
       
         
         
             
             
         
       
     
     Embodiment 4: with pulses in the base or important information. Using G.729, the first stage has LPC parameters, LTP lags, parity check, adaptive and fixed codebook gains, first few fixed codebook pulses, and every other fixed codebook pulses from the remaining pulses. The second stage has LPC parameters, LTP lags, parity check, adaptive and fixed codebook gains, the same first few fixed codebook pulses, and the complementary subset of pulses from the remaining fixed codebook pulses. See sequence below: 
     
       
         
         
             
             
         
       
     
     4A. In reconstruction with single packet loss, for packet n and packet (n+1), only one stage is used for reconstruction, and the remaining fixed codebook pulses are set to zero. See reconstruction below: 
     
       
         
         
             
             
         
       
     
     4B. Reconstruction with two or more consecutive packet losses reconstructs the packet n and the packet (n+2) as described in the paragraph 4A just above. The packet (n+1) is reconstructed by the G.729 frame erasure concealment scheme specified in the G.729 standard section 4.4, used for packet loss concealment. See reconstruction below: 
                         
Extensions
 
     Further embodiments are contemplated with 
     diversity offset, 
     multiple stages, and 
     multiple stages and diversity offsets. 
     Regarding performance and delay due to diversity: If the packet delay variation is larger than the packet interval/size, the system may choose not to introduce additional delay while making use of diversity in a limited manner. 
     Some other embodiments augment the MD (multiple description) approach as follows. For fixed codebook search, minimize [error(full rate)+w 1  error(Description  1 )+w 2  error(Description  2 )] instead of minimizing error(full rate) alone. (The letters “w 1 ” and “w 2 ” symbolize weight coefficients. Description  1  and Description  2  symbolize two descriptions). In addition an interpolation filter is used for shaping/filling of excitation. Also, MD quantizers are used for LPC parameters, LTP lags, fixed codebook gain and adaptive codebook gain. 
     Some Important Information embodiments apply FEC to important information. 
     Still other embodiments combine interleaving and diversity. 
     Some diversity based embodiments add interpolation of parameters in addition to fixed excitation repeating, from available (past/future) frames. 
     Adaptive Rate/Diversity Processes 
     In a type of constrained adaptive rate/diversity processes, integrated circuits and systems herein, these adapt source rate and the amount of time or path or time/path diversity, in accordance with network fluctuations based on some QoS level measure (e.g., overall packet loss rate due to packet loss, delay, delay-jitter, etc., but before the application or compensation with diversity). Note that QoS is an inverse function of packet loss rate—in other words, QoS goes up as packet loss rate goes down. Thus, being higher than a threshold of QoS means being less than a corresponding threshold of packet loss rate. Put yet another way, QoS is a positive quantity and packet loss rate can be thought of as a negative quantity. 
     Further details of some adaptation process embodiments are as follows: 
     When QoS level measure is lower than a given QoS threshold (e.g., overall packet loss rate before the application of diversity exceeds (&gt;) Threshold 1 ), increase/introduce diversity while decreasing overall transmission rate or keeping overall transmission rate substantially unchanged. 
     B. When QoS level measure is higher than another QoS threshold representing higher quality of service than the given QoS threshold of paragraph A (e.g., overall packet-loss rate before the application of diversity is less than (&lt;) Threshold 2  where Threshold 2  is less than or equal (&lt;=) Threshold 1 ), increase source rate (the bit rate for packet stream Pn). Note that Threshold 1  Th 1  and Threshold 2  Th 2  are values of the packet loss rate metric, inversely related to QoS and thresholds of QoS. The method for determining new steady-state source rate depends on available network resources according to any suitable table, algorithm or method selected by the skilled worker, see examples herein. The process of increasing source rate is achieved through one or more stages or steps. Two different steps which can either be used alone, or consecutively, or concurrently, are 
     When increasing the overall transmission rate, maintain diversity. 
     When reducing the amount of diversity, do not increase the overall transmission rate. 
     Note that source rate (sij) is different from “overall transmission rate.” Overall transmission rate for purposes herein denotes the sum sij+dij in a given state. Roughly speaking, overall transmission rate is the sum of the packet P 0  rate plus packet P 0 ′ rate plus rates for any other diversity packet for P 0 -primed. 
     By the use of diversity, some process embodiments handle short-term network fluctuations well, cope with VoIP/VOP applications that involve multiple links of heterogeneous characteristics, and are TCP-traffic friendly. This is because the overall transmission rate is decreased, or at least not increased, on the network in the event of low QoS level, thereby not burdening the network increasingly, as these process embodiments work to ameliorate the QoS. In this way such process embodiments improve QoS for users and are network friendly in that such process embodiments could be implemented at one node, some nodes, or all nodes without further congesting the network while improving QoS. 
     In one example, packet loss rate Threshold 1  is selected to be three percent (3%), and packet loss rate Threshold  2  is selected to be one-half percent (0.5%). Packet size is forty (40) milliseconds, corresponding to an overhead (header rate) of 320 bits/40 msec=8 kbps for VoIP. RTCP Transmission Interval is set to five (5) seconds, and the fraction lost (or packet-loss rate) is computed during last five (5) seconds in a latter part of the RTCP Transmission Interval. (Use of RTP and RTCP is described further later hereinbelow.) Source rate selections s 11 , s 12 , s 21 , s 22 , s 31 , s 32  are established at 16.0, 11.2, 11.2, 8.0, 8.0 and 5.7 kilobits/sec respectively. Diversity selections d 11 , d 12 , d 21 , d 22 , d 31 , d 32  are established at 0.0, 4.8, 0.0, 3.2, 0.0 and 2.3 kilobits/sec respectively. All the foregoing values are, of course, offered illustratively and not in any limiting sense. 
     QoS level measure computation is temporally localized at the suggested 5 seconds in order to avoid smoothing of network effects. The example adaptation mechanism uses a high threshold (Threshold 1 ) when QoS level decreases, and uses a low threshold (Threshold 2 ) when QoS level improves. This approach advantageously addresses a scenario of possible oscillation between rate/diversity states, but where this scenario is not applicable or is addressed by other means such as delay processes or otherwise, then some embodiments can also use equal thresholds or any choice of thresholds that confers satisfactory adaptation. 
     Some adaptation embodiments take into account packet loss, high delay, and delay-jitter, such as in the QoS level measure process. In one type of process embodiment, overall packet-loss rate due to loss, delay and delay jitter (and before the application of diversity) is used as QoS level measure. 
     Two specific embodiments or realizations of a rate/diversity adaptation process or method are diagrammed in the state transition diagrams of  FIGS. 1 and 2 . Note that these are not an exhaustive set of embodiments or realizations. If a connection is bad, one type of embodiment reduces the source rate and adds diversity while taking the overall transmission rate, or network burden, into account. 
     A state transition diagram is well understood by the skilled worker, and generally speaking, the arrows are transitions which occur upon the existence of a condition noted near its respective arrow. Thus, in  FIG. 1 , the arrows join small circles representative of a state of one sending computer connected to a packet network. More particular the state is the state of a source rate and diversity control block ( 331  of  FIG. 3  discussed later hereinbelow), which thereby controls the state of a speech encoder ( 321  of  FIG. 3 ), audio encoder or other media source encoder or compressor. 
       FIG. 1  illustrates a state transition diagram for a process embodiment where a new steady-state source rate is designated s 11 . In  FIG. 1 , overall packet loss rate F exceeds (&gt;) Threshold 1  before the application of diversity. (Where the phrase “packet loss rate” is used herein, it is to be understood interchangeably with packet loss fraction or packet loss ratio which are similar concepts.) When Threshold 1  is exceeded by packet loss rate F, a transition  101  occurs from the state (s 11 ,d 11 ) to state (s 22 ,d 22 ). When a gatekeeper request GK or Buffer occupancy full signal occurs, a transition  102  occurs from the state (s 11 ,d 11 ) to state (s 21 ,d 21 ). Gatekeeper and/or router boxes in the network may signal requests as just mentioned, and these are included in the state transition diagram for context and completeness of description. 
     Note that dotted ovals  111 ,  113 ,  115 , etc. diagrammatically surround and thus indicate states that have the same sum of s and d components, and thus indicate essentially the same “overall transmission rate” (i.e., same network burden or load). From left to right in each of  FIGS. 1 ,  10 ,  22 ,  23 ,  29  and  31 , the ovals indicate progressively reduced overall transmission rate, or sum of s and d components. 
     In  FIGS. 1 and 2 , an optional constraint in one class of embodiments introduces a specification: do not increase overall transmission rate. Also,
 
Overall transmission rates: . . . ( s 11 +d 11)=( s 12 +d 12)&gt;( s 21 +d 21)=( s 22 +d 22)&gt;( s 31 +d 31)=( s 32 +d 32) . . . .
 
     where (d 11 &lt;d 12 ), (d 21 &lt;d 22 ) and (d 31 &lt;d 32 ). 
     sij denotes the rate for Pn, and dij denotes the rate for Pn′. 
     In  FIG. 2  the bit length of each sij or dij part of a packet is proportional to the source rate and diversity rate when the transmission of packets themselves is at a constant rate of issuing packets from the sender. 
     In  FIG. 2  the source rate of a packet stream  205  is a given amount s 11 . When QoS falls, the control block  331  of  FIG. 3  utilizes a process wherein it reduces source rate to an amount s 22  and introduces a small diversity rate of d 22  as shown in packet stream  215 . Original overall transmission rate s 11 +0=s 11  of packet stream  205  exceeds overall transmission rate s 22 +d 22  of packet stream  215  resulting from rate/diversity adaptation. The overall transmission rate of packet stream  215  has been lowered or reduced from that of packet stream  205 . 
     Further in  FIG. 2  an alternative process goes from source rate s 11  of packet stream  205  to a packet stream  225 . Packet stream  225  has an overall transmission rate comprised of a source rate s 22  and diversity rate d 22  that sum to an amount substantially equal to original rate s 11 . 
     Transitions like transition  101  from left to right in  FIGS. 1 and 10  indicate that the process has encountered a QoS degradation where packet loss rate is exceeding Threshold 1 , and thus has become unacceptable. In response the process is ameliorating the QoS, by lowering the source rate and adding diversity until the QoS improves enough that the packet loss rate has gotten below Threshold 2  Th 2 . Lowering source rate means that the original information is being coded with more compression and perhaps more lossiness of compression, but this compression loss is almost insignificant compared to the user-perceived degradation that packet loss causes. 
     Conversely, transitions like  103  and  105  from right to left in  FIG. 1  indicate that the process is increasing its use of the network at a time when QoS has improved sufficiently to permit such increased use. Such increased use takes the forms of increasing the source rate and reducing and/or terminating path diversity, time diversity or combined time/path diversity. 
       FIG. 10  illustrates a state transition diagram for a process where a new steady-state source rate is designated s 21 . In  FIG. 10  the process suitably is arranged to make transition  1005  inside oval  113  when QoS has improved to the extent that packet-loss rate F has fallen below Threshold  2 . This  FIG. 10  example shows that embodiments are also suitably arranged to stay in a lower state (s 21 , d 21 ). Here, as in  FIG. 1 , operations move from a higher source rate s 11  to a lower source rate s 22  if QoS degrades (transition  101 ). 
     Thresholds can be varying as well, such as depending on the source rate used. Thus, in  FIG. 10 , a further transition  1007  occurs when criterion F exceeds a threshold Th 3 . In one example, transition  101  occurs when loss fraction exceeds 3% and transition  1007  occurs when loss fraction exceeds 4%. 
     Further details of some more adaptation process embodiments are as follows: 
     1. Adapt both the source rate sij and the amount of diversity dij, in accordance with network fluctuations based on some QoS level measure (see examples in  FIGS. 2 and 11 ). 
     When QoS level measure is lower than a given QoS threshold (e.g., overall packet loss rate before the application of diversity exceeds (&gt;) Threshold 1 ), add diversity while decreasing the source rate or keeping the source rate unchanged. (i.e., source rate sij here instead of overall transmission rate sij+dij in some embodiments)
         b) When QoS level measure is higher than another QoS threshold representing higher quality of service than the given QoS threshold of paragraph (a) (e.g., overall packet-loss rate before the application of diversity is less than (&lt;) Threshold 2  where Threshold 2  is less than or equal (&lt;=) Threshold 1 ), increase source rate. Note that Threshold 1  Th 1  and Threshold 2  Th 2  are values of the packet loss rate metric, inversely related to QoS and thresholds of QoS. The method for determining new steady-state source rate depends on available network resources according to any suitable table, algorithm or method selected by the skilled worker, see examples herein. The process of increasing source rate is achieved through one or more stages to reduce or prevent oscillatory behavior.       

     2. Special case: Adapt both the source rate and the amount of diversity, in accordance with network fluctuations based on some QoS level measure and constrain their sum so that overall transmission rate is reduced or unchanged (see  FIG. 2 ). 
     When QoS level measure is lower than a given QoS threshold (e.g., overall packet loss rate, packet loss rate before compensating by diversity, exceeds (&gt;) Threshold 1 ), add diversity while decreasing the overall transmission rate or keeping the overall transmission rate unchanged.
         b) When QoS level measure is higher than another QoS threshold representing higher quality of service than the given QoS threshold of paragraph (a) (e.g., overall packet-loss rate, packet loss rate before compensating by diversity, is less than (&lt;) Threshold 2  where Threshold 2  is less than or equal (&lt;=) Threshold 1 ), increase source rate. Note that Threshold 1  Th 1  and Threshold 2  Th 2  are values of the packet loss rate metric, inversely related to QoS and thresholds of QoS. The method for determining new steady-state source rate depends on available network resources according to any suitable table, algorithm or method selected by the skilled worker, see examples herein. The process of increasing source rate is achieved through one or more stages.       

     3. As noted in 1 and 2, the process of increasing source rate is achieved through one or more stages. Two different steps which can either be used alone, or consecutively, or concurrently, are a) when increasing the overall transmission rate, maintain some diversity, and b) when reducing the amount of diversity, do not increase the overall transmission rate. Note that (a) and (b) can be realized using various combinations of source rate and diversity. 
     4. The approaches are applied to a) time diversity embodiments (media-specific redundancy, important information diversity, FEC, multiple description, multiple description data partitioning), b) path diversity embodiments, and c) combined time diversity and path diversity embodiments. 
     5. QoS level measure computations and Adaptation Logics. 
     5A. Delay jitter handling via fixed-delay threshold embodiment declares a packet as lost, if the end to end delay of the packet is greater than a fixed threshold. Overall packet loss rate due to loss, delay, and delay jitter (but before the application of diversity) is used as a QoS level measure. Thus, in  FIG. 1 , transitions  101  and  103 ,  105  occur on thresholds as shown compared to a value F which is overall packet-loss rate in this 5A embodiment. Preferably but not necessarily, the overall transmission rate sij+dij is not increased on the transitions  101 . 
     5B. Delay jitter handling via adaptive packet playout embodiment performs delay jitter handling using an improvement over S. B. Moon et al., “Packet audio playout delay adjustment: Performance bounds and algorithms,” ACM/Springer multimedia systems, January 1998. In this improvement, overall packet loss rate due to loss, delay, and delay jitter (but before the application of diversity) is used as a QoS level measure. 
     Transition  101  of  FIG. 1  in this 5B embodiment occurs on the criterion
 
(mode=SPIKE) OR (mode=NORMAL AND Overall packet-loss rate&gt;Th1)
 
     Transitions  103  and  105  respectively occur on a criterion (mode=NORMAL AND Overall packet-loss rate&lt;Th 2 ). Preferably but not necessarily, the overall transmission rate sij+dij is not increased on the transitions  101 . 
     Here, the rate/diversity control  331  (or alternatively receiver  361 ′) detects whether network  351  is subject to spike-type delay increase and/or packet losses (SPIKE) even when the packet-loss rate has not yet exceeded the tolerable threshold Th 1 , or whether a more smoothly varying type of delay change/packet loss behavior (NORMAL) is occurring. This information is stored as a datum called “mode” for purposes of this embodiment 5B and used for adaptation. When SPIKE mode is occurring, the embodiment is relatively aggressive, being quick to initiate QoS-enhancing measures, and slow to end them. 
     One formula recognizes a SPIKE event when magnitude of delay difference of consecutive packets exceeds twice a variance measure+800 sampling intervals, compare the Moon et al. paper incorporated hereinabove at p. 21, Algorithm 2, line 2. 
     This 5B embodiment herein, however, not only recognizes a SPIKE event but also utilizes it for new purposes, processes and structures, to initiate a SPIKE mode to control a state machine of source rate and diversity amount. The SPIKE mode herein recognizes that packets arrive with an average delay based on the time of arrival minus the sender packet time stamp. Also, the packets have an average jitter magnitude, or measure of variance, in the varying delay values comparing packet to packet. The idea behind SPIKE mode herein recognizes an important control function for rate/diversity adaptation purposes when the magnitude of delay difference between consecutive packets exceeds some multiple of the measure of variance plus a constant. The multiple just-mentioned, reflects the idea that an onset of a significant delay difference in the incoming packets should be quite substantial compared to the usual amount of variation in delay in the packet stream. The constant reflects the idea that even if the measure of variance were equal to zero for a packet stream for a while, the onset of some delay difference would not be important if it were below the amount of the constant. It should be clear that various formulas and logic implementations can implement these ideas. One process embodiment determines when delay difference of consecutive packets |D(I,I−1)|&gt;2J+800 to initiate the spike mode. Another process embodiment determines when delay difference
 
| D ( I,I− 1)|&gt; mJ+c  
 
to initiate the spike mode, where m is a numerical value of a multiplier selected in the range 1.5 to 4 for example, and the constant is equal to average measured delay based on timestamps for a last predetermined number (e.g. 25) of speech packets.
 
     Another process embodiment uses a logic test to test whether the delay difference [|D(I,I−1)|&gt;m 1 J] OR [|D(I,I−1)|&gt;c 1 ]. m 1  is selected in the same range as numerical value m above. Constant c 1  is suitably made substantially equal to constant c above. 
     Still another process embodiment uses any of the foregoing tests but with an average of delay difference magnitudes to smooth out the process somewhat, wherein
 
[| D ( I+ 1 ,I )|+| D ( I,I− 1)|]/2 &gt;mJ+c  or alternatively a test
 
[[| D ( I+ 1 ,I )|+| D ( I,I− 1)|]/2 &gt;mJ ]OR [[| D ( I+ 1 ,I )|+| D ( I,I− 1)|]/2 &gt;c].  
 
     Once the SPIKE mode has been initiated, then any one of various tests for returning to NORMAL mode is implemented. One embodiment repeatedly computes a measure of variance and waits until the measure of variance falls below a predetermined amount, whereupon the NORMAL mode is initiated. Still another approach utilizes the calculations of the Moon paper not only for playout delay, but also to derive controls for SPIKE mode and NORMAL mode in a manner that tracks the calculations of SPIKE and NORMAL conditions for playout delay as described in Moon et al. 
     5CA. A first (herein type 5C embodiment, subtype A) adaptation embodiment with parameters specified in RTCP uses both Fraction Lost and interarrival jitter field as QoS level measures having their respective thresholds. 
     Transitions  101  of  FIG. 1  in this 5C embodiment respectively occur on the criterion
 
(Fraction Lost&gt;Th1)OR(Interarrival Jitter  J &gt;Th2)
 
     Transitions  103  and  105  respectively occur on a criterion (Fraction Lost&lt;Th 3 ) AND (Interarrival Jitter J&lt;Th 4 ) 
     Note in this 5CA embodiment that QoS enhancing measures are initiated on either an unacceptable level of Fraction Lost or of Jitter J. However, the QoS enhancing measures are relaxed on the occurrence of BOTH Fraction Lost and Jitter J becoming acceptable. Fraction Lost lower threshold Th 3  is made less than or equal to Fraction Lost higher threshold Th 1 . Providing some gap between Th 3  and Th 1  may help prevent oscillations in QoS in some network environments. Similarly, Jitter lower threshold Th 4  is made less than or equal to Jitter higher threshold Th 2 . 
     Preferably but not necessarily, the overall transmission rate sij+dij is not increased on the transitions  101 . 
     5CB. As illustrated in  FIG. 22 , a second (herein type 5C embodiment, subtype B) adaptation embodiment with parameters specified in RTCP uses both Fraction Lost and interarrival jitter field as QoS level measures having their respective thresholds. 
     Transitions  101  of  FIG. 1  in this 5C embodiment respectively occur on the criterion
 
(Fraction Lost&gt;Th1)OR(Interarrival Jitter  J  increases for  n  consecutive RTCP reports)
 
     Transitions  103  and  105  respectively occur on a criterion
 
(Fraction Lost&lt;Th2)AND(Interarrival Jitter  J  is equal to or less than the Original Value)
 
     Note in this 5CB embodiment, and in  FIG. 22 , that QoS enhancing measures are initiated on either an unacceptable level of Fraction Lost or a trend of a certain number n of consecutive increases of Jitter J. The number n is suitably 5 or any other number accomplishing an effective control function over QoS. Note that the QoS enhancing measures are relaxed on the occurrence of BOTH Fraction Lost and Jitter J becoming acceptable. Fraction Lost lower threshold Th 2  is made less than or equal to Fraction Lost higher threshold Th 1 . Providing some gap between Th 2  and Th 1  may help prevent oscillations in QoS in some network environments. Note further that n+1 values of Jitter J are suitably stored in a buffer or window of n+1 Jitter values. If the criterion of n Jitter increases occurs, then the oldest of the n+1 Jitter values is stored as the Original Value in a suitable register or memory location. Next the buffer is cleared. New RTCP reports of Jitter J now enter the buffer one by one, and are each respectively compared with the Original Value as stored. When the latest value of Jitter J that has come into the buffer is less than or equal to the Original Value, and if the Fraction Lost is less than Threshold  2  (Th 2 ), then the QoS enhancing measures are relaxed by making a transition from state (s 22 ,d 22 ) to state (s 12 ,d 12 ). Then if the succeeding latest value (or alternatively some predetermined plural succeeding number n 1  of latest values) of Jitter J that has come into the buffer is less than or equal to the Original Value, and if the succeeding latest value of Fraction Lost is still less than Threshold  2  (Th 2 ), then the QoS enhancing measures are still further relaxed by making a transition from state (s 12 ,d 12 ) to state (s 11 ,d 11 ) as shown in  FIG. 1 . 
     Preferably but not necessarily, the overall transmission rate sij+dij is not increased on the transitions  101 . 
     It should be apparent that numerous variations on this theme can be introduced in still further embodiment subtypes. 
     5D. Adaptation embodiment using TCP throughput estimate for both delay jitter handling approaches compares a ratio of a corresponding TCP throughput estimate to current overall transmission rate with a threshold. One relatively uncomplicated TCP throughput estimate is given by: (constant×packetsize)/(round-trip delay×sqrt(average loss measured during the lifetime of the connection)). A suitable value of the constant is 1.22. See D. Sisalem et al., “The loss-delay based adjustment algorithm: A TCP-friendly adaptation scheme,” NOSSDAV, July 1998. 
     In  FIG. 1 , this embodiment 5D uses as criterion for transitions  101 : (TCP throughput estimate/current overall transmission rate&lt;Th 1 ) 
     As criterion for transitions  110 ,  103  and  105  this embodiment 5D uses (TCP throughput estimate/current overall transmission rate&gt;Th 2 ). 
     “sqrt” means the “square-root function of” Still further, since thresholding is involved, the throughput estimate and current overall transmission rate can be squared, and compared with the square of threshold Th 1  or Th 2 . This eliminates the square root calculation and speeds computation in some embodiments. 
     Preferably but not necessarily, the overall transmission rate sij+dij is not increased on the transitions  101 . 
     By the use of diversity, the above embodiments handle short-term network fluctuations well, and cope with VoIP/VOP applications that involve multiple links of heterogeneous characteristics. 
     All the QoS level measure computations and adaptation logics are suitably used for rate/diversity adaptation (rate and diversity both, or either one alone, selected at different times, or selected on different transitions). All the QoS level measure computations and adaptation logics are suitably used for source rate adaptation alone in various embodiments without any diversity or diversity adaptation. All the QoS level measure computations and adaptation logics are suitably used for diversity adaptation alone in various embodiments without any source rate adaptation. 
     In  FIG. 23 , the amount of overall transmission rate reduction and thus severity of state change advantageously are made to depend on the severity of congestion. For example, one process embodiment is a combination of the processes of  FIGS. 1 and 23 . The process of  FIG. 1  pertains if the congestion severity is low (A≧F&gt;Th 1 ), and a decision step chooses the process of  FIG. 23  if the congestion severity is high (F&gt;A&gt;Th 1 ). The value A is an adaptation mode threshold value suitably in the range of 1.1×Th 1  to 2.0×Th 1 . Value of A set at 1.5 times Th 1  is mentioned as suitable, for instance. Value A is called an adaptation mode threshold because the mode or process of adaptation (e.g. of  FIG. 1  and of  FIG. 23 ) is the subject of selection. 
     Preferably but not necessarily, the overall transmission rate sij+dij is not increased on the decreasing transitions  2211  and  2215  of  FIG. 23 . Any of the state transition criteria of embodiments 5A, 5B, 5CA, 5CB, and 5D can be used to trigger a transition. See descriptions hereinabove. For instance if the state transition criteria for F in embodiment 5A is used, then F is a value of overall packet-loss rate reported back in the latest RTCP packet. Similarly, on the return transitions  2221 ,  2223  and  2225  then F is a value of overall packet-loss rate reported back in the latest RTCP packet then pertaining to the respective determination step giving rise to the respective transition  2221 ,  2223  and  2225 .
 
Overall transmission rates: . . . ( s 11 +d 11)=( s 12 +d 12)&gt;( s 21 +d 21)=( s 22 +d 22)&gt;( s 31 +d 31)=( s 32 +d 32) . . . .
 
     Where (d 11 &lt;d 12 ), (d 21 &lt;d 22 ) and (d 31 &lt;d 32 ). 
     sij denotes the rate for Pn, and dij denotes the rate for Pn′. 
     Among various embodiments are embodiments for rate/diversity adaptation for Voice over IP and Voice over Packet. Described herein are systems, integrated circuits, and processes to adapt both rate and diversity, or each individually, in Voice over IP, Internet Audio, and Voice over Packet (VoIP/VOP) applications. Advantages include a robust solution for handling network impairments, while utilizing network resources efficiently. 
     As noted earlier, Voice over Packet (VOP) and Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) are sensitive to jitter to an extent qualitatively more important than for text data files for example. This sensitivity is also a problem for other types of real-time communication media such as frames of compressed video, but for brevity, VOP will be discussed as a placeholder for the other types of real-time communication as well. 
     The frame is the data unit for the speech coder. The packet can hold one frame or more than one frame. With constant number of frames per packet, packet loss rate is equal to frame loss rate. 
     ATM is a more sophisticated packet network wherein every packet in a stream takes the same path, so it represents a form of transmission that conceptually lies between circuit switching and packet switching. ATM, Frame Relay, and other forms of networking also can benefit by the improvements described herein. 
     RTP provides time stamps and packet sequence numbers. UDP (User Datagram Protocol) manages end-to-end transmission without any retransmission. UDP sits in the same layer as TCP. In one embodiment, RTP/UDP/IP is herein utilized for VOP instead of TCP/IP. 
     When multiple users congest the routers in the network, some packets become lost by actual loss or excessive delay. 
     In  FIG. 4 , source rate control with no diversity, an embodiment uses a one-link network having, for example, a hundred users each transmitting at 16 Kb/s. Each packet has a header which takes about 8 Kb/s of overhead. As the number of users goes up to 140, for example, the packet loss rate goes to 4%. As the number of users increases, the packet loss rate also increases. In one example of a process embodiment, all the users are signaled, for instance, by a gatekeeper, to decrease their transmit rate from 16 Kb/s to 11.2 Kb/s. Then the packet loss rate advantageously drops. 
     The process executes a QoS determination step, which for example is a packet loss rate calculation over a predetermined window interval, given an expected rate of transmission. For example, if the connection protocol has identified a rate of transmission that is high, then a higher number of packets will be received during the same predetermined window interval at a given QoS than would be received the rate of transmission is lower. A simple packet loss rate calculation simply monitors the tags of the packets in a receive buffer, and counts up the number of packets that are present (a QoS measure) or those that are lost (Loss Rate which is just an inverse type of QoS measure). If a packet arrives in the buffer with a serial number and/or time stamp that indicates it is unusable, then it is dropped from the buffer and not counted. This is because VOP in some forms can only play or decode packets that have arrived in time to be meaningful to the user. 
     Another packet loss rate calculation that can be used with a short receive buffer keeps independently of the buffer a Service List of the packet tags and when they were received. The process simply counts from the Service List the number of packets which are within the window interval (e.g. last 5 seconds), or the number of missing packets depending on the approach. 
     Yet another process increments a counter when a new usable packet is received and decrements the counter when the time of arrival of a previously-counted usable but now-old packets has its time of arrival has become prior to the predetermined window interval from the present into the past. Other more sophisticated and arithmetically complex QoS measures are useful as well. 
     The skilled worker implements any suitable QoS determination. For example RTCP protocol has a reception block with a packet loss rate field wherein the protocol specification specifies how to compute a QoS measure at destination and transmit it back to the source. Thus, one type of embodiment suitably uses, supports or is compliant with RTCP protocol. Desirably, the source receives an “effective or overall packet loss rate or ratio” type of QoS measure which takes into account all lost packets, not only those actually lost in the network, but also those packets which came too late to be usable for the application, such as VOP, actually in use at the destination. Note further that the effective packet loss rate might be less when more sophisticated inventive VOP application software is implemented at the destination, even though the network congestion were no different.
 
Packets Lost=Packets Lost in Network+Packets Unusable at Destination.
 
EPLR=Effective Packet Loss Ratio=[Packets Lost in Network+Packets Unusable at Destination]/Packets Sent.
 
       FIG. 3  shows a system embodiment for adaptation to network conditions by adjusting either or both of at least two communications variables, here transmission rate and diversity. For brevity, process embodiment employed in this system embodiment is called “Rate/Diversity Adaptation.” The various blocks of  FIG. 3  are suitably implemented as all software, all firmware or hardware, or some mixture of software, firmware and hardware allocated and partitioned among the various blocks. In one embodiment, the blocks are all software code and manufactured into one or more sections of non-volatile memory on a single semiconductor chip. Combinations of volatile and non-volatile on-chip and off-chip storage are also suitably implemented in various other embodiments by the skilled worker. 
     In  FIG. 3 , a transmit section  311  in a source computer (computer not shown) has a speech encoder block  321  having sending rate sij. Block  321  supplies encoded speech to a Rate/Diversity Adaptation control block  331 . Control block  331  determines the degree of diversity dij to be commanded by control block  331 . Control block  331  feeds a STATE command to speech encoder  321  to initiate the generation of more or fewer packets for time-diversity, path diversity or both time and path diversity purposes. Also, control block  331  has an Add Diversity portion which couples and multiplexes encoded speech from encoder  321  to an RTP Packet Encapsulation block  341 . The Add Diversity portion introduces diversity according to each implemented process embodiment as taught elsewhere herein depending on STATE. Packet encapsulation block  341  supplies, communicates and sends packets to and through a packet network  351 , to a receive section  361 ′ of a destination computer (not shown). Receive section  361 ′ has a Delay jitter Handling block  371 ′ coupled to a Lost Packet Compensation block  381 ′ which in turn is coupled to a speech decoder block  391 ′. One process embodiment operates Lost Packet Compensation block  381 ′ so that if packet P 0  is not received, then packet P 0 ′ is decompressed and fed to speech decoder  391 ′ for playout. Lost Packet Compensation block  381 ′ in the destination also supplies via an RTCP packetizer  395 ′ RTCP packet loss information descriptive of source-to-destination packet communication back via packet network  351  to the Control block  331  in the source. 
     Both sides, source and destination, have speech encoder, rate/diversity control block, packet encapsulation, delay jitter handling, lost packet compensation and speech decoder. Thus, it should be understood that for two way communication, there is suitably provided a transmit section  311 ′ (not shown) in the destination computer suitably (but not necessarily) identical to transmit section  311  described hereinabove. Also suitably provided is a receive section  361  (not shown) in the source computer suitably (but not necessarily) identical to receive section  361 ′ described hereinabove. 
     Primes in  FIG. 3  indicate blocks in the destination computer, and unprimed numerals indicate blocks in the source computer. This format of drawing visually and literally communicates the transmitter source path to the receiver destination. Also, this format concisely and conveniently permits the reader to visualize both the transmit and receive software blocks  311  and  361  at the transmitter-source end by ignoring the primes on the numerals for the receive blocks. Further, the format represents software blocks  311 ′ and  361 ′ at the receiver destination end by considering all numerals as primed for transmit blocks and receive blocks. 
     Lost Packet block  381  (not shown) in the source also supplies via an RTCP packetizer  395  (not shown) second RTCP packet loss information descriptive of destination-to-source packet communication back via packet network  351  to the Control block  331 ′ in the destination. 
     In other more complex embodiments the path of communication from Lost Packet Compensation  381 ′ to Rate/Diversity control block  331  is suitably made independent of packet network  351 , as by satellite, wireless, PSTN, etc. 
     Advantageously, control block  331  and compensation block  381  are each important improvements, singly and in combination with each other and in combination with the other blocks described. Also, feeding back STATE command information to a speech encoder improved to respond in its operations thereto, advantageously confers flexibility and control over QoS under different network  351  loading conditions. 
     Receive section  361 ′ has a Delay-jitter Handling block  371 ′ with a buffer in it, a process for reading the packet headers including their packet sequence numbers and time stamps, and a process of discarding or ignoring packets that arrive too late. Block  371 ′ is coupled to a Lost Packet Compensation block  381 ′ which utilizes any suitable means of reconstructing lost VOP data in lost packets such as by inserting zeroes or white noise, or by interpolation or by reconstructing from time-diversity, path diversity, or combined time/path diversity packet information. 
     In addition block  381 ′ calculates the QoS measure, such as packet loss ratio as described earlier hereinabove. Lost Packet block  381 ′ in the destination also supplies the RTCP packetizer  395 ′ the QoS measure which packetizer  395 ′ incorporates into the payload of return RTCP packets and sends them to control block  331 . 
     Block  381 ′ couples commands and encoded speech data to speech decoder block  391 ′. The commands identify which of plural modes speech decoder block  391 ′ is to execute. For example, when only a single packet stream having a first type of encoding and transmission rate is being received, then the speech decoder is commanded to decode that first type of encoding and transmission rate. When a single packet stream having time-diverse packets in the stream is being received, then the speech decoder is commanded to decode by type of encoding, and to put the diverse packets information together to somewhat improve the quality of the output sound. When multiple packet streams having path-diverse packets are being received, then the speech decoder is commanded to decode by type of encoding, and to put the diverse packets information together to advantageously improve the quality of the output sound according to processes particularly emphasized herein. When multiple packet streams having not only time-diverse packets but also path-diverse packets are being received, then the speech decoder is commanded to decode by type of encoding, and to combine the packet information together to further advantageously improve the quality of the output sound. 
     Among various voice coders (vocoders) or speech coders contemplated for block  321  of  FIG. 3  are G.711 PCM (pulse code modulation), 64 kbps (kilobits per second); G.726 ADPCM (adaptive differential pulse code modulation), 32 kbps; G.729, 8 kbps; G.729 Annex A, reduced complexity version; G.729 Annex B, silence compression; G.723.1, 5.3/6.3 kbps (dual rate); G.723.1 Annex A, silence compression; TI-CELP and VOP-optimized vocoders as described in the literature cited herein or elsewhere. These specific identifications of vocoders are non-limiting examples. 
     Turning again to  FIG. 3 , the RTCP specification describes feedback information which is contemplated herein as sent from packetizer  395 ′ eventually to rate/diversity control block  331 . It is contemplated that in one type of embodiment the feedback information be computed as described herein and/or as described in the RTCP spec. Note that RTCP can be extended if an application requires additional feedback information. 
     In connection with  FIG. 9 , RTP is useful for real-time data like interactive voice and video. RTP services include payload type identification, sequence number, time stamp, and synchronization source identifier (identifies sender and any conference contributors to the packet). The header includes other information, and the payload includes voice frames, compressed audio, video, real-time control and measurement data, or other real-time information. The timestamp reflects the sampling instant of the first byte of the first voice frame in the packet. A clock oscillator in the system of  FIG. 3  provides a suitably stable time base for calculating this sampling instant time with sufficient accuracy to allow the delay jitter handling block  371 ′ and lost packet compensation block  381 ′ to respond to delay, jitter, and out-of-order packets. 
     RTP is suitably carried on top of UDP and IP. Each frame or set of frames of audio/voice/video/media has RTP header and a UDP packet contains the frame(s) and RTP header. The Payload type field in the RTP header identifies the type of coding that the encoder  321  uses. 
     RTCP is a control protocol for RTP. An RTCP “report packet” has a header as in  FIG. 20 . The report packet carries the synchronization source identifier of each sender  311  that a given one of one or more report blocks describes, as well as the synchronization source identifier of the computer (herein further improved with block  361 ′) that creates the report packet. A report block has several fields: 1) fraction lost L, 2) cumulative number of packets lost CL, 3) extended highest sequence number received EHSN, 4) interarrival jitter J, 5) last report packet time stamp LSR, and 6) delay since last report packet DLSR. Further report blocks in the report packet of  FIG. 20  identify a different sender computer (as in a conference) and report values L, CL, EHSN, J, LSR, DLSR back to that sender. Profile-specific extensions follow the report blocks as the skilled worker elects. 
     In RTCP report packet report block, the Fraction Lost field occupies eight (8) bits. Fraction Lost means the fraction of RTP data packets that were lost out of the packets sent by the described-sender since the last report packet was sent by the reporting sender. Fraction Lost is expressed as a binary fraction with the binary point at the left edge of the 8-bit field. Put another way, the integer occupying the 8-bit field is the Fraction Lost multiplied by 256. Put another way, Fraction Lost is the number of packets lost divided by the number of packets expected during the period since the last report packet. If the loss is negative due to duplicates, the fraction lost is set to zero. If all packets are lost in a reporting interval, no reception report is made. Note that in various alternative embodiments, the Fraction Lost calculation is either replaced by another QoS calculation, or suitably altered so that duplicates and diverse packets do not decrease the loss fraction. 
     In  FIG. 21 , QoS level measure computation process embodiment is temporally localized in order to avoid smoothing of network effects. While other intervals can be used in various embodiments, currently the RTCP Transmission Interval (longer line in  FIG. 21 ) is made long enough to gather and report statistically meaningful new QoS data. The RTCP transmission interval is made short enough at receiver  361 ′ to report back the new QoS data and also enable the sender  311  to adaptively change its source rate and diversity in a manner that is reasonably responsive to network conditions and opportunities. The RTCP interval in one range of embodiments is set between 1 second and 30 seconds. An example value of 5 seconds RTCP Transmission Interval between the I and I−1 RTCP report packets is contemplated in the foregoing range, for instance. 
     The QoS level measure computation process (shorter line QoS in  FIG. 21 ) is preferably arranged to occur right up to the end of the RTCP Transmission Interval so that the latest RTCP report packet is using the latest QoS data possible. The QoS level measure computation interval is made short enough at receiver  361 ′ to avoid smoothing of network effects.
 
Packets Lost=Packets Lost in Network+Packets Unusable at Destination.
 
EPLR=Effective Packet Loss Ratio=[Packets Lost in Network+Packets Unusable at Destination]/Packets Sent.
 
     Number of packets lost in a time interval between reports is suitably calculated as the difference in the cumulative number of packets lost in the report packets. The ELSN (extended last sequence number) data in the report packets is used as follows. Calculate the difference in the ELSNs between two report packets to obtain the expected number of packets during the interval between the report packets.
 
The packet loss fraction PLR=Packets Lost in Network/#Packets Expected=(Difference in Cumulative # of Packets Lost)/(Difference in ELSNs).
 
     Note that the Effective Packet Loss Ratio includes not only Packets Lost in Network but also Packets Unusable at Destination in the numerator. 
     In  FIG. 20 , the value L communicated from receiver to sender is suitably made equal to EPLR, or alternatively the RTCP Loss Fraction is used. 
     Interarrival Jitter J is a 32-bit mean deviation, smoothed absolute value, of the difference D(I, I−1) in packet spacing at the receiver compared to the sender for a pair of consecutive packets I and (I−1). Difference D is the absolute value of the difference in delays of at least two received packets. Delay d is the difference between a packet&#39;s RTP timestamp and the time of arrival in RTP time stamp units. In mathematical terms,
 
Delay  d ( I )= t ( I )− s ( I )(actual time received minus time stamp when sampled at source)
 
Delay Difference  D ( I,I− 1)= d ( I )− d ( I− 1)
 
     J is suitably calculated in a calculation loop starting from an initialized value J of zero and successively calculating:
 
 J=J +(| D ( I,I− 1)|− J )/ N.N= 16 is an example smoothing divisor constant used in RTCP.
 
     Other approaches can calculate jitter as an average of absolute values of Delay Difference over a window. One procedure, among others suitable, is
 
 J=J+[|D ( I,I− 1)|−| D ( I−N,I−N− 1)|]/ N.N= 16 is an example.
 
     Still other approaches calculate jitter as the statistical variance, or otherwise suitably as the skilled worker elects for the purposes at hand. 
     So another type of embodiment computes jitter J in block  371 ′ to report back QoS. Jitter J reported back by RTCP is then compared to a threshold in rate/diversity control block  331  of  FIG. 3 . Thus, when packets come so variably due to jitter that a steady voice decode stream in the receiver is unobtainable (beyond threshold of acceptability), then adaptation of rate/diversity should occur. 
     Still another type of embodiment computes in rate/diversity control block  331   a  joint function f(Loss Fraction, Jitter) and compares its value f with a threshold and then issues STATE controls based thereon according to a control loop similar to that described in  FIG. 16 , only with value f substituted for value L. It should be apparent that numerous embodiments of integrated circuits, process, and systems are available to the skilled worker in implementation. 
     Other data in the RTCP report packet are suitably used in fashioning yet other embodiments. 
     Cumulative Number of Packets Lost is a 24 bit count of lost packets since beginning of reception. 
     Extended Highest Sequence Number Received is two data: First, the sequence number in the RTP header of the latest RTP data packet from sender  311  as received at receiver  361 ′. Second, a count of sequence number cycles. 
     Last Report Packet Time Stamp is the time of reception at receiver  361 ′ of the latest RTCP report packet received from sender  311 . 
     Delay Since Last Report Packet is the time difference between reception of an RTCP report packet from the sender  311 , and sending this RTCP report packet from the receiver  361 ′. 
     RTCP provides for Profile-Specific Extensions in the report packets. Therefore, various QoS functions as described herein can be computed at the receiver  361 ′ in block  371 ′ and put into the Profile-Specific Extensions area of the report packet in some embodiments. Otherwise, the QoS functions are suitably computed in block  331  of sender  311  from RTCP report packet information like Loss Fraction and Jitter coming back from the receiver. In still a further variation, embodiments use very short RTCP application-defined packets, called APP packets and receiver  361 ′ sends back these very short report packets instead of the longer RTCP report packets. The short APP packet suitably contains Packets Lost only, from which Loss Fraction is computed at the sender  311 . Or the short packet suitably contains Cumulative Number of Packets Lost only. Or the short report packet from receiver contains Jitter and Loss Fraction only. 
     In this way, the introduction of block  381 ′ as a structural and process improvement into the system advantageously improves VoIP/VOP quality by establishing adaptive control of source rate sij and diversity dij. Block  381 ′ feeds QoS information such as packet-loss rate, delay statistics and any other information selected by the skilled worker as useful for this purpose, back to rate/diversity control  331 . Rate/diversity control  331  thereupon responds to the feedback information according to any suitable process established in control  331  and described herein or hereafter devised to improve QoS when it becomes less satisfactory. Such process can operate according to a thresholding algorithm as described elsewherein, or respond in a more gradual manner either according to more closely spaced thresholds or according to a virtually continuous adjustment of source rate and diversity. 
     Further, the introduction of block  381 ′ as a structural and process improvement into the system advantageously improves VoIP/VOP quality by actually utilizing more of the packets sent to receiver  361 ′ via packet network  351 . Block  381 ′ utilizes packets having diverse information and combines their information and controls speech decoder  391 ′ so as to form a speech output (or other audio or image or other media output) that more nearly replicates the speech input to speech encoder  321  originally or otherwise improves the quality. 
     Having a sender that has RTP protocol and a receiver that has RTCP to feed back a packet loss fraction to the sender are improved. The sender is improved by introducing rate/diversity control block  331  to add diversity and rate/diversity adaptation with state feedback to the speech encoder. Likewise improvements for lost packet compensation for the receiver are provided by block  381 ′. 
     Turning now to  FIG. 4 , and considering operations at the system level, source rate control with no diversity looks at the packet loss rate, for example. If the packet loss rate is higher than a particular threshold, then an embodiment of the process requests one, some or all the senders to reduce their source rate so that the congestion condition can be removed from network  351 . 
     Packet network  351  is a collection of interconnected routers or nodes, interconnected by links, and for the senders in a complex network, not all of the users are necessarily using the same links between the nodes. Thus, in  FIG. 3 , user  301 . p  is using different links such as link  303  in contrast to user  301 . q  who is using other links such as link  305 . However, a link  307  may be used by many users more frequently than some other links in network  351 , and thus contributes to packet loss and consequent low QoS more than do links  303  and  305 . Such a link  307  is then termed a bottleneck link. 
     In  FIG. 4  a bottleneck network link simulation was run with speech activity at 45%. The header bit rate was set at 8 kbps and the channel capacity was set for 24×64 kbps (in  FIGS. 4 ,  5 ,  7  and  8 ). The simulation studied source rate control with no diversity. Packet loss rate in percent (accounting for both actually lost packets and too-late packets) was graphed versus number of users (N) in a family of curves in  FIG. 4  corresponding to various source rates of 16 kbps, 11.2 kbps and 8 kbps wherein source rate is a parameter of the family of curves. Given an initial source rate of all users at 16 kbps, then as number of users N rises, the packet loss rate rapidly and nonlinearly rises along a curve  411  until packet loss rate has reached Threshold 1  of about 4% at about 140 users. Further in the  FIG. 4  example, requesting a source rate reduction from illustratively 16.0 kbps to 11.2 kbps suddenly and effectively causes the packet loss rate to fall, as shown by arrow  413 , from curve  411  to a curve  421  having parameter 11.2 kbps. Then as more users access the network and their number rises to about 180 users, then the packet loss rate even on the curve  421  rises rapidly once again nonlinearly to Threshold 1  of about 4%. Once again, the source rates are dropped for all users, this time from 11.2 kbps to 8 kbps, and the packet loss rate drops as shown by arrow  423 . Now packet loss rate for the 180 users is near zero, as seen by inspection at N=180 of a curve  431  having parameter 8 kbps. 
     As can be seen from inspection of the  FIG. 4 , more curves for higher source rates, intermediate source rates, and lower source rates can be added, and numerous quite sophisticated embodiments can be devised by the skilled worker to control packet loss rate. For example, the packet loss rate suitably is arranged to fall along an arrow like  413  not to essentially zero as shown but to still-significant positive value, by adding intermediate source rate values and more smoothly adjusting source rate. Alternatively, the system and process are structured to vary the source rate (and/or diversity) in the manner of a servomechanism or servo process loop to minimize an error defined as the departure from a target level of QoS. The loop would lock onto the target QoS level, except when to do so would require a source rate in excess of a maximum source rate permitted for the system or otherwise be subject to some technical constraint. Then arrows  413  and  423  would be essentially insignificant in magnitude. 
     In  FIG. 5 , the advantageous effect of diversity in reducing the y-axis residual packet loss rate is illustrated for a media-specific redundancy example. Residual packet loss rate accounts only for actually lost packets and too-late packets that were not compensated by receipt of diversity packets. Speech activity is a percentage of time that speech and not silence is occurring. Over a wide span of speech activity from 40-60 percent on the x-axis, the residual packet loss rate curve  511  when diversity is used, is dramatically lower than for curve  521  when a single stream of packets is used. Diversity curve  511  is illustrated for s 12 =11.2 kbps and d 12 =4.8 kbps using P 0  P 1 P 0 ′ P 2 P 1 ′ . . . sequence. Diversity curve  521  is illustrated for s 11 =16 kbps and d 11 =0 kbps using P 0  P 1  P 2  . . . sequence. The curves of  FIGS. 4 ,  5 ,  7  and  8  were derived from a simulation model described in connection with  FIG. 12 . In  FIGS. 5 and 7  simulated number of users N was 128. It was assumed that all users use the same source rate and diversity rate in computing each curve in  FIGS. 5 and 7 . 
       FIG. 7  is similar to  FIG. 5  in the axes and uses MD (multiple description) coding as an example. Further in  FIG. 7 , residual packet loss rate L is progressively reduced for any given x-axis amount of speech activity in the order of curves  711 ,  721  and  731 . Those curves respectively represent (sij, dij)=(8,8), (11.2,0) and (5.6,5.6) kbps. Rate/diversity adaptation is dramatically effective. 
       FIG. 8  illustrates another MD (Multiple Description) coding example.  FIG. 8  changes the axis of Packet Loss rate of  FIG. 4  to Residual Packet Loss Rate in  FIG. 8 . No-diversity source rate curves  411  and  421  (16.0 and 11.2 kbps source rate respectively) are repeated for clarity in  FIG. 8  because when no diversity is used Residual Packet Loss Rate equals Packet Loss Rate. This bottleneck link simulation had speech activity held constant at 45%, and header bit rate 8 kbps. Again, the introduction of diversity at a given overall transmission rate (sij+dij) produces a dramatic improvement in residual packet loss rate. 
     The  FIG. 8  curves substantiate the feasibility and advantage of using stepwise changes of STATE according to a process embodiment of  FIG. 1 , wherein not only does transition  101  improve QoS but also a further step  1007  (of  FIG. 10 ) further improves QoS if such further step becomes needed. Compare the improvement represented by curve  811  (represents (8,8) case) compared to curve  411  (16,0). At a given number of users the improvement in packet loss rate, indicated by down-arrow  813  is striking-down from 3% example Threshold 1  to less than 1%. Further compare the improvement represented by curve  821  (represents (5.6,5.6) case) compared to curve  421  (11.2,0). At a higher given number of users the improvement in packet loss rate, indicated by down-arrow  823  is also striking-again down from 3% example Threshold 1  to less than 1%. 
     While in the rate diversity adaptation of  FIG. 3  only two users are shown, at a sender  311  and a receiver  361 ′, various network embodiments do contemplate dozens, hundred, thousands or more users of network  351  in  FIG. 3 . Some, many or all of the users are each provided with improved transmit/receive software and apparatus  311  and  361  of  FIG. 3 . Packet network  351  is thus recognized to be a common area where the service demands of many users may start to contend or to produce congestion. Put another way, if  FIG. 3  be visualized as the send/receive software  311 ,  361  and computer of one user, then for 140 users,  FIG. 3  is replicated or multiplied 140 times with packet network  351  being common to all the diagrams. It should be understood further that because of the numerous different embodiments of the invention, various of those embodiments are suitably distributed to the various users with advantageously compatible use of one or more of the various embodiments all across the network. 
     In  FIG. 3 , the RTCP block sends back the packet-loss rate for packets that originated at the sender computer for which the receiver destination computer is receiving. And so, if it so happens that a low packet loss rate is detected at RTCP packetization block  395 ′, the receiver  361 ′ will signal back to sender  311  control block  331   a  low packet loss rate that tells the sender block  331  “do not add any diversity dij.” Whereas, another receiver at  301 . p  would detect another packet loss rate from a sender, such as  301 . q , from which  301 . p  is receiving and not sender  311  and not coordinated in any way with receiver  361 ′ either, but independent from both of sender  311  and receiver  361 ′. So a receiver at  301 . p  improved with an embodiment like that at  361 ′ would send back packet loss fraction information through network  351  to its own sender  301 . q  the instructions whether to add diversity or not, or the information on which sender  301 . q  would determine whether to add diversity or not in further transmission to the receiver at node  301 . p.    
     The amount of source rate adjustment and diversity adjustment responsively introduced by a given sender is subject to selection of any of various embodiment, the selection suitably made by the skilled worker bearing in mind principles of engineering economics, desirably short response-time, and other considerations. 
     For example, if the RTCP packet loss fraction datum rises above a tolerable Threshold 1 , one type of embodiment makes relatively smaller adjustments to source rate and diversity at the sender, and awaits reception of one or more additional RTCP packets to determine whether the packet loss fraction datum remains above the tolerable Threshold 1 , whereupon further adjustments to source rate and/or diversity are incrementally introduced until the packet loss fraction has been reduced acceptably. 
     In another type of embodiment, when the RTCP packet loss fraction datum rises above a tolerable Threshold 1 , such type of embodiment detects the difference between the packet loss fraction and Threshold  1  (or compares the fraction with Threshold 1  and one or more additional even less tolerable higher Thresholds). Then block  331  in such embodiment makes adjustments to source rate and diversity at the sender, the adjustments being either incremental or more major depending on whether the packet loss fraction is near Threshold 1  or in fact is much greater than Threshold 1 . Such embodiment does not await reception of one or more additional RTCP packets to determine whether the adjustment should be major rather than incremental. However, such embodiment does further update its adjustments and operations utilizing packet loss fraction data from further RTCP packets. The process in such embodiment is suitably tuned to produce adjustments that converge upon appropriate level of QoS in a desirably short response time. The process is tuned to prevent any major adjustments from leading to oscillation. Oscillation occurs when major decrease adjustments alternate with major increase adjustments, or divergent sequences of adjustments happen that do not contribute to satisfactory QoS. 
     Sender  311  decides whether to perform rate/diversity adaptation depending on the particular packet loss fraction (or other QoS measure) reported back from the particular receiver  361 ′ to which sender  311  communications are destined. Sender at node  301 . q  decides whether to perform rate/diversity adaptation depending on the particular packet loss fraction (or other QoS measure) reported back from the particular receiver at node  301 . p  to which the communications from the sender at node  301 . q  are destined. 
     The adjustments thus involve two or more of adjusting source rate sij, adjusting diversity rate dij (involving either or both of time diversity and path diversity rates), and adjusting the overall transmission rate sij+dij. 
     It is possible to have one receiver  361 ′ having no problem with packet loss and another receiver say at  301 . p  having a lot of packet loss. Advantageously, various embodiments avoid contributing in any way to an metastable or unstable network equilibrium wherein some nodes would interact collectively to “hog” network resources and others would be starved for network resources. Some schemes use redundancy wherein they repeat packets or information therein and thus increase the overall transmission rate. An important advantage of some embodiments is to use diversity adaptively—in other words, based on the network needs—and to avoid making congestion or the deleterious significance of a given bottleneck-link worse. Some embodiments have a first advantage of using the diversity as it is needed, and/or a second advantage of trying to reduce the congestion by both changing the source rate and the amount of diversity as well. 
     If some senders were encountering a lot of packet loss problems, then suppose that they start adding diversity and thus attempting to use more network resources and congesting the network some more. A further sender and receiver pair are now forced over their Threshold 1  of tolerable packet loss fraction, due to the increase in network congestion due to the first-mentioned senders. Suppose the further and now newly over-Threshold 1  sender and receiver also add diversity and attempt to use more network resources and congest the network still more, introducing QoS problems at further and further senders and receivers, in a snow-balling or chain reaction effect, wherein the packet network becomes even more greatly congested leading to network problems. Various embodiments avoid this problem by adding diversity to recover QoS adaptively, and either use the same overall transmission rate sij+dij, or decrease the overall transmission rate. 
     The response of sender  311  under control of block  331  might in some embodiments, as illustrated in  FIG. 11 , ask the network for more bandwidth, and such embodiments can be used where the chain reaction scenario is not applicable. But many of the embodiments advantageously avoid the chain reaction scenario even when it is applicable, by adapting to reduce the overall transmission rate sij+dij when the QoS becomes less acceptable. Thus, a form of the latter such process reduces the overall transmission rate even when it adds diversity, by concurrently reducing the source rate by an amount exceeding an amount of contribution due to addition of diversity. In other words, some process embodiments are improvements to control the sender in such a way as not to increase the overall transmission rate, thus the requested bandwidth and attendant network congestion, but instead will use the network in a way which will reduce lost VoIP/VOP packets. 
     Rate and diversity usage of the network is optimized subject to the constraint that overall transmission rate be less than or equal to a given amount (which might change with network conditions). In optimization mathematics terminology, a QoS merit function is optimized subject to at least one constraint, namely that overall transmission rate be less than or equal to a given amount. 
     QoS is affected jointly by the amounts of source rate at which the speech encoder is transmitting and given by variable sij and diversity given by variable dij commanded by control block  331  of  FIG. 3 . Diversity has types: time diversity or path diversity or combined time/path diversity, for instance. 
     The overall transmission rate is allocated between the source rate and the diversity dij. 
     Given a subsisting state of the network, QoS is a function of sij and dij. Mathematically, QoS is a function of two variables sij and dij. Graphically, QoS is a surface in a three-dimensional space having QoS as a vertical dimension and having two horizontal dimensions sij and dij. Thus,
 
QoS= f ( sij,dij ).
 
     As between two users p and q, QoS(p,q,t) represents the QoS for communications from p to q at time t. QoS(q,p,t) represents the QoS for communications in the opposite sense from q to p at time t. QoS varies with number of users N, speech activity A, and over time depending on the configuration state of the network. Put another way,
 
QoS=QoS( p,q,sijp,dijp,A,N,t ).
 
     This 7-dimensional QoS function expresses the idea that QoS depends on which two users are involved, the source rate sij from sender p, the diversity rate dij from sender p, number of users N and the time t. 
     Let L be the packet loss after the application of diversity, meaning after any packet recovery or reconstruction that is implemented. Packet loss rate L is inversely related to QoS by a function g(L) so
 
QoS= g ( L (( p,q,sijp,dijp,A,N,t )).
 
       FIGS. 4 ,  5 ,  7  and  8  represent graphs of residual packet loss in various hyperplanes cutting through the multi-dimensional space representing L(p,q,sijp,dijp,A,N,t). 
     Further, the following inequality expresses the challenge solved by embodiments herein to keep QoS above a threshold subject to a constraint on each sender p on overall transmission rate:
 
QoS( p,q,sijp,dijp,A,N,t )&gt;threshold
 
 sijp+dijp &lt;=max overall transmission rate respective to each sender  p.  
 
or, put otherwise,
 
 L ( p,q,sijp,dijp,A,N,t )&lt;threshold
 
 sijp+dijp &lt;=max overall transmission rate respective to each sender  p.  
 
     The sender takes advantage of the diverse properties of the packet network so as to reduce the packet loss rate and increase the QoS to at least an acceptable amount. 
     When the threshold applies to all the users on the network, then the challenge of maintaining high QoS calls for the network-friendly advantages discussed elsewhere herein. 
     Some embodiments have just one QoS threshold wherein if the transmission quality becomes less acceptable than that threshold, an embodiment will make an adjustment in rate/diversity adaptation indicated by transition  101  of  FIG. 1  to improve QoS. However, the fact of even a single threshold does not prevent control block  331  from making one or more further adjustments like transition  1007  of  FIG. 10  when additional RTCP packets indicate that the QoS remains on the unacceptable side of the threshold. The apparatus acts like a servomechanism wherein the use of even just one error threshold (although other embodiments herein can use more thresholds) enables the servo notwithstanding to continually make adjustments in its output to keep the error within the threshold. Thus, when QoS is unacceptable, the apparatus keeps adapting, if possible, by changing the values of sij, dij, or both, until QoS is brought within an acceptable range. At some point, given a subsisting state of the network, there will be an state of adaptation of an embodiment that confers not just adequate QoS but optimum QoS. Some embodiments find a barely acceptable QoS, others provide adaptive ways to reach the optimal QoS structure of (sij, dij) and search until the optimum QoS is obtained. Suppose the optimal QoS is obtained in the computers of every one of the network users. Since the optimum is the best the apparatus can do under constrained circumstances, consider whether network performance will start to degrade or become unstable. When circumstances are bad, the conditions are improved by adding diversity and reducing the overall transmission rate. When the situation is measurably improved, the source rate is suitably increased cautiously or incrementally through multiple stages  103  and  105  in  FIG. 1 , while the diversity is suitably reduced, maintained, or in the example of transition  103  even increased. Further in the example, the diversity is reduced or terminated on the final recovery transition  105  in oval  111 . 
     Control block  331  takes original compressed speech packets P 0 , P 1  , P 2 , P 3  and suitably adds diversity. If diversity robustness becomes needed, then it adds P 0 ′ a form of the information in packet P 0 . So if the network loses the packet P 0 , or P 0  comes too late and thus is not available while P 0 ′ is on hand, then the lost packet compensation block  381 ′ uses bits P 0 ′ to reconstruct the information in packet P 0  to some extent or even fully. 
     In  FIG. 6  no diversity is implemented as a stream of packets P 1 , P 2 , P 3  with their respective different headers H. Time diversity, in a first example has packet  611  with the information of packet P 1  and an appended, or trailing set of compressed bits ( 0 ) having information dependent relative to a previous packet P 0 . Packet  611  is followed by packet  613  bearing information of packet P 2  and an appended, or trailing, set of compressed bits ( 1 ) having information dependent relative to packet P 1 . Packet  613  is similarly followed by packet  615  bearing information of packet P 3  and a trailing set of compressed bits having information dependent relative to packet P 2 . 
     Time diversity, in a second example has packet  621  with the information of packet P 1  and trailing bits for compressed information dependent relative to two previous packets. Packet  621  is followed by packet  623  bearing information of packet P 2  and an appended, or trailing, set of compressed bits having information dependent relative to packet P 1  and the next previous packet before P 1 . Packet  623  is similarly followed by packet  625  bearing information of packet P 3  and two trailing sets of compressed bits having information dependent relative to packets P 2  and P 1  respectively. Succeeding packets have information of the nth packet and two trailing sets of compressed bits having information dependent relative to the nth packet&#39;s two predecessor packets P(n−1) and P(n−2). 
     Further in  FIG. 6 , a packet  631  having the information of packet P 1  is sent through the network. Further, a packet  632  has compressed bits which are a function not only of packet P 1  information but also packet P 2  information. Further in the sequence, packets  635  and  637  are successively sent bearing the information of packets P 2  and P 3 . Dependent packet  636  bears information that is a function f( 2 , 3 ) of packets  635  and  637 . Dependent packet  638  is similarly constructed in sequence. Here an example of function f is exclusive −OR (XOR) as in FEC parity schemes. 
     Another embodiment of time diversity has packets  641 ,  643 ,  645 , etc. having information same as packets P 1 , P 2 , P 3 , etc. as well as respective appended information bits dependent as a joint function of the information in the two preceding packets, e.g. f( 1 , 2 ). 
     In  FIG. 11 , the source rate s 11  of a packet stream  1111  is a given amount. When QoS falls, the control block  331  utilizes an alternative process wherein it reduces the source rate to an amount s 22  compared to first source rate s 11 . However, diversity d 22  is added in packet stream  1121  and the overall transmission rate s 22 +d 22  exceeds the original transmission rate s 11  (where d 11  was zero). 
     In a further alternative, control block  331  maintains source rate s 22  equal to s 11  and diversity d 22  is added as shown in a packet stream  1131 . Here again overall transmission rate exceeds the original transmission rate of stream  1111 . 
       FIG. 12  illustrates packet loss simulation. Voice sources  1 ,  2 ,  3 , . . . N each have two-state Markov models comprising speech and silence states. Each voice source is assumed to use the same coder rate R. The voice sources are fed to a buffer  1211  and thereupon to a communications link  1221  having a capacity C of, for example, 24×64 kbps. The buffer  1211  has a size, for example, of C/(R+H) packets, where C is link capacity, R is coder rate, and H is overhead rate. The model simulates to determine the packet loss rate L which results from various combinations of source rate, time diversity and path diversity, thus producing the graphs of  FIGS. 4 ,  5 ,  7  and  8 . Software prepared in a straightforward manner by the skilled worker operates various blocks of the system of  FIG. 3  and implements the process embodiments such as those represented by the state transition diagrams of  FIGS. 1 and 10 . 
     In  FIG. 13 , input to the simulator of  FIG. 12  varied number of users N over a time interval of ten (10) minutes (600 seconds). N started out at 128, rose to 155, then dropped to 112, rose to 164 and then dropped to 120. The simulator of  FIG. 12  then produced packet loss rate data. This data was fed to control software for control block  331 , which in turn produced states of  FIG. 1  for line STATE in  FIG. 3  in order to bring packet loss rate, and thus QoS, under control. 
     In  FIG. 14 , the states produced by the control block  331  are illustrated in a graph of Overall Transmission Rate sij+dij versus time t over the ten minute interval of  FIG. 13 . During use by the initial number N=128 of users, 16 kbps source rate and zero diversity is selected by control block  331 , corresponding to state (s 11 ,d 11 ) of  FIG. 1 . When the users rise to N=155, the control block downshifts to 8 kbps source rate and 3.2 kbps of diversity, corresponding to  FIG. 1  transition  101  to state (s 22 ,d 22 ). Then a transition next occurs after about 5 seconds to a state (s 21 , d 21 ) of (11.2, 0) kbps which persist for about 100 seconds. Next, when the users drop to N=112, the control block  331  transitions back to 16 kbps overall transmission rate, but does the transition as two-step up-shift in the structure of source rate and diversity as follows. First, the transition goes to state (s 12 ,d 12 ) using 11.2 kbps source rate and 4.8 kbps diversity rate. Second, a succeeding transition goes from state (s 12 ,d 12 ) back to state (s 11 ,d 11 ) and recovers 16 kbps source rate and turns off the diversity to zero. Later and further in  FIG. 13 , when the number of users subsequently goes to N=164 and then lastly down to N=120 in  FIG. 13 , the control block  331  adapts by again transitioning through steps as described. 
     In  FIG. 15 , a packet voice digital signal processor (DSP) is implemented as an integrated circuit  1411 . The integrated circuit is suitably a CMOS DSP such as any suitable selection from the TMS320C54x or TSM320C6x DSP families, or other such families commercially available from Texas Instruments Incorporated, Dallas, Tex. USA. See Wireless and Telecommunications Products: Central Office, Telemetry RF Receivers and Personal Communications Solutions, Data Book, Texas Instruments Incorporated, 1996, which is hereby incorporated herein by reference, and particular Chapter 9, Digital Signal Processors therein. 
     For example, the TMS320C54x fixed-point, DSP family is fabricated with a combination of an advanced modified Harvard architecture which has one program memory bus and three data memory buses. This processor also provides a central arithmetic logic unit which has a high degree of parallelism and application-specific hardware logic, on-chip memory, additional on-chip peripherals. This DSP provides a specialized instruction set for operational flexibility and speed of the DSP. 
     Separate program and data spaces allow simultaneous access to program instructions and data. Two reads and one write operation can be performed in a single cycle. Instructions with parallel store and application-specific instructions are provided. Data can be transferred between data and program spaces. The parallelism supports a powerful set of arithmetic, logic and bit-manipulation operations that can all be performed in a single machine cycle. Control mechanisms manage interrupts, repeated operations and function calling. On-chip RAM and ROM memories are provided. Peripherals on-chip include serial port and HPI host port interface. 
     In  FIG. 15 , integrated circuit  1511  is improved with software manufactured into the ROM, or other nonvolatile, memory for implementing some part of the process embodiments. Thus,  FIG. 15  emphasizes an example of software blocks manufactured into the integrated circuit  1511 , the hardware described hereinabove being understood. Thus, description in software parlance follows next regarding  FIG. 15  wherein for example a “unit” refers primarily to a block of software, although a hardware block is another suitable alternative. 
     In  FIG. 15 , voice samples are supplied from an analog to digital converter (ADC) not shown, to a PCM interface  1515  and converted there to pulse code modulation. Next the PCM is fed to an Echo Canceller block  1517 , which feeds a Gain Control block  1521 . Gain control  1521  supplies a Voice Activity Detector  1531  which detects whether voice packets or silence packets are to be generated. The output of Voice Activity Detector  1531  goes to a speech coder  1541  having a Voice Coding Unit, or encoder,  1551 . The speech coder  1541  is suitably devised or implemented by the skilled worker so as to have multiple coding rate modes as contemplated herein. For one example, G.729 and Annexes with 11.8 kbps, 8 kbps and 6.4 kbps selectable source rates sij is suitably used. Then an Add Diversity (dij) Rate/Diversity Control Block  1561  couples the output of encoder  1551  to a Packet Encapsulation Unit  1571  which thereupon outputs voice packets from the DSP. Control Block  1561  also feeds back STATE (sij,dij) control signals back to voice coding unit  1551  to command unit  1551  to produce speech packets at the sij source rate, and to produce diversity packets for diversity transmission at rate dij via packet encapsulation unit  1571 . 
     On a receive path in  FIG. 15  voice packets enter packet encapsulation unit  1571  where they are depacketized and passed to a Packet Playout Control Unit  1581 . Control Unit  1581  has software that implements process steps for delay handling, delay jitter handling and lost packet compensation. Incoming RTCP packets contain lost packet fraction information from a destination across the network external to integrated circuit  1511 . This lost packet fraction information is fed via a path  1583  to the Rate/Diversity control block  1561 . 
     Also, the delay and jitter handling portion of Packet Playout Control Unit  1581  includes software process steps to produce second lost packet fraction information representative of the incoming voice packets to integrated circuit  1511 . This second lost packet fraction information is fed via a path  1585  to Packet Encapsulation Unit  1571  which packetizes the second lost packet fraction information into outgoing RTCP packets to update the destination across the network. The destination is suitably improved with an integrated circuit  1511 ′ (not shown) similar to or identical to integrated circuit  1511  of  FIG. 15 . 
     From Packet Playout Control Unit  1581 , depacketized compressed voice information being received is then supplied in a controlled manner to a speech decoder  1555  portion of speech coder  1541 . Silence packets and voice packets, suitably dejittered and compensated by use of diversity packets as improved according to any of various process embodiments herein, then are decoded by speech decoder  1555  and thus played out. The speech thus played out, passes via Gain Control  1521  to PCM interface and from there to a DAC (digital to analog converter) not shown which can be provided either on-chip or off-chip as the skilled worker elects. The PCM output as converted by the DAC thus reconstitutes the voice in an advantageous manner more fully satisfactory and enjoyable to the user, by virtue of the various improvements provided and discussed herein. Further, a DTMF “touch-tone” generator  1591  and Tone Detector  1593  handle the dialing steps for placing a VOP/VoIP telephone call to confer a comprehensive application improved as discussed herein. 
     Operations of add diversity block  1561  of  FIG. 15  are illustrated in  FIG. 16 . A software implementation is illustrated. In  FIG. 16 , operations commence at BEGIN  1601  and proceed to a step  1605  to initialize a vector STATE having vector element values s (source rate) and d (diversity rate). The values s and d are initialized with initial values s 11  and d 11  respectively. 
     Next in  FIG. 16 , a loop begins at an input step  1611  to input a newly-arriving QoS datum such as a new RTCP report QoS inverse measure such as the packet loss fraction L. If no RTCP packet is present, operations branch to a RETURN  1614 . If an RTCP packet is present, then operations proceed to a decision step  1615 . 
     In the decision step  1615 , the value L is compared to determine if L exceeds a first threshold, designated Threshold 1  or Th 1 , indicating too much packet loss at the destination. If too much packet loss, then operations proceed from step  1615  to a decision step  1617  to determine whether L also exceeds an even higher level A. If L is less than or equal to A, operations go next to a moderate update step  1621 . If L exceeds A, operations go to an aggressive update step  1623 . 
     In step  1621 , a vector NEWSTATE is moderately updated in the manner shown in  FIG. 1  and intended to improve QoS and likely reduce value L expected subsequently when the destination reports back. NEWSTATE is an intermediate state value holding vector, used intermediately in controlling the values called STATE. NEWSTATE is suitably updated according to any software method selected by the skilled worker, such as by looking up in a table, or executing a CASE statement, or implementing a software state machine, or otherwise. If the source rate can be decreased no further, and the diversity can be increased no further, then step  1621  simply makes NEWSTATE the same as the current state. After step  1621  operations go to step  1651 . 
     In step  1623 , vector NEWSTATE is aggressively updated (for example to state (s 32 ,d 32 )) in the manner shown in  FIG. 23  and intended to improve QoS and likely reduce value L expected subsequently when the destination reports back. Here again, NEWSTATE is suitably updated according to any software method selected by the skilled worker, such as by looking up in a table, or executing a CASE statement, or implementing a software state machine, or otherwise. If the source rate can be decreased no further, and the diversity can be increased no further, then step  1623  simply makes NEWSTATE the same as the current state. After step  1623  operations go to step  1651 . 
     Some embodiments have thresholds B, C, etc., such that NEWSTATE is moderately updated if (A≧F&gt;Th 1 ), NEWSTATE is aggressively updated if (BF≧A&gt;Th 1 ), and NEWSTATE is even more aggressively updated if (F&gt;B&gt;A&gt;Th 1 ). 
     If in step  1615 , L does not exceed Threshold 1 , operations proceed to a decision step  1627 . Step  1627  determines if either the gatekeeper signal GK is on (GK=1) OR a buffer full flag is on (BFR=1). If NO, then operations go directly to step  1625 , but if YES, operations go to an update step  1629 . 
     In step  1629 , vector NEWSTATE is updated (for example to state (s 31 ,d 31 )) in the manner shown in  FIG. 23  and intended to improve QoS and likely reduce value L expected subsequently when the destination reports back. Here again, NEWSTATE is suitably updated according to any software method selected by the skilled worker, such as by looking up in a table, or executing a CASE statement, or implementing a software state machine, or otherwise. After step  1629 , operations go to step  1651 . 
     In decision step  1625 , the packet loss fraction value L is compared with a second threshold Threshold 2 , or Th 2 . If value L is less than Th 2 , then QoS has improved or is at a high level already. In such case, operations pass to a step  1631  to update NEWSTATE to increase the source rate. Step  1631  inputs a new estimated steady state overall transmission rate S. As in steps  1621  and  1623 , NEWSTATE is suitably updated according to any software method selected by the skilled worker, such as by looking up in a table, or executing a CASE statement, or implementing a software state machine, or otherwise. As indicated in  FIG. 1  and  FIG. 10 , the process need not be simply the reverse of the transitions available in step  1621 , and so step  1631  is customized for its own updating purposes. Also, if the source rate can be increased no further, and the diversity can be decreased no further, then step  1631  simply makes NEWSTATE the same as the current state. One embodiment performs aggressive overall transmission rate increase if the ratio R of estimated steady state overall transmission rate S to current overall transmission rate exceeds a threshold Th 3  (e.g. 3.0), and performs gradual overall transmission rate increase otherwise. For example, such embodiment uses TCP throughput estimate for new estimated steady state overall transmission rate S. The TCP throughput estimate is suitably that given earlier (5D) as 1.22×packetsize/(round-trip delay×sqrt (average loss measured during lifetime of the connection)). 
     After step  1631  operations go to a step  1651 . If in step  1625 , value were greater than or equal to second threshold Th 2 , then operations go to decision step  1635 . 
     In decision step  1635 , the packet loss fraction value L is tested to see if it lies in the range from first threshold Th 1  to second threshold Th 2  inclusive. If yes, then operations go to a step  1641  wherein intermediate NEWSTATE is filled with the values in the vector STATE. Together with a later step  1651 , this operation  1641  maintains the current control state. If the decision in step  1635  is NO (out of range), or when step  1641  is completed, then operations pass to step  1651 . 
     In step  1651  the vector STATE is filled with the values of NEWSTATE. Next in an output step  1661 , the values of STATE are output as control signals (sij, dij) to the encoder  321  of  FIG. 3  and the encoder  1551  of  FIG. 15 . Steps  1651  and  1661  thus implement transitions like  101  and  413  (see  FIG. 4 ) and other transitions discussed herein. From step  1661  operations pass to a decision step  1671  whether to STOP. If not, then operations loop back to step  1611  and continue repeatedly as discussed above. If STOP is yes, then operations go to END  1681 . STOP may be responsive to disconnection of communications with the particular destination, or to power off or to other conditions of a chip or system as desired. 
     The herein-incorporated U.S. Pat. No. 6,496,477 provides further disclosure about how path diversity packets are added. The emphasis of  FIGS. 1 ,  3 ,  15 ,  16 ,  17  and  18  are on the adaptive control features of some process, integrated circuit and system embodiments whereby source rate and diversity are either individually or jointly initiated, increased, decreased and terminated. The said adaptations are performed according to a process embodiment in response to QoS-related data obtained from the network or from a destination monitoring process. The adaptively-determined sij and dij, or controls generated in a relationship to sij and dij in the manner of a function thereof or substantially correlated to them, are then used to start, stop and adjust the operations of the diversity software and hardware disclosed in herein-incorporated U.S. Pat. No. 6,496,477 and the other disclosure herein. 
     In  FIG. 17 , system components are arranged to provide gateway functions and combined with cellular phone base-station functions. A communication system  1701  interfaces to a PSTN (public switched telephone network)  1703 , to a telephone  1705  (and PBX private branch exchanged connected to many wired and cordless telephones, not illustrated), to a fax machine  1707  and to cellular telephones  1709 . PSTN  1703  is coupled via T1/E1 Framer  1711  to a DSQ Switch  1741 . Telephone  1705  and Fax  1707  are coupled via a PCM Codec 1721 to the DSQ Switch  1741 . Cellular telephones  1709  are coupled via a wireless communications interface  1731  to the DSQ Switch  1741 . 
     Further in  FIG. 17 , the DSQ switch  1741  couples the various types of communications to a first port of a bank of one or more DSPs (digital signal processors, such as T1 TMS320C6x or TMS320C54x DSPs)  1751 ,  1753 , and so on to the Nth DSP  1755  in the DSP bank. Each DSP suitably has associated memory  1761 ,  1763 , . . .  1765  respectively provided as any suitable mix of volatile and nonvolatile memory selected by the skilled worker. The DSPs are connected via a second port of the bank to a bus  1771  which couples them to a microcontroller  1781  that has its own RAM memory  1783  and flash nonvolatile memory  1785 . The microcontroller  1781  communicates via a PHY, or Network Physical Interface  1791 , to packet data network  351  of  FIG. 3 . 
     In  FIG. 17 , one, some or all of the DSPs are improved for adaptive rate/diversity operation as described herein. Also, various parts of the improvements described herein are suitably partitioned between the DSPs  1751 ,  1753 , . . .  1755  and the microcontroller (MCU)  1781  and stored on-chip and in the off-chip memories as desired. Various partitioning alternatives are contemplated. Also, the MCU is omitted in another embodiment (not shown) and the various software blocks are partitioned among execution units of one DSP or among multiple DSPs. 
     In  FIG. 18 , the improvements are illustratively partitioned so that the RTCP is associated with MCU  1781  of  FIG. 17  and the rate/diversity control block  331  and lost packet compensation block  381  (not shown but unprimed in sender  311  of  FIG. 3 ) are provided in the DSP software complement. 
     In  FIG. 18 , MCU  1781  of  FIG. 17  is provided with a TCP/UDP/IP stack  1811  which further has MAC/ARP, Ethernet driver and other network interface protocol blocks. Further, network management software  1815  for MCU  1781  has a network management agent controlling and interfacing to a first software block for embedded webserver HTTP (Hypertext Transfer Protocol) and Java applications, a second software block for SNMP protocol, Voice MIBs, and Protocol MIBs, and a third software block for TFTP software download. Still further, telephone signaling gateway software for MCU  1781  has call processing software, address translation and parsing software, and H.323 protocols including H.225 signaling, H.245 software, and RAS/RTCP software. The RTCP function in block  1819  is coupled to the UDP function in TCP/UDP/IP stack  1811  and also coupled to the Packet Encapsulation unit in DSP  1511 . 
     A DSP interface manager software block  1821  is coupled to software blocks  1811 ,  1815 ,  1819  and  1823  and communicates with DSP  1511  and the software blocks described in connection therewith. 
     MCU  1781  runs system software  1823  including RTOS (real time operating system such as Microsoft Windows CE or Symbian EPOC, as well as DSP BIOS™ RTOS from Texas Instruments Inc.) System software  1823  includes WDT driver software, flash memory manager, BSP software, development and self-test (IPQST) software, and software installation code. 
     DSP  1511  has software in  FIG. 18  improved as described in  FIG. 15  for adaptive rate/diversity in both the send and receive functions. 
     In other embodiments, as shown in  FIG. 19 , network  351  has cellular phone base stations  1911 ,  1913 ,  1915 ,  1917 . Cell phone base stations  1911 ,  1913 ,  1915 ,  1917  are improved to be multimodal, receiving user-selected packet voice or non-packet wireless voice from cell phones  1921 ,  1923 ,  1925 ,  1931 ,  1933 ,  1935 ,  1937 ,  1939 . Wireless two-way communications are established between pairs of units listed as ordered pairs (cell-phone, base station): ( 1921 ,  1915 ), ( 1933 ,  1915 ), ( 1925 ,  1911 ), ( 1935 ,  1911 ), ( 1923 ,  1913 ), ( 1931 ,  1913 ), ( 1937 ,  1917 ), ( 1939 ,  1917 ). 
     Some of the cell-phones  1921 ,  1923 ,  1925 , and  1937  have a shaded rectangle, indicating for purposes herein improvements for adaptive rate/diversity as disclosed herein in their packet voice communications mode, for example as shown in any one or more of  FIGS. 1 ,  3 ,  15 - 18 . Other illustrated cell-phones  1931 ,  1933 ,  1935 ,  1939  lack the improvements for adaptive rate/diversity as disclosed herein in their packet voice communications mode, and have no corresponding shaded rectangle in  FIG. 19 . 
     Some of the cell phone base stations  1911 ,  1913  have a shaded rectangle, indicating for purposes herein improvements for adaptive rate/diversity as disclosed herein in their packet voice communications mode, for example as shown in any one or more of  FIGS. 1 ,  3 ,  15 - 18 . Other illustrated base stations  1915 ,  1917  lack the improvements for adaptive rate/diversity as disclosed herein in their packet voice communications mode, and has no corresponding shaded rectangle in  FIG. 19 . Even when no adaptive source rate/diversity control feature is provided, as in the base stations  1915  and  1917 , they do support both the mobile Internet Protocol phones (IP-phones) wherein IP-packetization suitably occurs at the mobile IP-phone, as well as support conventional wireless mobile phones. 
     Personal computer (PC) telephony units  1951  and  1953  have respective microphones and speakers, and these units  1951  and  1953  have modems of any suitable type, such as voice-band V.90, DSL (digital subscriber line), cable modem, wireless modem, among other choices. Personal computer (PC) telephony units  1951  and  1953  are respectively coupled to the network  351  via gateways  1961  and  1963  respectively. The gateways are suitably located in a private branch exchange or in a telephone central office, or in the office of an ISP (Internet Service Provider) or in the office of a private commercial network, for example. IP-packetization occurs at the PC telephony units  1951  and  1953 . The adaptation is end-to-end such as when phone at source has the rate/diversity control block and the phone at destination has a block to send QoS data back as well as to couple diverse packet information to the decoder for improved QoS. 
     For placing phone calls over the Internet, user voice goes in through microphone, then is processed in the computer by the main microprocessor, microcontroller, and DSP for vocoding and rate/diversity adaptation as in  FIG. 3 . Even if the access of the PC telephony unit is connected via voice-band modem to telephone central office and then to Internet service provider, the rate/diversity adaptation software is suitably provided in the PC telephony unit or wherever the rate/diversity adaptation software is suitably installed to adaptively produce diversity packets or dependent packets and/or to control the state of a voice encoder or audio compressor or image compressor or other media coder. 
     Adaptive rate/diversity improvements in an integrated circuit, software and system are suitably provided in an Internet mobile terminal such as an Internet appliance or mobile phone, cell phone or cordless phone with Internet or other packet network capability. 
     Cell phone base stations  1915 ,  1917  and  1911  are respectively coupled to IP packet network  351  via PSTN blocks  1971 ,  1973  and  1975  respectively. Each of the PSTN blocks  1971  and  1973  has a gateway therein to connect the call to the packet network  351 . The gateways in PSTN blocks  1971  and  1973  suitably have adaptive rate/diversity embodiments included therein. Thus, rate/diversity adaptation modules suitably are sited in the gateways and base stations of the system of  FIG. 19 . For example, base stations  1911  and  1913  are directly connected to packet network  351  by their own adaptive rate/diversity packet interface software and software stacks, all as taught herein in the present patent application and the incorporated U.S. Pat. No. 6,496,477. 
     A gateway GW  1981  couples network  351  to PSTN  1983  to which telephones (not shown) are coupled via a PBX  1985 . Also, one or more individual telephones  1987  are directly connected to PSTN  1981 . Further in  FIG. 19 , a LAN has nodes  1991  and  1993  coupled to network  351 . A computer  1995  is connected to node  1993 . 
     Integrated circuits into which the adaptive rate/diversity improvements are suitably manufactured include DSP (digital signal processor) from Texas Instruments and other companies offering DSP integrated circuits. Other integrated circuits suitable for the adaptive rate/diversity improvements include host microprocessor such as Intel&#39;s Pentium®, Pentium II®, Pentium III®, Celeron®, Xeon® and IA-64 microprocessors, AMD K6 and K7 microprocessors, National MediaGX and other microprocessors, and microcontrollers such as ARM and StrongARM series, MIPS series, Intel i960, Motorola Mcore and PowerPC integrated circuits, among many others. Still other integrated circuits which are contemplated for adaptive rate/diversity improvements include nonvolatile memories such as ROM, EPROM, EEPROM, Flash memory, EAROM, and FeRAM (Ferroelectric random access memory). Volatile memories such as DRAM, synchronous DRAM (SDRAM), R-DRAM (Rambus DRAM), DDR-DRAM, and other variants suitably also have a logic section or non-volatile section incorporating the adaptive rate/diversity improvements built into them as taught herein. In yet other embodiments, the adaptive rate/diversity improvements are loaded onto or manufactured into rigid disk drives, hard disk drives, and also various media such as floppy insertable disks, CD-ROM optical storage media, and/or chips in the read circuitry or other circuitry of drives for such storage media. Also, chipsets associated with processors suitably are in improvement embodiments made to have adaptive rate/diversity improvements manufactured into them, such as the Intel “440xx” series of chipsets, sometimes known as North Bridge and South Bridge chips, and the chipsets of other chipset manufacturers. (Chipsets of this type are also suitably improved with digital signal processors, as taught in any one or more of the U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,987,590 and 6,179,489 which are hereby incorporated by reference. The DSP suitably runs the adaptive rate/diversity improvements. In other versions, the adaptive software runs on the host microprocessor such as Pentium series or IA-64 series, or partitioned with part of the software on a DSP coupled to the host microprocessor(s) in the computer system. 
     Also, the rate/diversity adaptation can be provided at the telephone central office gateway. Also, rate/diversity adaptation can be put in a router in a packet network to improve it there. 
     Even more advantageously, when the adaptation is end-to-end and the units at both ends have at least the adaptation software, the mobile phone or desktop or notebook PC telephony unit adapts for advantageously satisfactory QoS. 
     As discussed further, an improved cell-phone base station (and also a gateway improved similarly) runs multiple packet voice modules with an inventive embodiment for each mobile telephone using the base station at a given time. 
     Some improvement embodiments are intended for gateways, wherein a improved gateway embodiment runs multiple packet voice modules with an inventive process, chip and system embodiment working in the gateway itself to adaptively control source rate and diversity rate for advantageous QoS for each telephone using the gateway at a given time. 
     In other embodiments, a base station itself is not only improved to be multimodal, supporting both the mobile Internet Protocol phones (IP-phones) and conventional mobile phones. But also, the improved base station embodiment runs multiple packet voice modules with an inventive process, chip and system embodiment working in the base station itself to adaptively control source rate and diversity rate for advantageous QoS for each cell-telephone communicating speech in non-packet form to the base station at a given time. Then the base station itself and not necessarily the cell-phone codes or recodes the speech and packetizes it with an inventive process, chip and system embodiment working to adaptively control source rate and diversity rate for advantageous QoS over a packet network to which the base-station is in turn connected. 
     Numerous combination embodiments and paths of advantageous operation are conveniently identified in  FIG. 19  using sequences apparatus numerals to name them. For example, a communication path  1921 - 1915 - 1961 - 1951  has the improved adaptive VOP in the terminal handset or PC IP phones but not in the base station or gateway. Path  1935 - 1911 - 1913 - 1931  has improved VOP in the base stations but not in the terminal handsets. Robustly, still other paths and embodiments like  1925 - 1911 - 1913 - 1923  have improved adaptive VOP both in the terminal handset and in the base stations. Here the adaptive VOP blocks work together or one defers to another as the skilled worker suitably elects to implement. The adaptive VOP blocks are advantageously upwardly compatible, so that an improved elements  1921 ,  1911 ,  1951 , or  1963  for some examples, can talk to unimproved elements such as  1933 ,  1917 ,  1961  or  1939  and vice versa. Still other combinations and paths are present in  FIG. 19  and important to peruse, but for conciseness do not appear to need tedious further explanation. 
       FIG. 20  shows a RTCP packet as discussed earlier hereinabove. 
       FIG. 21  shows QoS processing timing as discussed earlier hereinabove. 
       FIG. 22  shows a state transition diagram of a state diagram for hereinabove-described Type 5CB QoS level measure computations and Adaptation Logics. 
     In  FIG. 23 , a state diagram for rate/diversity adaptation process and apparatus has example states (sij, dij) as already discussed in  FIG. 1 . In  FIG. 23 , however, the state transitions operate differently. When operations are in state (s 11 ,d 11 ), e.g. (16.0, 0.0) and criterion F not only exceeds Threshold 1  but also aggressive trigger level A, then a transition  2211  goes from (s 11 ,d 11 ) to state (s 32 ,d 32 ), e.g., (5.7,2.3) kbps of source rate and diversity rate respectively. Another transition  2215  is discussed later hereinbelow. After transition  2211 , operations remain at state (s 32 ,d 32 ) unless and until criterion F becomes ameliorated and falls below Threshold 2 , whereupon a state transition  2221  to state (s 22 ,d 22 ) e.g., (8.0,3.2). By transition  2221 , source rate is increased, and diversity rate is also increased, and their sum (overall transmission rate) is increased. Operations remain at state (s 22 ,d 22 ) unless criterion F continues to be below Threshold 2 , or in case criterion F rises and later falls below Threshold 2 . Thereupon a state transition  2223  transfers the system to state (s 12 ,d 12 ) e.g., (11.2,4.8). By transition  2223 , source rate is increased, and diversity rate is also increased, and their sum (overall transmission rate) is increased. Operations remain at state (s 12 ,d 12 ) unless criterion F continues to be below Threshold 2 , or in case criterion F rises and later falls below Threshold 2 . Thereupon a state transition  2225  transfers the system to state (s 11 ,d 11 ) e.g., (16.0,0.0). By transition  2225 , source rate is increased, but diversity rate is decreased to zero, and their sum (overall transmission rate) is maintained unchanged at 16.0 kbps. Transition  2225  thus increases source rate and turns off the diversity feature. This turnoff is suitably accomplished in some embodiments by terminating the path diversity connection, and suitably accomplished in other embodiments by holding the path diversity connection open for instant use in case another transition  2211  is needed, but not transmitting any voice packets over it. Engineering economics and delay in disconnection and connection operations are suitably considered in selecting the type of embodiment to use there. 
     When operations are in state (s 11 ,d 11 ), e.g. (16.0, 0.0) and either a gatekeeper request GK=1 or Buffer Occupancy BFR=1 occurs, then adaptive source rate measures are employed without diversity measures, in this example. In such case, a transition  2215  goes from (s 11 ,d 11 ) to state (s 31 ,d 31 ), e.g., (8.0,0.0) kbps of source rate and no diversity rate. After transition  2215 , operations remain at state (s 31 ,d 31 ) unless and until both the gatekeeper request is turned off and the Buffer Occupancy condition is not present, i.e. GK=0 AND BFR=0. At that point, state transition  2231  takes the system from state (s 31 ,d 31 ) to state (s 21 ,d 21 ) e.g., (11.2,0.0). By transition  2231 , source rate is increased, and diversity remains off. Operations at state (s 21 ,d 21 ) poll the gatekeeper and buffer for updated status information. Then operations remain at state (s 21 ,d 21 ) unless the GK and BFR remain off, or in case GK or BFR go on again and later become both off, i.e. GK=0 AND BFR=0. Thereupon a state transition  2233  transfers the system to state (s 11 ,d 11 ) e.g., (16.0,0.0). By transition  2233 , source rate is increased, and diversity rate remains disabled or at zero, and their sum (overall transmission rate) is increased. Operations remain at state (s 11 ,d 11 ) unless criterion F causes aggressive transition  2211  of  FIG. 23  or moderate transition  101  of  FIG. 1  or unless GK or BFR go on again to cause transition  2215  of  FIG. 23 . 
     The processes and systems of  FIGS. 1 and 23  importantly introduce new criteria for transition, as in steps  101  combined with  2211  for instance, and combine the new criteria for transition with discrete states (sij,dij). Advantageously, the use of discrete states with these new criteria reduces the incidence of false alarms and oscillations. 
     Note that the state transition diagrams of  FIGS. 1 ,  22  and  23  compactly show advantageous features of some embodiments. Further note that the flowcharts of  FIGS. 16 ,  24 ,  25  and  26  show some of the same things as the state transition diagrams and also further advantageous features of processes, devices and systems as taught herein. 
       FIG. 24  shows a process for implementation in software media, integrated circuits, printed circuit cards, personal computers, networked appliances and other network edge-device computers, cell phone base stations, servers, routers, gateways and other apparatus. This process supports conferencing and multicasting. 
     The adaptive rate/diversity improvements are suitably implemented in conferencing, broadcast, unicast, and multicast devices and processes since UDP universal datagram protocol, RTP real-time transport protocol and RTCP and other protocols now available or yet to be devised are useful for supporting these services. 
     Broadcast with path diversity is described in connection with incorporated U.S. Pat. No. 6,496,477 FIG. 11. Conventional broadcast replicates the process of a single unicast connection from source to destination so that communication of a media stream is directed to many destinations. Improving upon conventional broadcast, adaptive rate/diversity processes as taught herein are replicated so that the media stream takes diverse packets to each of many destinations, and adaptive control of rate and time or path or combined time/path diversity as taught herein is applied to the communications each by each. 
     Multicast with path diversity is described in connection with incorporated U.S. Pat. No. 6,496,477 FIG. 12. Conventional multicasting fans out a media stream from a source farther out in the packet network so that communication of a media stream is directed to many destinations. Improving upon conventional multicast, adaptive rate/diversity process as taught herein is applied to the communications. The situation differs from adaptive rate/diversity control of improved broadcasting as described in the previous paragraph because rate/diversity adaptation of a given media stream at the source 1111 of U.S. Pat. No. 6,496,477 FIG. 12 affects plural destinations. When the plural destinations are experiencing different levels of QoS as reported in their RTCP packets sent back to source 1111, then the rate/diversity adaptation thus can be faced with conflicting QoS information to reconcile in making an adaptation transition such as  101  of  FIG. 1 . 
     Before proceeding further, note an example process context in  FIG. 24 . Operations commence at a BEGIN  2401  and proceed to establish an initial state (s 11 ,d 11 ) in a step  2411 . Next a step  2421  inputs RTCP report packets, but now from multiple destinations. A step  2431  generates information called herein a “report datum” for each destination, in some embodiments. Next a step  2441  generates a value from the “report data” collectively. This special value is called MQoS, motivated by but not limited to a concept of a Multicast QoS. Then the special MQoS value is used in place of Loss Fraction L in a step  2451  to drive the adaptive rate/diversity process steps at the sender which are collectively called process  2461 . Process  2461  includes the steps  1613  through  1671  of  FIG. 16  used in the particular part of  FIG. 24  identified by numeral  2461 . The process  2461  selectively and adaptively updates the NEWSTATE when appropriate and operations loops back to step  2421  to input more RTCP report packets as the process goes forward in time. When process  2400  is to be turned off, operations go from STOP decision step  1671  to RETURN  2471 . 
     The operations of steps  2441  and  2431  are next described in considerable detail. Note that there are many alternative ways of doing each of them, and an outline format is used to facilitate the detailed description. 
     Accordingly, several embodiments of adaptive rate/diversity control of improved multicasting are contemplated. As noted hereinabove, rate/diversity adaptation of a given media stream at the source 1111 of U.S. Pat. No. 6,496,477 FIG. 12 affects plural destinations. QoS reports come back to source 1111 from the various destinations for each portion in a series of portions comprising the transmission from source 1111. The QoS reports from the various destinations for a given portion of the transmission are combined into one or more herein-defined “Multicast QoS” evaluation numbers in  FIG. 24  step  2441  to drive the rate/diversity adaptation processes. Multicast QoS (MQoS) is variously defined for different process and device embodiments next. (The value of S, meaning estimated steady state overall transmission rate as in step  1631 , is also chosen in a similar manner to compute what is herein called “Multicast S”. In other words, use the information from each destination to compute an S value for that destination. Then, in a manner precisely analogous to any selected one of the MQoS calculations below, compute the Multicast S from the S values). 
     A. In a first method, the QoS reports from the various destinations for a given portion of the transmission are combined into a single herein-defined “Multicast QoS” evaluation number in step  2441  to drive the rate/diversity adaptation processes. In other words, Multicast QoS (MQoS) is defined for each corresponding transmission portion such as activity in a 5-second interval described by an RTCP report packet. The step  2431  of  FIG. 24  simply uses the Loss Fraction datum in one RTCP report packet as a report datum (or computes criterion F from data like Loss Fraction and Delay Jitter in one RTCP report packet) or computes criterion F using QoS computation methods described with reference to  FIGS. 1 and 23  for instance. 
     A1. The MQoS in step  2441  depends on what happens to fewer than all of the destinations 
     A1a. The MQoS depends on what happens to a majority of the destinations. Example: For the 37 th  RTCP packet, QoS values came back from 150 out of 155 destinations. The A1a embodiment is programmed to find the value of a statistic based on the QoS values from the best-QoS reporting X% of the 155 destinations, e.g., (say 90% of them), the best 140 (=155×0.90) out of the 150 QoS values.
         A1ai. MQoS=average of the best reporting X%   A1aii. MQoS=minimum of the best reporting X%   A1aiii. MQoS=median of the best reporting X%   A1aiv. MQoS=average of the worst reporting Y%   A1av. MQoS=minimum of the worst reporting Y%   A1avi. MQoS=median of the worst reporting Y%   A1avii. MQoS=maximum of the worst reporting Y%.       

     A1b. The MQoS depends on what happens to selected ones of the destinations. Example: For the 23rd RTCP packet, QoS values came back from 205 out of 324 destinations. The A1b embodiment is programmed to find the value of a statistic based on the QoS values disregarding the best-QoS reporting X% of the 324 destinations and disregarding the worst-QoS reporting Y% of the 324 destinations. MQoS=average of 20 percentile to 90 percentile loss fraction RTCP reports. 
     A1c. The MQoS depends on randomly selected ones of the destinations. Example: For the 147th RTCP packet, QoS values came back from 2000 out of 3000 destinations. The A1b embodiment is programmed to find the value of a statistic based on a random sample of N=100 of the 2000 QoS values. Then the processes apply a statistical computation according to any of the following alternatives:
         A1ci. MQoS=average of the N selected QoS values   A1cii. MQoS=minimum of the N selected QoS values   A1ciii. MQoS=median of the N selected QoS values   A1civ. MQoS=average of the selected QoS values, but leaving out their top X% and bottom Y%.       

     A2. A rate/diversity adaptation decision step depends on a MQoS statistic based on all the destinations&#39; reports of QoS received back for the given transmission portion. 
     A2a. The statistic is the median QoS. Example: For the 7 th  RTCP packet, QoS values came back from 150 destinations out of 180 destinations. The loss fraction values varied from 0.2% to 12%, mostly around 3%. 2.8% loss fraction was the median value. MQoS=2.8%. 
     A2b. The statistic is the QoS of the destination at the nth percentile of QoS. Example: For the 17 th  RTCP packet, QoS values came back from 138 destinations out of 180 destinations. The embodiment is programmed to find the 30 th  percentile as indicated by listing the reports in loss fraction order. Example: The loss fraction values varied from 0.2% to 12%, mostly around 3%. The 30 th  percentile value was 6.2%. MQoS=6.2%. 
     A2c. The statistic is the average QoS. Example: For the 24 th  RTCP packet, QoS values came back from 155 destinations. The embodiment is programmed to find the arithmetic mean or average QoS. Example: The loss fraction values varied from 0.2% to 12%, mostly around 3%. The arithmetic mean was 3.3%. MQoS=3.3%. 
     A2d. The statistic is the minimum QoS of any destination. Example: For the 33rd RTCP packet, QoS values came back from 125 destinations. The loss fraction values varied from 0.2% to 12.2%, mostly around 3%. The minimum QoS was 12.2% loss fraction. MQoS=12.2%. 
     In a second process type, the QoS reports from the various destinations for two or more portions of the transmission are combined into a single herein-defined “Multicast QoS” evaluation number to drive the rate/diversity adaptation processes. Two or more RTCP packets from the same destination are used to generate each report datum by averaging, median, minimum or other statistic, and step  2431  becomes more detailed. If only one RTCP packet from a given destination comes back when a most destinations are reporting back three for the given process, then the report datum is the value of that RTCP packet. The report data thus derived destination by destination are used according to any of the A-numbered processes to generate MQoS by step  2441  of  FIG. 24 , according to a correspondingly B-numbered embodiment. 
     Example Embodiment B2a: The statistic is the median QoS. Example: For the 7 th  through 12th RTCP packets, QoS values came back from 150 destinations. Each set of six RTCP packet Loss Fraction values for a given destination was averaged to produce a report datum for that destination. The report data varied from 0.5% to 7%, mostly around 3%. 2.9% loss fraction was the median value. MQoS=2.9%. 
     A tedious description of other B-type embodiments is suitably generated by following the directions of the previous paragraph, which is believed to amply disclose the subject matter of numerous B-type embodiments. 
     Other QoS level measures and adaptation logics are suitably combined with the teachings and figures shown herein. 
       FIG. 25  illustrates software to implement each of steps  1621 ,  1623  and  1629  of  FIG. 16 . In  FIG. 25 , after a BEGIN, operations go to a step  2511  to determine whether a diversity flag is on. If not, then source rate sij is decreased in a step  2515 . Next after step  2515 , a step  2521  sets, or turns on, the diversity flag. Then a step  2531  calls a diversity routine to create diversity packets. Then a step  2541  updates packet header diversity fields and dependency information appropriately. Those features of the packet are described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,496,477 for path diversity. Then a RETURN  2571  is reached. 
     If in step  2511  the diversity flag is already on, then operations branch to a step  2551  to vary the source rate and diversity aspects of the coder. Then in step  2561 , the packet header is updated in the dependency information and diversity fields to correspond to the changes made by step  2551 , whereupon RETURN  2571  is reached. 
     In  FIG. 26 , step  1631  of  FIG. 16  commences and goes to an input step  2605 . In step  2605 , information specifying a steady state overall transmission rate S is either estimated locally or input from a network element. Next, operations go to a decision step  2611  to determine whether the diversity flag is on. If so, operations go to a decision step  2621  to determine whether the overall transmission rate sij+dij is equal to estimated steady state overall transmission rate S from step  2605 , e.g., 11.2. If an estimated steady state overall transmission rate S value is not available, then a maximum amount (e.g., 16.0) is used for S by default. If so, then operations turn off (reset) the diversity flag in a step  2631 . Next a step  2641  calls the diversity routine to reduce diversity. Then a step  2651  updates packet header diversity fields and dependency information appropriately. Those features of the packet are described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,496,477 for path diversity, and the path diversity routine is described in FIG. 18 therein. Then a RETURN  2681  is reached. 
     If in step  2621 , the overall transmission rate is below value S, then operations branch to a step  2661  to change both the source rate and diversity (and suitably the path diversity method of the Packet Transmission Table of U.S. Pat. No. 6,496,477 and other diversity methods) without closing down the diversity feature. Then operations go to step  2651  to update packet header as described above. 
     If in step  2611 , the diversity flag is off, then operations branch to a step  2671  to increase the source rate only, whereupon RETURN  2681  is ultimately reached. 
       FIG. 27  shows how adaptive multipath routing is combined with adaptive rate/diversity to form a new combination process for integrated circuits, and systems of all kinds In one embodiment, diverse paths via three particular proxies are identified as described in incorporated U.S. Pat. No. 6,496,477, FIGS. 18-25. A first path via the first proxy is maintained throughout a communications connection. A second path is established via the second proxy, but when packet loss becomes unacceptable the second path is reestablished via the third proxy. In another more complex embodiment of  FIG. 27 , the multipath routing process seeks a satisfactory path and may switch adaptively from one path to another. Concurrently, the multipath routing process has its source rate adaptively varied. Also concurrently, the multipath routing process has one or more additional adaptive multipath routing process “siblings” seeking a respective second satisfactory path for diversity packets and switching adaptively from one second path to another. Advantageously, a path diversity receiving process implemented in the destination operates as shown and described in connection with FIGS. 5, 17 and 26 of incorporated U.S. Pat. No. 6,496,477 and/or as elsewhere described therein. In this way, complex and hard-to-solve network congestion problems are addressed by improved embodiments as illustrated by  FIG. 27 . 
       FIG. 28  supplements the software blocks of  FIG. 18  by adding ATM (asynchronous transfer mode), AAL (ATM Adaptation Layer) and Frame Relay Software coupled to the IP block in a TCP/UDP/IP software stack. 
     In  FIG. 29 , a local software application of rate/diversity control switches between states within the same oval (same overall transmission rate). Thus, diversity allocation is done by the DSP software application. 
       FIG. 29  also illustrates the concept that not just two, but three or even more states per rate oval are suitably introduced. One state per oval has source rate only, with no diversity. Another state per oval has packets with a source rate and a diversity packet with its diversity rate. A third state per oval has packets with a source rate, plus two diversity packets with respective diversity rates. Various examples of a third state are shown in  FIG. 6 , diversity packets  621 ,  631  and  641 . Furthermore, path diversity alternatives are illustrated in the incorporated U.S. Pat. No. 6,496,477 such as in the Packet Transmission Table therein. 
     In a complementary way, the network advantageously controls overall transmission rate, so that transitions between ovals in  FIG. 29  are under network control, such as by a gatekeeper. 
     In  FIG. 29 , operations suitably begin at state (16,0) at left. An estimation EST of network congestion is computed by network or by sender or by receiver to determine whether to make a high priority source rate adjustment. If operations are in any of the state of the 16 kbps oval and EST=8, then a transition goes from the originating 16 kbps state to state (4.0, 1.7, 2.3) on far right. If EST is neither of 11.2 or 8 then no EST driven transition is executed. If EST=11.2 as signaled by the network (or alternatively estimated by sender or receiver), then a transition goes from the originating 16 kbps state to state (5.7, 2.3, 3.2). 
     If at any 11.2 kbps state estimation EST=8, then a transition goes from the originating 11.2 kbps state to state (4.0, 1.7, 2.3). If GK=0 AND BFR=0 is signaled by the network, then a transition goes from any originating 8 kbps state back to state (5.7, 2.3, 3.2) provided that a ratio R is also less than or equal to a threshold Th 3 . For example, R is the ratio of estimated steady state overall transmission rate divided by current overall transmission rate. Th 3  suitably lies in a range of 1.5 to 4.0, and a value of 3.0 is suitable. Estimated steady state overall transmission rate S is that rate which the network signals is now available or which test algorithms at sender or receiver indicate is now available. Rate S is suitably computed as in the discussion of  FIG. 16  step  1631 . 
     If at any 11.2 kbps state, GK=0 AND BFR=0 is signaled by the network, then a transition goes from the originating 11.2 kbps state to state (8, 3.2, 4.8). If at any 8 kbps state, network conditions indicate greatly lessened congestion, then an aggressive recovery to state (8, 3.2, 4.8) is desirable. In  FIG. 29 , criterion (R&gt;Th 3 ) AND (GK=BFR=0) triggers a transition from any originating 8 kbps state to state (8, 3.2, 4.8) when the criterion is met. 
     Within a given oval, DSP software determines from QoS reports whether to make transitions to add diversity, relax diversity, or release diversity. Starting at state (16,0), a determination that A≧F&gt;Th 1  adds diversity and takes operations to a state (11.2,4.8). However, starting at state (16,0), if F&gt;A&gt;Th 1 , then operations adds two stages of diversity and goes to a state (8.0, 3.2, 4.8). Starting at state (11.2,4.8), a determination that F&gt;Th 1  adds further diversity and takes operations to state (8.0, 3.2, 4.8). If QoS becomes ameliorated, such that F&lt;Th 2 , then operations are transitioned from state (8.0, 3.2, 4.8) to state (11.2,4.8) and/or from state (11.2,4.8) to state (16,0) as shown. 
     Starting at state (11.2,0), a determination that A≧F&gt;Th 1  adds diversity and takes operations to a state (8.0,3.2). However, if F&gt;A&gt;Th 1 , then starting at (11.2,0) operations become more aggressive and add two stages of diversity and go to a state (5.7, 2.3, 3.2). If F&gt;Th 1  continues (unacceptable QoS) at state (8.0,3.2), then operations add diversity and go from state (8.0,3.2) to the state (5.7, 2.3, 3.2). If QoS becomes ameliorated, such that F&lt;Th 2 , then operations are transitioned from state (5.7, 2.3, 3.2) to state (8.0,3.2) and/or from state (8.0,3.2) to state (11.2,0) as shown. 
     Starting at state (8.0,0), a determination that A≧F&gt;Th 1  adds diversity and takes operations to a state (5.7,2.3). However, if F&gt;A&gt;Th 1 , then starting at (8.0,0), operations become more aggressive and add two stages of diversity and go to a state (4.0, 1.7, 2.3). If F&gt;Th 1  continues (unacceptable QoS) at state (5.7,2.3), then operations add diversity and go from state (5.7,2.3) to a state (4.0, 1.7, 2.3). If QoS becomes ameliorated, such that F&lt;Th 2 , then operations are transitioned from state (4.0, 1.7, 2.3) to state (5.7,2.3) and/or from state (5.7,2.3) to state (8.0,0) as shown. 
     With the use of ratio R in the transition criteria, overall transmission rate changes from low rate ovals are advantageously arranged to be larger than rate changes on return transitions between higher rate ovals. Thus, successively smaller increases in rate are achieved with finer increases as higher rates (and attendant network burden) are approached. 
       FIG. 30  shows a histogram of frequency in percent versus number # of consecutive packet losses in a window time interval such as 5 seconds. The instances of packet losses are tabulated zero (no loss) where a packet is received, one (1: only one packet lost and not two or more consecutively), two (2: two packets lost consecutively and not 3 or more consecutively), three (3: three packets lost consecutively and not 4 or more consecutively) and four plus (4+: four or more packets lost consecutively). 
     The histogram information is here recognized as quite useful for rate/diversity adaptation purposes. Even though the packet loss rate might be the same in two different cases, the aggressiveness of adaptation measures is suitably made more aggressive if the histogram is more populated with higher numbers of packets lost consecutively. 
       FIG. 31  shows a state transition diagram for implementing selectively aggressive measures based on the histogram information of  FIG. 30 . The receiver  361 ′ of  FIG. 3  collects the information of the histogram and acts upon it directly, or sends the information of the histogram back to sender  331  for rate/diversity adaptation in sender  331 . 
     In  FIG. 31  operations suitably are arranged to begin at a high source rate and low (or zero) diversity state (s 11 ,d 11 ). Different criteria called z 1  and z 2  cause respectively moderate and aggressive adaptation measures based on the consecutive packet loss histogram information. If z 1  occurs, then operations go from state (s 11 ,d 11 ) to reduce source rate and introduce an amount d 22  of single diversity at state (s 22 ,d 22 ). This is the moderate adaptation. 
     If z 2  occurs, then operations instead go from state (s 11 ,d 11 ) to reduce source rate and introduce two amounts of diversity d 42 ,e 42  at state (s 42 ,d 42 ,e 42 ). This is the aggressive adaptation. 
     Criterion z 1  is suitably established as (A≧F&gt;Th 1 ) AND frequency of two-consecutive-losses-or more is Th 2  or less. 
     Criterion z 2  is suitably established as (F&gt;A&gt;Th 1 ) OR frequency of two-consecutive-losses-or more exceeds Th 2 . 
     If and when QoS becomes ameliorated, such that a criterion z 3  is met, then operations are transitioned from state (s 42 ,d 42 ,e 42 ) to state (s 22 ,d 22 ), and/or from state (s 22 ,d 22 ) to state (s 12 ,d 12 ), and/or from state (s 12 ,d 12 ) to state (s 11 ,d 11 ) as shown. 
     Criterion z 3  is suitably established as (F&lt;Th 3 ) AND frequency of two-consecutive-losses-or more is less than a threshold Th 4 . 
     Th 1  is suitably made 3%, Th 2  is suitably 2%, Th 3  is suitably 0.5% and Th 4  is suitably 0.25%. The skilled worker suitably tunes the thresholds. Also, an automated tuning process suitably varies the thresholds over illustrative ranges 1-5% for Th 1  and Th 2 , and over 0% to 2% for Th 3  and Th 4  for most satisfactory adaptation operation. 
     Note among other advantageous features of the process of  FIG. 31  that the return transition from state (s 42 ,d 42 ,e 42 ) to state (s 22 ,d 22 ) is suitably made to be a larger transition in overall transmission rate than the subsequent return transition from (s 22 ,d 22 ) to (s 12 ,d 12 ) and thence to (s 11 ,d 11 ). In this way, a smoother servo homing behavior is achieved. 
       FIG. 31  is interpreted in light of the embodiments and transition criteria earlier discussed herein, and it should be apparent that numerous embodiments varying the arrangements illustrated in  FIG. 31  are also contemplated based on mixing and matching various criteria from other embodiments. 
       FIG. 32  illustrates process, device and system embodiments applying a further concept of varying the number of frames per packet (frm/pkt) by transition from a state  3211  (1 frm/pkt) to a state  3221  (2 frm/pkt) when A≧F&gt;Th 1 . When F&gt;A&gt;Th 1  in state  3211 , a more aggressive adaptation transition to a state  3231  (3 frm/pkt) occurs. 
     Bracketed sets of packets illustrate the meaning of each state. State  3211  corresponds to transmission of packets in a series of packets each with a header H and a payload comprising one frame of compressed data, sent at a certain number of packets per second and a certain number of frames per second. 
     A second state  3221  involves transmission of packets in a series of packets each with a header H and a payload comprising two frames of compressed data sent suitably (but not necessarily) at the same number of frames per second as in state  3211 , but at a different and fewer number of packets per second. Notice that a brace indicates 3 payload frames corresponding to comparable information distributed differently among packets depending on which state is used. 
     A third state  3231  involves transmission of packets in a series of packets each with a header H and a payload comprising three frames of compressed data sent suitably (but not necessarily) at the same number of frames per second as in state  3211 , but at a different and still fewer number of packets per second. Notice that 3 payload frames are included in the same one packet with its one header when state  3231  is used. 
     Return transitions occur when criterion F&lt;Th 2 . One return transition takes operations from state  3231  to state  3221 . Another return transition takes operations from state  3221  to state  3211 . 
     Note that the criteria for transition are suitably selected according to any of the various embodiments elsewhere described herein. 
     The variable frames-per-packet embodiments are suitably augmented with time or path or combined time/path diversity as shown in  FIG. 33 . Note that ovals surround states that have the same overall transmission rate sij+dij. Suppose a transmission rate of header bits is 8 kbps of overhead (ovhd), for example, when the source rate is 16.0 kbps with one frame per packet. Then in other ovals the transmission rate overhead of header bits is the 8 kbps base rate divided by the number of frames per packet. So ovhd=4 kbps at 2 frm/pkt, and ovhd=8/3 kbps at 3 frm/pkt. 
       FIG. 33  illustrates process, device and system embodiments applying diversity and variable number of frames per packet (frm/pkt) using multiple description (MD) technology. In  FIG. 33  operations transition from a state  3211  (1 frm/pkt, 16 kbps source rate, zero diversity rate) to a state  3325  (2 frm/pkt, (5.6 kbps source rate, 5.6 kbps diversity rate)) when A≧F&gt;Th 1 . When F&gt;A&gt;Th 1  in state  3211 , a more aggressive adaptation transition to a state  3335  (3 frm/pkt, (4 kbps source rate, 4 kbps diversity rate)) occurs. Further in  FIG. 33 , a network condition GK=1 OR BFR=1 occurring when operations occupy state  3211 , transitions the operations to a state  3221  (2 frm/pkt, 11.2 kbps, zero diversity). 
     Return transitions occur when criterion F&lt;Th 2 . One return transition takes operations from state  3335  to state  3325 . Another return transition takes operations from state  3325  to a state  3315  (1 frm/pkt, 8 kbps source rate, 8 kbps diversity rate). Another return transition takes operations from state  3315  to state  3211 . 
     Flow diagrams of some processes for control of frames/packet are the same as  FIG. 16  except the update-NEWSTATE steps  1621 ,  1623 ,  1629  and  1631  are programmed for frames per packet control. Thus,  FIG. 25  steps  2515  and  2551  are enhanced by incrementing frames/packet therein. Also,  FIG. 26  steps  2661  and  2671  are enhanced by decrementing frames/packet control bits to control RTP packet encapsulation  341  of  FIG. 3  and packet encapsulation unit  1571  of  FIG. 15 . Packet headers are suitably updated with new frames/packet information as desired in steps  2541 ,  2561  and  2651 . 
     Again, other criteria for the transitions as described elsewhere herein are suitably employed. Each of the types of time diversity, path diversity, and time/path diversity as described herein and in the incorporated U.S. Pat. No. 6,496,477 are contemplated for use in various embodiments. 
     Note that changing number of frames per packet, it may be advisable in some embodiments to make the frm/pkt transition only during a silence period following a talkspurt featuring unacceptable QoS. Other embodiments suitably make frm/pkt transition during a talkspurt without restriction. 
     Another embodiment performs a hybrid frame/packet adaptation: frame/packet increase occurs during both silence periods and active speech, but frame/packet decrease occurs during silence periods only. Steps  2515 ,  2551 ,  2661  and  2671  are correspondingly improved by preceding them with tests for presence of a talkspurt flag or a silence flag, so that the transitions occur according to the just mentioned logic embodiments that depend on silence only, or talkspurt, or during either silence or talkspurt. If the required test is not met, the respective step  2515 ,  2551 ,  2661  or  2671  is bypassed, and if the test is met the respective said step is performed. 
     Also, note a possible effect on some diversity methods when changing number of frames per packet. Suppose, for example, that a time diversity P(n)P(n−1)′ in one packet is changed to P(n)P(n−1)′ P(n+1)P(n)′ by changing to more frames per packet. If the longer packet is lost, both P(n)′ and P(n) are lost, meaning that all of the nth information is lost. Accordingly, some embodiments suitably change to a diversity method that is resistant to packet loss concurrently with (or at least close in time to) a transition from one number of frames per packet to a higher number of frames per packet. 
     Gateways, wireless base stations, private branch exchanges, networked appliances and other applications are suitably enabled by adaptive rate/diversity controls, chips, chipsets, printed circuit cards, and subsystems disclosed herein. Recoder and/or transcoding processes recodes or transcode the information and produces an output compressed and coded according to a different form than was received by a given device. It is contemplated that devices, processes and systems are suitably cascaded and integrated for various telecommunication and networking purposes. Where many channels are processed simultaneously, the systems are suitably replicated or multiplexed to the extent desired, so that software and hardware are effectively, efficiently and economically employed. Where blocks are shown herein, they are suitably implemented in hardware, firmware or software in any combination. The embodiments described are merely illustrative, while the scope of the inventive subject matter is defined by the claims and equivalents thereof.