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Citations from Books

[edit]

I've removed the following from the article. these do not appear to be particularly useful for readers by may be useful for editors. ~Kvng (talk) 17:13, 4 February 2021 (UTC)[reply]

  • "We present results of experiments performed on oSIP, an open-source implementation of the Session Initiation Protocol embedded in many IP Phones."
Association for Computing Machinery. Special Interest Group on Embedded Systems. (2006). EMSOFT 2006: proceedings of the Sixth ACM & IEEE International Conference on Embedded Software. ACM Press. p. 263.
  • "We applied our tool to a large software application: oSIP, an open-source implementation of the Session Initiation Protocol."
Chakrabarti, Arindam (2007). A Framework for Compositional Design and Analysis of Systems. p. 197.
  • "The development of m-learning server and user entity will be based on oSIP, eXosip and oRTP, which are open source SIP software."
Li, Frederick; Zhao, Jianmin (2008). Advances in Web Based Learning - ICWL 2008. Springer. p. 545.
  • "In the second function, they are: the execution of the scripts to switch on/off the wireless interface; the creation and initialization of a new eXosip stack (the C-based SIP stack used by UCT IMS client); and the invocation of a new register phase."
Bonnin, Jean-Marie; Giannelli, Carlo; Magedanz, Thomas (2009). Mobilware 2009. Springer. p. 289.
  • "The implementation of the client is achieved by the use of several free open-source libraries: the oSIP and eXosip libraries for SIP signalling;..."
Al-Begain, Khalid; Balakrishna, Chitra; Galindo, Luis Angel; Fernandez, David Moro (2009). A Development and Deployment Perspective. John Wiley & Sons. p. 206.
  • "We have implemented a simple IMS client using eXtended osip (eXosip) library in C programming."
Prasad, Anand R.; Buford, John F; Gurbani, K. Vijay (2011). Future Internet Services and Service Architectures. River Publishers. p. 309.
  • "There have been many mature open source SIP stack at present, such as Osip/Exosip, OPAL, VOCAL, etc. Among these SIP stacks, Osip/Exosip, which is small and fast, is most suitable for portable applications."
Sung, Wen-Pei; Kao, Jimmy C.M.; Chen, Ran (2012). Frontiers of Energy and Environmental Engineering. CRC Press. p. 314.