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Floor control

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Floor control allows users of networked multimedia applications to utilize and share resources such as remote devices, distributed data sets, telepointers, or continuous media such as video and audio without access conflicts. Floors are temporary permissions granted dynamically to collaborating users in order to mitigate race conditions and guarantee mutually exclusive resource usage.[1]

Basically, in floor control a user who wishes to speak makes a request (through his/her user equipment unit (UE)) for the right to speak, and then waits for a response that either grants or denies the user's request. In accordance with early PoC proposals, the floor is granted only for talk burst on a first received basis, and no queuing of floor control messages is performed.

References

  1. ^ "Floor Control for Multimedia Conferencing and Collaboration (1997)".

2. Method and system for floor control for group call telecommunications services