Microsoft technology licensing, llc (20240137446). GENERATING AND PROCESSING CHARGING DATA RECORDS BASED ON PREDICTED RECORD LENGTH simplified abstract

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GENERATING AND PROCESSING CHARGING DATA RECORDS BASED ON PREDICTED RECORD LENGTH

Organization Name

microsoft technology licensing, llc

Inventor(s)

Devesh Verma of Delhi (IN)

Krishnakumar Vijayan of Bangalore (IN)

Kumar Arakere Basavaraj of Bangalore (IN)

Girish R. Nair of Nashua NH (US)

Arthur J. Barabell of Sudbury MA (US)

Venki Reddy Pulicherla of Bangalore (IN)

Abhishek Kumar Sinha of Bangalore (IN)

Basant Kumar of Bangalore (IN)

Pikan Ghosh of West Bengal (IN)

GENERATING AND PROCESSING CHARGING DATA RECORDS BASED ON PREDICTED RECORD LENGTH - A simplified explanation of the abstract

This abstract first appeared for US patent application 20240137446 titled 'GENERATING AND PROCESSING CHARGING DATA RECORDS BASED ON PREDICTED RECORD LENGTH

Simplified Explanation

The present disclosure relates to managing the generation and processing of charging data records (CDRs) in a telecommunication environment, such as 4G, 5G, or future generation mobile networks. The systems involve predicting CDR lengths before encoding and providing them to a charging gateway function to ensure they do not exceed a maximum allowable length, reducing the total number of CDR packages generated and transmitted.

  • Predicting CDR lengths before encoding
  • Providing CDRs to a charging gateway function to prevent exceeding maximum length
  • Reducing the total number of CDR packages generated and transmitted
  • Incrementally predicting CDR lengths as charging containers are added

Potential Applications

The technology can be applied in telecommunications companies, mobile network operators, and other industries that rely on efficient management of charging data records.

Problems Solved

1. Ensuring CDRs do not exceed maximum allowable length for processing 2. Reducing the total number of CDR packages generated and transmitted

Benefits

1. Improved efficiency in managing charging data records 2. Reduction in processing time and resources 3. Prevention of system overload due to excessive CDR generation

Potential Commercial Applications

Optimizing CDR management systems for telecommunications companies Improving data processing efficiency for mobile network operators

Possible Prior Art

One possible prior art could be systems that predict data lengths in other data processing environments, such as database management systems.

Unanswered Questions

How does this technology impact data security in telecommunication networks?

This article does not address the specific security measures implemented to protect the integrity of charging data records in telecommunication networks.

What are the potential limitations of this technology in handling large volumes of CDRs?

The article does not discuss the scalability of the system in managing a high volume of charging data records efficiently.


Original Abstract Submitted

the present disclosure generally relates to systems, methods, and computer-readable media for managing the generation and processing of charging data records (cdrs) in a telecommunication environment (e.g., a fourth generation (4g) a fifth generation (5g), or future generation mobile network). the systems described herein involve predicting lengths of cdrs prior to encoding and providing the cdrs to a charging gateway function to ensure that the cdrs do not exceed a maximum allowable length that the charging gateway function is capable of processing while also reducing the total number of cdr packages that are encoded and transmitted. indeed, the systems described herein can predict the length of the cdrs incrementally as charging containers are added, thus limiting the number of cdrs that are generated and processed.