| ==Phrack Inc.== |
| Volume One, Issue Two, Phile 6 of 9 |
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| Toward Universal Information Services Via ISDN |
| ~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~ ~~~ ~~~~ |
| by Taran King |
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| From PROTO newsletter of AT&T Bell Laboratories |
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| Phase one, the Present. |
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| The local network of today, although still largely |
| voice-oriented, is already on the path to Universal |
| Information Services. Lightguide fiber is dramatically |
| expanding the capacity of local networks, helping to lower |
| the costs and increase the demand for high-band width, |
| Information Age services. And public networks are |
| increasingly digital and geared for data and special |
| services. For example: |
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| o The AT&T Network Systems 5ESS (TM <riiiight>) switch, |
| designed by Bell Laboratories, can serve as the hub of a |
| local deployment of remote modules at locations up to 100 |
| miles from a host central office. |
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| o The Integrated Special Services Network (ISSN) is a channel |
| network that provides special services, customer control |
| options and digital private lines rearrangeable under |
| software control. The ISSN incorporates digital carrier |
| terminating equipment such as the D4 Channel Bank, D5 Digital |
| Terminal System and Digital Access and Cross-connect System |
| (DACS). |
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| o The New Centrex is bringing greater levels of customer |
| control, improved services and a broad range of data |
| capabilities to the business customer. |
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| Today's public networks consist of multiple or |
| overlay networks. The public switched network, or circuit |
| network, mainly for voice, is the base network. Two kinds of |
| overlay networks provide special services. Channel networks |
| carry private lines leased by large customers and transmit |
| much of today's data and image traffic; they also handle |
| traffic for network operations support. Packet networks |
| carry data communications, while packet switching is used |
| internally to public networks for common channel signaling to |
| set up, route and take down calls, or to give customers |
| information. |
| "Overlay networks help telecommunications companies |
| efficiently meet growing demand for digital transmission and |
| special services," says Stan Johnston, Market Planning |
| Manager, Network Systems Evolution, in AT&T Network Systems. |
| "Their integration into a single network, however, would be |
| still more effective." |
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| Phase two, the Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN). |
| ~~~~~ ~~~~ ~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ |
| The ISDN is a concept to which AT&T is committed - and it's |
| the foundation for Universal Information Services. The |
| central idea of ISDN, as AT&T Network Systems sees it, is to |
| provide an individual user a link to the local central office |
| of generous band-width - a digital subscriber line that can |
| carry 144,000 bits per second (sure beats 2400 baud!). The |
| band-width is subdivided into two 64,000-bit channels, which |
| may carry voice or data or both, and one 16,000-bit channel |
| for packetized signaling information or data transport. Such |
| a link provides convenient "integrated" network access by |
| accommodating voice, data and signaling over a single line. |
| The ISDN will make it easier for a customer to get |
| varied services from public and private networks. More |
| bandwidth for big customers will be available through another |
| ISDN access standard, the extended digital subscriber line, |
| which provides 1.5 billion bits per second as 24 channels of |
| 64,000 bits each. |
| In 1986, new software from Bell Labs will enable the |
| 5ESS switch to accommodate ISDN-sized 144,000-bit channels |
| that standardize and simplify subscribers' use of local |
| networks. AT&T is committed to future products that will |
| also be ISDN-compatible. Other vendors, too, some of whom |
| already plan to build premises, terminal, and other |
| equipment to ISDN standards, will make ISDN a cooperative |
| effort. |
| By providing integrated digital access to networks, |
| ISDN will make important progress toward the goal of |
| Universal Information Services. But overlay networks will |
| continue to divvy up the transport job. And messages needing |
| less than 144,000 bits per second will not fill their |
| allotted bandwidth, leaving capacity underutilized. |
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| Phase three, Universal Information Services. |
| ~~~~~ ~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ |
| Rooted in the fertile ground of 5ESS switches, ISDN equipment |
| and technologies such as wideband packet transport, Universal |
| Information Services will bear fruit during the 1990s. From |
| a single kind of network will hang services as different as |
| apples, oranges and pears. Just as network access was |
| integrated in ISDN, transport functions will increasingly be |
| integrated by powerful new network equipment evolved from |
| equipment developed for the ISDN. Where customers once got |
| standard-sized ISDN channels, they'll get big bandwidth for |
| large jobs, little bandwitdh for small jobs. |
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