Title: Chapter 12: Telecommunications Systems
1Data Communications and Computer Networks A
Business Users Approach Third Edition
- Chapter 12 Telecommunications Systems
2 Objectives
- Identify the basic elements of a telephone
system, and discuss the limitations of telephone
signals - Describe the composition of the telephone
industry before and after the 1984 Modified Final
Judgment, and explain the differences - Describe the difference between a local exchange
carrier and an interexchange carrier, and list
the services each offers
3 Objectives (continued)
- Differentiate between the roles of the local
telephone company before and after the
Telecommunications Act of 1996 - List the types of leased lines that are available
and their basic characteristics - Outline the features of ISDN, and distinguish a
basic rate interface from a primary rate
interface - List the basic characteristics of frame relay,
such as permanent virtual circuits, committed
information rate, and switched virtual circuits
4 Objectives (continued)
- Identify the main characteristics of Asynchronous
Transfer Mode, including the roles of the virtual
path connection and the virtual channel
connection, the importance of the classes of
service available, and ATMs advantages and
disadvantages - Identify the main characteristics of digital
subscriber line, and recognize the difference
between a symmetric system and an asymmetric
system
5 Introduction
- Students used to go into either data
communications or voice communications - Today, the two fields are merging
- Voice systems transfer computer data and data
networks support voice - Anyone studying the field of data communications
and networks must learn some basic
telecommunications too
6 The Basic Telephone System
- POTS is the plain old telephone system that
connects most homes and small businesses - POTS lines were designed to transmit the human
voice, which has a bandwidth less than 4000 Hz - A telephone conversation requires two channels,
each occupying 4000 Hz
7 The Basic Telephone System (continued)
8 The Basic Telephone System (continued)
- A 4000 Hz analog signal can only carry about
33,600 bits per second of information while a
4000 Hz digital signal can carry about 56,000
bits per second - If you want to send information faster, you need
a signal with a higher frequency OR you need to
incorporate more advanced modulation techniques - POTS cannot deliver faster signals
9 The Basic Telephone System (continued)
- Local loop is the telephone line that runs from
the telephone companys central office to your
home or business - Central office is the building that houses the
telephone companys switching equipment and
provides a local dial tone on your telephone - If you place a long distance call, the central
office passes your telephone call off to a long
distance provider
10 The Basic Telephone System (continued)
11 The Basic Telephone System (continued)
- The country is divided into a few hundred local
access transport areas (LATAs) - If your call goes from one LATA to another, it is
a long distance call and is handled by a long
distance telephone company - If your call stays within a LATA, it is a local
distance call and is handled by a local telephone
company
12 The Basic Telephone System (continued)
- A trunk is a special telephone line that runs
between central offices and other telephone
company switching centers - A trunk is usually digital, high speed, and
carries multiple telephone circuits - A trunk is typically a 4-wire circuit, while a
telephone line is a 2-wire circuit
13 The Basic Telephone System (continued)
- A trunk is not associated with a single telephone
number like a line is - A telephone number consists of an area code, an
exchange, and a subscriber extension - The area code and exchange must start with the
digits 2-9 to separate them from long distance
and operator services
14 The Basic Telephone System (continued)
15 The Basic Telephone System (continued)
- When the telephone company installs a line, it
must not proceed any further than 12 inches into
the building - This point is the demarcation point, or demarc
- Modular connectors, such as the RJ-11, are
commonly used to interconnect telephone lines and
the telephone handset to the base - When the handset is lifted off the base
(off-hook), an off-hook signal is sent to the
central office
16 The Basic Telephone System (continued)
- When the off-hook signal arrives at the central
office, a dial tone is generated and returned to
the telephone - When the user hears the dial tone, they dial (or
press) the number - The central office equipment collects the dialed
digits, and proceeds to place the appropriate call
17 The Basic Telephone System (continued)
- Foreign exchange service (FX) - customer calls a
local number which is then connected to a leased
line to a remote site - Wide area telecommunications services (WATS) -
discount volume calling to local and long
distance sites - Off premises extensions (OPX) - dial tone at
location B comes from the PBX at location A
18 The Telephone Network Before and After
1984
- In 1984, the U.S. government broke up ATT
- Before then, ATT owned a large majority of all
local telephone circuits and all the long
distance service - With the Modified Final Judgment of 1984, ATT
had to split off the local telephone companies
from the long distance company - The local telephone companies formed seven
Regional Bell Operating Companies - Today, there are only 4 left Bell South, SBC,
Qwest (US West), and Verizon (Bell Atlantic)
19 The Telephone Network Before and After
1984 (continued)
20 The Telephone Network Before and After
1984 (continued)
- Another result of the Modified Judgment was the
creation of the LATA (local access and transport
area) - Local telephone companies became known as local
exchange carriers (LECs) - Long distance telephone companies became known as
interexchange carriers (IEC, or IXC) - Calls that remain within a LATA are intra-LATA,
or local calls - Calls that pass from one LATA to another are
inter-LATA, or long distance
21 The Telephone Network Before and After
1984 (continued)
- Before 1984, the telephone network in the U.S.
resembled a large hierarchical tree, with Class 5
offices at the bottom and Class 1 offices at the
top - Users were connected to the Class 5 offices
- The longer the distance of a telephone call, the
further up the tree the call progressed - Todays telephone structure is a collection of
LECs, POPs, and IECs
22 Telephone Networks after 1996
- Telecommunications Act of 1996 opened up the
local telephone market to competitors - Now cable TV companies (cable telephony), long
distance telephone companies, or anyone that
wanted to start a local telephone company could
offer local telephone service - Local phone companies that existed before the Act
are known as incumbent local exchange carriers
(ILEC) while the new companies are competitive
local exchange carriers (CLEC)
23 Telephone Networks after 1996 (continued)
- LECs are supposed to allow CLECs access to all
local loops and switching centers / central
offices - If a local loop is damaged, the LEC is
responsible for repair - The LEC is also supposed to provide the CLEC with
a discount to the dial tone (17-20) - LECs can also provide long distance service if
they can show there is sufficient competition at
the local service level
24 Other Players in the Market
- Alternate operator services - pay phones, hotel
phones - Aggregators - pulls a bunch of small companies
together and goes after phone discounts - Reseller - rents or leases variety of lines from
phone companies, then resells to customers - Specialized mobile radio carriers - mobile
communication services to businesses and
individuals, including dispatch, paging, and data
services - ARDIS and RAM Mobile Data two good examples
25 PBX
- Private branch exchange (PBX) - common internal
phone switching system for medium to large-sized
businesses - Provides advanced intelligent features to users,
such as - 4-digit internal dialing
- Special prefixes for WATS, FX, etc (private
dialing plans) - PBX intelligently decides how to route a call for
lowest cost
26 More PBX Features
- Voice mail
- Routes incoming calls to the best station set
(automatic call distribution) - Provides recorded messages and responds to
touch-tone requests (automated attendant) - Access to database storage and retrieval
(interactive voice response) - VoIP
27 PBX Components
- CPU, memory, telephone lines, trunks
- Switching network
- Supporting logic cards
- Main distribution frame
- Console or switchboard
- Battery back-up system
28 Automated Attendant
- Plays a recorded greeting and offers a set of
options - Lets the caller enter an extension directly
(touch tone or voice) and bypass an operator - Forwards the caller to a human operator if the
caller does not have a touch tone phone - Available as an option on a PBX
29 Automatic Call Distributor
- Automatic Call Distributor perhaps youve
experienced this when you call a business, are
told all operators / technicians / support staff
etc. are busy, and that your call will be
answered in the order it was received - Used in systems where incoming calling volume is
large, such as customer service, help desk, order
entry, credit authorization, reservations, and
catalog sales - Early systems used hunt groups
- Original systems routed call to first operator in
line (kept person very busy!)
30 Automatic Call Distributor (continued)
- Modern systems perform more advanced functions,
such as - Prioritize the calls
- Route calls to appropriate agent based on the
skill set of the agent - If all agents busy, deliver call to waiting queue
and play appropriate message (like how long they
may have to wait) - Forward calls to another call center, or perform
automatic return call
31 Interactive Voice Response
- IVR is similar to AA EXCEPT
- IVR incorporates a connection to a database (on a
mainframe or server) - IVR allows caller to access and/or modify
database information - IVR can also perform fax on demand
32 Interactive Voice Response (continued)
- Common examples of IVR include
- Calling your bank to inquire about an account
balance - University online registration system
- Brokerage firm taking routine orders from
investors - Investment fund taking routine requests for new
account applications - A company providing employees with info about
their benefit plans
33 Key Telephone System
- Used within a small office or a branch office, a
key telephone system (KTS) is an on-premise
resource sharing device similar to a PBX - For example, a key system might distribute 48
internal telephone sets over 16 external phone
lines - The business would pay for the 16 individual
lines but have 48 telephone sets operating - User selects outside line by pressing
corresponding line button on key set (phone)
34 Leased Line Services
- Most home computer users use POTS lines and
conventional modems to connect to other computer
systems - What if you need a faster service, or need one
that is always on? - You can get a leased line service
- A basic leased line, or tie line, gives you a 56
kbps data transfer rate - T-1 (or T1) service provides 1.544 Mbps rate
- Used by businesses to connect their in-house
telephone systems (PBX) and data networks to the
outside world
35 T-1 Service
- A T-1 service is a digital, synchronous TDM
stream used by businesses and telephone companies - A T-1 service is always on and always
transmitting - One T-1 service can support up to 24 simultaneous
channels - These channels can be either voice or data (PBX
support) - A T-1 service can also be provisioned as a single
channel delivering 1.544 Mbps of data (LAN to ISP
connection)
36 T-1 Service (continued)
- A T-1 service requires 4 wires, as opposed to a
2-wire telephone line - A T-1 can be either intra-LATA (local) which
costs roughly 350-400 per month, or inter-LATA
(long distance) which can cost thousands of
dollars per month (usually based on distance) - A customer may also be able to order a ¼ T-1 or a
½ T-1
37 T-1 Service (continued)
- T-1constantly transmits frames (8000 frames per
second) - Each frame consists of one byte from each of the
24 channels, plus 1 sync bit (8 24 1 193
bits) - 8000 frames per second 193 bits per frame
1.544 Mbps - If a channel is used for voice, each byte is one
byte of PCM-encoded voice - If a channel is used for data, each byte contains
7 bits of data and 1 bit of control information
(7 8000 56 kbps)
38 Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN)
- ISDN is another leased service that provides a
digital telephone or data connection into a home
or business - With ISDN you can have a digital telephone line
and a 64 kbps data line, or one 128 kbps data
line - The basic rate interface (BRI) is the service for
homes and small businesses, while the primary
rate interface (PRI) is the service for larger
businesses
39 ISDN (continued)
- BRI ISDN consists of two B channels and one D
channel - A B channel can carry 64 kbps of data or
PCM-encoded voice - The D channel is 16 kbps and carries signaling
information - The B channels are dialable, and the D channel
can be always on - Many users combine both B channels for a 128 kbps
data channel
40 ISDN (continued)
- PRI ISDN is used by larger businesses and
contains 23 B channels and one 64 kbps D channel - PRI ISDN is essentially equivalent to a T-1, but
with ISDN, the 23 channels are dialable! - The appropriate ISDN modems / multiplexors are
necessary to support this service - What could you use an always-on D channel for?
41 Frame Relay
- Frame relay is the leased service that can
provide a high-speed connection for data transfer
between two points either locally or over long
distances - A business only has to connect itself to the
local frame relay port - Hopefully this connection is a local telephone
call - Once the data reaches the local frame relay port,
the frame relay network, or cloud, transmits the
data to the other side
42 Frame Relay (continued)
43 Frame Relay (continued)
- A connection between two endpoints is called a
permanent virtual circuit (PVC) - PVCs are created by the provider of the frame
relay service - User uses a high-speed telephone line to connect
its company to a port, which is the entryway to
the frame relay network - The high-speed line, the port, and the PVC should
all be chosen to support a desired transmission
speed
44 Frame Relay (continued)
45 Frame Relay (continued)
- Consider a company that has four office locations
and currently has six leased lines
interconnecting the four locations - To install frame relay, the company would ask for
six PVCs in place of the six leased lines - The company would also need four high-speed
telephone lines and four ports connecting the
four locations to the frame relay cloud
46 Frame Relay Setup
47 Frame Relay Setup (continued)
48 Committed Information Rate (CIR)
- The user and frame relay service would agree upon
a committed information rate (CIR) - CIR states that if the customer stays within a
specified data rate (standard rate plus a burst
rate), the frame relay provider will guarantee
delivery of 99.99 of the frames - The burst rate cannot be exceeded for longer than
2 seconds
49 CIR (continued)
- Example If a company agrees to a CIR of 512 kbps
with a burst rate of 256 kbps, the company must
stay at or below 512 kbps, with an occasional
burst up to 768 kbps, as long as the burst does
not last longer than 2 seconds - If the company maintains their end of the
agreement, the carrier will provide something
like 99.99 throughput and a network delay of no
longer than 20 ms - If the customer exceeds its CIR, and the network
becomes congested, the customers frames may be
discarded
50 Frame Relay vs. the Internet
- Frame relay has many advantages over the
Internet, including guaranteed throughput and
minimum delay as well as better security - Internet has the advantage of being practically
everywhere - Cheaper and simpler to create connections (no
PVCs necessary) - Internet tunnels (VPNs) are also attractive
51 Voice over Frame Relay (VoFR)
- Frame relay is also capable of supporting voice
communications - High transfer speeds adequately support the needs
of interactive voice - If a company requires multiple voice circuits,
frame relay is an interesting solution
52 Frame Relay Switched Virtual Circuits
- Frame relay can also provide switched virtual
circuits (SVC) - An SVC can be created dynamically by the customer
- Good for short-term connections, but more
expensive
53 Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM)
- Asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) is a very high
speed packet delivery service, similar in a
number of ways to frame relay - Both send packets of data over high speed lines
- Both require a user to create a circuit with a
provider - One noticeable difference between ATM and frame
relay is speed - ATM is capable of speeds up to 622 Mbps while
frame relays maximum is typically 45 Mbps
54 ATM (continued)
- Similar to frame relay, data travels over a
connection called a virtual channel connection
(VCC) - To better manage VCCs, a VCC must travel over a
virtual path connection (VPC) - One of ATMs strengths (besides its high speeds)
is its ability to offer various classes of
service - If a company requires a high-speed, continuous
connection, they might consider a constant bit
rate service
55 ATM (continued)
- Variable Bit Rate (VBR) less demanding service
- Can also support real time applications (rt-VBR),
as well as non-real time applications (nrt-VBR),
but does not demand a constant bit stream - Available bit rate (ABR) used for bursty traffic
that does not need to be transmitted immediately - ABR traffic may be held up until a transmission
opening is available - Unspecified bit rate (UBR) for lower rate
traffic that may get held up, and may even be
discarded part way through transmission if
congestion occurs
56 Advantages and Disadvantages of ATM
- Advantages of ATM include very high speeds and
different classes of service - Disadvantages include potentially higher costs
(both equipment and support) and a higher level
of complexity
57 Digital Subscriber Line
- Digital subscriber line (DSL) is a relative
newcomer to the field of leased line services - DSL can provide very high data transfer rates
over standard telephone lines - Unfortunately, less than half the telephone lines
in the U.S. are incapable of supporting DSL - There has to be a DSL provider in your region
58 DSL (continued)
- DSL, depending on the type of service, is capable
of transmission speeds from 100s of kilobits into
single-digit megabits - Because DSL is highly dependent upon noise
levels, a subscriber cannot be any more than 5.5
kilometers (2-3 miles) from the DSL central
office - Service can be symmetric, in which downstream and
upstream speeds are identical, or asymmetric in
which downstream speed is faster than upstream
speed
59 DSL (continued)
- A DSL service often connects a user to the
Internet - A DSL service can also provide a regular
telephone service (POTS) - The DSL provider uses a DSL access multiplexer
(DSLAM) to split off the individual DSL lines
into homes and businesses - A user then needs a splitter to separate the POTS
line from the DSL line, and then a DSL modem to
convert the DSL signals into a form recognized by
the computer
60 DSL (continued)
61 DSL (continued)
- A DSL service comes in many different forms
- ADSL - Asymmetric DSL
- CDSL - Consumer DSL (trademarked version by
Rockwell) - DSL.Lite - Slower form than ADSL
- HDSL - High-bit rate DSL
- RADSL - Rate adaptive DSL (speed varies
depending on noise level)
62 DSL (continued)
63 Computer Telephony Integration
- Computer telephony integration (CTI) emerging
field that combines more traditional voice
networks with modern computer networks - Consider a system in which a customer calls a
customer support number - Customers telephone number appears on customer
support reps terminal and immediately pulls up
customers data - Rep answers phone by clicking on an icon on the
screen and helps the customer - Rep transfers the call by clicking on another
icon on the computer screen
64 Computer Telephony Integration
(continued)
- CTI can also integrate voice cabling with data
cabling - PBX talks directly to the LAN server
- PBX can direct the LAN server to provide a
telephone operation to the user through the
users computer - Telephones may still be connected to the PBX or
they may be connected to the LAN via the LAN
wiring
65 Computer-Telephony Integration (CTI)
- CTI applications could include the following
- Unified messaging Third party call control
- Interactive voice response PBX Graphic User
Interface - Integrated voice recognition Call filtering
- and response
- Fax processing and fax-back Customized
menuing systems - Text-to-speech and speech-to-text conversions
66 Telecommunication Systems in Action A
Company Makes a Service Choice
- Better Box Corporation has offices in Seattle,
San Francisco, and Dallas, with headquarters in
Chicago - Better Box wants to connect Chicago to each of
the other three offices - Better Box needs to download 400 kbyte files in
20 seconds - Requires a transmission speed of 160,000 bps
- Better Box could use three separate T-1 lines,
use a frame relay service, or use asynchronous
transfer mode
67 Telecommunications Systems in Action A
Company Makes a Service Choice
68 Telecommunications Systems in Action A
Company Makes a Service Choice
69 Telecommunications Systems in Action A
Company Makes a Service Choice
- Better Box Corporation might also consider
dial-up access lines, ISDN BRI service, and
leased 56k lines - Dial-up, ISDN BRI, and leased 56k lines will not
meet the companys requirements for a 160 kbps
download - Typical various prices for these services are
shown on the next table
70 Telecommunications Systems in Action A
Company Makes a Service Choice
- To provide T-1 service to all four offices
- Seattle to Chicago 6325 (1200 2.50 per
mile) - San Francisco to Chicago 6625
- Dallas to Chicago 3500
- Total interLATA T-1 costs 16,450 / month
71 Telecommunications Systems in Action A
Company Makes a Service Choice
- To provide frame relay service
- Three ports at 256K 3 x 495
- One port at 768K 1240
- Three 256K PVCs 3 x 230
- Four intraLATA T-1s 4 x 350
- Total charge 4815 / month
72 Telecommunications Systems in Action A
Company Makes a Service Choice
- To provide asynchronous transfer mode service
- Four ports at 1.544 Mbps ABR 4 x 1750
- Three channels 3 x 250
- Three paths 2 per mile x 5140 miles 10,280
- Four intraLATA T-1s 4 x 350
- Total ATM charges 19,430 / month
73 Summary
- Telephone system
- 1984 Modified Final Judgment
- Local exchange carrier vs. interexchange carrier
- Telecommunications Act of 1996
- Leased lines
- ISDN and basic rate interface vs. primary rate
interface - Frame relay
- Asynchronous Transfer Mode
- Digital subscriber line and symmetric vs.
asymmetric system