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Title: Foundations


1
Foundations

  • How we got to where we are

2
Information Communications Technology
  • Telephone and messaging service to all parts of
    the world
  • Worldwide digital communications
  • Entertainment services
  • Personal computers
  • Worldwide connectivity via the Internet and the
    World Wide Web
  • Access to information of all kinds

3
How Did We Get to Where We Are
  • We started with simple hand-keyed Morse code
    telegraphy
  • Introduced voice telephone networks
  • Moved to digital technology within them
  • Then to the provision of data communication
    networks of two types
  • the TDM synchronous, circuit-oriented networks of
    the telephone industries and
  • the best-effort, packet-switched internetworking
    strategies of the US DoD, which grew into the
    Internet and gave us the IP Networks of today.

4
Where Will We Be Tomorrow?
  • A ubiquitous broadband, multimedia, IP-based
    network
  • with a large set of communication services
  • serving an immense array of applications
    dependent on information and communications
    technology (ICT)
  • which are available to enable and support all
    aspects of modern society.

5
Applications Enabled by ICT
  • Banking and Financial Transactions
  • Transportation and Travel
  • Business
  • Commerce
  • Property Management
  • Education
  • Medicine
  • Entertainment
  • Security
  • Military Affairs
  • Justice
  • Industry

6
ICT Services
  • Information Storage, Retrieval, Distribution,
    and Processing
  • Messaging IM, email
  • Conferencing
  • Telemetry, Telematics
  • Reservations and Scheduling
  • Inventory and Catalog Management
  • Command and Control
  • Billing, Accounting, Paying
  • Audio, Video and Data

7
ICT Applications
  • E-Commerce
  • Publishing
  • Supply Chain Management
  • Social Networking
  • Multimedia Broadcasting

8
Are these new ideas?
  • No, they are not!
  • A man named Casson said it all back in 1910, when
    the telephone revolution had come and gone.

9
It has all been said before!
  • In 1910, H.D. Casson wrote a book, entitled The
    History of the Telephone, in which he made it
    obvious that the future had arrived!
  • The History of the Telephone is a fascinating
    book. It provides a detailed, on-the-spot
    recounting of the early days with Bell and the
    ATT Co,
  • In addition it describes existing and potential
    telephone applications that we are still
    implementing and re-inventing!
  • The coverage of social implications is amazing.
    The insights in THOTH have been repeatedly
    rediscovered in every review that has taken place
    since.
  • http//sailor.gutenberg.org/by-title/xx710.html

10
The History Of The Telephone
  • Thirty-five short years, and presto! The newborn
    art of telephony is fullgrown. Three million
    telephones are now scattered abroad in foreign
    countries, and seven millions are massed here, in
    the land of its birth.
  • So entirely has the telephone outgrown the
    ridicule with which, as many people can well
    remember, it was first received, that it is now
    in most places taken for granted, as though it
    were a part of the natural phenomena of this
    planet. It has so marvellously extended the
    facilities of conversation--that "art in which a
    man has all mankind for competitors"--that it is
    now an indispensable help to whoever would live
    the convenient life.

11
From THOTT
  • The disadvantage of being deaf and dumb to all
    absent persons, which was universal in
    pre-telephonic days, has now happily been
    overcome and I hope that this story of how and
    by whom it was done will be a welcome addition to
    american libraries.
  • What we might call the telephonization sic of
    city life, for lack of a simpler word, has
    remarkably altered our manner of living from what
    it was in the days of Abraham Lincoln. It has
    enabled us to be more social and cooperative. It
    has literally abolished the isolation of separate
    families, and has made us members of one great
    family.

12
  • It has become so truly an organ of the social
    body that by telephone we now enter into
    contracts, give evidence, try lawsuits, make
    speeches, propose marriage, confer degrees,
    appeal to voters, and do almost everything else
    that is a matter of speech.
  • Casson described uses of the telephone that we
    still hear pundits predicting today. For
    example, he noted that "There seems to be no sort
    of activity which is not being made more
    convenient by the telephone."

13
  • The hundred largest hotels in New York City have
    twenty-one thousand telephones--nearly as many as
    the continent of Africa and more than the kingdom
    of Spain.
  • The Christmas Eve orders that flash into Marshall
    Field's store, or John Wanamaker's, have risen as
    high as the three thousand mark.
  • Whether the telephone does most to concentrate
    population, or to scatter it, is a question that
    has not yet been examined.

14
  • It is certainly true that it has made the
    skyscraper possible, and thus helped to create an
    absolutely new type of city, such as was never
    imagined even in the fairy tales of ancient
    nations. its efficiency is largely, if not
    mainly, due to the fact that its inhabitants may
    run errands by telephone as well as by elevator.
  • It is used to call the duck-shooters in Western
    Canada when a flock of birds has arrived and to
    direct the movements of the Dragon in Wagner's
    grand opera "Siegfried.

15
  • At the last Yale-Harvard football game, it
    conveyed almost instantaneous news to fifty
    thousand people in various parts of New England.
  • At such expensive pageants as that of the Quebec
    Tercentenary in 1908, where four thousand actors
    came and went upon a ten-acre stage, every order
    was given by telephone. . In the last ten years
    there has been a sweeping revolution in this
    respect. Government by telephone!

16
  • Next to public officials, bankers were perhaps
    the last to accept the facilities of the
    telephone. As for stockbrokers of the Wall Street
    species, they transact practically all their
    business by telephone
  • The telephone arrived in time to prevent big
    corporations from being unwieldy and
    aristocratic. The foreman of a Pittsburg coal
    company may now stand in his subterranean office
    and talk to the president of the Steel Trust, who
    sits on the twenty-first floor of a New York
    skyscraper.

17
  • The long-distance talks, especially, have grown
    to be indispensable to the corporations whose
    plants are scattered and geographically misplaced.

18
Predicted Applications from Casson
  • In-room hotel service
  • Shopping by phone
  • Run errands by phone, enabling skyscrapers,
    disbursed cities
  • News gathering, sports results
  • Stock transactions
  • Mobile - boats, trains
  • Management of disbursed activities, businesses
  • Democracy in business
  • 911 Emergency services

19
and many more.
  • To-day the telephone goes to sea in the passenger
    steamer and the warship. Its wires are waiting at
    the dock and the depot, so that a tourist may sit
    in his stateroom and talk with a friend in some
    distant office.
  • In the operation of trains, several dozen roads
    have now put it in use, some employing it as an
    associate of the Morse method and others as a
    complete substitute. It has already been found to
    be the quickest way of despatching trains. It
    will do in five minutes what the telegraph did in
    ten. And it has enabled railroads to hire more
    suitable men for the smaller offices.

20
  • In news-gathering, too, much more than in
    railroading, the day of the telephone has
    arrived.
  • But it is in a dangerous crisis, when safety
    seems to hang upon a second, that the telephone
    is at its best.
  • In the supreme emergency of war, the telephone is
    as indispensable, very nearly, as the cannon.
    This, at least, is the belief of the Japanese,
    who handled their armies by telephone when they
    drove back the Russians

21
  • It is the instrument of emergencies, a sort of
    ubiquitous watchman.
  • When the girl operator in the exchange hears a
    cry for help--"Quick! The hospital!" "The fire
    department!" "The police!" she seldom waits to
    hear the number. She knows it. She is trained to
    save half-seconds. And it is at such moments, if
    ever, that the users of a telephone can
    appreciate its insurance value.
  • When instant action is needed in the city of New
    York, a General Alarm can in five minutes be sent
    by the police wires over its whole vast area of
    three hundred square miles.

22
  • If a disaster cannot be prevented, it is the
    telephone, usually, that brings first aid to the
    injured.
  • After the destruction of San Francisco, Governor
    Guild, of Massachusetts, sent an appeal for the
    stricken city to the three hundred and fifty-four
    mayors of his State and by the courtesy of the
    Bell Company, which carried the messages free,
    they were delivered to the last and furthermost
    mayors in less than five hours.

23
  • Every fourth American farmer is in telephone
    touch with his neighbors and the market.
  • The first farmer who discovered the value of the
    telephone was the market gardener.
  • As yet, few farmers have learned to appreciate
    the value of quality in telephone service, as
    they have in other lines. The same man who will
    pay six prices for the best seed-corn, and who
    will allow nothing but high-grade cattle in his
    barn, will at the same time be content with the
    shabbiest and flimsiest telephone service,
    without offering any other excuse than that it is
    cheap.

24
  • But this is a transient phase of farm telephony.
    The cost of an efficient farm system is now so
    little-- not more than two dollars a month, that
    the present trashy lines are certain sooner or
    later to go to the junk-heap with the sickle and
    the flail and all the other cheap and
    unprofitable things.

25
Prescient, or what?
  • If you consider that the invention of wireless
    communications occurred about the same time
    1900 - maybe we should recognize that we have
    been in the post-modern era of telecommunications
    ever since?

26
The Beginning - Telegraphy
1845
27
Where Are We Now?
  • Let me start by telling you something about
    how the
  • telephone system works and
  • how the Internet works.

28
Early 21st Century Telephony
  • The voice signal generated by the microphone in
    your telephone set is transmitted along a twisted
    pair of copper wires to the nearest Local Office.
  • There it is sampled 8000 times per second
  • and the sample values are quantized into one of
    255 amplitude levels and
  • represented by an 8-bit binary number
  • an octet, or byte, of 1s and 0s.

29
Calling
  • When you pick up the phone, the network is
    notified and sends you a dial-tone to let you
    know that it is ready willing and able to accept
    your input.
  • In the telephone world you respond by dialing
    dialing a telephone number.
  • The telephone number is a command to the network
    to make a connection from your phone line to that
    of the called party, and to check the status of
    that partys phone.
  • If it is available the network rings the called
    party and sends you a copy of the ringing sounds.
    If not, it sends you a busy signal.

30
  • When the called party answers you have a direct
    connection to them
  • Then it is up to you to decide what to do
  • talk to the machine,
  • hang up, or
  • talk to the person/machine who/that answered.
  • The connection will be maintained until one of
    you hangs up.

31
Number Please
  • That gives you a connection, but how did it get
    established.
  • It used to be done by young women the voice
    with a smile plugging wires together in a
    switchboard.

32
Todays Answer is the Advanced Intelligent
Network
  • In the AIN, the establishment of the connection
    is done through a signaling system that runs on a
    packet-switched data network which is separate
    from the transport network.
  • This signaling system, called SS7, has three
    types of nodes
  • service switches,
  • service controls, and
  • signal switches.

33
AIN in action
  • When you dial, the number is received by a
    service switch where it is sent to the service
    control a database where the connection
    details are stored.
  • After the availability of the called party is
    assured, this connection information is sent to
    the signal transfer points the voice switches -
    to make the connection.

34
Basic Signaling Architecture
Service Control
Signal Transfer
Service Switch
35
Basic Call Setup
Signal Transfer
STP
STP
Service Switch
SSP
SSP
36
Benefits of SS7
  • Having a signaling system that is separate from
    the talking system means that expensive
    communications bandwidth is not tied up while
    dialing takes place (even touch-tone dialing
    takes a lot of time) freeing up a lot of
    communications capacity.
  • More than, since the actual telephone number is
    stored in memory, it allows such services as 911,
    411, 1-800 numbers, group dialing, and so on
  • This also allows such neat things as directing
    calls to an appropriate 24-hour-service-centre
    depending on the time-of-day.

37

Shared Circuits - Multiplexing
  • Telephone wires and cables are expensive
  • Your telephone call is multiplexed (combined)
    with thousands of others on a time-sharing basis
    on very high capacity digital transmission links
    as it moves along the established circuit from
    one signal switch to another on its way to the
    destination.
  • This is called time division multiplexing

38
Time Division Multiplexing
In telephony each source is sampled 8,000 time
per second
39
TDM Applications
  • Digital Telephony
  • Data Communications
  • Satellite Access
  • Optical Fibre
  • Cellular Radio

40
Data Communications
  • The digital time division multiplexed telephone
    (TDM) networks, based on 64 kbps digital voice
    channels, are the major carriers of data
    communications as well.
  • Data transmission rates on the worlds
    telecommunication networks vary from 56 kbps from
    a voiceband modem on your phone line to 1.5 Mbps,
    or so, on DSL, to 10s of Terabits per second on
    optical fiber trunks.

41
Digital TDM Hierarchy
42
SONET Rates
Optical systems now carry 160 OC-192 signals
using lDM on a single fibre
43
Computer Communications
  • A parallel genesis of modern networks started
    with what some call
  • computer communications,
  • more properly referred to as
  • packet-switched communications, that
  • grew out of a solution to requirements of the
    US DoD for command and control messaging networks
    that could survive nuclear war.

44
DoD requirements
  • The DoD requirements originated with ARPANET and
    DDN to meet DOD requirements
  • survivability
  • no central points of failure
  • availability
  • security

45
  • network interoperability
  • accommodate heterogeneous networks and terminal
    equipment
  • handle surge traffic
  • lots of excess capacity
  • parallel routes
  • support priority traffic

46
The Origins of the Internet
  • As one of those confluences that occur in
    technological evolution, there were groups of
    researchers with common backgrounds (MIT,
    Berkley, Stanford) who had used computers with
    serial character communications USART ports and
    teletype machines as terminals.
  • They had extended the access to their own
    computers locally over twisted-pair wiring and
    remotely over telephone lines with rudimentary
    modems, as a convenience that led to experiments
    with time-shared computing.

47
  • So, they took to connecting across the continent
    to keep in contact, and being lazy souls
    -developed the software that enabled their
    activities for exchanging messages and files.
  • They knew that computer output only came in
    bursts when the Enter key was depressed - and
    so they invented ways to transmit data in short,
    intermittent packages called packets.
  • the idea grew
  • and turned into the solution to the DoD problem.

48
Line Sharing
  • The idea of using packets short blocks of data
    for communications between computers,
  • in a day when telephone or data line charges were
    high,
  • allowed the line to be shared in a simple way
    first you, then me the Aphonse-Gaston protocol
    for getting through the narrow doorway.

49
Bursty Data
  • This idea is based on the observation that
    computer data is bursty. This made perfectly
    good sense at the time.
  • After all, the only time when data had to be
    communicated was when you hit the ENTER key and
    the contents of the keyboard memory buffer had to
    be sent to the mainframe, or when a screen full
    of characters had to be sent, or an email sent.
  • So, knowing that data is bursty one can package
    it with the address of the sender and the address
    of the recipient written on the face of the
    envelop and give it to the network to deliver.

50
As the Post Office Does
  • The first station knows which truck to put your
    letter on to get it on its way.
  • The distribution center in Ottawa knows which
    trucks go to Montreal and points East and North,
    and which go to Toronto, and points West and
    South.
  • A similar situation is true of every sorting
    station the letter goes through. When it gets to
    its final destination, the local mail room gets
    it to you.

51
  • Great! A connectionless network. A fire and
    forget system launch and leave! Makes very
    efficient use of the trucks on each intermediate
    link.
  • The smarts are in the network, not in some
    centralized switching center.
  • Every switch (router) is equal to every other.
  • This is called a peer-to-peer network.

52
Routing
  • OK, so how do routers know the routes to support
    this internetworking idea?
  • Each router in the network has software that asks
    every adjacent router to provide routing
    information about all the routers that it is
    connected to continuously - throughout the
    entire internetwork!

53
  • The packet-switching concept grew into a suite of
    protocols, called the Department of Defense
    Protocol Standards, developed as part of the
    ARPANET.
  • From this beginning, the internetworking
    protocols have grown into what is now known as
    the TCP/IP or Internet Protocol Suite.
  • The governing body for this suite of protocols is
    the IETF the Internet Engineering Taskforce.

54
Recent Status
  • The telecommunication industry and its clients
    the worlds telephone companies using
    circuit-emulating, TDM digital networks, and
  • Computer operators using best effort, TCP/IP
    packet switched routers to interconnect networks,
    mostly consisting of Ethernet-based local area
    networks.

55
Recent Status
  • Recently (which means really recently) we have
    the computer communications community, i.e., the
    Internet providers, moving very quickly to
    introduce new technology (equipment and
    methodologies) that improves the quality of
    service in best effort TCP/IP networks so that
    they can carry the output of continuous sources
    such as voice and video.

56
  • The improvement in quality has been so rapid in
    fact that the worlds telecommunications
    companies (carriers) and cable TV companies have
    started to deploy packet switches in their core
    networks and to employ IP LAN technologies in
    their wired and wireless local loops.
  • The introduction of IP technology into the
    carrier networks has also been driven by the
    flexibility and power it affords.
  • Local Area Networks

57
Convergence
  • The worlds networks are beginning to converge
    towards a reliance on the use of an
    ever-expanding TCP/IP suite of protocols with new
    mechanisms to provide circuit-like connections to
    subscribers that are capable of carrying
    streaming information such as voice and
    television.

58
Convergence
  • Convergence used to be a future for
    communications.
  • Today it is the present.
  • The goal is a single portal
  • For all services radio, TV, telephone, email,
    file transfer, www access, space management,
    personal command and control, etc.
  • Offered by a single network.

59
Common basis
  • The exciting accelerant to this progress is that
    the same programming technologies are used in the
    applications running in the computers, on the
    terminal equipment, and in the network.
  • An application designed for a communications
    switch is written in the same language, using the
    same software components, that the business data
    processing entities it connects are.

60
Result
  • One example of the power of this that comes to
    mind is that a customer of can have access to
    their profile as recorded in a merchants back
    office to, say review an account, or to more
    powerfully - change an address.
  • The implications of client access to back-office
    data bases are profound.

61
Fall Rush
  • An example of the service opportunities created
    by an all-IP network is a certain telephone
    company that services an area with many
    universities.
  • Every Fall they had to connect thousands of new
    subscribers in a short period.
  • They stopped physically disabling the phone
    service into student quarters, relying on
    software disabling in their data bases. The
    phone number/location data was preserved.
  • This allowed them to put up a web page where a
    student could provide name and address along
    with a credit card number, which when verified
    caused the phone line to be activated
    immediately, without human intervention.
  • The implication is that outsiders were able to
    change crucial entries who to charge for
    service - in the companys data base the holy of
    holies!

62
Hibernia Atlantic TransAtlantic Cables
63
  • INTERMISSION
  • http//www.members.shaw.ca/grandmafaiths/senior-ci
    tizen.htm
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