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Telephone Systems and Cabling
Lecture 4 Telephone Systems and Cabling
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This lecture will cover:
On-site telephone systems Peripheral devices for telephone systems voic call center services Copper and fiber that connect telephones Computers and networks
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Telephone Connections
The first telephones were wired from one user directly to another user (1876) Later switchboards were installed, operated by individuals (1877) Automatic switching or a central office switch patented by Almon Strowger (1891)
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Switches PBX Centrex Key Systems
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PBX and Centrex Systems
All provide: connections between staff in organizations connections to the outside world the ability for on-site personnel to make calls within the call territory without paying telephone usage fees
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PBX and Centrex Systems
Only difference between two systems: location of equipment ownership of equipment
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PBX Private Branch Exchange Located on the customer’s premises
Owned by the user Eliminates the need to wire each on-site individual telephone to a central office All lines wire to PBX switch, which connects to a central switch operated by provider
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PBX Each employee does not have to pay for:
telephone line to central office telephone calls made between people in the same office dialing within the system can be done with fewer digits Campus Operator
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Centrex Central Exchange
Located on the local telephone providers premises Equipment owned by the telephone provider Offers same features as PBX in terms of costs per call, and reduced digit dialing
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Key Systems Function like a PBX
Often smaller, but nowadays differences hard to see Formerly had less features than PBX User base around 50 to 125 telephones
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Connecting Phones to Switches
Local provider will bring wire into a building to an interface called rj11cjack Most common interface used rj21x jack has larger capacity, 25 lines
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rj11c Location of jack important
Common point from which to test telephone lines and trunks This is where service begins/ends up to jack telephone provider responsibility from jack to PBX PBS vendor must test demarcation point between provider/user
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Features of Centrex No-requirement for on-site switching equipment
Direct-inward dialing Direct-outward dialing Automatic identification of dialed calls
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Appeal of Centrex User Provider Save on operator costs, none required
Detailed billing reports Zero on-site space requirements Provider stimulation of long distance calling less use of long distance circuits for call setup reduction in staff requirements to place calls
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Key Systems Loop start system versus ground start (PBX)
Analog home phones are loop start Provides all the functionality of a PBX
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Starting a Line You “start” a phone line by seizing the handset
A supervisory signal is sent to central office Two ways to send this signal loop start ground start
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Loop Start Most common type of trunk found in residential installations To initiate a call you form a “loop” ring between your set and the central office AC sent to your ringer when handset lifted AC interrupted DC loop then formed to support the call
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Ground Start A handshaking routine between CO and PBX
Initiated by the PBX to get dial tone To see if a trunk is dedicated to the call the PBX checks to see if the tip lead is grounded Once a trunk is dedicated, the CO will close the relay and ground the tip lead
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Direct Inward Dialing Routes calls directly from a local telephone company to telephone connected to a PBX or Centrex switch without operator intervention Prior to 80’s expensive feature Now commonly sold Companies buy entire blocks of phone #’s
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Networks Send traffic in two main ways: circuit-based switching
Dedicates a path through the network for the entire duration of the call packet-based switching Breaks up the message in packets and send packets over network when available routes become available, message assembled at final destination
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IP Networks for Calls Voice calling over IP networks is uneven
Packets share the network Congestion causes delays Primarily used within sites and not to customer Low incentive to pursue, long-distance telephone costs are low
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IP Based Phone Systems Special phone and routers used
Equipment digitizes voice traffic and assembles it into packets Compresses the signal so that it takes up less capacity on the network
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IP Telephone Vendors Lucent Technologies Cisco Systems 3Com
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Why slow to take off? Cost: still too high
Reliability: local area networks tend to crash, choppy when network congested Existing phone base: works great, not expensive, lasts about 10 after initial investment
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Add-On Features Maintenance contracts
Moves and changes to telephone equipment Upgrades to the hardware and software Feature telephones Wireless phone systems Peripheral devices: voice mail, automatic call distribution, call accounting systems
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Call Accounting Track all phone calls made by users (SMDR: station message detail recording) Allows for charging department for usage Indicates amount of traffic on each phone line
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Voice Mail Based on a voice store and forward system
Octel Communications first installed voic in 1980 PC based systems now available
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Automated Attendants Programmed statements to answer calls
Or programs that direct calls at busy times Formerly not a part of voice mail Voice mail vendors bought out automated vendors and made it a part of voice mail
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Voice Mail Components CPU: executes the application programs
Codecs: convert analog signals to digital signals and visa versa, compress voice to decrease storage space Software: determines the feature I/O cards: to connect phone system with VM
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Voice Mail Components Speech recognition cards: specialized cards and software to recognize spoken commands such as the numbers 1-10 Other system components: ports, scanners, high-speed buses, power supplies, tape and disk drives
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Automatic Call Distribution
Enable companies to manage incoming calls and maximize use of employee time route calls to agent who’s been idle the longest route calls to appropriate agent groups if all agents busy, will hold caller in a queue, route call to another agent, or take voice mail provide reports that measure productivity of agents, trunk usage, number of abandoned calls
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Media Carry voice and data traffic
Characteristics of media determine its speed, accuracy and distance at which traffic can be carried copper high-quality copper fiber
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Copper Cabling Electrical properties to copper cabling create resistance and interference problems Signals weaken as they travel Resistance of copper slows down signal Signals are direct current, very susceptible to outside electrical sources Two copper wires twisted together to limit interference problems
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Twisted Copper Used in: from set to PBX from set to key systems
from PCs to wiring closet of a LAN from homes to nearest local telephone wiring center
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Cat 5 Unshielded Twisted Pair
Typically installed for voice and data Carries traffic at 100 Mbps within buildings Cat 5 or 3 most commonly used Name indicates that cabling tested and meats standards set for this type of copper cabling
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Fiber Optics Immune to electrical interference
Signals transmitted in the form of light No electricity present in signal Highly resistant to taps Small in size, requires less conduit Lightweight, no sparking hazard Enormous bandwidth
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Disadvantages Fiber Termination and connection costs high
Needs more care in handling, not flexible like copper Extra electrical power needed Specialized technicians needed to install and test fiber
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Fiber Usage In all long distance networks Between central offices
From central offices to neighborhood wire centers Internet services provider networks Undersea cable runs Electric utility networks
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Components Fiber System
Transmitters: convert electrical signals to light signals LED Laser: very powerful Transducers: convert light signals to electrical signals
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DWDM Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing
important part of infrastructure for carrying high-speed voice, data, streaming video and audio Key reason for convergence Convergence: applied to high-speed networks that carry traffic using IP
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Advantages DWDM Higher capacity over fewer strands of fiber
Lower costs to upgrade networks, same fiber used by multiplexing Space saving, less amplifying equipment needed Lower ongoing maintenance expenses, less equipment necessary
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Amplifiers and Multiplexers
Key components of DWDM networks amplifiers boost the signal every60 miles multiplexers combine light from multiple sources onto a single strand of fiber every 360 miles
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