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CS4550: Computer Networks II public telecommunication networks
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“public” telecom networks “public” telecom networks US telco networks : history, business, politics US telco networks: basic structure cable TV networks wireless networks international telephone networks future (?) - fiber to the home?
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US telco networks : history invention of telephone: ~1876 Alex. G. Bell, Elisha Gray, P. Reis original telephone patents: 1876,77 spread of telephone companies: 1893-4 to 1901 establishment of AT&T, its tactics, monopoly in 3 areas
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US telco networks : history hush-a-phone, pres. address, etc. antitrust lawsuits : 1921, 1956, 1984 divestiture of 1984 other LD companies, Baby Bells, etc. after 1984 1996: second divestiture and TC Act recent events
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US telco networks : business generally very profitable, because - telephone service universal (in US) - local service companies often enjoy monopolies - ATT enjoyed 3 monopolies (<1984), protected by gov’t many years - ATT subsidized local service by overcharging on long distance (<84)
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US telco networks : politics often have had major influence on telecommunications industry - companies are very large, have many customers (voters) - telecom. essential to modern economy - control of communications is power (political, economic) - at times gov’t has protected monopolies; at times, divested them - antitrust laws
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US telco nets : structure < 1984 ATT enjoyed monopolies in 3 areas: - local telco service - long distance - network equipment telco network divided into 5-level hierarchy
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US telco nets : local loops local loop; “end office” or central office; star topology; app. 19K in US end office phone twisted pair to l.d. switch phone
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PBX : private branch exchange a privately owned telephone switch; enables companies, etc. to have own private local phone network several generations; most recent are digital, capable of data and voice connect to public telco through a “trunk,” or higher capacity line centrex - similar service, but owned and maintained by the telco
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telco switch - generic design control unit switching matrix network interface digital/analog devices trunks...
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US telco nets : structure < 1984 regional switch (10) end office (19000) ATT l.d. structure < 84 -simple hierarchy, augmented by tandem lines -easy design, but not most efficient use of resources
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US telco nets : structure < 1984 AT&T was major telco in US, largest in world (approximations below) -70% of local telephones in US - 99% of l.d. traffic - 99% telecom equipment - 1,000,000 employees - total revenue was 2% of annual GNP of US
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US telco nets : structure < 1984 AT&T before 1984 22 BOCs (Bell Operating Companies) --> local telephone service Western Electric --> equipment Long lines department --> long distance service Bell Telephone laboratories --> research lab “national resource”
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AT&T : divestiture background : 1956 consent decree 1974 : US DOJ brought suit against ATT for violation of antitrust law. Charged that ATT “denied benefits of free and competitive market to purchasers of telecommunications equipment and service” settlement negotiated after years of negotiations and softball
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AT&T divestiture, results 22 BOCs separated, grouped into 7 RBOCs RBOCs to provide “equal access” RBOCs may sell but NOT manufacture CPE ATT retained WE, long lines, part of Bell labs Bell labs split between ATT and RBOCs (Bellcore) 161 LATAs defined ATT released from 1956 decree
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LATA local access transport area defines boundaries local telcos cannot cross; so 3 types of calls local (truly local) - no charge ; Monterey to Monterey local access : toll charge to local company (Monterey to Salinas) long distance : must use a long distance company (Monterey - San Jose)
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AT&T since 1984 l.d. share has decreased from 95%+ to ~60% or less, still quite profitable employees --> ~300,000 (until 96) ventured into computers - failed twice (ATT PC, NCR purchase) bought out Craig McCaw’s cellular company -- > cellular network gone to all digital network 2nd divestiture, 1996 (--> 180,000) has agreement to merge with TCI
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telecom since 1984 AT&T doing well, but only 1 of several major companies Sprint, MCI major competitors after 84 Worldcom-MCI merger produced major telecom power Lucent Tech. --> another power telecom in other countries have moved towards competition, freedom technology moved forward faster than ever before
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telco companies today, US ATT, Sprint, MCI-Worldcom ; GTE original 7 RBOCs : Pacific Telesis; Nynex; Ameritech; US West ;Southwestern Bell (now SBC); Bell Atlantic;Bell South. mergers have reduced these SBC bought Pacific Telesis, and pending Ameritech Nynex and Bell Atlantic merged GTE may merge with Bell Atlantic
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some current and future trends all networks converging towards data networking (Internet) i.e., voice, TV cable and internet become 1 network TCI-ATT merger pending Sprint-Cisco agreement on data network will have higher bandwidth available to home & throughout
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TV cable networks designed for TV broadcast to homes uses coaxial cable : 1 TV channel has 6 MHz, or 1500 voice channels; 1 cable can carry hundreds of channel to carry voice/data, switching equipment needs to be modified. TV networks can provide competition for voice, and higher speed internet access ATT-TCI merger: ATT hopes to use TV cable for voice and data to penetrate home.
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TV cable -- long distance combo TV cable network ATT long distance network
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cellular nets : wireless phones central station, and base stations
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cellular nets : wireless phones base stations communicate through radio signals with end users competition for local phone and limited data. Has difficulties inherent in wireless media - inference, capacity, handoffs between cells; but these are being addressed. security also more difficult
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satellite networks : iridium, etc. iridium project : Motorola and others; already has 80-90 satellites in orbit other competing will probably be expensive, but a world- wide network for voice data
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internet telephony already here... will get better quality less than conventional, but as speed improves, this will too many parts of world have poor phone penetration; this may be the way to bring service, and break nationalistic monopolies (e.g., Telmex) and US telco monopolies
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international telco summary US most advanced, but western Europe, Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore, others close much of world - India, China, Indonesia, Mexico/Latin America - far behind; some still have monopolies (e.g. Telmex) some leading internat’l companies: Erricson, Deutche Telecom, British Telecom, Cable and Wireless, Hong Kong Telecom, NTT Lucent Tech., MCI-Worldcom, Sprint-Cisco, ATT, GTE, SWB
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future : fiber to the home? high capacity of fiber has drastically altered world of telecom breakup of ATT 1984 has also drastically improved progress fiber to the home? some predict this, may happen; but in whatever form, we can expect higher capacity internet and telephone access... possibly through TV cable... and continued progress in communications
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