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The public switched telephone network (PSTN) is the network of the world's public circuit-switched telephone networks. It consists of telephone lines, fiber optic cables, microwave transmission links, cellular networks, communications satellites, and undersea telephone cables, all inter-connected by switching centers, thus allowing any telephone in the world to communicate with any other. Originally a network of fixed-line analog telephone systems, the PSTN is now almost entirely digital in its core and includes mobile as well as fixed telephones.

The technical operation of the PSTN utilizes standards created by the ITU-T. These standards allow different networks in different countries to interconnect seamlessly. There is also a single global address space for telephone numbers based on the E.163 and E.164 standards. The combination of the interconnected networks and the single numbering plan make it possible for any phone in the world to dial any other phone.

Contents

[edit] History

The first telephones had no network but were in private use, wired together in pairs. Users who wanted to talk to different people had as many telephones as necessary for the purpose. A user who wished to speak whistled into the transmitter until the other party heard.

Soon, however, a bell was added for signalling, and then a switch hook, and telephones took advantage of the exchange principle already employed in telegraph networks. Each telephone was wired to a local telephone exchange, and the exchanges were wired together with trunks. Networks were connected in a hierarchical manner until they spanned cities, countries, continents and oceans. This was the beginning of the PSTN, though the term was unknown for many decades.

Automation introduced pulse dialing between the phone and the exchange, and then among exchanges, followed by more sophisticated address signaling including multi-frequency, culminating in the SS7 network that connected most exchanges by the end of the 20th century.

The growth of the PSTN meant that traffic engineering techniques needed to be deployed to deliver quality of service (QoS) guarantees for the users. The work of A.K. Erlang established the mathematical foundations of methods required to determine the capacity requirements and configuration of equipment and the number of personnel required to deliver a specific level of service.

In the 1970s the telecommunications industry began implementing packet switched network data services using the X.25 protocol transported over much of the end-to-end equipment as was already in use in the PSTN.

In the 1980s the industry began planning for digital services assuming they would follow much the same pattern as voice services, and conceived a vision of end-to-end circuit switched services, known as the Broadband Integrated Services Digital Network (B-ISDN). The B-ISDN vision has been overtaken by the disruptive technology of the Internet.

At the turn of the 21st century, only the oldest parts of the telephone network still use analog technology for anything other than the last mile loop to the end user, and digital services have been increasingly rolled out to end users using services such as DSL, ISDN, FTTx and cable modem systems.

Several large private telephone networks are not linked to the PSTN, usually for military purposes. There are also private networks run by large companies which are linked to the PSTN only through limited gateways, like a large private branch exchange (PBX).

[edit] PSTN operators

The task of building the networks and selling services to customers fell to the network operators. The first company to be incorporated to provide PSTN services was the Bell Telephone Company in the United States.

In some countries however, the job of providing telephone networks fell to government as the investment required was very large and the provision of telephone service was increasingly becoming an essential public utility. For example, the General Post Office in the United Kingdom brought together a number of private companies to form a single nationalised company.

In recent decades however, these state monopolies were broken up or sold off through privatization.

[edit] Regulation of the PSTN

In most countries, the central government has a regulator dedicated to monitoring the provision of PSTN services in that country. Their tasks may be for example to ensure that end customers are not over-charged for services where monopolies may exist. They may also regulate the prices charged between the operators to carry each others traffic.

[edit] Technology in the PSTN

[edit] Network topology

The PSTN network architecture had to evolve over the years to support increasing numbers of subscribers, calls, connections to other countries, direct dialling and so on. The model developed by the US and Canada was adopted by other nations, with adaptations for local markets.

The original concept was that the telephone exchanges are arranged into hierarchies, so that if a call cannot be handled in a local cluster, it is passed to one higher up for onward routing. This reduced the number of connecting trunks required between operators over long distances and also kept local traffic separate.

However, in modern networks the cost of transmission and equipment is lower and, although hierarchies still exist, they are much flatter, with perhaps only two layers.

[edit] Digital channels

As described above, most automated telephone exchanges now use digital switching rather than mechanical or analog switching. The trunks connecting the exchanges are also digital, called circuits or channels. However analog two-wire circuits are still used to connect the last mile from the exchange to the telephone in the home (also called the local loop). To carry a typical phone call from a calling party to a called party, the analog audio signal is digitized at an 8 kHz sample rate with 8-bit resolution using a special type of nonlinear pulse code modulation known as G.711. The call is then transmitted from one end to another via telephone exchanges. The call is switched using a call set up protocol (usually ISUP) between the telephone exchanges under an overall routing strategy.

The call is carried over the PSTN using a 64 kbit/s channel, originally designed by Bell Labs. The name given to this channel is Digital Signal 0 (DS0). The DS0 circuit is the basic granularity of circuit switching in a telephone exchange. A DS0 is also known as a timeslot because DS0s are aggregated in time-division multiplexing (TDM) equipment to form higher capacity communication links.

A Digital Signal 1 (DS1) circuit carries 24 DS0s on a North American or Japanese T-carrier (T1) line, or 32 DS0s (30 for calls plus two for framing and signaling) on an E-carrier (E1) line used in most other countries. In modern networks, the multiplexing function is moved as close to the end user as possible, usually into cabinets at the roadside in residential areas, or into large business premises.

These aggregated circuits are conveyed from the initial multiplexer to the exchange over a set of equipment collectively known as the access network. The access network and inter-exchange transport use synchronous optical transmission, for example, SONET and Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SDH) technologies, although some parts still use the older PDH technology.

Within the access network, there are a number of reference points defined. Most of these are of interest mainly to ISDN but one – the V reference point – is of more general interest. This is the reference point between a primary multiplexer and an exchange. The protocols at this reference point were standardized in ETSI areas as the V5 interface.

[edit] Impact on IP standards

Voice quality over PSTN networks was used as the benchmark for the development of the Telecommunications Industry Association's TIA-TSB-116 standard on voice-quality recommendations for IP telephony, to determine acceptable levels of audio delay and echo.[1]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links


166 videos foundNext > 

The Public Switched Telephone Network in Transition

The Federal Communications Commission held two workshops to examine the transition from the public switched telephone network (PSTN) to new technologies. Circuit-switched wireline voice technology has created a high standard for reliability, accessibility, and ubiquity. Consumers will continue to expect and demand these qualities, even as they shift from PSTN services to services provided over different networks. The transition away from the PSTN is already occurring, and is likely to accelerate. Through these workshops, the Commission will seek input on the technical, economic, and policy issues that must be addressed to minimize disruption during this transition, and to protect consumers, public safety, competition, and other important interests

Introduction to Telephone Systems

Info Level: Beginner Presenter: Eli the Computer Guy Date Created: August 2, 2010 Length of Class: 54 Minutes Tracks Telephone Systems Prerequisites None Purpose of Class This class introduces students to the basic components of telephone systems. Topics Covered Public Switched Telephone Network Central Offices Trunk Lines PBX and Voicemail Systems PBX Stations Voicemail Subcribers Class Notes Introduction Telephone systems are not complicated if you understand how they work. A Word on VoIP VoIP is not a telephone system PSTN PSTN -- Public Switched Telephone Network is like the Internet, but for telephone communication NADP -- North American Dialing Plan -- Is the system for routing telephone calls. Central Office -- All telephone lines connect to a local central office Trunk Lines Every Trunk Line has a telephone number A Trunk Line allows for 1 incoming or outgoing call. You can have far more telephones in a building then you have trunk lines. Incoming Trunk lines are setup in Hunt Groups. If the main phone number is busy the call is automatically forwarded to the next number in the Hunt Group Incoming Hunt Groups are setup by your local telephone company. Outgoing calls can be routed to use selected trunk lines. This in configured in your PBX. PBX and Voicemail The PBX routes telephone calls The Voicemail system provides all audio messaging. (Voicemail boxes, Message Boards, and Auto Attendant Messages) Stations All devices that connect to the PBX are "Stations". This ...

The Public Switched Telephone Network in Transition

This workshop focused on what obstacles and opportunities the transition may create regarding public safety, accessibility, and ubiquitous service. The workshop also attempted to identify and evaluate the types of non-carrier stranded assets (such as alarm monitoring systems) that would be left after the transition. For more information, see www.fcc.gov

Packet Switched Telephone Networks in 144 seconds!

Tune into Hak5 this week for Pulse Code Modulation, Time Division Multiplexing and more!

telephone network.wmv

report in PHYSICS :)

History of telephone network - 01

Excuse the cameraman

Inside a Telephone Network Interface Box

A telephone network interface box is where all your telephone lines in your home go into.

Hak5 - Time Division Multiplexing

This time on the show Darren continues his series on the Public Switched Telephone Network with Time Division Multiplexing and some of the more interesting elements of T1 signalling. signaling.

Connecting VoIP with Public Phone Networks : DigInfo

Mobile Technika and International System Research jointly released their FMC Enabler package, a support tool for IP phone solution. The package offers fixed and mobile FMC (fixed mobile convergence) communication on a Windows Mobile smart phone. With the implementation of this package, users can use both types of phones as an IP phone and as a mobile depending on the situation. The PPPhone FMC Enabler package includes a soft phone or PPPhone for mobile IP telephony which meets the IETF (Internet Engineering Task Force) standards, SIP standards, and a VoIP server which connects data networks with PSTN (which are Public Switched Telephone Network) ones.

Telecommunications Training

Telecommunications training: Online Course Module 1 Fundamentals of Telephony by Teracom Training Institute Lesson L1000 Fundamentals of Telephony - Introduction NOTE: You can watch this in full quality by going to teracomtraining dot com and clicking on the Online Courses tab. Lesson description: The first lesson in this module is a brief history lesson. The objectives of this lesson are to understand: • Why telecom networks are divided into local access wiring and long-distance transmission • The invention of the telephone and Bell's patent • The emergence of local telephone companies Then, in the USA: • The founding of AT&T • The expiry of the patent and emergence of independents • Federal government action against AT&T resulting in its breakup • Emergence of cellular and internet telephony • The end of long-distance as a standalone business • Re-combination of pieces of the former AT&T into AT&T, Verizon In Canada: • The establishment of provincial telephone companies • The Telephone Association and Stentor, and its dissolution • Consolidation of provincial companies under TELUS and Bell Module Description: Whether you're interested in telecom, datacom, wireless, Wide Area Networking or Voice over IP, everything begins with the Public Switched Telephone Network and Plain Ordinary Telephone Service. We'll begin with a model for the PSTN, explaining analog circuits and circuit switching, as well as common telephony buzzwords and jargon, and an overview of SS7. Lessons ...

36 news items

 
ITworld.com
Sun, 20 May 2012 20:29:18 -0700

PBXs connect internal telephones of businesses, while also connecting the business to the Public Switched Telephone Network, or PSTN. They handle the processing of all calls within the PBX's system, and they have all the telecommunications features ...
 
PC Advisor
Wed, 16 May 2012 07:52:28 -0700

This involves replacing Reed's existing 5500 ISDN (Integrated Services Digital Network) and PTSN (Public Switched Telephone Network) lines with 1500 SIP trunks, which will support more than five million voice calls a year. Employees will be able to ...
 
FierceEnterpriseCommunications
Sun, 20 May 2012 11:32:53 -0700

IP-based Telecommunications Relay Service (TRS) Technological Standards: The FCC said technological advances have resulted in the migration of the majority of TRS usage from public-switched telephone network services to IP-based services.
 
MarketWatch (press release)
Tue, 08 May 2012 05:18:09 -0700

These offices typically have low bandwidth connections to the internet or low call-capacity connections to the public switched telephone network through their public telephone service provider. The most common connections for such branch offices are ...
 
Technology Spectator
Mon, 14 May 2012 09:07:27 -0700

It is interesting to see what has happened since Telstra took the decision to embrace structural separation and close the PSTN (Public Switched Telephone Network) in order to move to a NGN (Next Generation Network) environment.
 
MarketWatch (press release)
Mon, 14 May 2012 07:16:20 -0700

As a network solution provider we leverage our global network to provide customers managed access services to the United States Internet backbone, video content, the public switched telephone network or their corporate headquarters, or government ...
 
Techzone360
Thu, 17 May 2012 12:35:51 -0700

... authority over interconnected VoIP service providers, it defined “interconnected VoIP” as a service that permits users generally "to receive calls that originate on the [PSTN] and to terminate calls to the public switched telephone network.
 
MarketWatch (press release)
Wed, 09 May 2012 07:32:40 -0700

SIP trunking is a Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) connection used by Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) service providers to connect business telephone systems to the public switched telephone network. Digerati's SIP trunking service allows ...
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