Talk:Public switched telephone network
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Moved POTS to a separate page because the services are provided at the end of the network.
POTS, or Plain Old Telephone Service, describes the services available on analog telephones. This is a subset of what is available on ISDN and mobile telephones.
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[edit] RE: Capitalization Question
Shouldn't public switched telephone network be capitalized in the article? 144.118.58.229 06:59, 7 November 2007 (UTC)
- See the 'Article titles' section of Manual of Style for details. 'Bauani' • Talk2me 11:40, 26 April 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Pre-Merger Concept
I added the hierarchy with links to the main articles. Luis F. Gonzalez 18:03, 17 November 2006 (UTC)
Ought each section be so small, or would the longer descriptions in office classification be more appropriate? Jim.henderson 21:02, 17 November 2006 (UTC)
- I think the concept of PSTN office classification should start in this article. With each section being small. The overall hierachy section should point the office classification article, and each class should point to its respective class article. Each class article then should point to specific switches, 5ESS/DMS. No? Luis F. Gonzalez 21:42, 17 November 2006 (UTC)
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- The first three classes don't have much to say, hence should contain everything that any existing article (especially Office classification) says about them, apart from any material that may be so useless that it ought simply to die.
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- I agree, the first three don't have much meat and don't need their own articles. But we don't know if someone at some future point may have more information. Luis F. Gonzalez 06:48, 22 November 2006 (UTC)
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- Sections for classes 4 and 5 must necessarily be larger, essentially pasting in whatever is in their specific class articles today. Yes, all class sections should also point to specific hardware.
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- The PSTN article in my opinion should have minimal information on class, one paragraph for example. Each class article 4 and 5 in could then have one para on specific hardware which then point to deeper vendor implementations. Luis F. Gonzalez 06:48, 22 November 2006 (UTC)
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- Umm, but no, you're saying to keep the Class 4 and Class 5 articles out of this one, thus their sections here would not be much more than definitions and links. Yes, that certainly will keep this one from becoming long and ungainly. Is this your reason for retaining the class articles?
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- Yes. Luis F. Gonzalez 06:48, 22 November 2006 (UTC)
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- Well then, that leaves our little project rather small. It's just a matter of merging Office classification into this one. Yes, that's workable and leaves room for many additions in years to come, if someone wants to make extensive additions.
- Jim.henderson 15:17, 22 November 2006 (UTC)
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- That would be all very well if the USA was the entire world but of course it is not. Here we have a perfectly relevant document (PSTN article) for those users not located in the US potentially rendered irrelevant for the merging with a specifically US centric document. Granted, the larger proportion of users are US based users but quite often it seems many articles presume a specifically US audience.
Well then, I am inclined to agree with our anonymous commentator. The mention here of the antique American classes should be pared, and not merged. I'd like to see an article on Tandem switch from a less parochial view. Right now it's just a redirect to a strictly American article. Anyway in recent week I've been doing other Wikipedia things, for example describing Panel swtich, 1XB switch, 5XB switch, 1ESS switch, Reed relay and other topics, and paying no attention to how these switched network articles ought to be divided. So, I hope our friend Louis will take good care of it. Jim.henderson 04:43, 18 January 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Past tense?
I noticed that section 3 -- U.S. Telephone Switch Hierarchy -- is written in the past tense ("exchanges were"). Does this mean the U.S. TSH is no longer in use? I would reccomend either moving this to the infinitive tense ("exchanges are"), or clarifying the fact that this system no longer exists by mentioning that fact within the section. --Action Jackson IV 04:48, 18 January 2007 (UTC)
- The concept was important in the Bell System. In the 1950s and 60s routing was in large degree governed by this office hierarchy. As the system became larger and more complex, and as computerization and common channel signalling allowed more complex routing methods, the hierarchy became less relevant to ordinary operations. Whether the system was ever formally abolished, I don't know. Similar classifications were set up in foreign countries, and an international classification scheme of "Centres de Transit" with London as the first CT1 in the 1970s and lesser levels as CT2 and CT3, but again I don't know whether any of these systems are still in use or were ever abolished.
- Anyway it has been proposed that this section be cut down or abolished as belonging to only one nation (even if that nation had the majority of the world's telephones at the time) leaving Office classification to handle these questions as they pertain to the USA. Jim.henderson 02:35, 22 January 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Wartime Situations/World War
What if there's another "World War" or military conflict among more than one countries; how will that affect the International Gateways? Will it have some significant effect on our Internet?
88.105.55.192 13:17, 6 October 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Classes given too much signifiance
The Discussion of the AT&T switch class nomenclature shouldn't be given so much significance within the article. Only North America ever used this convention and it doesn't deserve such importance in an article about what a Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) is, (and yes it should be capitalised when used as it's an acronym). The article should be focusing on the technology and topology used within the network. The fact that it was divided in to classes in the USA should constitue a regional variance side note at most, much like in the UK they are called: RCUs (Remote Concentrator Unit), DLSU (Digital Local Switching Unit), DMSU's (Digital Main Switching Unit) or DISC (Digital International Switching Centre). —Preceding unsigned comment added by 82.40.157.27 (talk) 11:53, 24 January 2008 (UTC)
Goodness, for a moment this evening I suspected User:Guy Harris was following me around and finishing all my unfinished edits, but no, this was just my self flattery. Not a problem anyway; pleasant to sit back and see competent hands do the work. Anyway, I would hate to trim the large and antiquated North American hierarchy, and indeed Guy's proposed Via net loss article merger threatens to expanded it further. Perhaps this large section would loom less "significant" or prominent if it were placed after the much smaller European sections. Jim.henderson (talk) 04:11, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- About the only competence I can claim is recognizing that this article and Via Net Loss both give the 5 levels of the switching hierarchy. :-)
- Perhaps there should be a separate article (or articles) for the architecture of the North American switch hierarchy, and either give a summary here, pointing to the main article, along with the sections on the UK and French hierarchies, or split those into articles of their own as well? Guy Harris (talk) 04:27, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
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- It used to be separate, poorly titled as Office classification. My fellow grey-bearded telephone veterans in 2006 had described the hierarchy similarly in several articles, and then along came me, less competent in topic than in editing. To a merger proposal I first said no, then was persuaded and the merger at first justified my fears and then the merged article was greatly improved during 2007. Lately it has acquired much new and mostly good material, unbalancing the article and raising the question of reversing the merger.
- So, yes, a split might work well, but first someone must either invent a better name, or find an existing article that would be be improved by moving either all three national obsolete hierarchies into it, and hoping for more countries, or just moving the American half of this one there. Well, I don't much like this last idea. These national routing systems were perhaps not the soul of the PSTN in their day, and are very much not so today, and they were pretty much the same with interesting variations. Jim.henderson (talk) 07:36, 6 February 2008 (UTC)
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- Historic Switching Hierarchies? I was largely responsible for the increase in the historic US/Canada material, and for the UK and French additions. In part, I stopped because most of the rest of the then-developed world was more of the same: mostly two or three levels, often with a final route through the capital city. There are a few quirks, mostly for political reasons: Germany, with some traffic handled through "the other" side or various military units, because of the geography and borders; Northern Ireland, mostly handled by BT in those days, but with some connections that sneaked through Eire switches due to geography; Southern Africa (to the extent that there was much network structure beyond South Africa), etc. But almost all of that might be even more plodding in a litany of recitation of obsolete material. The only area which was built out as extensively with circuit switching as North America was the small portion of Iran that got installed by AT&T before the revolution - the Shah had bought state of the art switches for the entire country, including remote villages, which required an extensive network to be designed, even though few calls would ever be presented through some of those locations. But that four-level design was never really implemented, and much of the equipment never shipped. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 76.241.139.254 (talk) 06:17, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
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