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#15
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On Sun, 17 Aug 2003 13:44:25 -0400, "Dr. Anthony J. Lomenzo"
wrote: the phone system wires carry their own juice, well, even those wires have to have a source for their power generation! Where is it and note that even in extensive power grid failures like the nation just experienced, the phones came through! So where is their source? Or does the phone system commonly LOW DC voltage and thus absence of any needed AC 'push' amperage [dunno, I'm asking!] permit a DC generator system that can virtually run with no problems!? Any phone techs in the house? I used to work for ALLTEL, a medium sized Incumbent Local Exchange Carrier, in the United States. A telephone system's local loop in the United States, the two pair of wires which connect to your home (only one of which is usually in use, so the other might not be connected to the entire system) are wired to a bank of batteries which provide +48vDC. There are generators which keep the batteries charged, but the phone system powers its equipment with the DC electricity from those batteries. And, yes, as the price for maintaining that monopoly all those years, AT&T was required to meet uptime standards and connect to anyone who wanted the service, no matter where he lived. The result after several decades was a remarkably complete and nearly ubiquitous telephone system nationwide. The Babybells and the other ILEC companies which survived them still have to meet those requirements. "Cable telephone", IP telephony, and cell phone providers do not. That's why the system glitches with "cable telephone" service, small though they were, were so surprisingly significant to people; at least two generations of Americans grew up without ever experiencing a telephone infrastructure failure of any kind. But, it's also why the "last mile" of high-speed Internet connectivity has been so difficult to make ubiquitous. That nine-nines-reliable phone network is only reliable for 3-minute-average telephone conversations nationwide. But it all held true until the Internet and cell phones came along, and all the network provisioning assumptions the Bells made got shot to gehenna when people nailed up their phone lines to have a 24/7 Internet connection and started to have three or more telephone numbers per household. It was only then that we started hearing "we can't do it" on a regular basis, and only then that the area codes started to change a lot. Over in Europe and in the "Third World" nations, they're still building out a telephone network for their people, what with costs having been so much higher and brain trust so much more expensive, before some very recent political changes were made. That's why those systems appear to be more advanced; the initial investments in network infrastructure were made far later. The older infrastructure in North America and (to a slightly lesser extent) Western Europe still works just fine for what most people want. Rob |
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