2624 lines
104 KiB
Groff
2624 lines
104 KiB
Groff
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1/25/95 12:04:41 PM Opening ÒISDN FAQ 1/25/95Ó for recording.
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Newsgroups: comp.dcom.isdn,comp.answers,news.answers,alt.internet.services
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Path: newsbf01.news.aol.com!newstf01.news.aol.com!uunet!news.sprintlink.net!mv!fastball.unimaster.com!cherkus
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From: cherkus@UniMaster.COM (Dave Cherkus)
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Subject: comp.dcom.isdn FAQ Part 1 of 5: Introduction, Etc.
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Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
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Keywords: ISDN FAQ telecom
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Originator: cherkus@fastball.unimaster.com
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Distribution: world
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Message-ID: <isdn1_789873827@UniMaster.COM>
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Nntp-Posting-Host: fastball.unimaster.com
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Sender: usenet@mv.mv.com (System Administrator)
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Supersedes: <isdn1_789570001@UniMaster.COM>
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Reply-To: cherkus@UniMaster.COM (Dave Cherkus)
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Expires: Thu, 9 Feb 1995 01:23:47 GMT
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Summary: This posting contains a list of Frequently Asked
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Questions (and their answers) about ISDN.
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Organization: UniMaster, Inc.
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Date: Thu, 12 Jan 1995 01:27:06 GMT
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Followup-To: comp.dcom.isdn
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Lines: 276
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Xref: newsbf01.news.aol.com comp.dcom.isdn:7725 comp.answers:6080 news.answers:18977 alt.internet.services:25719
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Archive-name: isdn-faq/part1
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Last-modified: $Date: 1995/01/12 01:18:39 $
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Version: $Revision: 4.2 $
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------------------------------
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1.01) Summary of changes from the last version
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- MS Telematica vendor info from mstelema@icil64.cilea.it
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- alt.internet.servicess to posting list, per request of
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aab@cichlid.com (Andy Burgess)
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- Info about getting the NIUF ASI ISDN programming interface
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documentation, courtesy of vances@xenitec.on.ca (Vance Shipley)
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- Pointer to ISDN Web page from dank@alumni.caltech.edu
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(Daniel R. Kegel)
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- MERGE Technologies Group vendor info from JGFIELDS@delphi.com
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- Vendor info for Apple-oriented ISDN solutions from
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CLAUSS1@AppleLink.Apple.COM (Clauss, Chris)
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- Touched up discription of ISDN availability in intro section,
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input from Tilman Schmidt <tilman@gb1.sema.de>
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- A whole new section on SGI, courtesy of mwang@abravanel.esd.sgi.com
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(Michael Wang)
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- Update for Adtran info courtesy of Kevin Schneider <kevin@adtran.com>
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- CSI vendor info courtesy of beyries@csisdn.com (Mike Beyries)
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- Info about getting ISDN in Canada from Peter Graw <p45dpmg@sherritt.ca>
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- Updated NT-1 info from oj@vivo.com (Oliver Jones)
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- TPI vendor info and general FAQ advise from linimon@lonesome.com
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(Mark Linimon)
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- diehl info update from uh@diehl.de (Uwe Huebner)
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- Info about "The ISDN Literacy Book" from hopkins@aw.com
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- HP product info from Pierre_Vidalenc@hp6300.desk.hp.com
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(Pierre Vidalenc)
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- Corrected info about getting the faq via e-mail
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- Intel info from dagj@netcom.com (Dag Johansen Esq.) and
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marjorie_j_panditji@ccm.jf.intel.com (Marjorie Panditji)
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- Vendor info about Conware GmbH from knapp@conware.de (Roland Knapp)
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- Gandalf update from jsteinb@charm.gandalf.ca (Jennifer Steinberg)
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- Numerous corrections of e-mail addresses, typos, etc.
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------------------------------
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1.02) comp.dcom.isdn Frequently Asked Questions - Introduction
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These questions and answers have (almost entirely) been extracted from
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comp.dcom.isdn. Please post any comments or new material that you
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have, or email them to the current FAQ editor, cherkus@unimaster.com.
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In particular, the vendor equipment chart is incomplete. If you want
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to share vendor equipment info, just cut and paste the headers from the
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chart below and create a new entry for the new information, and send it
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to me.
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This FAQ consists almost entirely of information posted to this group.
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There are a fair number of holes and there may be some outdated
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information in it. There is no claim of completeness or guarantee of
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accuracy of any kind, or no warranties for merchantability or fitness
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for a particular purpose. If you have some useful information that you
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would like to share, email it to me. My goal is to have the FAQ mirror
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the information provided to the newsgroup itself. The next-to-last
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section of this FAQ gives references that provide much more information
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than this FAQ does.
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This FAQ is posted biweekly to the comp.dcom.isdn news group with an
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expiration period of two weeks. This FAQ is available via anonymous ftp
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to host rtfm.mit.edu, in the directory /pub/usenet/news.answers/isdn-faq.
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It's also accessible via the e-mail server -- send the command
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"send usenet/news.answers/isdn-faq/*" (without the quotes) in the body
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of a e-mail message to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu. It is also available
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via any other site that shadows news.answers. Some of these sites
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are:
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North America: ftp.uu.net /usenet/news.answers
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Europe: ftp.uni-paderborn.de /pub/FAQ
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ftp.Germany.EU.net /pub/newsarchive/news.answers
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grasp1.univ-lyon1.fr /pub/faq
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ftp.win.tue.nl /pub/usenet/news.answers
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ftp.sunet.se /pub/usenet
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Asia: nctuccca.edu.tw /USENET/FAQ
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hwarang.postech.ac.kr /pub/usenet/news.answers
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If you have Web access, I recommend you access Dan Kegel's ISDN Web
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page at http://alumni.caltech.edu/~dank/isdn/, which has even more ISDN
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information and a pointer to a Web-accessible copy of this ISDN FAQ.
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I would like to thank Sean Welch for creating the previous edition
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of the FAQ. His work is still responsible for the majority of the
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information gathered here. I hope to continue the fine example that
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Sean has set.
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------------------------------
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1.03) Table of Contents
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Section 1:
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Subject: 1.01) Summary of changes from the last version
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Subject: 1.02) comp.dcom.isdn Frequently Asked Questions - Introduction
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Subject: 1.03) Table of Contents
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Subject: 1.04) To Do List
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Subject: 1.05) Who do I have to thank for this list?
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Section 2:
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Subject: 2.01) What is ISDN?
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Subject: 2.02) What does an ISDN network connection look like?
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Subject: 2.03) What will Basic Rate (2B+D) ISDN look like in my house/office?
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Subject: 2.04) What is a NT1? Who sells them?
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Subject: 2.05) Can the existing local loop lines be reused for ISDN?
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Subject: 2.06) How does this compare to regular phone lines?
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Subject: 2.07) Is caller ID available on ISDN?
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Subject: 2.08) What do I get above and beyond plain old telephone service?
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Subject: 2.09) What do ISDN phones cost?
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Subject: 2.10) Can you use existing telephone equipment with the voice portion?
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Subject: 2.11) What is National ISDN?
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Subject: 2.12) What is the NIUF?
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Subject: 2.13) What is ATM?
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Subject: 2.14) What is B-ISDN?
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Subject: 2.15) What is BONDING?
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Subject: 2.16) Data Encapsulation for IP over ISDN
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Subject: 2.17) Full Motion Video over ISDN
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Subject: 2.18) What is a SPID? How come my ISDN device won't work without one?
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Subject: 2.19) Will ISDN terminal equipment that works in one country
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work properly when it is installed in another country?
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Subject: 2.20) Will ISDN terminal equipment that works with one vendor's ISDN
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switch work properly when used with another vendor's switch?
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Subject: 2.21) Do different manufacturers' Terminal Adaptors interoperate when
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used asynchronously?
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Subject: 2.22) Why do I get only about 19.2k throughput from my TA?
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Subject: 2.23) How long should call setup take when using a TA?
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Section 3:
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Subject: 3.01) How do I find out about getting ISDN in my area?
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Section 4:
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Subject: 4.01) Where can I find what all of these acronyms mean?
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Subject: 4.02) What are the relevant standards?
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Subject: 4.03) Where can I read more?
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Subject: 4.04) Can I get on-line National ISDN information from Bellcore?
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Section 5:
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Subject: 5.01) Who is shipping what?
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Subject: 5.02) How about that SPARCstation 10?
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Subject: 5.03) How about that IBM Waverunner?
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Subject: 5.04) How about that SGI?
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Subject: 5.05) How about that HP?
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Subject: 5.06) How about that Intel RemoteExpress?
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------------------------------
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1.04) To Do List
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Questions for which I have not yet put together an answer, but for which I
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am accepting suggestions:
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a) What programming API's are useful for creating ISDN applications?
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(e.g. Sun, Microsoft TAPI, NIUF ASI, ETSI(?), CAPI(?), more(?))
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What are their strengths and weaknesses?
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------------------------------
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1.05) Who do I have to thank for this list?
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Lots of people, in one way or another.
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Dave@yost.com (Dave Yost)
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CLAUSS1@AppleLink.Apple.COM (Clauss, Chris)
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Eric_Boll-RXNN70Q@email.sps.mot.com (Eric Boll)
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Greg.Onufer@Eng.Sun.COM
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Helge.Oldach@Stollmann.DE (Helge Oldach)
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Jim.Rees@umich.edu (Jim Rees)
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JGFIELDS@delphi.com
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KUMQUAT@SMCVAX.SMCVT.EDU (Gary C. Kessler)
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PMW1@psuvm.psu.edu (Peter M. Weiss)
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Pierre_Vidalenc@hp6300.desk.hp.com (Pierre Vidalenc)
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SYSGAERTNER@cygnus.frm.maschinenbau.th-darmstadt.de (Mathias Gaertner)
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apsteph@cs.utexas.edu (Alan Palmer Stephens)
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art@acc.com (Art Berggreen)
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awillis@athena.mit.edu (Albert Willis)
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bernot@inf-wiss.uni-konstanz.de (Gerhard Bernot)
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beyries@csisdn.com (Mike Beyries)
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bharrell@garfield.catt.ncsu.edu (Ben Harrell)
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blsouth!klein@gatech.edu (Michael Klein)
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bob@larribeau.com (Bob Larribeau)
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bob_clemmons@smtp.esl.com (Bob Clemmons)
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cabo@Informatik.Uni-Bremen.DE (Carsten)
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cherkus@UniMaster.COM (Dave Cherkus)
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cliff@Berkeley.EDU (Cliff Frost)
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craig@aland.bbn.com (Craig Partridge)
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cstorry@gandalf.ca (Chuck Storry)
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curt@kcwc.com (Curt Welch)
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dagj@netcom.com (Dag Johansen Esq.)
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dank@alumni.caltech.edu (Daniel R. Kegel)
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dav@genisco.gtc.com (David L. Markowitz)
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dave@philips.oz.au
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dem@hep.net (David E. Martin)
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dror@digibd.com (Dror Kessler)
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dwight@hyphen.com (Dwight Ernest)
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earle@poseur.JPL.NASA.GOV (Greg Earle - Sun JPL on-site Software Support)
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eleskg@nuscc.nus.sg (Winston Seah)
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elitman@wam.umd.edu (Eric A. Litman)
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etxorst@eos.ericsson.se (Torsten Lif)
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ews@Babel.COM (Ed Sznyter)
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fenton@combinet.com (Jim Fenton)
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garym@netcom.com (Gary Martin)
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giles@paxdata.demon.co.uk (Giles Heron)
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glarson@bnr.ca (Greg Larson)
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goldstein@bbn.com (Fred R. Goldstein)
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huntting@futureworld.advtech.uswest.com (Brad Huntting)
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james@kaiwan.com (James - The Keeper)
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jerry@watchman.sfc.sony.com (Jerry Scharf)
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jfritz@wvnvm.wvnet.edu (Jeffrey Fritz)
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jhonan@kralizec.zeta.org.au (Jamie Honan)
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jik@security.ov.com (Jonathan I. Kamens)
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jms@romana.Tymnet.COM (Joe Smith)
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jordan@hursley.ibm.com (Rob Jordan)
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jsteinb@charm.gandalf.ca (Jennifer Steinberg)
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jwb@capek.rdt.monash.edu.au (Jim Breen)
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kessler@Eng.Sun.COM (Tom Kessler)
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ketil@edb.tih.no (Ketil Albertsen,TIH)
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kevin@adtran.com (Kevin Schneider)
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kevin@newshost.pictel.com (Kevin Davis)
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kevinc@aspect.UUCP (Kevin Collins)
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keyman@Eng.Sun.COM (Dave Evans)
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kph@cisco.com (Kevin Paul Herbert)
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krowett@large.cisco.com (Kevin J. Rowett)
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knapp@conware.de (Roland Knapp)
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linimon@lonesome.com (Mark Linimon)
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lmarks@vnet.ibm.com (Laurence V. Marks)
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marjorie_j_panditji@ccm.jf.intel.com (Marjorie Panditji)
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marc@dumbcat.sf.ca.us (Marco S Hyman)
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marc@Destek.NET (Marc Evans)
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mea@intgp1.att.com (Mark Anderson)
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mike@tn.com (Mike Sanders)
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mikes2@cc.bellcore.com (Mike Souryal)
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msun@ntmtv.com (Ming Sun)
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mstelema@icil64.cilea.it ()
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muftix@junior.bintec.de (Juergen Ernst Guenther)
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mwang@abravanel.esd.sgi.com (Michael Wang)
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oj@vivo.com (Oliver Jones)
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oppedahl@panix.com (Carl Oppedahl)
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hopkins@aw.com (Gerald L. Hopkins)
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p45dpmg@sherritt.ca (Peter Graw)
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paul@suite.sw.oz.au (Paul Antoine)
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peter@memex.co.uk (Peter Ilieve)
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pturner@eng.auburn.edu (Patton M. Turner)
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rachelw@spider.co.uk (Rachel Willmer)
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randys@access.digex.net (Randolph A. Sisto)
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rdavies@janus.enet.dec.com (Rob Davies)
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rjl@fawlty1.eng.monash.edu.au (Russell Lang)
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rogers@eplrx7.es.dupont.com (Wade T. Rogers)
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ronnie@cisco.com (Ronnie B. Kon)
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sanjay@media.mit.edu (Sanjay Manandhar)
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scott@labtam.labtam.oz.au (Scott Colwell)
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scotty@l5next.gagetalker.com (Scott Turner)
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sklower@toe.CS.Berkeley.EDU (Keith Sklower)
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sorflet@bnr.ca (winston (w.l.) sorfleet)
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spike@coke.std.com (Joe Ilacqua)
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stamp@cc.bellcore.com (stamp,scott)
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tilman@gb1.sema.de (Tilman Schmidt)
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tnixon@microsoft.com (Toby Nixon)
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turtle@newshub.sdsu.edu (Andrew Scherpbier)
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uh@diehl.de (Uwe Huebner)
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varney@ihlpf.att.com (Al Varney)
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vances@xenitec.on.ca (Vance Shipley)
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we34329@is1.vub.ac.be (Sven De Kerpel)
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wb8foz@scl.cwru.edu (David Lesher)
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welch@watchtower.Berkeley.EDU (Sean N. Welch)
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whs70@cc.bellcore.com (sohl,william h)
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wmartin@nsa.bt.co.uk (William Martin)
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zok@ins.net (Andreas Frackowiak)
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--
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Dave Cherkus ----- UniMaster, Inc. ----- Contract Software Development
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Specialties: UNIX TCP/IP X OSF/1 AlphaAXP AIX RS/6000 Performance ISDN
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Email: cherkus@UniMaster.COM Tel: (603) 888-8308 Fax: (603) 888-8308
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if (cpu.type == PENTIUM && cpu.step < 8) { panic("Intel Inside!"); }
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Newsgroups: comp.dcom.isdn,comp.answers,news.answers,alt.internet.services
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Path: newsbf01.news.aol.com!newstf01.news.aol.com!uunet!news.sprintlink.net!mv!fastball.unimaster.com!cherkus
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From: cherkus@UniMaster.COM (Dave Cherkus)
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Subject: comp.dcom.isdn FAQ Part 2 of 5: General Topics
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Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
|
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Keywords: ISDN FAQ telecom
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Originator: cherkus@fastball.unimaster.com
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Distribution: world
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Message-ID: <isdn2_789873827@UniMaster.COM>
|
|
Nntp-Posting-Host: fastball.unimaster.com
|
|
Sender: usenet@mv.mv.com (System Administrator)
|
|
Supersedes: <isdn2_789570001@UniMaster.COM>
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Reply-To: cherkus@UniMaster.COM (Dave Cherkus)
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Expires: Thu, 9 Feb 1995 01:23:47 GMT
|
|
Summary: This posting contains a list of Frequently Asked
|
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Questions (and their answers) about ISDN.
|
|
Organization: UniMaster, Inc.
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Date: Thu, 12 Jan 1995 01:27:40 GMT
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References: <isdn1_789873827@UniMaster.COM>
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Followup-To: comp.dcom.isdn
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Lines: 1025
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Xref: newsbf01.news.aol.com comp.dcom.isdn:7726 comp.answers:6081 news.answers:18978 alt.internet.services:25720
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Archive-name: isdn-faq/part2
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Last-modified: $Date: 1995/01/12 01:18:39 $
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Version: $Revision: 4.2 $
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------------------------------
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2.01) What is ISDN?
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ISDN stands for "Integrated Services Digital Networks", and it's a
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ITU-T (formerly CCITT) term for a relatively new telecommunications
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service package. ISDN is basically the telephone network turned
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all-digital end to end, using existing switches and wiring (for the
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most part) upgraded so that the basic "call" is a 64 kbps end-to-end
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channel, with bit-diddling as needed (but not when not needed!).
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Packet and maybe frame modes are thrown in for good measure, too, in
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some places. It's offered by local telephone companies, but most
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readily in Australia, Western Europe, Japan, Singapore, and portions
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of the USA, and with other portions of USA asomewhat more behind.
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In France, ISDN is known as "RNIS".
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eleskg@nuscc.nus.sg (Winston Seah)
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goldstein@bbn.com (Fred R. Goldstein)
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paul@suite.sw.oz.au (Paul Antoine)
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tilman@gb1.sema.de (Tilman Schmidt)
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------------------------------
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2.02) What does an ISDN network connection look like?
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A Basic Rate Interface (BRI) is two 64K bearer ("B") channels and a single
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delta ("D") channel. The B channels are used for voice or data, and the D
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channel is used for signaling and/or X.25 packet networking. This is the
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variety most likely to be found in residential service.
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Equipment known as a Terminal Adapter (TA) can be used to adapt these
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channels to existing terminal equipment standards such as RS-232 and
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V.35. This equipment is typically packaged in a similar fashion to
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modems, either as standalone units or as interface cards that plug into
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a computer or various kinds of commmunications equipment (such as
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routers or PBXs). TAs do not interoperate with the modem; they
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replace the modem.
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There may be cases where there is no need to interface to existing
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terminal equipment or to emulate exisiting terminal equipment, or there
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may equipment with synchronous interfaces present. In these cases,
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standalone units or computer interfaces can provide high speed
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synchronous connections to the B channels without converting to an
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asynchronous standard.
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Another common type of equipment can be used to implement a bridge
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between local area networks using the ISDN channel to transport the
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data. These devices typically provide features such as demand
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dialing and/or data compression.
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Of course, more traditional devices such as telephones and fax machines
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can be attached to the BRI, assuming they have the proper interface
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hardware and software.
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Another flavor of ISDN is Primary Rate Interface (PRI). Inside North
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America and Japan, this consists of 24 channels, usually divided into
|
|
23 B channels and 1 D channel, and runs over the same physical
|
|
interface as T1. Outside of these areas the PRI has 31 user channels,
|
|
usually divided into 30 B channels and 1 D channel and is based on the
|
|
E1 interface. It is typically used for connections such as one between
|
|
a PBX (private branch exchange, a telephone echange operated by the
|
|
customer of a telephone company) and a CO (central office, of the
|
|
telephone company) or IXC (inter exchange carrier, a long distance
|
|
telephone company).
|
|
|
|
kevinc@aspect.UUCP (Kevin Collins)
|
|
keyman@doorway.Eng.Sun.COM (Dave Evans)
|
|
turtle@newshub.sdsu.edu (Andrew Scherpbier)
|
|
cherkus@UniMaster.COM (Dave Cherkus)
|
|
oj@vivo.com (Oliver Jones)
|
|
KUMQUAT@SMCVAX.SMCVT.EDU (Gary C. Kessler)
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
2.03) What will Basic Rate (2B+D) ISDN look like in my house/office?
|
|
|
|
An ISDN BRI U-Loop is 2 conductors from the CO (telephone company
|
|
central office) to the customer premises. Its maximum length may be
|
|
5.5 km (18000 ft). The equipment on both sides of the U loop has to be
|
|
carefully designed to deal with the long length of the U loop and the
|
|
noisy environment it operates in.
|
|
|
|
At the customer premises the U-loop is terminated by an NT1 (network
|
|
termination 1) device. The NT1 drives an S/T-bus which is usually 4
|
|
wires, but in some cases it may be 6 or 8 wires. In these optional
|
|
cases, the extra wires are used provide power to operate telephones
|
|
when normal power fails. Alternately, 'phantom' power may be derived
|
|
from the standard four wires. Outside of North America emergency mode
|
|
operation provides power for basic voice service only in the case of
|
|
loss of local power. In emergency mode operation the NT1 receives up
|
|
to 1.2W from the central office. In North America there is no provision
|
|
for emergency mode operation.
|
|
|
|
The name of the S/T bus comes from the letters used in the ISDN
|
|
specifications used to refer to two reference points, S and T. Point T
|
|
refers to the connection between the NT1 device and customer supplied
|
|
equipment. Terminals can connect directly to NT1 at point T, or there
|
|
may be a PBX (private branch exchange, i.e. a customer-owned telephone
|
|
exchange). When a PBX is present, point S refers to the connection
|
|
between the PBX and the terminal. Note that in ISDN terminology,
|
|
"terminal" can mean any sort of end-user ISDN device, such as data
|
|
terminals, telephones, FAX machines, etc.
|
|
|
|
This picture shows what a residential ISDN connection looks like.
|
|
|
|
Point T Point U |
|
|
+--------+ 4-8 wires +-------+ 2-4 wires |
|
|
|Terminal|-----+-----| NT1 |-------------[| wall (to telco CO)
|
|
+--------+ | +-------+ |
|
|
+--------+ | |
|
|
|Terminal|-----+
|
|
+--------+ |
|
|
:
|
|
+--------+ |
|
|
|Terminal|-----+
|
|
+--------+
|
|
|
|
The T bus is a multipoint bus in this configuration. It is sometimes
|
|
called the passive bus because there are no repeaters on the line
|
|
between the NT1 and the devices. It can be implemented using the same
|
|
cable and connectors as is 10 base T Ethernet. There may be up to 8
|
|
devices on the S/T bus. The bus may be formed with splitters and T
|
|
connectors - it is a bus, not a star. The D channel is used to control
|
|
the attachment of the one to eight devices to the two B channels. No
|
|
two devices attach to the same B channel at the same time.
|
|
|
|
In this configuration, the major function of the NT is to allow more
|
|
than one device to have access to the 2 B channels provided by the ISDN
|
|
BRI. For instance, you may have an ISDN telephone, an ISDN fax and an
|
|
ISDN computer interface attached to the BRI. Each device can listen
|
|
for calls and only connect to a B channel when it identifies a message
|
|
requesting a service it can provide.
|
|
|
|
The NT1 only implements part of the channel sharing scheme; the other
|
|
devices participate as well, and the communication protocol used by the
|
|
NT1 and the other devices is an integral part of the scheme. The NT1
|
|
also performs other functions; it translates the bit encoding scheme
|
|
used on the lines between it and the telephone company (the U loop) to
|
|
the encoding used between it and the devices. These schemes are
|
|
different because the device to NT encoding was designed to enable
|
|
channel sharing whereas the NT to telco encoding was designed to allow
|
|
transmission across long distances.
|
|
|
|
In the United States, the customer pays for the NT device, so don't
|
|
forget to include the cost of this unit in your cost estimates, or if
|
|
you don't need the multiple device attachment feature, try to find a
|
|
device that does not require the NT device (i.e. it attaches directly
|
|
to the U loop). If you are not in the United States the telephone
|
|
company provides the NT device, but remember there is no such thing as
|
|
a free lunch - you are probably paying for it through increased rates,
|
|
or increased taxes, etc. (flames to sci.economics or alt.talk.politics).
|
|
|
|
Unfortunately, the NT1 is not an inexpensive device. It has to convert
|
|
between the signalling used on the U loop (which is operates over long
|
|
distances (5.5 km, 18000 ft) in a noisy environment and does not have
|
|
to deal with contention between devices) and the signalling of the S/T
|
|
bus (which operates over shorter distances in a quieter environment but
|
|
it does have to deal with contention between devices and other protocol
|
|
functions). It also provides diagnostic functions such as loopback
|
|
mode, and it may have to provide power, as descibed above.
|
|
|
|
This picture shows what an ISDN connection looks like when a PBX is
|
|
present.
|
|
|
|
Point S Point T Point U |
|
|
+--------+ 4-8 wires +-------+ 4-8 wires +-------+ 2-4 wires |
|
|
|Terminal|-----------| NT2 |-----------| NT1 |-----------[| wall
|
|
+--------+ | (PBX) | +-------+ |
|
|
Point S +---+---+ |
|
|
+--------+ _________/ |
|
|
|Terminal|/ | Point S
|
|
+--------+ |
|
|
+---+----+
|
|
|Terminal|
|
|
+--------+
|
|
|
|
In this configuration, the wires at points S and T are point-to-point
|
|
links. Electrically, the S and T points are the same, which is why the
|
|
name S/T bus is almost always used. This makes sense; the terminal
|
|
should see the same physical interface whether it is hooked up with or
|
|
without a PBX. But, logically they are different. The telephone
|
|
company needs to know that there is a PBX between itself and the user
|
|
so that it can coordinate its efforts with the PBX. So, in cases where
|
|
the difference is important, the specifications use the S and T
|
|
terminology.
|
|
|
|
When there is no PBX in the configuration, the NT1 device is usually a
|
|
standalone device that is packaged a lot like a modem: in a small box
|
|
when there are only a few, and in a rackmount when you need a lot of
|
|
them. In the United States, the customer buys the NT1 but in most of
|
|
the rest of the world the telephone company provides the NT1. When
|
|
there is a PBX the rackmounted NT1s are quite common. Also, when
|
|
there is a PBX the use of PRI lines instead of BRI lines is common.
|
|
|
|
cherkus@unimaster.com (Dave Cherkus)
|
|
cliff@Berkeley.EDU (Cliff Frost)
|
|
curt@kcwc.com (Curt Welch)
|
|
dror@digibd.com (Dror Kessler)
|
|
Eric_Boll-RXNN70Q@email.sps.mot.com (Eric Boll)
|
|
glarson@bnr.ca (Greg Larson)
|
|
krowett@large.cisco.com (Kevin J. Rowett)
|
|
mea@intgp1.att.com (Mark Anderson)
|
|
paul@suite.sw.oz.au (Paul Antoine)
|
|
pturner@eng.auburn.edu ( Patton M. Turner)
|
|
ronnie@cis
|
|
|
|
1/25/95 12:05:38 PM Opening ÒISDN FAQ 1/25/95#2Ó for recording.
|
|
co.com (Ronnie B. Kon)
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
2.04) What is a NT1? Who sells them?
|
|
|
|
[ Ed Note: Some may feel that there's a bit of overlap between the
|
|
preceeding sections and this one, but the preceeding sections are
|
|
hard to write without integrating NT1 information and this one
|
|
is so informative and well-written that it can stand on its own
|
|
so I think I should leave it as is. Comments? ]
|
|
|
|
Reply: What's an NT1, why do I need one, and where do I get one?
|
|
|
|
An NT1 (network terminator 1) is a device which provides an interface
|
|
between the two-wire twisted pairs used by telephone companies in
|
|
their ISDN Basic Rate (BRI) network and an end-user's four-wire
|
|
terminal equipment. The NT1 also provides power for the terminal
|
|
equipment if necessary (most ISDN phones need power from the NT1, but
|
|
most data terminal adapters--TAs--don't).
|
|
|
|
Most ISDN central office equipment (including AT&T 5ESS and Northern
|
|
Telecom DMS-100 switches) sends data to your home or office via what's
|
|
known in ITU-T lingo as a U interface on a single twisted pair. The
|
|
NT1 hooks up to this twisted pair, and converts the signals from the U
|
|
interface to the four-wire S/T interface. Most terminal equipment
|
|
(for example, the IBM Wave Runner add-in-card TA and most telephones)
|
|
offers the S/T interface.
|
|
|
|
In North America, you have to buy and maintain your own NT1 device.
|
|
The telephone company offers end-users a U interface. In Europe and
|
|
Japan, the telephone company provides the NT1, owns it, and offers
|
|
end-users a S/T interface directly. In North America, some ISDN
|
|
equipment vendors offer devices which connect directly to the U
|
|
interface (for example, the Combinet CB160). If you have one of these
|
|
devices, you don't need to buy a separate NT1. The U interface can't
|
|
be built in to the device when it's offered for sale in Europe or
|
|
Japan. (This is unfortunate for vendors, who must build and test
|
|
separate products for the relatively small North American market if
|
|
they want to offer the convenience of a U-interface.)
|
|
|
|
Many types of NT1s require an external power supply, although some
|
|
include a built-in supply. There are typically two classes of
|
|
external power supplies. One class provides ten to twelve
|
|
watts--enough power for both the NT1 and for the terminal equipment.
|
|
The other class provides about two watts--enough power for the NT1
|
|
alone. Many good power supplies offer at least a few seconds of
|
|
battery backup, to cover for glitches in line power.
|
|
|
|
Physically, the NT1 is a little plastic box with LEDs on it which can
|
|
be screwed to a wall. The external power supply (if one is included)
|
|
is a typical plug-wart. If you're using a lot of BRI lines, you can
|
|
buy a rack holding a dozen or so NT1s with a built in power supply.
|
|
|
|
It's a good idea to install your NT1 in a permanent fashion. If you
|
|
unplug the ISDN line (the U interface twisted pair) from the NT1, it
|
|
shows up as a sign of line trouble in the central office. Some
|
|
telephone companies respond to this so-called "trouble" by disabling
|
|
your ISDN line at the central office, and require you to place a
|
|
service call on your analog telephone to get your ISDN service
|
|
restored.
|
|
|
|
All the vendors shown here accept credit card orders and ship
|
|
promptly. All the vendors have well-organized telesales operations
|
|
with friendly and reasonably knowledgeable sales people. Prices are in
|
|
US dollars, as of 10/26/94, for single-unit purchases. Pricing is
|
|
becoming volatile; competition seems to be heating up.
|
|
|
|
AT&T, Northern Telecom, and Tone Commander NT1s can be ordered from:
|
|
Bell Atlantic Teleproducts
|
|
West Building, Suite 150
|
|
50 E. Swedesford Rd
|
|
Frazer Pa, 19355
|
|
tel +1-215-695-2300 or 800-221-0845
|
|
|
|
Maker Description Part No. Price
|
|
----- ----------- -------- ------
|
|
Northern Telecom NT1 standalone IN51000 108.00
|
|
Northern Telecom 10w power supply IN61000 72.00
|
|
Northern Telecom 2w power supply IN61005 36.00
|
|
AT&T NT1U-220 IA51007 276.00
|
|
AT&T NT1U-230 IA51009 165.00
|
|
AT&T 10w power supply IA61000 105.00
|
|
Tone Commander NT1 IT51000 224.00
|
|
Tone Commander 2w power supply IT61000 34.00
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tone Commander offers their own NT1 for sale. Their sales literature
|
|
says it may be used as a drop-in replacement for the AT&T NT1U-220.
|
|
|
|
Tone Commander Systems
|
|
4379 150th Ave NE, PO Box 97039
|
|
Redmond WA 98073-9739 USA
|
|
+1 206 883-3600 or 800 524 0024
|
|
fax +1 206 881 7179
|
|
They may refer you to a distributor such as
|
|
Greybar Electric or Bell Atlantic.
|
|
|
|
Maker Description Part No. Price
|
|
----- ----------- -------- ------
|
|
Tone Commander NT1 standalone NT1U-220TC 185.25
|
|
Tone Commander Power supply 901034 28.50
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adtran offers their own NT1 products for sale.
|
|
|
|
Adtran, Inc.
|
|
901 Explorer Blvd Huntsville, AL 35806-2807 USA
|
|
+1 205 971 8000
|
|
fax +1 205 971 8030
|
|
|
|
Maker Description Part No. Price
|
|
----- ----------- -------- ------
|
|
Adtran NT1 NT1 ACE 395.00
|
|
Adtran Power Supply PS2 150.00
|
|
Adtran Power Kit 74.00
|
|
Adtran Standalone NT1 NT1/T400 575.00
|
|
(incl 7W supply)
|
|
Adtran Rackmount NT1 NT1/T400 395.00
|
|
|
|
|
|
IBM sells the RoadRunner, an NT1 device with added value: it can
|
|
operate either as a standard NT1 or in extended mode. In extended mode
|
|
it provides an intergrated voice terminal adapter and a connection to
|
|
which POTS telephone devices (including modems, FAXs, and answering
|
|
machines) can be attached. This allow a home POTS line to be replaced
|
|
with an ISDN line.
|
|
|
|
When operating with a DMS-100 switch, one B channel is devoted to the
|
|
analog phones and one B channel is devoted to the data terminal
|
|
adapter. When attached to a 5ESS switch, the B channels may be
|
|
allocated dynamically. The analog phones may use either B channel that
|
|
is available, and the data terminal device may use either or both B
|
|
channels.
|
|
|
|
The device includes a built in power supply and a back up battery,
|
|
providing up to 18 hours of on-hook, or 6 hours of off-hook operation
|
|
during a local power failure.
|
|
|
|
IBM
|
|
800-426-2255
|
|
+1-404-238-2157
|
|
|
|
Maker Description Part No. Price
|
|
----- ----------- -------- ------
|
|
IBM 7845 Network 82G6060 350.00
|
|
Terminator
|
|
Extended
|
|
|
|
Motorola UDS offers the NT100 Network Termination Unit. This is an
|
|
NT1 with added value: a series of diagnostic tests can be chosen via a
|
|
front-panel rotary switch.
|
|
|
|
Motorola UDS
|
|
5000 Bradford Drive
|
|
Huntsville AL 35805-1993
|
|
+1 205 430 8000
|
|
800 451 2369
|
|
fax +1 205 830 5657
|
|
|
|
Maker Description Part No. Price
|
|
----- ----------- -------- ------
|
|
Motorola UDS Net. Term. Unit NT100
|
|
|
|
Thanks to the following people who helped uncover this information.
|
|
tynane@chdasic.sps.mot.com (Ed Tynan)
|
|
rkp@bighorn.dr.att.com (Russell Pierce)
|
|
"H.A. Kippenhan Jr." <KIPPENHAN@fndcd.fnal.gov>
|
|
csederholm@VNET.IBM.COM
|
|
The people who compiled the NIUF solutions catalog
|
|
|
|
Special thanks to oj@vivo.com (Oliver Jones) for editing this section.
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
2.05) Can the existing local loop lines be reused for ISDN?
|
|
|
|
The ISDN pairs are the same wires as used for regular telephone
|
|
service. If you became an ISDN user at home, the same wire pair that
|
|
now provides your telephone service would be used to provide ISDN
|
|
(assuming you no longer have the regular line).
|
|
|
|
Most of the lines do not require any special conditioning. Yes, if
|
|
a line has load coils on it they must be removed, BUT load coils
|
|
are usually only found on existing lines that are 15,000 feet or
|
|
longer. As to lines with bridge taps, the 2B1Q line transmission
|
|
scheme (not to be confused with 2B + D channelization) is tolerant
|
|
of a certain amount of bridge taps and, therefore it is only a minimal
|
|
subset of existing lines (lines with bridge taps whose total length is
|
|
greater than 3000 feet for the bridge taps) that would require
|
|
special "de-conditioning."
|
|
|
|
With those things as the criteria, (in North America) we find than
|
|
generally around 90% or so of existing telephone lines need no
|
|
"de-conditioning" in order to be used for ISDN BRI service.
|
|
|
|
whs70@cc.bellcore.com (sohl,william h)
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
2.06) How does this compare to regular phone lines?
|
|
|
|
The ISDN line may act like two independent phone lines with two numbers.
|
|
Depending on the CO equipment, conferencing features etc. may be available
|
|
(conferencing in the telephone switch). BRI ISDN phones can support key-set
|
|
features such as you would expect to get on an office PBX like:
|
|
- multiple directory numers per line.
|
|
- multiple lines per directory number.
|
|
- conferencing features.
|
|
- forwarding features.
|
|
- voice mail features.
|
|
- speed call.
|
|
- call park.
|
|
- call pickup.
|
|
- ring again.
|
|
- textual status displays.
|
|
|
|
curt@kcwc.com (Curt Welch)
|
|
glarson@bnr.ca (Greg Larson)
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
2.07) Is caller ID available on ISDN?
|
|
|
|
Caller ID (name or number display) may be supported (depending on the
|
|
CO setup). The availability of caller ID for residential phones would
|
|
depend on the capabilities of the local phone network and legislation
|
|
allowing or disallowing caller ID. The availability of Caller ID
|
|
relies on the underlying switching protocol used by the switches
|
|
that make up the telephone system (e.g. SS7).
|
|
|
|
curt@kcwc.com (Curt Welch)
|
|
glarson@bnr.ca (Greg Larson)
|
|
KUMQUAT@SMCVAX.SMCVT.EDU (Gary C. Kessler)
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
2.08) What do I get above and beyond plain old telephone service?
|
|
|
|
Plain old telephone service is transmitted between the central office
|
|
to your home or office telephone set (or modem, or fax) in analog
|
|
form. At the central office, the analog signal is converted to a
|
|
series of digital samples at a rate of 8000 samples per second. Each
|
|
sample is seven or eight bits in length. As the signals for a
|
|
telephone call move around the central office, or between central
|
|
offices, they are transmitted in digital form. Thus, a telephone call
|
|
consumes a transmission bandwidth of either 56 or 64 kilobits per
|
|
second. The theoretical (Nyquist) limit for the frequency response of
|
|
a signal sampled 8000 times per second is 4kHz. However, due to
|
|
various losses in the telephone system, the frequency response of an
|
|
ordinary telephone call is usually quoted as 3.1kHz. Ordinary
|
|
modem-based data transmission uses schemes for encoding data in an
|
|
analog signal so it fits in this 3.1kHz bandwidth. 14.4kbps is a
|
|
commonly available transmission rate at the high end of the scale.
|
|
With this transmission rate, over three-quarters of the bitrate handled
|
|
by the central office is wasted.
|
|
|
|
Notice that in telephony, 64kpbs means 64000 bits per second, whereas
|
|
in computer engineering 64k bytes typically means 65536 bytes.
|
|
|
|
ISDN brings the digital signal all the way to your home or desktop. With
|
|
ISDN, you can place a data call which uses all 56kbps or 64kbps, because
|
|
there is no need to convert the signal to analog in your modem and back
|
|
to digital at the central office. The availability of the full bandwidth
|
|
presents some interesting technological opportunities:
|
|
-- transmission of high-fidelity compressed audio
|
|
-- transmission of encrypted audio
|
|
-- transmission of lots of data
|
|
-- transmission of other compressed signals, such as video
|
|
|
|
Basic-rate ISDN (BRI) offers two channels of this service. In BRI, the
|
|
connection between your site and the central office offers 64kbps
|
|
bidirectionally on each channel. Each of these channels may be used
|
|
for a voice call, for circuit-switched data, or for X.25 packet
|
|
switched data. Thus, the existing POTS circuit [POTS: Plain Old
|
|
Telephone Service, i.e. traditional analog telephony] can be
|
|
conditioned to carry two calls at the same time. (Your mileage may
|
|
vary; you have to specifically order and pay for the various services
|
|
from your telephone company, just as you have to order and pay for Call
|
|
Waiting for an ordinary phone line. Also, not all services are
|
|
available everywhere; X.25 connectivity between COs is a notable
|
|
problem in the Greater Boston area as of 9/93, for example.)
|
|
|
|
Incidentally, ISDN brings another interesting service to your home or
|
|
desktop: a highly reliable 8000Hz clock signal. In most cases, the
|
|
central office switches, long-distance carriers, and ISDN terminal
|
|
equipment all operate with exactly the same clock frequency. In a
|
|
real-time communications environment (like a voice phone call) this
|
|
means that there's no need to compensate for differences between the
|
|
sampling rates at each end of the call.
|
|
|
|
One of the other features is that instead of the CO sending an AC ring
|
|
signal to activate your bell, it sends a digital packet that tells WHO
|
|
is calling (if available), WHAT TYPE of call (speech, datacomm?), the
|
|
NUMBER DIALED (maybe one of your aliases) and some other stuff. Your
|
|
equipment can then analyze this stuff and make an "intelligent" decision
|
|
what to do with it. For example, a phone (with speech-only capacity)
|
|
would completely ignore a datacomm call while a Terminal Adapter (ISDN
|
|
"modem") or a phone with built-in datacom functions would respond to it.
|
|
If you have several "aliases" tied to your line, you can program certain
|
|
phones to answer calls for certain numbers only. Datacomm calls contain
|
|
baud rate and protocol information within the setup signal so that the
|
|
connection is virtually instantaneous (no messing around with trying
|
|
different carriers until both ends match).
|
|
|
|
curt@kcwc.com (Curt Welch)
|
|
etxorst@eos.ericsson.se (Torsten Lif)
|
|
oj@vivo.com (Oliver Jones)
|
|
Helge.Oldach@Stollmann.DE (Helge Oldach)
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
2.09) What do ISDN phones cost?
|
|
|
|
The ISDN sets can cost between $180 for an AT&T 8503T ISDN phone from
|
|
Pacific Bell up to $1900 depending on what/how many features are needed.
|
|
|
|
A recent report states that the price is $536.90 for an AT&T 7506 with
|
|
the RS-232 port on the back and $102.70 to get the 507A adaptor to hook
|
|
analog devices to my 7506.
|
|
|
|
Recent quotes were "$200" for a Coretelco 1800 and "$600" for a Fujitsu
|
|
SRS 1050.
|
|
|
|
keyman@doorway.Eng.Sun.COM (Dave Evans)
|
|
huntting@futureworld.advtech.uswest.com (Brad Huntting)
|
|
spike@coke.std.com (Joe Ilacqua)
|
|
scotty@l5next.gagetalker.com (Scott Turner)
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
2.10) Can you use existing telephone equipment with the voice portion?
|
|
|
|
Terminal Adapters (TA'a) are available that will interface non ISDN terminal
|
|
equipment (TE), called TE2 to the S/T interface. At least one RBOC provides
|
|
a modem pool to allow for interchange of data with POTS subscribers. Bellcore
|
|
may approve a standard to allow a analog pair to interface to POTS sets from
|
|
a NT1. Also w/o a NT2 only one set can be connected to a B channel at a time. This prevents 2 sets from participating in the same voice call.
|
|
|
|
pturner@eng.auburn.edu ( Patton M. Turner)
|
|
spike@coke.std.com (Joe Ilacqua)
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
2.11) What is National ISDN?
|
|
|
|
Because of the breadth of the international ISDN standards, there are a
|
|
number of implementation choices that vendors of ISDN equipment can
|
|
make. Given the number of choices vendors can make, different vendors
|
|
equipment may not interoperate. In the United States, Bellcore has
|
|
released a series of specifications to try to avoid these
|
|
interoperability problems. These are the National ISDN
|
|
specifications. Contact the Bellcore ISDN hot line listed below for
|
|
more information.
|
|
|
|
KUMQUAT@SMCVAX.SMCVT.EDU (Gary C. Kessler)
|
|
cherkus@UniMaster.COM (Dave Cherkus)
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
2.12) What is the NIUF?
|
|
|
|
North American ISDN Users Forum (NIUF) is an org. of ISDN-interested
|
|
parties, coordinated by NIST (National Institute of Stds. and Tech.)
|
|
Contact:
|
|
|
|
NIUF Secretariat
|
|
National Institute of Standards and Technology
|
|
Building 223, Room B364
|
|
Gaithersberg, MD 20899
|
|
(301) 975-2937 voice
|
|
(301) 926-9675 fax
|
|
(301) 869-7281 BBS 8N1 2400 bps
|
|
|
|
Bellcore has made the PostScript files for "A Catalog of National
|
|
ISDN Solutions for Selected NIUF Applications, Second Edition"
|
|
accessable via anonymous ftp from the machine info.bellcore.com.
|
|
This document has a tremendous amount of information about
|
|
ISDN products and vendors, among many other things. See the item
|
|
below for details.
|
|
|
|
The currently approved documents for the Application Software
|
|
Interface (ASI) from the North American ISDN User's Forum (NIUF)
|
|
are available via anonymous FTP from dsys.ncsl.nist.gov. The
|
|
documents are in Postscript and found in uncompressed ASCII (foo.ps),
|
|
compressed (foo.Z) and zipped (foo.zip) files.
|
|
|
|
These documents describe the Implementation Agreements made by the
|
|
NIUF for an API to ISDN services.
|
|
|
|
The file sizes are approximate and intended to help determine space
|
|
requirements for transfer.
|
|
|
|
Part 1: Overview and Protocols - Approved: 10/4/91, Updated: 10/30/92
|
|
~ftp/asi/docs/part1.ps - 347853 bytes
|
|
~ftp/asi/docs/part1.Z - 119655 bytes
|
|
~ftp/asi/docs/part1.zip - 89545 bytes
|
|
|
|
Part 2: MS-DOS Access Method - Approved: 6/5/92
|
|
~ftp/asi/docs/part2.ps - 146474 bytes
|
|
~ftp/asi/docs/part2.Z - 44450 bytes
|
|
~ftp/asi/docs/part2.zip - 31599 bytes
|
|
|
|
Part 3: Enhanced DOS/Protected Mode Shell Access Method -
|
|
Approved: June 5, 1992, Updated: 10/30/92
|
|
~ftp/asi/docs/part3.ps - 285344 bytes
|
|
~ftp/asi/docs/part3.Z - 91273 bytes
|
|
~ftp/asi/docs/part3.zip - 68331 bytes
|
|
|
|
Part 4: UNIX Access Method - Approved: 10/30/92
|
|
~ftp/asi/docs/part4.ps - 151809 bytes
|
|
~ftp/asi/docs/part4.Z - 47765 bytes
|
|
~ftp/asi/docs/part4.zip - 33465 bytes
|
|
|
|
For further information regarding these documents please contact
|
|
Robert Toense (rtoense@nist.gov) (phone: +1 301 975 2930).
|
|
|
|
cherkus@UniMaster.COM (Dave Cherkus)
|
|
vances@xenitec.on.ca (Vance Shipley)
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
2.13) What is ATM?
|
|
|
|
ATM (Asynchronous Transfer Mode) is a switching/transmission technique
|
|
where data is transmitted in small, fixed sized cells (5 byte header,
|
|
48 byte payload). The cells lend themselves both to the time-division-
|
|
multiplexing characteristics of the transmission media, and the packet
|
|
switching characteristics desired of data networks. At each switching
|
|
node, the ATM header identifies a "virtual path" or "virtual circuit"
|
|
that the cell contains data for, enabling the switch to forward the
|
|
cell to the correct next-hop trunk. The "virtual path" is set up
|
|
through the involved switches when two endpoints wish to communicate.
|
|
This type of switching can be implemented in hardware, almost essential
|
|
when trunk speed range from 45Mb/s to 1Gb/s.
|
|
|
|
One use of ATM is to serve as the core technology for a new set of ISDN
|
|
offerings known as Broadband ISDN (B-ISDN).
|
|
|
|
For more information, read comp.dcom.cell-relay.
|
|
|
|
This group has a Frequently Asked Questions list; it is posted
|
|
to news.answers and is in various archives as cell-relay-faq.
|
|
|
|
art@acc.com (Art Berggreen)
|
|
cherkus@UniMaster.COM (Dave Cherkus)
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
2.14) What is B-ISDN?
|
|
|
|
Broadband ISDN refers to services that require channel rates greater than
|
|
a single primary rate channel. While this does not specificially imply
|
|
any particular technology, ATM will be used as the switching infrastructure
|
|
for B-ISDN services.
|
|
|
|
B-ISDN services are categorized as:
|
|
|
|
INTERACTIVE
|
|
Conversational -- such as videotelephony, videoconferencing, ...
|
|
Messaging -- such as electronic mail for images, video, graphics,...
|
|
Retrieval -- such as teleshopping, news retrieval, remote education,...
|
|
|
|
DISTRIBUTION
|
|
Without user presentation control -- electronic newspaper, electronic
|
|
newspaper, TV distribution
|
|
With user presentation control -- remote education, teleadvertising,
|
|
news retrieval
|
|
|
|
More information: ITU ITU-T Rec. I.211.
|
|
|
|
KUMQUAT@SMCVAX.SMCVT.EDU (Gary C. Kessler)
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
2.15) What is BONDING?
|
|
|
|
An inverse multiplexing method of the Bandwidth ON Demand
|
|
INteroperability Group, implemented by most (all?) inverse multiplexor
|
|
vendors to interoperate with inverse multiplexors of other vendors.
|
|
|
|
BONDING is a set of protocols developed by U.S. inverse multiplexor
|
|
that supports communication over a set of separate channels as if their
|
|
bandwidth were combined into a single coherent channel. For example it
|
|
supports a single 384 kb/s data stream over 6 64 kb/s channels.
|
|
|
|
The specification defines a way of calculating relative delay between
|
|
multiple network channels and ordering data such that what goes in one
|
|
end comes out the other.
|
|
|
|
Most (all?) vendors also have their own proprietary methods that
|
|
usually add features and functions not present in BONDING mode 1. Mode
|
|
1 is the mode used for recent interoperability testing between vendors.
|
|
|
|
Chip Sharp at Teleos has made available electronic copies of the
|
|
BONDING (Bandwidth on Demand Interoperability Group) 1.0 and 1.1
|
|
specifications. The specs are available via WWW, gopher, anonymous
|
|
FTP, DECnet COPY, and AFS (see instructions below).
|
|
|
|
The following files are available:
|
|
|
|
- aaareadme-networks help file (in ascii text)
|
|
- bdmain.doc main body of BONDING 1.0 specification
|
|
(Word for Windows 2.0 format)
|
|
- bdmain.ps main body of BONDING 1.0 specification (Postscript)
|
|
- bdannex.doc annex of BONDING 1.0 specification (Word
|
|
for Windows 2.0 format)
|
|
- bdannex.ps annex of BONDING 1.0 specification (Postscript)
|
|
- bd_v1_1.doc changes for BONDING 1.1 specification (Word
|
|
for Windows 2.0 format)
|
|
- bd_v1_1.ps changes for BONDING 1.1 specification (Postscript)
|
|
|
|
Transfer Instructions:
|
|
|
|
WWW:
|
|
server: www.hep.net
|
|
URL: gopher://www.hep.net:70/11/info_center/networks/bonding
|
|
|
|
Gopher:
|
|
server: gopher.hep.net
|
|
Bookmark:
|
|
Name=Bandwidth on Demand Interoperability Group (BONDING) Documents
|
|
Type=1
|
|
Port=70
|
|
Path=1/info_center/networks/bonding
|
|
Host=gopher.hep.net
|
|
|
|
Anonymous FTP:
|
|
server: ftp.hep.net
|
|
directory: networks/bonding
|
|
|
|
DECnet COPY (only for those on HEP-NSI DECnet):
|
|
HEPNET::[ANON_FTP.NETWORKS.BONDING]
|
|
|
|
AFS:
|
|
/afs/hepafs1.hep.net/public/anon_ftp/networks/bonding
|
|
|
|
marc@dumbcat.sf.ca.us (Marco S Hyman)
|
|
"Bob Larribeau" <p00136@psilink.com>
|
|
"David E. Martin" <dem@hep.net>
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
2.16) Data Encapsulation for IP over ISDN
|
|
|
|
A decision was made at the Amsterdam IETF to state that all systems
|
|
wishing to guarantee IP interoperability should implement PPP. Such
|
|
systems may also implement the Frame Relay or X.25 encapsulations, and
|
|
an RFC will be published delineating how, when it is known that the
|
|
encapsulations are limited to that set of three, they may be
|
|
distinguished by examination of the first correctly checksummed and
|
|
HDLC bit-stuffed packet.
|
|
|
|
Many implementations are using PPP so that they can negotiate
|
|
compression and/or multilink operation.
|
|
|
|
There is an Internet Draft from the Point-to-Point Protocol Working
|
|
Group of the Internet Engineering Task Force that describes the use of
|
|
PPP over ISDN. This draft is named draft-ietf-pppext-isdn-NN.txt in
|
|
the internet-drafts Shadow Directories on nic.ddn.mil, nnsc.nsf.net,
|
|
nic.nordu.net, ftp.nisc.sri.com, munnari.oz.au, Germany.EU.net and on
|
|
many, many other mirror archives. This is also discussed in RFC 1356
|
|
|
|
1/25/95 12:06:07 PM Opening ÒISDN FAQ 1/25/95#3Ó for recording.
|
|
|
|
by Malis, et. al.
|
|
|
|
A common practice in most European countries is raw IP packets
|
|
delimited by HDLC flags. Another common practice is an encapsulation
|
|
using simple HDLC in layer 1, X.75 (LAPB, usually I-frames) in layer 2
|
|
and, sometimes, T.70 in layer 3. PPP is used instead of HDLC/X.75/T.70
|
|
when the network doesn't provide the callers telephone number eg. when
|
|
emulating a modem or the callers number is lost on telephone company
|
|
borders. In this case, caller authentication is done via PAP/CHAP
|
|
instead.
|
|
|
|
sklower@toe.CS.Berkeley.EDU (Keith Sklower)
|
|
cherkus@UniMaster.COM (Dave Cherkus)
|
|
KUMQUAT@SMCVAX.SMCVT.EDU (Gary C. Kessler)
|
|
muftix@junior.bintec.de (Juergen Ernst Guenther)
|
|
cabo@Informatik.Uni-Bremen.DE (Carsten)
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
2.17) Full Motion Video over ISDN
|
|
|
|
In ISDN, video isn't a "service being offered" - at least not for
|
|
low/midrange quality. You buy the proper equipment for both
|
|
subscribers, plug it in, and place the call. Just like speaking French
|
|
on ISDN isn't something being offered - it is something you just do,
|
|
yourself.
|
|
|
|
Video telephony over narrowband ISDN is governed by a suite of ITU-T
|
|
(formerly CCITT) interoperability standards. The overall video
|
|
telephony suite is known informally as p * 64 (and pronounced
|
|
'p star 64'), and formally as standard H.320. H.320 is an "umbrella"
|
|
standard; it specifies H.261 for video compression, H.221, H.230, and
|
|
H.242 for communications, control, and indication, G.711, G.722, and
|
|
G.728 for audio signals, and several others for specialized purposes.
|
|
A common misconception, exploited by some equipment manufacturers, is
|
|
that compliance with H.261 (the video compression standard) is enough
|
|
to guarantee interoperability.
|
|
|
|
Bandwidth can be divided up among video, voice, and data in a
|
|
bewildering variety of ways. Typically, 56kbps might be allocated to
|
|
voice, with 1.6kbps to signalling (control and indication signals) and
|
|
the balance allocated to video.
|
|
|
|
An H.320-compatible terminal can support audio and video in one B
|
|
channel using G.728 audio at 16 kb/s. For a 64 kb/s channel, this
|
|
leaves 46.4 kb/s for video (after subtracting 1.6 kb/s for H.221
|
|
framing).
|
|
|
|
The resolution of a H.261 video image is either 352x288 (known as CIF)
|
|
or 176x144 (known as quarter-CIF or QCIF). The frame rate can be
|
|
anything from 30 frames/second and down. Configurations typically use
|
|
a 2B (BRI) or a 6B (switched-384 or 3xBRI with an inverse multiplexer)
|
|
service, depending on the desired cost and video quality. In a 384kbps
|
|
call, a video conferencing system can achieve 30 frames/second at CIF,
|
|
and looks comparable to a VHS videotape picture. In a 2B BRI call, a
|
|
standard video phone can achieve 15 frames/second at CIF.
|
|
|
|
Those who have seen the 1B video call in operation generally agree that
|
|
the quality is not sufficient for anything useful like computer based
|
|
training - only for the social aspect of being able to *see* Grandma as
|
|
well as hear her (sort of like the snapshot pictures you make with that
|
|
$5 camera with no controls).
|
|
|
|
A 2B picture, on the other hand, is for all practical purposes
|
|
sufficient for remote education, presentations etc. Rapidly changing
|
|
scenes are still not very well handled, but as soon as the picture
|
|
calms down, the sharpness and color quality are impressive (considering
|
|
that only two plain phone channels are being used). With 2B+D being the
|
|
standard BRI, this kind of picturephone will be usable "everywhere"
|
|
(including private homes).
|
|
|
|
However, it should still be noted that 6xB or H0 does allow for dramatic
|
|
improvement in picture quality compared to 2xB. In particular, H.320
|
|
video/audio applications will often allocate 56kbps for audio, leaving
|
|
only 68.8kbps for video when using 2xB. On the other hand, using H0
|
|
would get you 326.4kbps for video with 56kbps for audio. Alternative
|
|
audio algorithms can improve picture quality over 2xB by not stealing
|
|
as many bits. Note that 6B is not identical to H0; the latter is a
|
|
single channel which will give you 80kbps above that of six separate B
|
|
channels. Inverse multiplexors can be used to combine B channels.
|
|
|
|
ketil@edb.tih.no (Ketil Albertsen,TIH)
|
|
kevin@newshost.pictel.com (Kevin Davis)
|
|
oj@vivo.com (Oliver Jones)
|
|
mikes2@cc.bellcore.com (Mike Souryal)
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
2.18) What is a SPID? How come my ISDN device won't work without one?
|
|
|
|
SPIDs are Service Profiles IDs. SPIDs are used to identify what sort
|
|
of services and features the switch provides to the ISDN device.
|
|
Currently they are used only for circuit-switched service (as opposed
|
|
to packet-switched). Annex A to ITU recommendation Q.932 specifies the
|
|
(optional) procedures for SPIDs. They are most commonly implemented by
|
|
ISDN equipment used in North America.
|
|
|
|
When a new subscriber is added, the telco personnel allocate a SPID
|
|
just as they allocate a directory number. In many cases, the SPID
|
|
number is identical to the (full ten digit) directory number. In other
|
|
cases it may be the directory number concatinated with various other
|
|
strings of digits, such as digits 0100 or 0010, 1 or 2 (indicating the
|
|
first or second B channel on a non-centrex line), or 100 or 200 (same
|
|
idea but on a centrex line) or some other, seemingly arbitrary string.
|
|
Some people report SPIDs of the form 01nnnnnnn0 for AT&T custom and
|
|
01nnnnnnn011 for NI-1, where n is the seven digit directory number.
|
|
It is all quite implementation dependent.
|
|
|
|
The subscriber needs to configure the SPID into their terminal (i.e.
|
|
computer or telephone, etc., not their NT-1 or NT-2) before they will
|
|
be able to connect to the central office switch.
|
|
|
|
When the subscriber plugs in a properly configured device to the line,
|
|
Layer 2 initialization takes place, establishing the basic transport
|
|
mechanism. However if the subscriber has not configured the given SPID
|
|
into their ISDN device, the device will not perform layer 3
|
|
initialization and the subscriber will not be able to make calls. This
|
|
is, unfortunately, how many subscribers discover they need a SPID.
|
|
|
|
Once the SPID is configured, the terminals go through an
|
|
initialization/identification state which has the terminal send the
|
|
SPID to the network in a Layer 3 INFOrmation message whereby the
|
|
network responds with an INFO message with the EID information element
|
|
(ie). Thereafter the SPID is not sent again to the switch. The switch
|
|
may send the EID or the Called Party Number (CdPN) in the SETUP message
|
|
to the terminal for the purpose of terminal selection.
|
|
|
|
SPIDs should not be confused with TEIs (terminal endpoint identifiers).
|
|
TEIs identify the terminal at Layer 2 for a particular interface
|
|
(line). TEIs will be unique on an interface, whereas SPIDs will be
|
|
unique on the whole switch and tend to be derived from the primary
|
|
directory number of the subscriber. Although they are used at
|
|
different layers, they have a 1-to-1 correspondence so mixing them up
|
|
isn't too dangerous. TEIs are dynamic (different each time the terminal
|
|
is plugged into the switch) but SPIDS are not. Following the
|
|
initialization sequence mentioned above the 1-to-1 correspondence is
|
|
established. TEIs are usually not visible to the ISDN user so they are
|
|
not as well known as SPIDs.
|
|
|
|
The "address" of the layer 3 message is usually considered to be the
|
|
Call Reference Value (also dynamic but this time on a per call basis)
|
|
as opposed to the SPID, so the management entity in the ISDN device's
|
|
software must associate EID/CdPN on a particular TEI and Call Reference
|
|
Number to a SPID.
|
|
|
|
There are some standards that call for a default Service Profile, where
|
|
a terminal doesn't need to provide a SPID to become active. Without
|
|
the SPID however, the switch has no way of knowing which terminal is
|
|
which on the interface so for multiple terminals an incoming call would
|
|
be offered to the first terminal that responded, rather than to a
|
|
specific terminal.
|
|
|
|
sorflet@bnr.ca (winston (w.l.) sorfleet)
|
|
cstorry@gandalf.ca (Chuck Storry)
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
2.19) Will ISDN terminal equipment that works in one country
|
|
work properly when it is installed in another country?
|
|
|
|
There are four major problem areas.
|
|
|
|
The first has to do with voice encoding, and is only a problem if the
|
|
equipment is a telephone. Equipment designed for use in North America
|
|
and Japan uses mu-law encoding when converting from analog to digital,
|
|
whereas the rest of the world uses A-law. If the equipment has a
|
|
switch for selecting one or the other of these encoding types, then
|
|
there will not be a problem with the voice encoding.
|
|
|
|
The second has to do with the way the equipment communicates with the
|
|
telephone exchange. There are interoperability problems because
|
|
* there are so many different services (and related parameters) that the
|
|
user can request and
|
|
* each country can decide whether or not to allow the telephone exchange
|
|
to offer a given service and
|
|
* the specifications that describe the services are open to interpretation
|
|
in many different ways.
|
|
So, as with other interoperability problems, you must work with the vendors
|
|
to determine if the equipment will interoperate. This is a basic problem;
|
|
it impacts all ISDN equipment, not just voice equipment.
|
|
|
|
The third has to do with homologation, or regulatory approval. In most
|
|
countries in the world the manufacturer of telephone equipment must
|
|
obtain approvals before the equipment may be connected to the network.
|
|
So, even if the equipment works with the network in a particular
|
|
country, it isn't OK to hook it up until the manufacturer has jumped
|
|
through the various hoops to demonstrate safety and compliance. It is
|
|
typically more expensive to obtain world-wide homologation approvals
|
|
for a newly-developed piece of ISDN equipment than it is to develop it
|
|
and tool up to manufacture it.
|
|
|
|
A fourth issue is in the US the TA and NT1 are both provided by the
|
|
customer, while in Europe the NT1 is provided by telephone company.
|
|
Stated differently, if you walk into a store in the US and buy
|
|
something to plug into an ISDN line it may be designed as a one-piece
|
|
unit that connects to point U. In Europe you would get something that
|
|
plugs into point T. Thus you might take a piece of US-originated
|
|
equipment to Europe and find that it won't work because the jack in
|
|
Europe is a T interface and the plug on your US equipment is a U
|
|
interface.
|
|
|
|
There are attempts to remedy this situation, particularly for BRI
|
|
ISDN. In North America, the National ISDN User's Forum is coming
|
|
up with standards that increase the uniformity of ISDN services.
|
|
In Europe, a new standard called NET3 is being developed.
|
|
|
|
msun@ntmtv.com (Ming Sun)
|
|
marc@dumbcat.sf.ca.us (Marco S Hyman)
|
|
jwb@capek.rdt.monash.edu.au (Jim Breen)
|
|
keyman@Eng.Sun.COM (Dave Evans)
|
|
oj@vivo.com (Oliver Jones)
|
|
wmartin@nsa.bt.co.uk (William Martin)
|
|
oppedahl@panix.com (Carl Oppedahl)
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
2.20) Will ISDN terminal equipment that works with one vendor's ISDN
|
|
switch work properly when used with another vendor's switch?
|
|
|
|
[Ed. Note: The title is edited from the previous faq to try to fit in
|
|
with the preceding question]
|
|
[Also, this seems to imply that there are only two implementations
|
|
to worry about and it is very US-centric. This section needs to be
|
|
reworked]
|
|
|
|
When the National ISDN-1 standard is implemented, there will be a single
|
|
standard for how TE communicates with the CO (the call setup dialogue).
|
|
Until that time, you may encounter two different varieties of CO equipment,
|
|
each with its own call setup dialogue:
|
|
* ATT 5ESS
|
|
* Northern Telecom DMS100
|
|
Some ISDN TE equipment can be configured to communicate with either;
|
|
some works with only one variety.
|
|
|
|
Jim.Rees@umich.edu (Jim Rees)
|
|
jerry@watchman.sfc.sony.com (Jerry Scharf)
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
2.21) Do different manufacturers' Terminal Adaptors interoperate when
|
|
used asynchronously?
|
|
|
|
There is a standard up to 19.2k (V.110) but above that there is no real
|
|
standard implemented. However, in practice there is a fair degree of
|
|
interoperability (even when the TA's manual tells you otherwise)
|
|
because many TAs use the same chip set (supplied by Siemens) which
|
|
happily goes up to 38.4. TAs from different suppliers that are using
|
|
the Siemens chips have a fair chance of interoperating at up to 38.4k.
|
|
|
|
wmartin@nsa.bt.co.uk (William Martin)
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
2.22) Why do I get only about 19.2k throughput from my TA?
|
|
|
|
The problems in using TA's are the same as those in using fast modems.
|
|
You only get the throughput that your serial port can handle. The
|
|
serial ports of many machines struggle to receive at 19.2k. Sending is
|
|
easier to implement efficiently. Many machines will happily send data
|
|
to a TA at 38.4, but choke down to around 19.2k or lower when receiving
|
|
(with lots of retries on ZMODEM file transfer).
|
|
|
|
wmartin@nsa.bt.co.uk (William Martin)
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
2.23) How long should call setup take when using a TA?
|
|
|
|
The "less than a second" call setup sometimes claimed seems to be rare.
|
|
TAs have a negotiation phase and it typically takes around 4 seconds
|
|
to get through to the remote site.
|
|
|
|
wmartin@nsa.bt.co.uk (William Martin)
|
|
--
|
|
Dave Cherkus ----- UniMaster, Inc. ----- Contract Software Development
|
|
Specialties: UNIX TCP/IP X OSF/1 AlphaAXP AIX RS/6000 Performance ISDN
|
|
Email: cherkus@UniMaster.COM Tel: (603) 888-8308 Fax: (603) 888-8308
|
|
if (cpu.type == PENTIUM && cpu.step < 8) { panic("Intel Inside!"); }
|
|
|
|
|
|
Newsgroups: comp.dcom.isdn,comp.answers,news.answers,alt.internet.services
|
|
Path: newsbf01.news.aol.com!newstf01.news.aol.com!uunet!news.sprintlink.net!mv!fastball.unimaster.com!cherkus
|
|
From: cherkus@UniMaster.COM (Dave Cherkus)
|
|
Subject: comp.dcom.isdn FAQ Part 3 of 5: Getting ISDN Service
|
|
Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
|
|
Keywords: ISDN FAQ telecom
|
|
Originator: cherkus@fastball.unimaster.com
|
|
Distribution: world
|
|
Message-ID: <isdn3_789873827@UniMaster.COM>
|
|
Nntp-Posting-Host: fastball.unimaster.com
|
|
Sender: usenet@mv.mv.com (System Administrator)
|
|
Supersedes: <isdn3_789570001@UniMaster.COM>
|
|
Reply-To: cherkus@UniMaster.COM (Dave Cherkus)
|
|
Expires: Thu, 9 Feb 1995 01:23:47 GMT
|
|
Summary: This posting contains a list of Frequently Asked
|
|
Questions (and their answers) about ISDN.
|
|
Organization: UniMaster, Inc.
|
|
Date: Thu, 12 Jan 1995 01:27:54 GMT
|
|
References: <isdn2_789873827@UniMaster.COM>
|
|
Followup-To: comp.dcom.isdn
|
|
Lines: 198
|
|
Xref: newsbf01.news.aol.com comp.dcom.isdn:7727 comp.answers:6082 news.answers:18979 alt.internet.services:25721
|
|
|
|
Archive-name: isdn-faq/part3
|
|
Last-modified: $Date: 1995/01/12 01:18:40 $
|
|
Version: $Revision: 4.2 $
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
3.01) How do I find out about getting ISDN in my area?
|
|
|
|
EURIE contact data:
|
|
|
|
Country Company name tel / fax
|
|
=========== ================ ====================== ===================
|
|
Austria PTT Austria Mr Michael Schneider +43 1 317 30 39
|
|
+43 1 31 3.13.66.63
|
|
Belgium BELGACOM Mr Egied Dekoster +32 2/213.46.49
|
|
+32 2/921.02.13
|
|
Denmark Tele Danmark Mr Soren Christensen +45 3399 6940
|
|
+45 3314 5625
|
|
Finland Telecom Finland Mr Terho Salo +358 31 243 22 67
|
|
+358 31 243 23 83
|
|
Finland The ATC Finland Mr Matti Tammisalo +358 0 606 35 08
|
|
+358 0 606 33 22
|
|
France France Telecom Mr Pascal Meriaux +331 44 44 53 59
|
|
+331 44 44 75 50
|
|
Germany DBP Telekom Mr Volker Fink +49 6151 83 30 67
|
|
+49 6151 83 50 68
|
|
Greece OTE Mrs Vas. Danelli +30 1 611 89 96
|
|
+30 1 805 20 64
|
|
Ireland Telecom Eireann Mr John Lawler +353 1 790 10 00
|
|
+353 1 677 49 41
|
|
Italy Iritel Mr Rocco Gentile +39 65 494 52 56
|
|
+39 65 94 20 54
|
|
Italy Itacable Mr Rolando Bottoni +39 65 734 45 23
|
|
+39 65 7 34 48 05
|
|
Italy SIP Mr Bernardino de Rito +39 6 36 88 40 38
|
|
+39 6 36 44 88
|
|
Luxembourg EPTL Mr Hubert Schumacher +352 49 91 56 56
|
|
+352 49 12 21
|
|
Netherlands PTT Telecom Ms Corinne der Kinderen +31 70 34 32 473
|
|
+31 70 34 39 747
|
|
Norway Norwegian Telecom Mr Odd Egil Asen +47 22 77 71 22
|
|
+47 22 2 0 78 00
|
|
Portugal TLP Mr Antero Aguilar +351 1 147 797
|
|
+351 1 544 796
|
|
Portugal Telecom Portugal Mr Jose Brito +351 1 35 04 710
|
|
+351 1 35 04 197
|
|
Spain Telefonica Espana Mr Fernando Moratinos +34 1 584 96 81
|
|
+341 584 95 58
|
|
Sweden Telia Mr Peter Ostergren +46 8 713 17 99
|
|
+46 8 713 73 62
|
|
Switzerland PTT Telecom Mr Jean-Yves Guillet +41 31 62 72 27
|
|
+41 31 6 2 85 26
|
|
UK British Telecom Mr JM Pickard +44 71 356 89 52
|
|
+44 71 796 91 20
|
|
UK Mercury Mr Clive Curt is +44 71 528 26 35
|
|
+44 71 528 20 66
|
|
|
|
Australia:
|
|
Telecom: 008 077 222 (voice), (07) 220 0080 (fax)
|
|
|
|
Belgium:
|
|
|
|
As from 01/01/94 ISDN is available in belgium on demand. All major
|
|
switching nodes of the national telecom company BELGACOM are digital
|
|
and a very fast increasing number of sub-nodes are converted to digital
|
|
connections. BRA (Basic Rate Access) can be connected in less than a
|
|
week in over 75% of the country. PRA may take longer depending on
|
|
geographical location. Caller ID is available on ISDN in Belgium
|
|
(using EURO-ISDN = ISDN fase 2 in Belgium) but only between ISDN
|
|
devices although it may be hidden by the caller.
|
|
|
|
BELGACOM: departement van de communicatie, ISDN-cel
|
|
paleizenstraat 42 - 4de verdieping
|
|
1210 Brussel
|
|
tel: 078/11.66.77 (free of charge)
|
|
|
|
Canada:
|
|
Stentor
|
|
1-800-578-4736 (fax back service)
|
|
|
|
Germany:
|
|
Deutsche Bundespost Telekom
|
|
|
|
IfN - Ingenierubuero fuer Nachrichtentechnik
|
|
Haidelmoosweg 52
|
|
D - 78467 Konstanz
|
|
Tel: +49 7531 97000-0
|
|
FAX: +49 7531 74998
|
|
|
|
United Kingdom:
|
|
British Telecom ISDN Helpdesk
|
|
0800 181514 from within the UK,
|
|
+44 272 217764 from outside.
|
|
|
|
Mercury Data Communication
|
|
0500 424194 from within the UK,
|
|
+44 81 914 2335 from outside.
|
|
|
|
North America:
|
|
North American ISDN Users Forum (NIUF): see item above
|
|
|
|
United States:
|
|
I suggest that you call the local telephone service center office
|
|
and ask for the name and number of the Marketing Product Manager
|
|
for ISDN services. If the service rep cannot make heads or tails
|
|
of your question, ask to speak to the local service center manager
|
|
for complex business services. This person should be able to
|
|
direct you to the right place. For the Bell companies, this
|
|
position is normally part of the telephone company's core marketing
|
|
staff at their headquarters location.
|
|
|
|
Ameritech: 800-832-6328
|
|
|
|
Bellcore national ISDN information clearing house hotline:
|
|
800 992-4736
|
|
|
|
Bellcore's "ISDN Deployment Data", Special Report (SR) 2102.
|
|
Bellcore document ordering: US: 1-800-521-2673, other: 1-908-699-5800
|
|
|
|
Bell Atlantic: 800-570-ISDN (all except New Jersey Bell)
|
|
1-800-843-2255 x4736 (New Jersey Bell customers)
|
|
|
|
BellSouth 1-800-858-9413
|
|
|
|
Cincinatti Bell 513-566-DATA
|
|
|
|
Pacific Bell:
|
|
800-995-0346 - ISDN Availability Hotline (automated audio response)
|
|
800-662-0735 - ISDN Telemarketing (ordering information)
|
|
800-4PB-ISDN - ISDN service center
|
|
Also, try the gopher servers at gopher.pacbell.com or gw.pacbell.com.
|
|
|
|
GTE: Menu-driven information service at [800] 4GTE-SW5.
|
|
Florida, North Carolina, Virginia, and Kentucky: 1-800-483-5200
|
|
Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, and Penn. 1-800-483-5600
|
|
Oregon and Washington 1-800-483-5100
|
|
California 1-800-483-5000
|
|
Hawaii 1-800-643-4411
|
|
Texas 1-800-483-5400
|
|
|
|
Nevada Bell 702-688-7124 (contact Lyle Walters)
|
|
|
|
NYNEX: 1-800-438-4736, 800-GET-ISDN, 800-698-0817 or 212-626-7297.
|
|
|
|
Rochester Tele. 716-777-1234
|
|
|
|
Southwestern Bell (Texas)
|
|
Austin 512-870-4064
|
|
Dallas 214-268-1403
|
|
Houston 713-567-4300
|
|
San Antonio 512-351-8050
|
|
Southwestern Bell (Missouri)
|
|
St. Louis 800-SWB-ISDN (800-792-4736)
|
|
|
|
US West 303-896-8370 (contact Julia Evans)
|
|
|
|
Combinet "BBS":
|
|
|
|
By popular demand, the Combinet "BBS" providing information on ISDN
|
|
availability in many areas of the US is now available via the Internet.
|
|
The information is supplied by Bell Communications Research and various
|
|
Operating Companies and is updated periodically as new information
|
|
becomes available.
|
|
|
|
To access the service, telnet to bbs.combinet.com and login as
|
|
isdn (no password is required). After entering an area code and
|
|
three-digit prefix, the service displays the availability of ISDN.
|
|
Also displayed is information about carrier installation prices and
|
|
monthly charges.
|
|
|
|
For those without direct Internet access, the service continues to be
|
|
available on a dialup basis using a 2400 bit/sec modem at (408) 733-4312.
|
|
|
|
Intel:
|
|
|
|
If you want to know if you can get basic rate ISDN in YOUR LOCAL AREA
|
|
(anywhere in the U.S>), call the helpful folks at Intel on
|
|
1-800-538-3373, and ask for extension 208. They have lots of good FREE
|
|
info on ISDN availability, pricing, etc.
|
|
|
|
bharrell@garfield.catt.ncsu.edu (Ben Harrell)
|
|
elitman@wam.umd.edu (Eric A. Litman)
|
|
marc@Destek.NET (Marc Evans)
|
|
varney@ihlpf.att.com (Al Varney)
|
|
bernot@inf-wiss.uni-konstanz.de (Gerhard Bernot)
|
|
jhonan@kralizec.zeta.org.au (Jamie Honan)
|
|
dav@genisco.gtc.com (David L. Markowitz)
|
|
Peter Ilieve <peter@memex.co.uk>
|
|
hopkins@aw.com (Gerald L. Hopkins)
|
|
KUMQUAT@SMCVAX.SMCVT.EDU (Gary C. Kessler)
|
|
fenton@combinet.com (Jim Fenton)
|
|
james@kaiwan.com (James - The Keeper)
|
|
stamp@cc.bellcore.com (stamp,scott)
|
|
we34329@is1.vub.ac.be (Sven De Kerpel)
|
|
--
|
|
Dave Cherkus ----- UniMaster, Inc. ----- Contract Software Development
|
|
Specialties: UNIX TCP/IP X OSF/1 AlphaAXP AIX RS/6000 Performance ISDN
|
|
Email: cherkus@UniMaster.COM Tel: (603) 888-8308 Fax: (603) 888-8308
|
|
if (cpu.type == PENTIUM && cpu.step < 8) { panic("Intel Inside!"); }
|
|
|
|
|
|
Newsgroups: comp.dcom.isdn,comp.answers,news.answers,alt.internet.services
|
|
Path: newsbf01.news.aol.com!newstf01.news.aol.com!uunet!news.sprintlink.net!mv!fastball.unimaster.com!cherkus
|
|
From: cherkus@UniMaster.COM (Dave Cherkus)
|
|
Subject: comp.dcom.isdn FAQ Part 4 of 5: Standards and References
|
|
Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
|
|
Keywords: ISDN FAQ telecom
|
|
Originator: cherkus@fastball.unimaster.com
|
|
Distribution: world
|
|
Message-ID: <isdn4_789873827@UniMaster.COM>
|
|
Nntp-Postin
|
|
|
|
1/25/95 12:06:49 PM Opening ÒISDN FAQ 1/25/95#4Ó for recording.
|
|
g-Host: fastball.unimaster.com
|
|
Sender: usenet@mv.mv.com (System Administrator)
|
|
Supersedes: <isdn4_789570001@UniMaster.COM>
|
|
Reply-To: cherkus@UniMaster.COM (Dave Cherkus)
|
|
Expires: Thu, 9 Feb 1995 01:23:47 GMT
|
|
Summary: This posting contains a list of Frequently Asked
|
|
Questions (and their answers) about ISDN.
|
|
Organization: UniMaster, Inc.
|
|
Date: Thu, 12 Jan 1995 01:28:04 GMT
|
|
References: <isdn3_789873827@UniMaster.COM>
|
|
Followup-To: comp.dcom.isdn
|
|
Lines: 362
|
|
Xref: newsbf01.news.aol.com comp.dcom.isdn:7728 comp.answers:6083 news.answers:18980 alt.internet.services:25722
|
|
|
|
Archive-name: isdn-faq/part4
|
|
Last-modified: $Date: 1995/01/12 01:18:41 $
|
|
Version: $Revision: 4.2 $
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
4.01) Where can I find what all of these acronyms mean?
|
|
|
|
An archive of telecommunication related files are maintained on
|
|
lcs.mit.edu in the telecom-archives sub directory. There is a
|
|
glossary of general telecom acronyms, as well as an ISDN specific
|
|
list.
|
|
|
|
jms@romana.Tymnet.COM (Joe Smith) asks:
|
|
PMW1@psuvm.psu.edu (Peter M. Weiss)
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
4.02) What are the relevant standards?
|
|
|
|
There are numerous ITU-T (formerly CCITT) standards on ISDN.
|
|
References in the book bibliography (especially Stallings and appendix
|
|
B of Kessler) contain more details.
|
|
|
|
Q.921
|
|
(aka I.441) "ISDN User-Network Interface Data Link Layer Specifications", 1988
|
|
The D channel protocol. Found in Blue book Fascicle VI.10
|
|
|
|
Q.931
|
|
(aka I.451) "ISDN User-Network Interface Layer 3 Specification for Call control"
|
|
1988. The messages that are sent over the D channel to set up
|
|
calls, disconnect calls etc. Found in Blue book Fascicle VI.11
|
|
Q.930: General Overview
|
|
Q.931: Basic ISDN call control
|
|
Q.932: Generic procedures for the control of ISDN supplementary services
|
|
Q.933: Frame Mode Call Control
|
|
Q.2931 (ex-Q.93B): B-ISDN Call control
|
|
|
|
G.711: Pulse Code Modulation (PCM) of Voice Frequencies
|
|
|
|
G.722: 7-kHz Audio Coding Within 64 kbit/s
|
|
|
|
G.728: Coding of Speech at 16 kbit/s Using Low-Delay Code Excited
|
|
Linear Prediction (LD-CELP)
|
|
|
|
H.320: Narrow-band Visual Telephone Systems and Terminal Equipment
|
|
|
|
H.221: Frame Structure for a 64 to 1920 kbit/s Channel in Audiovisual
|
|
Teleservices
|
|
|
|
H.230: Frame Synchronous Control and Indication Signals for Audiovisual Systems
|
|
|
|
H.242: System for Establishing Communications Between Audiovisual Terminals
|
|
Using Digital Channels up to 2 Mbit/s
|
|
|
|
H.261: Video Codec for Audiovisual Services at p x 64 kbits/s
|
|
|
|
H.243: Basic MCU Procedures for Establishing Communications Between Three or
|
|
More Audiovisual Terminals Using Digital Channels Up to 2 Mbit/s
|
|
|
|
I.2xy "ISDN Frame Mode Bearer Services", 1990
|
|
|
|
I.310 ISDN - Network Functional Principles
|
|
I.320 ISDN protocol reference model
|
|
I.324 ISDN Network Architecture
|
|
I.325 Reference configs for ISDN connection types
|
|
I.326
|
|
I.330 ISDN numbering and addressing principles
|
|
I.331 Numbering plan for ISDN (and several more in I.33x relating
|
|
to numbering and addressing and routing)
|
|
I.340 ISDN connection types
|
|
I.350/351/352 refer to performance objectives
|
|
I.410-412 refer to user-network interfaces
|
|
as do I.420 and 421
|
|
I.430/430 Layer 1 specs
|
|
I.440/441 Layer 2 specs (Q.921)
|
|
I.450-452 Layer 3 specs (Q.931)
|
|
I.450: General Overview
|
|
I.451: Basic ISDN call control
|
|
I.452: Extensions
|
|
I.460-465 Multiplexing and rate adaption
|
|
I.470 Relationship of terminal functions to ISDN
|
|
|
|
V.110
|
|
(aka I.463) "Support of DTE's with V Series Type Interfaces by an ISDN"
|
|
Terminal rate adaption by bit stuffing. C.f. V120.
|
|
|
|
V.120
|
|
(aka I465) "Support by an ISDN of Data Terminal Equipment with V series
|
|
Type Interfaces with Provision for Statistical Multiplexing" 1990
|
|
(This has been amended since the blue book). An alternative to
|
|
V.110
|
|
|
|
V.25bis calling mechanism under synchronous.
|
|
|
|
|
|
ITU-T (formerly CCITT) standards can be obtained via:
|
|
|
|
Gopher: info.itu.ch
|
|
|
|
E-Mail: Mail to: teledoc@itu.arcom.ch
|
|
Mail body:
|
|
HELP
|
|
LIST /itu
|
|
LIST /itu/rec
|
|
|
|
Hard Copy:
|
|
|
|
International Telecommunication Union
|
|
Information Services Department
|
|
Place des Nations
|
|
1211 Geneva 20
|
|
Switzerland
|
|
|
|
TEL: +41 22 730 5554
|
|
FAX: +41 22 730 5337
|
|
Internet email: helpdesk@itu.ch
|
|
X.400 email: S=helpdesk;A=arcom;P=itu;C=ch
|
|
|
|
|
|
cherkus@unimaster.com
|
|
dave@philips.oz.au
|
|
oj@vivo.com (Oliver Jones)
|
|
KUMQUAT@SMCVAX.SMCVT.EDU (Gary C. Kessler)
|
|
we34329@is1.vub.ac.be (Sven De Kerpel)
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
4.03) Where can I read more?
|
|
|
|
"ISDN In Perspective"
|
|
Fred R. Goldstein
|
|
Addison-Wesley
|
|
ISBN 0-201-50016-7
|
|
|
|
[Ed. Note: the second edition is new...]
|
|
"ISDN: Concepts, Facilities, and Services, Second Edition"
|
|
Gary Kessler
|
|
McGraw-Hill, 1993 (2/e).
|
|
ISBN 0-07-034247-4
|
|
|
|
"Integrated Services Digital Networks: Architectures / Protocols / Standards"
|
|
Hermann J. Helgert
|
|
Addison Wesley
|
|
ISBN 0-201-52501-1
|
|
|
|
The Basic book of ISDN (second edition)
|
|
Motorola University Press
|
|
Addison-Wesley Publisching company inc.
|
|
ISBN 0-201-56374-6
|
|
|
|
A 48 pages booklet covering all basic questions on ISDN and some case
|
|
studies on the possible installation. Can be obtained freely from
|
|
Motorola sometimes.
|
|
|
|
"Sensible ISDN Data Applications"
|
|
Jeffrey Fritz
|
|
jfritz@wvnvm.wvnet.edu
|
|
West Virginia University Press
|
|
ISBN 0-937058-31-9
|
|
|
|
"The ISDN Literacy Book"
|
|
Gerald L. Hopkins
|
|
Addison-Wesley 1995
|
|
ISBN 0-201-62979-8
|
|
384 pages, softcover
|
|
|
|
"ISDN and Broadband ISDN" (2nd edition)
|
|
William Stallings
|
|
Macmillan
|
|
ISBN 0-02-415475-X
|
|
|
|
"Networking Standards: A Guide to OSI, ISDN, LAN and MAN Standards"
|
|
William Stallings
|
|
Addison-Wesley
|
|
|
|
"A Catalog of National ISDN Solutions for Selected NIUF Applications"
|
|
North American ISDN User's Forum
|
|
(use NIUF information above or order via Bellcore, document GP-1, $43)
|
|
and/or see info on anonymous ftp to info.bellcore.com above)
|
|
|
|
The 1990 ISDN Directory and Sourcebook
|
|
Phillips Publishing Inc.
|
|
7811 Montrose Road
|
|
Potomac, MD 20854
|
|
(301) 340-2100
|
|
|
|
ISDN Sourcebook
|
|
Information Gatekeepers Inc.
|
|
214 Harvard Ave,
|
|
Boston, MA 02134
|
|
(617) 232-3111
|
|
1 800 323-1088
|
|
|
|
Bellcore National ISDN Specifications
|
|
SR-NWT-001953
|
|
SR-NWT-002361
|
|
SR-NWT-002120 (National ISDN-2)
|
|
US: 1-800-521-2673, other: 1-908-699-5800
|
|
|
|
Bellcore ISDN Availability Report
|
|
WR-NWT-2102 ($103)
|
|
US: 1-800-521-2673, other: 1-908-699-5800
|
|
|
|
Bellcore ISDN Deployment Data
|
|
Special Report (SR) 2102
|
|
US: 1-800-521-2673, other: 1-908-699-5800
|
|
|
|
AT&T Technical Journal special issue on ISDN
|
|
(Volume 65, Issue 1) January/February 1986
|
|
|
|
EFFector. Issue 2.01, Issue 2.06, Issue 2.08
|
|
ftp.eff.org:pub/EFF
|
|
|
|
AT&T Documents
|
|
--------------
|
|
"5ESS(rg.tm) Switch National ISDN Basic Rate Interface
|
|
Specification - 5E8 Software Release"
|
|
AT&T document number 235-900-341
|
|
|
|
"5ESS(rg.tm) Switch ISDN Basic Rate Interface
|
|
Specification - 5E7 Software Release" {Custom BRI}
|
|
AT&T document number 235-900-331
|
|
|
|
"5ESS(rg.tm) Switch ISDN Primary Rate Interface
|
|
Specification - 5E7 Software Release"
|
|
AT&T document number 235-900-332
|
|
|
|
"5ESS(rg.tm) Switch Interface Specification to a
|
|
Packet Switched Public Data (X.75) Network -
|
|
5E8 Software Release" [as in CCITT X.75]
|
|
AT&T document number 235-900-317
|
|
|
|
"5ESS(rg.tm) Switch X.75' Intranetwork Interface
|
|
Specification - 5E8 Software Release"
|
|
[as in Bellcore's TR-000310]
|
|
AT&T document number 235-900-325
|
|
|
|
"5ESS(rg.tm) Switch Documentation Description
|
|
and Ordering Guide"
|
|
[list/description of 5ESS documents]
|
|
AT&T document number 235-001-001
|
|
|
|
AT&T documents ordering:
|
|
1-800-432-6600 USA
|
|
1-800-225-1242 Canada
|
|
+1 317 352-8557 elsewhere
|
|
|
|
AT&T Customer Information Center
|
|
Order Entry
|
|
2855 N. Franklin road
|
|
Indianapolis, IN 46219
|
|
(317) 352-8484 (fax)
|
|
|
|
Northern Telecom Documents
|
|
--------------------------
|
|
|
|
NTP 297-2401-100 ISDN System Description
|
|
NTP 297-2401-010 ISDN Product Guide
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
4.04) Can I get on-line National ISDN information from Bellcore?
|
|
|
|
Information about National ISDN is now available by anonymous FTP (File
|
|
Transfer Protocol) over the Internet at host "info.bellcore.com". FTP
|
|
allows the retrieval of formatted documents and software.
|
|
|
|
The rest of this document assumes that you have access to a machine
|
|
connected to the Internet that supports FTP, and that you have a system
|
|
that can print both ASCII formatted documents and PostScript formatted
|
|
documents.
|
|
|
|
The files are available in PostScript through anonymous FTP from
|
|
"info.bellcore.com" in the /pub/ISDN sub directory.
|
|
|
|
I M P O R T A N T: Many of the files are large, it is essential
|
|
that you first get the README (the upper case is important) file
|
|
for detailed information on retrieving various files associated with
|
|
documents.
|
|
|
|
The following text describes a typical anonymous FTP session:
|
|
|
|
system: ftp info.bellcore.com <enter>
|
|
Connected to info.bellcore.com.
|
|
220 info FTP server (SunOS 4.1) ready.
|
|
Name: anonymous <enter>
|
|
331 Guest login ok, send ident as password.
|
|
Password: <enter your internet login -- example: student@university.edu>
|
|
230 Guest login ok, access restrictions apply.
|
|
ftp> cd /pub/ISDN <enter>
|
|
250 CWD command successful.
|
|
ftp> mget README <enter>
|
|
mget README? yes <enter>
|
|
200 PORT command successful.
|
|
150 ASCII data connection for README (8758 bytes).
|
|
226 ASCII Transfer complete.
|
|
local: README remote: README
|
|
8943 bytes received in 0.19 seconds (46 Kbytes/s)
|
|
ftp> quit <enter>
|
|
221 Goodbye.
|
|
|
|
<enter> represents pressing the "enter" or "return" key on your
|
|
computer keyboard.
|
|
|
|
The README file is in ASCII format and may be read with most word
|
|
processors. The other files in the directory are in PostScript format
|
|
and may be downloaded as needed by using the "mget" command while in
|
|
the FTP.
|
|
|
|
You should determine your local procedure for printing PostScript
|
|
documents. For example, on many UNIX systems, PostScript files may be
|
|
printed on a PostScript printer by using the "lpr" command. A typical
|
|
Post Script print command may look like:
|
|
|
|
lpr -P<printer> -h -v <filename.ps>
|
|
|
|
where:
|
|
<printer> represents printer name accessable to your system, and
|
|
<filename.ps> represents a PostScript file.
|
|
|
|
notes:
|
|
'-h' corresponds to the option of suppressing the printing of
|
|
burst page while '-v' corresponds to the option of printing
|
|
raster image, i.e., PostScript. Please note that the printer
|
|
must support PostScript imaging model in order to print these
|
|
files.
|
|
|
|
Some systems are configured to detect PostScript formatted files
|
|
automatically, so a command to print the documents on that kind
|
|
of system is:
|
|
|
|
lpr -P<printer> <filename.ps>
|
|
|
|
If you have problems or you'd like to comment on the information
|
|
stored at this site or wish to make recommendations for future
|
|
enhancements, you can send email to:
|
|
|
|
isdn@cc.bellcore.com
|
|
|
|
Or, call the Bellcore's National ISDN Hotline: 1-800-992-ISDN
|
|
|
|
A recent visit to the system revealed the following directories:
|
|
|
|
CATALOG: NIUF (National ISDN User's Forum) catalog:
|
|
"A Catalog of National ISDN Solutions for Selected NIUF
|
|
Applications, Second Edition." [Ed: lots of big files,
|
|
but some great info - chapter 4 is hundreds of pages of
|
|
ISDN product/vendor information]
|
|
CONTACTS: List of ISDN contacts at various Regional Bell Operating
|
|
Companies
|
|
DEPLOYMENT: Currently empty but being worked on
|
|
EVENTS: Info about the "ISDN Solutions '94" event
|
|
NATIONAL_ISDN: Bellcore document SR-NWT-2006, "National ISDN"
|
|
[Ed: Requires Apple's Laser Prep; e.g., //pip.shsu.edu/
|
|
tex-archive/dviware/psprint/vms/laserprep70.ps, in many
|
|
cases when a non-Apple printer is being used]
|
|
README: The Read Me File
|
|
TARIFF: Currently empty but being worked on
|
|
|
|
whs70@cc.bellcore.com (sohl,william h)
|
|
--
|
|
Dave Cherkus ----- UniMaster, Inc. ----- Contract Software Development
|
|
Specialties: UNIX TCP/IP X OSF/1 AlphaAXP AIX RS/6000 Performance ISDN
|
|
Email: cherkus@UniMaster.COM Tel: (603) 888-8308 Fax: (603) 888-8308
|
|
if (cpu.type == PENTIUM && cpu.step < 8) { panic("Intel Inside!"); }
|
|
|
|
|
|
Newsgroups: comp.dcom.isdn,comp.answers,news.answers,alt.internet.services
|
|
Path: newsbf01.news.aol.com!newstf01.news.aol.com!uunet!news.sprintlink.net!mv!fastball.unimaster.com!cherkus
|
|
From: cherkus@UniMaster.COM (Dave Cherkus)
|
|
Subject: comp.dcom.isdn FAQ Part 5 of 5: Products
|
|
Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
|
|
Keywords: ISDN FAQ telecom
|
|
Originator: cherkus@fastball.unimaster.com
|
|
Distribution: world
|
|
Message-ID: <isdn5_789873827@UniMaster.COM>
|
|
Nntp-Posting-Host: fastball.unimaster.com
|
|
Sender: usenet@mv.mv.com (System Administrator)
|
|
Supersedes: <isdn5_789570001@UniMaster.COM>
|
|
Reply-To: cherkus@UniMaster.COM (Dave Cherkus)
|
|
Expires: Thu, 9 Feb 1995 01:23:47 GMT
|
|
Summary: This posting contains a list of Frequently Asked
|
|
Questions (and their answers) about ISDN.
|
|
Organization: UniMaster, Inc.
|
|
Date: Thu, 12 Jan 1995 01:28:17 GMT
|
|
References: <isdn4_789873827@UniMaster.COM>
|
|
Followup-To: comp.dcom.isdn
|
|
Lines: 621
|
|
Xref: newsbf01.news.aol.com comp.dcom.isdn:7729 comp.answers:6084 news.answers:18981 alt.internet.services:25723
|
|
|
|
Archive-name: isdn-faq/part5
|
|
Last-modified: $Date: 1995/01/12 01:18:42 $
|
|
Version: $Revision: 4.2 $
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
5.01) Who is shipping what?
|
|
|
|
ISDN Products by Vendor:
|
|
|
|
+------------------+--------------------------------------------+
|
|
| | Product Type |
|
|
| Vendor +----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
|
|
| | IF | TA | BR | RO | TE | IC | TS | VC | CC |
|
|
+------------------+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
|
|
| AccessWorks | | x | | | | | | | |
|
|
| Adtran, Inc. | | x | | | | | | | |
|
|
| AMD | | | | | | x | | | |
|
|
| ANDO | | | | | | | x | | |
|
|
| Ascend | | | | x | | | | | |
|
|
| AT&T | x | x | | | x | x | x | | |
|
|
| AT&T Microelect. | | | | | | x | | | |
|
|
| BinTec | x | | | x | | | | | |
|
|
| Cisco Systems | | | | x | | | | | |
|
|
| Combinet | | | x | | | | | | |
|
|
| Conware GmbH | | | x | x | | | | | |
|
|
| CPV-Stollmann | x | x | x | x | | | | | |
|
|
| CSI | x | | x | x | | | | | |
|
|
| diehl isdn | x | | x | x | | | | | x |
|
|
| DigiBoard | | | x | | | | | | |
|
|
| Digital Eq. | x | | | x | | | | | |
|
|
| DGM&S | | | | | | | | | x |
|
|
| EICON Technology | x | | | | | | | | |
|
|
| EuRoNIS | x | | | | | | | | |
|
|
| Gandalf | x | x | x | | | | | | |
|
|
| Hayes | x | x | | | | | | | |
|
|
| Hermstedt | x | x | | | | | | | |
|
|
| IBM | x | | | | | | | | |
|
|
| INS | | | | x | | | | | |
|
|
| Intel | x | | | | | | | x | |
|
|
| ISDN Systems | x | | | | | | | | |
|
|
| MERGE | | | | | | | x | | |
|
|
| MITEL | | | | | | | x | | |
|
|
| Motorola UDS | | x | | | | | | | |
|
|
| MS Telematica | x | | | | x | | | | |
|
|
| netCS | x | | | x | | | | | |
|
|
| Network Express | | | x | x | | | | | |
|
|
| Paxdata | | x | x | | | | | | |
|
|
| SCii | x | | | | | | | | |
|
|
| Siemens | | | | | | x | | | |
|
|
| Spider Systems | | | | x | | | | | |
|
|
| Sun Microsystems | x | | | | | | | | |
|
|
| Telenetworks | | | | | | | | | x |
|
|
| Teleos | | | | | | | x | | |
|
|
| Telesoft | | | | | | | x | | x |
|
|
| Telrad Telecomm. | | x | | | | x | x | | |
|
|
| TPI | | | | | | | x | | |
|
|
| Trillium | | | | | | | | | x |
|
|
| Zydacron | | | | | | | | x | |
|
|
+------------------+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
|
|
|
|
Key:
|
|
|
|
IF: Interface Card
|
|
TA: Terminal Adapter (Standalone)
|
|
BR: Bridge
|
|
RO: Router
|
|
TE: Telephones
|
|
IC: Integrated Circuit
|
|
TS: Test Equipment
|
|
VC: Video Teleconferencing Equipment
|
|
CC: Call Control Software
|
|
|
|
Vendor Info:
|
|
|
|
AccessWorks Communications Inc
|
|
670 North Beers Street
|
|
Holmdel, NJ 07733
|
|
Tel: 800 248 8204
|
|
Tel: 908 721 1337
|
|
Fax: 908 888 4456
|
|
Internet: info@accessworks.com
|
|
|
|
Adtran, Inc.
|
|
901 Explorer Blvd
|
|
Huntsville, AL 35806-2807 USA
|
|
+1 205 971 8000
|
|
fax +1 205 971 8030
|
|
|
|
Advanced Micro Devices
|
|
901 Thomson place
|
|
Mailstop 126
|
|
Sunnyvale, CA 94086
|
|
(408) 732 2400 (voice)
|
|
|
|
ANDO:
|
|
7617 Standish Place
|
|
Rockville, MD 20855
|
|
voice: (301) 294-3365
|
|
fax: (301) 294-3359
|
|
email: mgriffin@access.digex.net
|
|
|
|
Ascend Communications, Inc.
|
|
1275 Harbor Bay Pkwy
|
|
Alameda, CA 94501
|
|
(510) 769-6001
|
|
info@ascend.com
|
|
|
|
AT&T
|
|
1-800-222-PART: Quick access to small quantity orders of ISDN products.
|
|
Personal Desktop Video or TeleMedia Connection System:
|
|
Visual Communications Products
|
|
8100 East Maplewood Avenue 1st Floor
|
|
Englewood, CO 80111
|
|
(800)843-3646 (800)VIDEO-GO Prompt 3
|
|
|
|
AT&T Microelectronics
|
|
Allentown, PA
|
|
(800) 372-2447
|
|
Distributer: CoSystems at 408.748.2190
|
|
mktg: Steve Martinez at 408.748.2194 (steve@cosystems.com)
|
|
tech: Gary Martin at 408.748.2195 (gary@cosystems.com)
|
|
|
|
BinTec Computersysteme GmbH
|
|
Willstaetter Str. 30
|
|
D-90449 Nuernberg
|
|
Germany
|
|
Phone: +49.911.9673-0
|
|
Fax: +49.911.6880725
|
|
email: vertrieb@bintec.de
|
|
|
|
Cisco Systems
|
|
San Jose CA
|
|
1-800-553-6387
|
|
or 1-800-888-8187 ext. 6849 (salesman scott smith)
|
|
|
|
Combinet
|
|
333 West El Camino Real, Suite 240
|
|
Sunnyvale, California 94087
|
|
(408) 522 9020 (voice)
|
|
(408) 732 5479 (fax)
|
|
(800) 967-6651 for product lit
|
|
(408) 522-9020 for pre-sales support
|
|
|
|
Conware Computer Consulting GmbH
|
|
Killisfeldstr. 64
|
|
D-76227 Karlsruhe
|
|
Germany
|
|
Phone: +49.721.9495-0
|
|
Fax: +49.721.9495-130
|
|
email: vertrieb@conware.de
|
|
|
|
CPV-Stollmann Vertriebs GmbH
|
|
Gasstrasse 18 P.O. Box 50 14 03
|
|
D-22761 Hamburg D-22714 Hamburg
|
|
Germany Germany
|
|
Phone: +49-40-890 88-0
|
|
Fax: +49-40-890 88-444
|
|
Electronic Mail:
|
|
Info@Stollmann.DE (general inquiries)
|
|
Helge.Oldach@Stollmann.DE (IPX router technical contact)
|
|
Michael.Gruen@Stollmann.DE (IP router technical contact)
|
|
|
|
CSI (Connective Strategies, Inc.)
|
|
Clyde Heintzelman, V. P. Marketing
|
|
4500 Southgate Pl., Suite 100
|
|
Chantilly, VA 22021
|
|
Voice: (703) 802-0023
|
|
FAX: (703) 802-0026
|
|
Internet: info@csisdn.com
|
|
|
|
diehl isdn GmbH
|
|
Bahnhofstrasse 63
|
|
D-7250 Leonberg
|
|
Germany
|
|
Tel. 49/7152/93 29 0
|
|
Fax. 49/7152/93 29 99
|
|
email: bode@diehl.de
|
|
|
|
DigiBoard
|
|
6400 Flying Cloud Drive
|
|
Eden Prarie, MN 55344
|
|
(612) 943 9020 (voice)
|
|
(612) 643 5398 (fax)
|
|
(800)-344-4273
|
|
info@digibd.com (email)
|
|
|
|
Digital Equipment Co
|
|
REO2 G/H2
|
|
DEC Park
|
|
Worton Grange
|
|
Reading
|
|
Berkshire
|
|
England
|
|
|
|
DGM&S
|
|
609.866.1212
|
|
|
|
EICON Technology
|
|
Montreal, Quebec
|
|
EiconCard ISDN/PC ISA PC card.
|
|
Supports 2B + D "multiplexed" over single RJ45 connector.
|
|
They provide s/w for Windows, OS/2, SCO UNIX, UNIX SVR4, Netware.
|
|
List price $1395
|
|
|
|
EuRoNIS
|
|
Manufacturer of the Macintosh Planet-ISDN NuBus Card.
|
|
166 rue Montmartre
|
|
75002 Paris, France
|
|
Tel: +33 (1) 44 82 70 00
|
|
Fax: + 33(1) 42 33 40 98
|
|
euronis@applelink.apple.com
|
|
|
|
Gandalf Technologies
|
|
130 Colonnade Road South
|
|
Nepean Ontario Canada K2E 7M4
|
|
(800) GANDALF (voice)
|
|
|
|
Hayes ISDN Technologies
|
|
501 Second St., Suite 300
|
|
San Francisco CA 94107
|
|
(415) 974-5544 (voice)
|
|
(415) 543-5810 (fax)
|
|
|
|
Hermstedt GmbH
|
|
Kaefertaler Strasse 164
|
|
D-68167 Mannheim
|
|
Germany
|
|
Phone: +49 (621) 3 38 16-0
|
|
Fax: +49 (621) 3 38 16-12
|
|
|
|
International Business Machines
|
|
(800) 426-2255
|
|
|
|
INS - Inter Networking Systems
|
|
P.O. Box 101312
|
|
D-44543 Castrop-Rauxel
|
|
Germany
|
|
+49 2305 356505 (voice)
|
|
+49 2305 24511 (fax)
|
|
e-mail: info@ins.de
|
|
|
|
Intel Corporation
|
|
Intel Products Group
|
|
5200 N.E. Elam Young Parkway
|
|
Hillsboro, Oregon, 97124-6497
|
|
FaxBack 1-800-525-3019
|
|
Product Info:
|
|
+1-800-538-3373, in the US and Canada
|
|
+44-1793-431155, in Europe
|
|
+1-503-264-7354, worldwide
|
|
Intel BBS 1-503-264-7999 (modem settings 8-N-1, up to 14.4Kbps)
|
|
Tech. support (503) 629-7000
|
|
|
|
ISDN Systems Corp.
|
|
Vienna VA USA
|
|
703-883-0933
|
|
|
|
MERGE Technologies Group, Inc.
|
|
211 Gateway Road West, Ste. 201
|
|
Napa, CA 94558
|
|
800.824.7763 (Voice)
|
|
707.252.6687 (FAX)
|
|
|
|
MITEL Corporation
|
|
360 Legget Drive
|
|
Kanata, Ontario, Canada
|
|
K2K 1X3
|
|
Paul Mannone or Peter Merriman
|
|
(613) 592-2122
|
|
|
|
Motorola UDS
|
|
5000 Bradford Drive
|
|
Huntsville, AL 35805
|
|
(205) 430 8000 (voice)
|
|
|
|
Ms Telematica
|
|
via S. Marcellina 8
|
|
20125 Milano
|
|
Italy
|
|
Phone: +39.2.66102315
|
|
Fax: +39.2.66102708
|
|
email: mstelema@icil64.cilea.it
|
|
|
|
netCS Informationstechnik GmbH
|
|
Feuerbachstr. 47-49
|
|
12163 Berlin 41
|
|
Germany
|
|
Tele: +49.30/856 999-0
|
|
FAX: +49.30/855 52 18
|
|
E-Mail: sales@netcs.com / support@netcs.com
|
|
|
|
Network Express, Incorporated (info@nei.com)
|
|
World Headquarters Western Regional Office
|
|
4251 Plymouth Road 2694 Bishop Drive, Suite 103
|
|
Ann Arbor, MI 48105 San Ramon, CA 94583
|
|
tel (313) 761-5005 tel (510) 244-2080
|
|
fax (313) 995-1114 fax (510) 244-2083
|
|
|
|
Paxdata Networks Limited
|
|
Communications House
|
|
Frogmore Road
|
|
Hemel Hempstead
|
|
HERTS HP3 9RW
|
|
UK
|
|
0442 236336 (voice)
|
|
0442 236343 (fax)
|
|
mktg: Jim Fitzpatrick (jim@paxdata.demon.co.uk)
|
|
tech: Giles Heron (giles@paxdata.demon.co.uk)
|
|
|
|
SCii Datavoice SO ISDN NuBus card
|
|
+49 (0) 89-54-67-57-0 (Munich, Germany)
|
|
|
|
Siemens Components Inc.
|
|
Integrated Circuit Division
|
|
2191 Laurelwood Road
|
|
Santa Clara, CA 95054-1514
|
|
(408) 980-4500
|
|
|
|
Spider Systems
|
|
UK France Germany
|
|
Spider Systems Limited Spider Systems SA Spider Systems Limited
|
|
Spider House Les Algorithmes Schadowstrasse 52
|
|
Peach Street Saint Aubin 91194 D-4000 Dusseldorf 1
|
|
Wokingham Gif-sur-Yvette Germany
|
|
England Paris Cedex
|
|
RG11 1XH France
|
|
0734 771055 (voice) (1) 69 41 11 36 (voice) (0211) 93 50 120 (voice)
|
|
0734 771214 (fax) (1) 69 41 12 27 (voice) (0211) 93 50 150 (fax)
|
|
|
|
Sun Microsystems Computer Company (SMCC)
|
|
Mountain View, CA
|
|
(800) USA-4SUN
|
|
|
|
Telenetworks
|
|
US Europe
|
|
Lauren May / Bob Gefvert Ian Walsh (DIVA)
|
|
625 Second St., Suite 100 Kingswood House, 12 Shute End
|
|
Petaluma CA 94952 Wokingham, RG11 1BJ, England UK
|
|
phone 707-778-8737 phone +44.734.891719
|
|
fax 707-778-7476 fax +44.734.891721
|
|
emal info@tn.com
|
|
|
|
Teleos
|
|
2 Meridian Road
|
|
Eatontown, NJ 07724
|
|
908.389.5700
|
|
|
|
Telesoft
|
|
Chris Cox
|
|
512.282.6701
|
|
|
|
Telrad Telecommunications, Inc.
|
|
135 Crossways Park Drive
|
|
Woodbury, New York 11797
|
|
(516) 921-8300
|
|
1 800 645-1350
|
|
TelradPAC: 0B+D PAD NI-1 & Euro-ISDN
|
|
IDS: V&D phone NI-1
|
|
MTA: V.110 TA Euro-ISDN
|
|
|
|
TP
|
|
|
|
1/25/95 12:07:24 PM Opening ÒISDN FAQ 1/25/95#5Ó for recording.
|
|
I
|
|
Tele-Path Industries, Inc.
|
|
221 South Yorkshire Street
|
|
Salem, VA 24153
|
|
+1 703 375 0500
|
|
|
|
Trillium
|
|
310.479.0500
|
|
|
|
Zydacron, Inc.
|
|
670 Commercial Street
|
|
Manchester, NH 03101
|
|
Tel: (603) 647-1000
|
|
Fax: (603) 647-9470
|
|
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
5.02) How about that SPARCstation 10?
|
|
|
|
The hardware on the SS10 supports 2 B channels (64K+64K) and 1 D
|
|
channel (16K) for a grand total 144K in marketing speak. Typically you
|
|
might use both B channels for data, 1 channel for voice and 1 channel
|
|
for data, or 1 channel for data to 1 point and 1 channel for data to
|
|
another point. In some parts of the world it's also popular to run
|
|
X.25 over the D channel.
|
|
|
|
Info from the SPARCstation 10 full announcement e-mail:
|
|
|
|
- What Becomes Available When:
|
|
o ISDN
|
|
Chip on the motherboard (done)
|
|
ISDN Drivers on Solaris 2.1 or greater (done)
|
|
Teleservices API Q1 CY93 Solaris 2.x
|
|
Wide Area Networking software Q1 CY93 Solaris 2.x
|
|
The chip on the motherboard provides a BRI (basic rate interface)
|
|
ISDN connection that is integrated with workstation audio.
|
|
The drivers provide a low level interface to the hardware.
|
|
The Teleservices API enables application development for
|
|
workstation/telephony integration - providing functions like
|
|
call setup, transfer, hold, confer, etc. The API is hardware
|
|
independent so that it will work with third party non-ISDN
|
|
telephony hardware and software. The WAN software enables
|
|
data communication - running IP over ISDN (in other words,
|
|
applications that run over ethernet will run over ISDN).
|
|
In the first release, Sun will support data communications
|
|
in the US (for the AT&T 5ESS switch), the UK, France, Germany
|
|
and Japan. We will support voice services in the US (for
|
|
the AT&T 5ESS switch) only.
|
|
|
|
This is also now available on the SPARCstation LX, and available as an
|
|
SBus card for any SBus workstation running Solaris 2.1 or later.
|
|
|
|
The current set of ISDN drivers for Solaris 2.1 or greater support
|
|
the AT&T 5ESS switch; the next release is expected to support
|
|
DMS-100 and national standard.
|
|
|
|
Get API_xtel* from sunsite.unc.edu:/pub/sun-info/white-papers for
|
|
more information on the API itself. The XTel libraries, etc., are
|
|
not bundled with either Solaris 2.x or SunLink ISDN at this time.
|
|
|
|
SunLink ISDN description (quoted from Fall/Winter '93 SunExpress catalog):
|
|
The SunLink ISDN software included in both kits is based on the international
|
|
CCITT standard, and supports the following carrier-dependent implementations:
|
|
o AT&T 5ESS (U.S.)
|
|
o France Telecom VN2 (France)
|
|
o DBT 1TR6 (Germany)
|
|
o Britsh Telecom ISDN2 (U.K.)
|
|
o NTT INS-Net 64 (Japan)
|
|
|
|
Sunlink ISDN software provides the following features:
|
|
o Transparent IP connectivity, to allow you to run most existing IP
|
|
applications, without modification, over ISDN
|
|
o Graphics User Interface (GUI)-based configuration tool, for easy
|
|
installation and administration
|
|
o Security features, including callback, calling address, and PPP
|
|
authentication password
|
|
o Inactivity timer, for transparent open/close connections
|
|
o Integrated network management with SunNetManager agent
|
|
|
|
dank@blacks.jpl.nasa.gov (Dan Kegel)
|
|
kessler@Eng.Sun.COM (Tom Kessler)
|
|
Greg.Onufer@Eng.Sun.COM
|
|
dav@genisco.gtc.com (David L. Markowitz)
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
5.03) How about that IBM Waverunner?
|
|
|
|
The IBM WaveRunner Digital Modem is an internal adapter for personal
|
|
computers (ISA, Microchannel or PCMCIA) which can communicate over an
|
|
ISDN line to either ISDN destinations or analog modems and FAX
|
|
machines. WaveRunner requires ISDN Basic Rate service, an NT-1, and
|
|
either OS/2 2.1 or higher or Microsoft Windows 3.1 or higher.
|
|
|
|
WaveRunner uses AT-style commands, can be used with existing
|
|
communication application, supports V.120 encapsulation and performs
|
|
TCP/IP SLIP to Synchronous TCP/IP Translation.
|
|
|
|
The WaveRunner Hot Line at 1-919-254-ISDN is available for questions
|
|
Technical Support. For a product brochure, call 1-800-426-3395 and
|
|
request document 13403. To order, call 1-800-IBM-2YOU (1-800-426-2968)
|
|
|
|
A complete description is available via anonymous ftp:
|
|
|
|
ibminet.awdpa.ibm.com: pub/announcements/193-305
|
|
|
|
jordan@hursley.ibm.com (Rob Jordan)
|
|
lmarks@vnet.IBM.COM (Laurence V. Marks)
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
5.04) How about that SGI?
|
|
|
|
Indy ISDN BRI:
|
|
|
|
Available as a no charge option to all Indy owners running IRIX 5.2
|
|
or one of its patch variants. ISDN will be bundled with the releases
|
|
after IRIX 5.2. In North America, call SGI customer service at
|
|
1-800-800-4744; otherwise, call the local support office.
|
|
|
|
CONFORMANCE:
|
|
|
|
Indy ISDN has been approved for the following switch protocols in the
|
|
following countries:
|
|
|
|
- 1TR6 in Germany
|
|
- Euro-ISDN in Germany, Sweden, and Finland
|
|
- NTT in Japan
|
|
|
|
Indy ISDN has been working with the following switch protocols in the
|
|
United States:
|
|
|
|
- DMS100
|
|
- 5ESS
|
|
- National ISDN1
|
|
|
|
Countries other than the United States and Canada may require testing
|
|
or approval before Indy ISDN can be operated in that country. Please
|
|
check with your local provider or with SGI before using Indy ISDN in a
|
|
country that is not listed above.
|
|
|
|
CAPABILITIES
|
|
|
|
The Indy transfers circuit switched data on the B channels. A point to
|
|
point (PPP) daemon runs in the background on the Indy and uses ISDN to
|
|
set up a IP link to the destination machine.
|
|
|
|
Both B channels can be combined using a round-robin packet sending
|
|
scheme to maximize throughput. This is sometimes called "inverse
|
|
multiplexing". It is also similar to "bonding".
|
|
|
|
PPP can also be configured to bring up one or both B channels as the
|
|
bandwidth demand increases and bring down the channels when the demand
|
|
decreases. This is commonly known as "bandwith-on-demand".
|
|
|
|
PPP utilizes a variety of compression, thus increasing data throughput
|
|
to beyond 128Kb.
|
|
|
|
PPP uses PAP to authenticate connections.
|
|
|
|
For more specialized data transfer applications which do not want to
|
|
use PPP, an ASI interface is available.
|
|
|
|
INTEROPERABILITY
|
|
|
|
The Indy is interoperable with the following:
|
|
- Other Indy systems
|
|
- Network Express Interhub
|
|
- Ascend
|
|
|
|
MORE INFO:
|
|
|
|
http://www.sgi.com/tech/indy_isdn.marketting_spec.html
|
|
http://www.sgi.com/products/Indy/Indy_top.html
|
|
http:/www.sgi.com
|
|
|
|
mwang@abravanel.esd.sgi.com (Michael Wang)
|
|
wmesard@esd.sgi.com
|
|
talbott@esd.sgi.com
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
5.05) How about that HP?
|
|
|
|
The HP ISDN Link products for the HP Apollo Workstations (HP 9000
|
|
S700) and HP Unix Servers (HP 9000 S800) provides network connections
|
|
to public or private ISDN networks.
|
|
|
|
An HP 9000 connected to the ISDN network can communicate with any HP
|
|
or non-HP system which implements the TCP/IP protocol and which
|
|
encapsulates IP packets according to X.25 RFC877/1356 or with the PPP
|
|
protocol (J2460A/J2455A). Also, with J2461A/J2456A ordered, the HP
|
|
9000 equipped with an ISDN Link can act as a non-dedicated IP router
|
|
for any system attached to the LAN.
|
|
|
|
The main features of the product are :
|
|
* B Channel switching communication at 56/64 Kbps up to 384Kbps
|
|
Up to three BRI per system are supported.
|
|
* RFC 1356 compliant for X.25 encapsulation between ISDN and
|
|
TCP/IP and PPP interoperability
|
|
* X.25 packet switching over D channel
|
|
* SNMP based network management
|
|
|
|
Major HP ISDN BRI Link Benefits:
|
|
* Optimizes communication costs
|
|
* Transparency for the end-user
|
|
* Access to packet switching networks via D channel
|
|
* Network security
|
|
* Centralized management through HP OpenView Node Manager
|
|
* Interoperability
|
|
|
|
To get some more info e-mail to:
|
|
Pierre_Vidalenc@hp6300.desk.hp.com (Pierre Vidalenc)
|
|
Tel (+33) 76 62 14 49
|
|
Fax (+33) 76 62 12 78
|
|
|
|
Pierre_Vidalenc@hp6300.desk.hp.com (Pierre Vidalenc)
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
5.06) How about that Intel RemoteExpress?
|
|
|
|
The Intel RemoteExpress product comes in two versions, a client version
|
|
and a bridge version. With the client version, you can access a remote
|
|
LAN in a seamless fashion. When you log in remotely, your network
|
|
connections look just the same as the network connections in the office;
|
|
there are no new interfaces to learn. With the bridge version, your LAN
|
|
administrator can provide you access to remote clients and to other
|
|
bridges. Bridge to bridge calls can connect two or more remote LANs.
|
|
|
|
RemoteExpress software supplies several levels of security to protect
|
|
unwanted access to the LAN. Embedded on every RemoteExpress board is a
|
|
MAC address. The software can use this address to determine whether a
|
|
system is allowed access to the LAN.
|
|
|
|
The client supports a single BRI ISDN line. Both B channels can be used
|
|
for a single data connection of 128 kbps. Automatic channel expansion
|
|
is supported. A standard analog phone can be connected to the
|
|
RemoteExpress board so that one can either make or receive standard
|
|
voice calls.
|
|
|
|
The bridge product supports up to 3 BRI ISDN lines (6 B channels),
|
|
supporting anywhere from 1 to 6 simultaneous connections. With all 6
|
|
channels allocated to a single data connection, bridges support a
|
|
maximum transmission rate of 384 kbps (bridge to bridge connection). The
|
|
RemoteExpress bridge is an SNMP agent allowing the bridge to be
|
|
controlled remotely. The bridge also supports Spanning Tree Protocol
|
|
(802.1 IEEE).
|
|
|
|
Clients support TCP/IP, Novell NetWares IPX/ODI, NDIS 2.0 (e.g., Banyan
|
|
Vines), and several other network operating systems. Bridges are
|
|
transparent and will pass any Ethernet packet.
|
|
|
|
The hardware and software included in the RemoteExpress LAN adapter
|
|
(client product) and RemoteExpress Bridge Pack are made to run in a DOS-
|
|
based PC. The bridge pack includes the RemoteExpress board and an
|
|
EtherExpress(tm) LAN adapter (Intel's ethernet board). Also included
|
|
with the bridge is a copy of Intel LANDesk(tm) Traffic Analyst.
|
|
|
|
marjorie_j_panditji@ccm.jf.intel.com (Marjorie Panditji)
|
|
--
|
|
Dave Cherkus ----- UniMaster, Inc. ----- Contract Software Development
|
|
Specialties: UNIX TCP/IP X OSF/1 AlphaAXP AIX RS/6000 Performance ISDN
|
|
Email: cherkus@UniMaster.COM Tel: (603) 888-8308 Fax: (603) 888-8308
|
|
if (cpu.type == PENTIUM && cpu.step < 8) { panic("Intel Inside!"); }
|
|
|
|
|
|
1/25/95 12:08:26 PM Closing Log file.
|
|
|