523 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
523 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
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_______________________________________________________________________________
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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_ _ _ _
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((___)) ((___))
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[ x x ] cDc communications [ x x ]
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\ / presents... \ /
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(` ') (` ')
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(U) (U)
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Frankie's Yellow Pages ... Volume II
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Yet another file from the Cow's Information Series,
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the Yellow Pages are a testament to the fun-filled
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world created by those zany Bell technicians. Herein,
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the serious phreak will find a complete encyclopedia
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of Bell System terms, abbreviations, and acronyms...
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>> A CULT Publication by High Priest and Scribe, Franken Gibe <<
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-cDc- Cult of the Dead Cow Dissemination Council -cDc-
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_______________________________________________________________________________
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Cable Fill The percentage of pairs in a cable sheath actually
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~~~~~~~~~~ assigned and used.
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Cable Vault An area, generally on the lower level of the telco,
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~~~~~~~~~~~ where cables enter the building.
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Call Forwarding
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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One of those amazing custom calling services. When call forwarding is
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activated by a customer, all calls to that line are automatically routed
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to another line designated during activation. [C.F. is ESS's answer to
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the diverter]
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Call Store
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~~~~~~~~~~
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The equipment unit of an Electronic Switching System that provides temporary
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memory storage of information pertaining to call processing & maintenance.
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Call Waiting
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~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The custom calling service adored by millions that provides a tone burst
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to a customer on an established call when a second call has been directed
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to that line. The notification tone is heard only by the called customer,
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whereas the incoming caller hears regular ringing. The customer can place
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the existing call on hold, connect to the calling party, and then repeat
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the procedure to reestablish the original connection. This operation can
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be done ad nauseum. [See File on the Call Waiting Tap...available to some]
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CAMA See Centralized Automatic Message Accounting
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~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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CAMA-ONI See CAMA- Operator Number Identification
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~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Carried Load
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~~~~~~~~~~~~
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(1) The load you tote around on the Big Date, and try to control [eew!]
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(2) The average number of calls that are in progress. The unit, one call,
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is called...shucks, y'know this...an Erlang.
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Carrier System
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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A system for transmitting one or more channels of information by processing
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and converting to a form suitable for the transmission medium used by the
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system [got that?]. Many information channels can be carried by one broad-
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band carrier system. Common types of carrier systems are frequency-division,
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in which each info. channel occupies an assigned portion of the frequency
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spectrum, and time-division, in which each info. channel uses the trans-
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mission medium for periodic assigned time intervals.
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Carterfone Decision
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The MONUMENTAL decision made by the FCC in 1968 to the effect that telco
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customers should be allowed to connect their own equipment (i.e.
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DATA MODEMS) to the public telenetwork provided that this interconnection
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not adversely affect the telco's operations or the utility of the tele-
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phone system to others. Prior to this wonderful decision, only telco
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provided equipment could be hooked up to the network. Let's take a
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few moments to thank the Modem Deity for Equal Access.
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CCH See Connections per Circuit Hour
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~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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CCIS See [yawn] Common Channel Interoffice Signaling
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~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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CCITT See Intl. Telephone & Telegraph Consultative Committee
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~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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CCS See Hundred Call Seconds
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~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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CCSA See Common-Control Switching Arrangement
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~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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CDO See Community Dial Office
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~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Central Office (CO)
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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(1) An Overrated Bulletin Board System.
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(2) A switching system that connects lines to lines and lines to trunks. The
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term is more often used to refer to the telco building itself in which
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a switching system is located and to include other equipment (such as
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transmission system terminals) that may be located in such a building.
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Central Office Code
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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A 3-digit identification number under which up to 10k station codes are
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subgrouped. Exchange area boundaries are associated with the CO code which
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accordingly has billing significance. Note that SEVERAL CO codes may be
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served by a single CO. Also called NNX code...the prefix...the exchange.
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Central Office Work Order
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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An order for work to be done in the operating company to make or change
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equipment assignments for switching system line or trunk access.
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Centralized Automatic Message Accounting (CAMA)
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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(Phantom Phreak's Phavorite...) A process using centrally located
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equipment, including a switchboard or a traffic service position,
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associated with a tandem or toll switching office, for automatically
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recording billing data for customer-dialed extra-charge calls originating
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from several local central offices. A tape record is processed at an
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electronic data processing center.
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Centralized Automatic Message Accounting- Operator Number Identification
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(CAMA-ONI) Operator
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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An operator located at a position that is connected temporarily on a
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customer-dialed station-to-station call. The operator secures the calling
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number from the customer and keys the number into the centralized
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automatic message accounting equipment.
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Centralized Intercept Bureau (CIB)
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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That type of bureau that is part of an Automatic Intercept System and is
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associated with one or more automatic intercept centers. It provides
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facilities whereby operators situated at auxiliary service positions
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furnish assistance to calling customers whose calls have been intercepted
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and who require help beyond that furnished by the auto. intercept center.
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Centrex
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~~~~~~~
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A service for customers with many stations that permits station-to-station
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dialing, one listed directory # for the customer, direct inward dialing
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to a particular station, and station identification on outgoing calls.
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The switching functions are performed in a central office.
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Channel
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~~~~~~~
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A transmission path between two points. The term channel may refer to a
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one-way path or, when paths in the two directions of transmission are
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always associated, to a 2-way path. It is usually the smallest subdivision
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of a transmission system by means of which a single type of communication
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service is provided, i.e., a voice channel, teletypewriter, or data channel.
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Channel Bank
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~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Channel terminal equipment used for combining (multiplexing) channels on a
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frequency-division or time-division basis. Voice channels are combined into
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12- or 24-channel groups.
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Channel Busy Tone
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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An audible signal indicating that a call cannot be completed because of
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trunk or switching system blocking. The tone is applied 120 times per
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minute. Also called fast busy or (the ever-popular reorder) tone.
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CIB See Centralized Intercept Bureau
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~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Circuit
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~~~~~~~
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(1) A communication path between two or more points.
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(2) A network of circuit elements, such as resistors, inductors, capacitors,
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semiconductors, etc., that performs a specific function.
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(3) A closed path through which current can flow.
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(4) A term no 'philter' would ever dream of asking.
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Circuit Order
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The document used to transmit engineering design of a public telephone
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network trunk or special-service circuit to the department that
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implements the design. (Good Social Engineering term...)
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CLASS See Custom Local Area Signaling Service
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~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Class 5 Office
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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A local central office that serves as the network entry point for station
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loops and certain special-service lines. Also called an end office. Other
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offices, classes 1,2,3, and 4, are toll offices in the telenetwork.
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CO See Central Office
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~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Code
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~~~~
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(1) Any of a wide variety of schemes for representing info. such as a color
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color code for values resistors, Morse code for telegraphy, and a ZIP
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code for a mail address.
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(2) A system of rules for representing information by digital signals such
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as teletypewriter code. See ASCII (Vol. I).
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(3) A numbering system for telephone addresses. See Central Office Code,
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Station Code, and Number Plan Area.
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(4) A set of standard abbreviations for equipment and facility names. See
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Common Language Code.
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(5) A set of rules for representing the amplitude of a signal sample by
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digital signals. See Pulse Code Modulation.
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(6) The least impressive achievement or possession of the common phreak.
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See also Codezz, Kodezz, K0dezz, etc.
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Coded Ringing
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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A form of semiselective ringing. The customer is required to identify his
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own code by the number of rings and/or their duration. A variation of
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coded ringing is one of the CLASS services.
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Coherent
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~~~~~~~~
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(1) Something the CULT is not very often.
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(2) Refers to a fixed phase relationship that provides certain advantages
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in signal detection.
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Coherent Modulation System
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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(For the SERIOUS amongst you)...A modulation system that requires a carrier,
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either transmitted or locally derived and having the same frequency and
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phase as that associated with the received signal, for recovering the
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original modulating signal.
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Coherent Phase-Shift Keying (CPSK)
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Modulation techniques for transmitting digital info. in which that info.
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is conveyed by selecting discrete phase changes of the carrier relative
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to a reference. See Coherent Modulation System or a physicist near you.
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Coin-First Service
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Coin telephone service in which an initial rate deposit is required to
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obtain a dial tone. Coin-first service is being replaced by dial-tone-
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first, an improved service requiring additional functions in the station
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and in the switching system. (Thus the BIOC concept that areas with
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coin-first fortress phones are served by older switches.)
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Coin Relay
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~~~~~~~~~~
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A relay in a coin telephone that collects or returns the coins under the
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control of the central office. This relay is activated by CO tones,
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and in areas that do not use out-of-band signaling, Red Box tones can
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mean free calls by activating this relay.
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Common Channel Interoffice Signaling (CCIS)
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This is as precise a definition as I could find. I remember on Phreak Klass
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2600 (in 806), the arguments used to rage as to what CCIS is and how
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it negates or prevents boxing. Sigh. I'll go into all that here, since
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CCIS is one of the Top Five most-likely Philter Questions.
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CCIS is a signaling system, developed for use between stored program
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switching systems (i.e., ESS et alia), in which all of the signaling info.
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for a group of trunks (i.e., operator or 'blue box' MF tones, Green and
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Red tones) is transmitted over a dedicated high-speed data link, rather
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than on a per-trunk basis (i.e. inband signaling, whereby tones
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were actually 'shuttled' on your voice trunk). CCIS can reduce call setup
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time and save money (yeah!) compared with individual trunk signaling.
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That is the definition. Now, you may wonder what the difference
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is between out-of-band signaling and CCIS. Alright, though some will
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say that they're the same, that's not quite so. CCIS is out-of-band, but
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out-of-band is not always CCIS. Got that? That is to say, out-of-band
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is the generic label of signaling that occurs outside the voiceband.
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This method usually places signaling at frequencies beyond the voice
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frequencies, but not necessarily on a dedicated-trunk (CCIS). Thus,
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per-trunk signaling COULD be out-of-band. CCIS, on the other hand,
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devotes a separate trunk to signaling data. Thus, all such signaling
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is carried over a trunk separate from the voice trunk. This is out-of-
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band in a sense, then. The following is a letter I wrote to 2600 Mag. and
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their response. It's not too explicit, but it may help clarify a touch.
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Dear 2600:
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In the course of two years of telecom, I've read countless Gfiles
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which describe the (virtual) spectrum of 'boxes'. Yet few files give
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a clear explanation as to why boxing is impossible in many electronic
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switching offices. Would you mind explaining CCIS, and just how this
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'prevents' boxing? Thanks.
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Reply: "Put quite simply, it's impossible to blue box in an electronic
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switching office under CCIS because the equivalent of the blue box tones
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that a phreak would send are transmitted over a completely different line.
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Since you don't have access to these lines, blue boxing no longer works.
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This is ALSO called out-of-band signaling."
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Common Control
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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An automatic arrangement in which items of control equipment in a switching
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system are shared; they are associated with a given call only during the
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periods required to accomplish the control functions. All Bell System
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Crossbar and ESS systems have common control. This is in contrast to the
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individual relays of Strowger switching.
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Common-Control Switching Arrangement (CCSA)
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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An arrangement in which switching for a private network is provided by one
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or more common-control switching systems. The switching systems may be
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shared by several private networks and also may be shared with the public
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telephone network.
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Common Language Code
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Codes used to ensure uniform abbreviation of equipment and facility names,
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places, place names, etc. (Be nice to get ahold of a summary...anyone?)
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Communications Satellite Corporation (COMSAT)
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Created by authorization of Congress in the Communications Satellite Act
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of 1962. This private corporation (NOT any agency of the U.S. Government,
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though subject to governmental regulation) was created primarily to
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provide for the establishment, operation, and management of a commercial
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communications satellite system. COMSAT presently acts as manager for
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INTELSAT and also represents the U.S. in INTELSAT.
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Community Dial Office (CDO)
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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A small automatic switching system that serves a separate exchange area
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having its own numbering plan and ordinarily having no operating or
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maintenance force located in its own building; operation is handled and
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maintenance is directed from a conveniently located and beautifully
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landscaped point referred to as an operator office.
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Compandor
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~~~~~~~~~
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An abbreviation for compressor-expandor. A device used to compress the
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range of talker volumes at the input to a carrier system (in particular,
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to increase low-level talker volumes) and to expand the received volumes
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at the output of the carrier system (to provide complementary function
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and to make the transmission system transparent). This technique improves
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the signal-to-noise ratio for low-level talkers and provides a
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substancially reduced received noise level during the so-called quiet
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intervals. A miracle, really.
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Compandor Mistracking
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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If this shows up on a philter, leave me mail. Mistracking refers to the
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failure of the expandor-characteristic of a compandor to complement
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exactly the compressor-characteristics, thereby causing signal distortion.
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COMSAT See Communications Satellite Corporation
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~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Concentration
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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(1) Applies to a switching network (or portion thereof) that has more
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inputs than outputs.
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(2) In a traffic network, combining calls arriving on many lines or trunks
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to transmit them more efficiently in a trunk group.
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(3) Locating as much equipment as possible at a given place to achieve
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economies in such things as building costs, maintenance, etc.
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(4) Something VERY difficult to maintain when reading tech. manuals.
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Connecting Arrangement
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The implementation for connecting arrangement service. A connecting
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arrangement consists of an interconnecting unit, a Technical Reference,
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and a tariff offering.
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Connecting Arrangement Service
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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A service providing electrical connection to the public telenetwork of
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customer-provided equipment. This service, whish is usually denoted by a
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uniform service order code (USOC), is offered by tariff and is implemented
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with an interconnecting unit and a Technical Reference. (Great SE term!)
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Connection
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~~~~~~~~~~
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(1) A point where a junction of two or more conductors is made.
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(2) Generally, a telfo connection is a 2-way voiceband circuit completed
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between two points by means of one or more switching systems. It
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contains two loops and may contain one or more trunks.
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Connections per Circuit Hour (CCH)
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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An indication of holding time of calls. Under normal circumstances, ACH=
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CCH which is about equal to 6 in busy hour for trunk groups excluding
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high-usage groups.
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Connector
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~~~~~~~~~
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In Step-by-Step switching systems, a 2-motion electromechanical switch that
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operates on the last two digits of the telephone number to connect from a
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selector to any one of 100 customer loops. The connector performs the
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following functions:
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o Tests for busy
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o If busy, returns busy tone
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o If idle, rings the called party and returns ringback tone to calling line
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o Provides a supervisory signal indicating that answer has occurred and
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trips ringing
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o Provides talking battery to the calling line on intraoffice calls and
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to the called line
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o Disconnects when the customer hangs up
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Construction Program
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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A detailed plan of placement, removal, and rearrangement of facilities to
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modernize and expand the capacity of the facilities network.
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Conversion (Converting)
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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In signaling, the substitution of one, two, or three digits for received
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digits for the purpose of directing the call through the next office.
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Coordinate Network
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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A switching network consisting of incoming and outgoing talking paths
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arranged at right angles to each other with fine-motion or electronic
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switching elements at intersections.
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CORNET Network
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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A private telephone network serving Western Electric and Bell Laboratories;
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CORNET is a contraction of corporate network. This network uses common-
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control switching arrangements (CCSA).
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Country Code
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~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The 1-, 2-, or 3-digit number that, in the world numbering plan, identifies
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each country or integrated numbering plan in the world. The initial digit
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is always the world-zone number. Any subsequent digits in the code further
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define the designated geographic area (normally identifying a specific
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country). On an international call, the country code is dialed before
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the national number.
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Coupler
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~~~~~~~
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An alternate name for an interconnecting unit.
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CPSK See Coherent Phase-Shift Keying
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~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Crossbar Switch
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The basic element of any Crossbar System. A crossbar switch is a relay
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mechanism consisting of 10 horizontal paths and 10 or 20 vertical paths.
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Any horizontal path can be connected to any vertical path by means
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of magnets. A 2-stage operation is used to close any crosspoint. First, a
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selecting magnet shifts all selecting fingers in a horizontal row, then a
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holding magnet shifts a vertical actuating card to close the selected
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contacts.
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Crosspoint Array
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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An arrangement of switching elements used in some switching networks,
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characterized by incoming and outgoing talking paths arranged at right
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angles to each other, with switching elements at intersections.
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Crosstalk
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~~~~~~~~~
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Undesired power coupled into a communications circuit from other communi-
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cations circuits. Telephone crosstalk may be either intelligible (& thus
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VERY amusing) or unintelligible (& thus VERY annoying).
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CTRAP See Customer Trouble Report Analysis Plan
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~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Custom Calling Services
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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A group of four keen services provided by ESS to business and residence
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customers: 3-way calling, speed calling, call waiting, and call forwarding.
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Custom Local Area Signaling Service (CLASS)
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The ultimate calling service. CLASS is one of the Bell Network's futuristic
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services meant to prop-up profits and presumably make the customers' lives
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a little better. This service includes such features as call-blocking
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and filtering, coded/priority ringing, and customer-accessible ANI on
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incoming callings. CLASS is but one facet of the ultimate telco network,
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ISDN (Integrated Services Digital Network).
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Customer-Premises Equipment
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Equipment normally installed on the customer's premises, such as telephone
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sets, key telephones, PBX's, etc.
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Customer Trouble Report Analysis Plan (CTRAP)
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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A plan that provides manual and mechanized procedures for recording troubles
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reported by customers and analyzing the reports to obtain statistical data
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regarding customer service.
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_______________________________________________________________________________
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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That's about it for Volume II. The C's are indeed myriad and multitudinous.
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After you've digested yet another chunck of Telco Tech Info., look for Volume
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III of the Yellow Pages, coming soon to BBS's everywhere...sorta.
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_______________________________________________________________________________
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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(c)1987 cDc communications by Franken Gibe 12/0/87-28
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All Rights Worth Not Very Much At All
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