Sprint Moves Phone Network to IP 212
Ryan Barrett writes "Sprint announced that it has 'begun transforming its telephone network so voice calls are transmitted in packets.' AP article here. Combined with a recent /. story about Telus doing the same thing, this sets an interesting precedent. Many telcos already use packet-switching to handle a significant chunk of their calls. Is this the beginning of the end for circuit-switched networks?"
Telus Calls Sprint (Score:5, Funny)
Ouch, now I have to remember IP addresses too (Score:5, Funny)
Reminds me of that old Dogbert Joke about having a Tilde in the phone number. I wonder how long it will be till them move to IPv6, won't that be a joy to dial.
Re:Ouch, now I have to remember IP addresses too (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Ouch, now I have to remember IP addresses too (Score:2, Interesting)
Is Mr or Mrs. slashdot there? When would be a good time to call back?
Re:Ouch, now I have to remember IP addresses too (Score:5, Interesting)
More like the middle of the end (Score:4, Interesting)
The quicker companies do this, the better it will be for their margins - this news from Sprint probably doesn't mean much for their users, but their shareholders should be happy. The cost of carrying VoIP is much lower, which is what allows those calling card companies to stay in business.
Already going on .... elsewhere (Score:2, Interesting)
there is nothing new to this kind of thinking.
there is a paradigm shift going on through out the telecom voice/data industry
such a move is already being made in the "test-bed " countries like CHINA and INDIA where the telco network is newly gaining great importance in infrastructure.
already in INDIA the BhartiGroup and RELAINCE (2 main telco operators) have their backbones as IP based traffic.
it seems strange that such a move made in such
Re:Already going on .... elsewhere (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:More like the middle of the end (Score:2)
Crooks, every last one of 'em. I hope that as soon as they all to to VoIP, someone figures out how to connect to it from a standard computer and bypass the local phone company completely! (And yes, I know there already exists a way for calling someone on you
Re:More like the middle of the end (Score:3, Informative)
it's cool stuff. a friend of mine is using it and I'm signing up next week.
Re:More like the middle of the end (Score:5, Insightful)
There is a really good article [shirky.com] on the economics invoved by Clay Shirky. Recommended reading.
Re:More like the middle of the end (Score:5, Insightful)
However, there's a new component here: the "legislative" layer.
In the ZapMail scenario, individual businesses could replace the FedEx service simply by buying a fax machine; but that's only because of FCC rules which a) demanded that common carriers (the phone companies) could not discriminate against different users of the network, and b) allow any non-destructive device to be connected to the Public Switched Network. In other words, the fax machine revolution was sparked by FCC rules which created an open and equal (Lessig would call it "flat and end-to-end") network on top of which others could build and innovate.
However, the FCC has chosen a different path with "broadband" these days. The FCC has already begun to rule (and appears ready to go whole hog with more rulings) that companies which provide broadband services own their network. If we were replaying ZapMail today, that means the phone companies would be allowed to prevent individual businesses from using their network to transfer documents via fax. Customers who wanted to deliver a document would have to use either an authorized corporate partner (in this case, FedEx) or the services of the telephone company itself.
We're already seeing manifestations of this in the Internet today; Most ISP's won't allow individuals to use port 25 (SMTP) so if you want to send email, you have to use the server provided by the ISP. That service is no longer available to customers, even the ones who have already bought equipment capable of sending and receiving email direrctly.
Consider AOL's position concerning mailing lists: If you want to provide a mailing list (free or fee) service to AOL subscribers, you must either a) run your list from an "approved" (read: corporate partner) server, or b) trudge through a lengthly approval process to get your mailing list onto the "whitelisted" list. It's not a far stretch to see the day when there will be a fee to mailing list managers in order to service AOL subscribers, and that will be the end of the free mailing list.
So, the next thing to fail will be the "free" services currently offered on the Internet.
We're already seeing pressure on major business sites to get an AOL keyword associated with their site. For all I know, getting that keyword cost money. If it doesn't already, it soon will. When that starts to happen, I wonder if Slashdot will be pulling in enough revenue to maintain contact with it's AOL customers, or if Slashdot will become another site AOL subscribers have to jump through hoops (or pay and extra "access" fee) to access?
Will we see a day when on-line gamers will be required to use only the "service provider approved" gaming server, because ports to other servers are blocked? Isn't Microsoft doing something like this already on MSN requiring a Passport to access their Gaming server?
Will we soon see the day when trying to access any "terrorist" news site (like Al Jazerra) will be impossible, and accessing any "liberal" (read: non-corporate/administration partner) news site will be slow and unreliable at best? And if you're trying to get to the campaign web site of the non-incumbent candidate, well, you can just forget it.
There's more at work here than just simple economics. Without on open networking layer as we had with the PSN, there won't be the kind of telecommunications revolution we say after the AT&T breakup in 1984.
Re:More like the middle of the end (Score:2)
The beginning of the end started when the equipment manufacturers started producing boxes that allowed VoIP calls to have the same quality as circuit-switched ones.
They did? I've recently been in some training where we discussed the problems of getting VOIP to work on networking gear. It was interesting to see scenarios where one slight change to MTUs, etc., caused a 180 degree reversal of QoS behavior. Nothing I've looked at, including carrier class boxes, handles VOIP worth a damn. Data boxes, and
Not IP (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not IP (Score:5, Informative)
A friend who used to work for Nortel (didn't many) mentioned this. Worldcom did most of their long distance stuff on top of IP6.
Re:Not IP (Score:5, Informative)
Note that in general, these are all behind-the-scenes private networks. You will still be circuit-switched to a point (inside your local office, typically). Then there'll be a TDM-to-packet gateway which converts your circuit-switched connection into ATM (or IP).
From an IP point of view, one of the side effects of this is that you don't need a seperate IP address for every phone, or even a seperate address for every house. All you need is an IP address/port number combination for each end of an active call in any given network. (And there are ways of getting around that restriction too.) Since these are all private networks cut off from the internet, IPV4 provides more than enough addresses.
Packet telephony all the way to the home, at least from the telcos, is some ways off. You'd either have to have a gateway inside your house to which you connect all your legacy phones, or you'd replace all the phones with IP phones. As you can probably see, there's a lot of inertia behind that *not* happening -- try convincing your great uncle Bert that he needs to replace all the phones in his house.
Re:Not IP (Score:2)
How long has it been since you've seen a rotary telephone in use?
Re:Not IP (Score:2)
A long time, but if I flip the switch on my phone, I can still call anyone. Backwards compatibility doesn't exist in the IP phone switchover.
Re:Not IP (Score:2)
If you use a gateway to convert touch tone and rotary phones to IP, there is no reason why backwards compatability cannot be implemented for use with the current hardware. Backwards compatability for the phone numbers, and emergency service (911 here in the states), would require a software solution. That should not be to dificult to do (even for the phone companies)
How long has it been since you've seen a rotary telephone in use? Thi
Re:Not IP (Score:2)
Re:Not IP (Score:2)
Re:Not IP (Score:2, Informative)
I was working as a Network Engineer for them, in amsterdam, and as far as I know, we only had a test IPv6 network.
We did a lot of discussing IPv6, and as per most of the big ISPs right now, decided that it isn't currently worth it.
Could insert obligatory US != world comment, but to be honest that's totally how Wcom worked....Europe? that in Texas ???
Re:Not IP (Score:2)
Re:Not IP (Score:2)
Re:Not IP (Score:2)
Let me guess (Score:3, Funny)
, unfortunately, monthly fees will rise with 25% due to the *better* services that'll be provided....;o)...
IPV6 (Score:5, Funny)
Re:IPV6 (Score:4, Funny)
Now it'll be 1-800-I-DONT-HAVE-A-FLOOR-U-INSENSITIVE-CLOD
Re:IPV6 (Score:2, Interesting)
The longest one I actualy saw was 1-800-333-DIAMONDS, and they did emphasize the S at the end (unlike 1-800-MATTRES, "leave off the last S for savings").
Do they do that idiocy outside the US too, or is this another example of our monopoly on stupidity?
Re:IPV6 (Score:3, Funny)
Pinging 3ffe:501:8:0:260:97ff:fe40:efab from 2001:630:1c0:1:201:2ff:fea9:9ae0 with 32 bytes of data:
Destination host unreachable.
Destination host unreachable.
Destination host unreachable.
Destination host unreachable.
8 149 ms 149 ms 149 ms 2001:200:0:6c04::1
9 281 ms 279 ms 287 ms pc1.notemachi.wide.ad.jp [2001:200:0:6c01:290:27ff:fe3a:d8]
10 277 ms 276 ms 277 ms pc6.otemachi.wide.ad.jp [2001:200:0:1800::9c4:0]
11 Destination host
I'm bored. (Score:2)
Tracing route to chaz.ws.ipv6.ne-worcs.ac.uk [2001:630:1c0:1:201:2ff:fea9:9ae0] over a maximum of 30 hops:
1 3 ms 2 ms 3 ms 3ffe:b80:1c5d:1:200:cff:fe3e:d15a
2 72 ms 137 ms 126 ms 3ffe:b80:3:5d89::1
3 97 ms 77 ms 66 ms tu-viagenie.ipv6.noris.de [2001:780::b]
4 157 ms 179 ms 197 ms 3ffe:b00:c18:1017::2
5 467 ms 465 ms 454 ms 3ffe:2100:1:9::c13f:5e06
6 * 529 ms 516 ms 2001:630:0:f006::2
7 463
new pipe (Score:2)
Re:new pipe (Score:2)
For one thing, there are bundles upon bundles of dark fiber (run but never utilized) stretched between the metropolitan centers that they've yet to find a use for.
Secondly, laying fiber is expensive. The cost of converting to VoIP from their regular gear has got to be enormous, and if they had to lay fiber there's now way they could afford it. The only way Sprint could justify the conversion is if they were able to use their existing lines.
***************
Speaking of Sprint, last year at
Circuit Switching will still be around... (Score:5, Informative)
There is a lot of value in the use of packetized data. More "lines" over fewer trunks is just one of them, and for your average, everyday user, they will not notice the difference.
On the other hand, certain timing based encryption schemes will have to remain on locked in circuits to function. The latency caused through the use of packet buffering regardless of how slight, may be enough to cause a "handshake" failure, or just spew unintelligable garbage.
Of course, as encryption systems become more and more robust the need for "hard lines" will start to dissipate.
I for one welcome our new packetized telephone overlords...
krystal_blade
Re:Circuit Switching will still be around... (Score:2)
but if they cut the hard lines, we'll be trapped!
That's cool but... (Score:2, Interesting)
Damn! (Score:5, Funny)
beginning of the end for circuit-switched networks (Score:5, Funny)
"Serial is slow, let's move to parallel."
"Now parallel is slow, let's go to serial."
It all started with central, time-sharing systems, then switched to distributed computing when the technology permitted, and there now a trend torwards centralized administration again.
Batch processing was popular, then on-line processing replaced it, now many things are going back to batch processing because of the time/cost advantages it provides.
It seems that as technologies disappear, even newer technologies come along that remind everyone of the (still) very valid why they were using the older technologies in the first place.
Just wait, in 5-10 years, CRTs will be popular once again, and I suppose circuit switching will probably find a new foothold as well.
Re:beginning of the end for circuit-switched netwo (Score:5, Informative)
I have been installing VOIP, VOFR, and IP Telephony for years now for many businesses, I have lots of 99.999% uptime systems, no complaints in almost two years for quality of voice, I can't believe /.ers are amazed and puzzled by such simple things as a forty year old idea being used by a carrier. I guess /. isn't what it used to be.
Re:beginning of the end for circuit-switched netwo (Score:2)
Amazed and puzzled? I think not.
All I'm trying to point out is that they will no doubt discover some purpose in the future where switched-circuit systems are better suited than packet switching.
It's quite possible the more important systems will go back to being circuit switched because of the better reliablity... With no other devices sharing the line
Re:beginning of the end for circuit-switched netwo (Score:2)
Re:beginning of the end for circuit-switched netwo (Score:2)
Circuit switching will probably return under the guise of "guaranteed quality of service" over the unreliable packet switched network. In fact, ATM does virtual circuit switching already.
bandwidth? (Score:2)
Anyone using this type of service already, how good is the quality on it? Also how does the phone connect to the providers server?
Looks very promising and should hopefully lead to at least a freeze in the cost of phone calls, and hopefully a steady decrease.
Re:bandwidth? (Score:3, Interesting)
I believe GSM uses 13kbits (or in that neighbourhood) and I have used the speex codec in 8kbits mode recently and it give good enough quality to make conversations.
If you use uncompressed audio you need about 32kbits.
Jeroen
Re:bandwidth? (Score:2)
Yeah but the question .on every /.er's mind is ... (Score:2, Funny)
About Freaking time (Score:5, Interesting)
When I see stuff like this, I get this warm happy feeling inside when it seems like it's actually a *good* idea to actually upgrade from our old vintage phone system to something that can do a hell of alot more useful things. Datapackets can be uniquely identified as "voice" "fax" or "data", which could in theory make a whole slew of things possible...
Though it makes me wonder, if the telcos are going for packet based voice communications, why the hell would I bother placing a long distance call through them when I can use VoIP software. Don't get me wrong, i'll all for the idea digital packet based phone service, if for nothing else but making all phones with that service high speed internet ready.
Re:About Freaking time (Score:2)
But will this benefit the consumer ? (Score:3, Interesting)
Nice idea and all that but how will the consumer benefit from this ? will we get lower call charges or will the CEO just get another 5million on his paypacket ?
Re:But will this benefit the consumer ? (Score:5, Informative)
1. One phone number for multi devices (I think this was covered in the article).
2. Phone numbers not tied to physical location, but rather device or authentication. Would be most nifty for mobiles to go landline. (this was covered)
3. Multi communication... end users could in theory have two telephones, and place two calls on the same line. No further need for an alarm wire from your telco.
4. No D/A loss when you copy your CD over your phone.
5. Everyone is highspeed internet ready... in theory you need 32Kbit for decent voice, perhaps 64K / 128K bit just to be safe. Pay more money to throttle you up to internet speeds... no more waiting for low paid installers.
6. Networked appliances no longer need "internet access" but rather phone access, and no gay ass 300 baud modems in your digital cable box.
Re:But will this benefit the consumer ? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:But will this benefit the consumer ? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:But will this benefit the consumer ? (Score:3, Interesting)
This was Sprint ION. DSL and up to four voice phone lines over the same wire.
Sprint pulled the plug on it last year, after losing a lot of money. They had some deployment problems, but users able to get it were reportedly happy with it. They shut it down just before it was scheduled to be deployed at my CO.
From what I've been able to gather, a large part of the problem was Sprint's CLEC st
It'll never work (Score:4, Funny)
Re:It'll never work (Score:2, Informative)
Re:It'll never work (Score:3, Funny)
Ah, but what else is out there? (Score:2)
Somewhere out there, someone is building systems that _will_ have a significant impact on telephony. Find these guys - that will be news.
Intellectual property, or real property? (Score:3, Funny)
Why, was property in the real world too expensive?
[rimshot]
Thanks, I'll be here all the week.
IP?! Or ATM? Or something else? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:IP?! Or ATM? Or something else? (Score:5, Interesting)
I beg to differ.
Voice over IP is already standard part of corporate IT. It is rapidly leaking into the consumer space.
Historically, Big Dumb Pipes have continually displaced managed bandwidth type systems. Voice over IP is just the latest example.
I did a consulting project for Qualcomm as part of my classwork last semester studying whether 802.11b has the potential to disrupt CDMA networks. People might find the paper interesting, since it indirectly addresses many of the same issues.
http://web.mit.edu/~rwilley/www/Qualcomm.pdf
CISCO VOIP phone (Score:3, Interesting)
Voice over IP is the way voice traffice will be handled in the future. The article talks about sending IP traffic over ATM, at least for now - it's more expensive that way but the cost of new switches is also quite high.
You might want to read more on the "Martini Draft" and MPLS to get a sense of how ATM will be replaced by IP technologies.
Re:IP?! Or ATM? Or something else? (Score:3, Insightful)
Umm... no. Many telephone companies are moving AWAY from circuit switched networks to packet switched ones (whether that be IP or some other protocol). Why? First, it's cheaper (you can use more commodity hardware, especially if you're using IP). Second, it can be more efficient, since traffic can be re-routed to make bett
Wiretapping (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Wiretapping (Score:5, Insightful)
That is sort of the point of the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act [askcalea.net].
That particular battle was fought and lost 9 years ago.
Re:Wiretapping (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Wiretapping (Score:3, Insightful)
But probably not in this case. To "leverage existing infrastructure" this will not be a user visible voip application. One or more endpoints and transport networks involved will use existing circuits for quite some time.
Packet Switched Voice is not the Internet (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Packet Switched Voice is not the Internet (Score:2)
their switches
That's got to a key ingredient. The ingredient that probably caused other posters to think - "No Way can this work!"
If voice service were conducted over some of the public pieces of the internet that I use, the latency chop effect would make Max Headroom sound smooth.
And in the UK (Score:5, Informative)
VOIP end to End (Score:2)
Nortel vs. Cisco (Score:2, Interesting)
I found it interesting that Telus, a Canadian telco, will use equipment from American companies Cisco Systems and Juniper Networks whereas Sprint, an American telco will use equipment from Canada's Nortel.
I have nothing particularly insightful to say right now. Talk amongst yourselves ;-)
hope they have echo cancellation (Score:3, Funny)
Not IP but ATM (Score:5, Informative)
Packet based (Score:2)
Some questions/observations (Score:5, Informative)
2. A brief search of the web suggests VoIP can be more secure [nwfusion.com] than traditional telephony. To what extent will government fight this? Effectively having an SSH tunnel to the other caller wouldn't be appreciated by the gov't given the present modus operandi of the US.
3. VoIP is certainly a logical progression, and I don't see the big telcos going out of business soon. Where I live, there are just a few DSL providers but only one company (SBC) owns all the wires into the area. Their only real competitor is cable TV whom they are fighting tooth and nail to gain marketshare. I imagine access to wireless frequencies has very little competition (think: 802.11), but will there need to be legislation to keeping it open?
How very 1960s... (Score:2)
PCS laptop cards (Score:2)
Hidden Agenda (Score:3, Insightful)
reading /. tends to make me think in this way :-b
Doesn't say IP (Score:3, Insightful)
I think Telus is nuts to use IP. I hope they succeed, but I still think they're nuts.
Re:Doesn't say IP (Score:2)
You haven't heard of MPLS I take it? It's pretty cool technology. Basically, if you set up an IP cloud with MPLS-aware routers, then you can use this network for standard packet-switched communication, or you can establish (in real-time) "virtual circuits" through the network for high speed, low-latency communication. Thus, you get the best of both the packet switch and circuit switched worlds.
I won't bother de
Background info (Score:3, Informative)
I used to work on this, and can say that its quite a robust system. Runs about 8000 POTS lines or 2000 xDSL, and also supports DS1 and TDM lines. Backbone is OC3 ATM with other options available. VOIP should be done now/soon but I don't believe Sprint went that route. The system has Echo Cancellation and all the other required perks to ensure good quality.
Used to.. Anyone need an embedded driver dev in RTP?
/.ing (Score:2)
My sister have been trying that for years but still no effect
Wired in 1996 on ATM and IP (Score:3, Interesting)
IP Phone...hmm... (Score:2)
555-3175 contacted, waiting for reply
Ring... Ring...
We're sorry, the customer you dialed connot be reached offline, would you like to connect or remain offline?
----
my question is if your phones crap out and you need to reinstall tcp/ip on it, how do you call tech support?
the last 1/2" (Score:2)
The only logical progression is to pull analog out of the loop completely for the last 1/2" between the phone and the user, bypassing the soon to be obsolete analog audio output "mouth".
Re:Lets face it (Score:5, Informative)
Trunk switching has been multiplexed for decades already. Previously, it might have been multiplexed by FDMA (frequency division), and now it looks like they are moving to IP based (or similar) to route calls through exchanges. The end user won't notice the difference. It's unlikely that the call routing will be done over the public Internet.
The trunk network can already run out of capacity - you do not now have dedicated bandwitdth and never had dedicated bandwidth over the trunk network (ever got the 'All circuits are busy' message?) A packet based trunk network is no less secure than the existing trunk networks. Packet switching != routing over the public internet.
Re:Lets face it (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Lets face it (Score:2)
(Being able to dynamicly allocate bandwidth to users can be really handy compared to the fixed switched networks.)
And you can even have a private network.... making it just as secure as a switched network (even more secure as you can add encryption to prevent clandestine wire taps).
Add to this that a traditional switched network gets really noise after a few switches and digital networks will be able bounce your signal around the world without adding additi
Re:Lets face it (Score:5, Informative)
This kind of switching hasn't been done for years. Electronic phone exchanges have existed for decades, and digital phone exchanges (at least where I live) have made up the entire network for over 10 years.
The electromechanical exchanges did manage to hang on into the early 1990s in many places though. Good old Strowger. (An excellent site about the phone network in days gone by is Light Straw [light-straw.co.uk]. If you are ever in a position to visit the London Science Museum, they have a good-sized portion of a Strowger phone exchange that you can play with - makes lovely clattering noises!)
Re:Plenty of voice communication is already... (Score:2)
Re:Last-mile (Score:2, Interesting)
Otherwise you won't be able to get DSL services (well at least that's the pathetic excuse the use in the UK when you request aDSL and you have fibre to your door!)
Re:Last-mile (Score:3, Informative)
Re:IP? (Score:3, Interesting)
Jeroen
Re:IP? (Score:5, Informative)
TDM is sort of a strange thing in that there is no real electrical circuit but you do get a dedicated time slot on the line. ATM definitly is packet switched.
Guaranteeing bandwith (QoS) is not hard at all, the routers simply need a table of active circuits.
Only packets for those circuits and in only a certain amount get through.
Jeroen
Re:so does this mean (Score:2)
With inflation and other operating cost increase that would be a mircle.
Re:so does this mean (Score:2)
Re:so does this mean (Score:2)
Re:The USA is Dying (Score:5, Funny)
One more crippling bombshell crushed the already beleaguered circuit-switching community when slashdot.com community didn't care that the use of circuit switches has dropped yet again. Coming on the heels of a recent Usenet survey which plainly states that circuit switches are boring, this news serves to reinforce what we've known all along. Circuit switch use is collapsing in complete disarray, as fittingly exemplified by falling dead last in the recent Cowboy Neal polls.
You don't need to be a Kreskin to predict circuit switching's future. The hand writing is on the wall: Circuit switching faces a bleak future. In fact there won't be any future at all for circuit switching because it is dying. Things are looking very bad for circuit switching. As many of us are already aware, the circuit switch continues to lose relevence. Red ink flows like a river of blood.
Fact: Nobody cares Timmy.
Re:DSLers 'dedicated' line just got clipped? (Score:2)
Re:It will take 15 years to upgrade network... (Score:2)
Naw. In 15 years all net access will be wireless over 802.11r. Though service will be sketchy since no vendor will be able to agree on a set standard.