AT&T Migrating Phone Network to IP 167
prostoalex writes "Following the lead of Sprint and Telus, who are moving their telephone networks to IP, AT&T will spend $3 billion to migrate to an IP-based network. By the end of 2005 about 270 legacy systems will be retired." The article also notes how the current ratio of packet traffic to voice is already 8:1.
Better be IPv6 (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Better be IPv6 (Score:1, Informative)
I'd take anything spewed by Eslambolchi with a grain of salt. He's correct about the migration to edge-to-edge (e.g. doing away with old technology) but at the same time he's the champion of the "concept of zero" (e.g. lay everybody off) which doesn't exactly sit very well with the people who
What about VOIP (Score:5, Interesting)
If so, maybe they should spread the good word to our frinds at the RIAA. ::/me wakes up::
Re:What about VOIP (Score:4, Interesting)
Phone companies want to itemize and per-minute and allocation and whatnot anything to death. They will stop working with VOIP when they are forced to, not a second before.
Re:What about VOIP (Score:5, Informative)
VOIP is just another protocol. Most people seem to not realize that by the time their phoneline reaches the edge of their neighborhood, it has become a digital signal. The transition to VOIP is just natural progression. It allows more flexability, but will still require routers and switchtes to operate. Through these switches and routers is how the phone companies will keep track of calls. VOIP does NOT mean an end to phone numbers, providers, etc... Remember that most of the internet is carried by the ILEC networks on the same loops used to carry voice, just reonfigured slightly to allow pure data traffic. VOIP providers merely use these loops in the data configuration with routers that convert the analog voice signals to packets closer to the customer end than normal voice lines. VOIP merely abstracts the traffic type from the physical layer more than current SS7 and other protocols. VOIP is not simply PC-PC calls placed by IP address. VOIP is only a different protocol, central switches are still used to route calls and keep track of things, they just run more efficently (ie: 1 VOIP switch about the size of a 10k cisco can handle the entire call volume for a decent sized city (or 2) where currently several switches are required by the ILECs). Per-minute rates and such will still be acounted for. Phone providers will switch to VOIP mainly due to the relative simplicity and flexability of its stucture. VOIP is NOT what alot of people percieve, it is simply a new method of routing voice traffic that does not eliminate the need for routers/switches/etc...
TM
Re:What about VOIP (Score:2)
Re:What about VOIP (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:What about VOIP (Score:3, Insightful)
'at&t moves voice service to ip' would have been a hilarious gag article 10 years ago, now no one even blinks.
Re:What about VOIP (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:What about VOIP (Score:5, Informative)
Carriers like AT&T, which sell primarily long distance, like VOIP since it saves them money, and could eventually allow them to bypass the ILECs entirely, since it turns voice calls into another internet data stream. They like VOIP.
Bandwidth? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Bandwidth? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Bandwidth? (Score:2, Insightful)
A possibility is to convert the current fiber framework to support fiberoptic dense wave division multiplexing which takes light, bends it through a prism to split it into 32 seperate colors and alternate the sequence of flashes to produce a on/off 1/0. This is technology that can be applied to current fiber lines, and can expand their bandwidth
Re:Bandwidth? (Score:1)
DWDM [cablingdb.com]
Re:Bandwidth? (Score:2)
A possibility is to convert the current fiber framework to support fiberoptic dense wave division multiplexing
Nah, most backbones already do DWDM.
Re:Bandwidth? (Score:5, Informative)
However I worked at the software end, not VoIP network operations -- what do I know?
Re:Bandwidth? (Score:3, Insightful)
Indeed. However, the services that will suffer the most are legacy data over voice lines, such as fax and modems.
Re:Bandwidth? (Score:2)
Re:Bandwidth? (Score:1)
I thought everyone was settled on G.729a since that's what all the cell networks tend to use and the IP cores and whatnot are there, refined, tested and debugged thoroughly.
Re:Bandwidth? (Score:5, Interesting)
Ah, but with packet telephony, we are only "burning up" bandwidth for active calls:
Take a traditional circuit-switch T1 carrying 24 DS0, sitting idle making no calls, and you still have a T1 that can be used for nothing else.
Take the same scenario in a packet-switched world, and you have a T1 100% usable for other data until such time as the circuit is needed. QoS (LLQ, or PQ/CBWFQ in Cisco-speak) ensures that when there IS a voice call it gets priority treatment.
Last note, on IP overhead: Enterprises with smaller links can leverage compressed RTP headers (cRTP) to reduce the 40 byte IP/UDP/RTP penalty down to 2 bytes across point-to-point links (Frame Relay PVC, leased lines, BRIs, etc). This concept doesn't really apply to a carrier because of the CPU impact header compression costs, but considering all carrier networks are currently severly underutilized I do not think this should be a reason to shy away from packet telephony.
Re:Bandwidth? (Score:2)
Re:Bandwidth? (Score:2, Interesting)
Ogg Speex is actively developed last I checked.
You know (Score:5, Funny)
Re:You know (Score:1)
Yeah, and c3ll.....u....lar phone co......nvers....ations over that liiiiii.....neare going to be great!!!!!!
I wonder how my USR Courier v.Everything will handle the line? Will hardware and Xon/Xoff flow control flake out enroute to my ISP? Hmmmm
Re:You know (Score:2)
Just a thought.
Re:You know (Score:1)
Re:You know (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, here's an example based on one person's experience. My organization is converting its TDM PBX system to IP Telephony and VOIP. We are completely packet switched IP for voice from the phone across our entire WAN to the PSTN circuits connecting us to our ILEC. We have not implemented QoS at all at this point. My phone is separated from the PSTN circuits by a T-1 point to point circuit that also carries the traffic of about 65 developers, sys admins and DBA's back to the main data center. We have about 1
Re:You know (Score:2)
Re:You know (Score:2)
Things can evolve (Score:5, Funny)
The day the RIAA will be such a threat to peaceful P2P that people will start reading aloud file hex printouts byte by byte over the phone to share data, I think the trend will reverse. But I might be wrong
Re:Things can evolve (Score:1)
Re:Things can evolve (Score:2)
A long time ago I got a new compaq server with a free copy of NT4. I had no use for the NT4, but a friend of mine across the country did. So I emailed him the prod key, and from IRC I used DCC file transfer to send him a zipfile of the i386 directory off the cd. He was on a 14.4 modem so it took something like 72 hours. Shout out to my homey criZasher.
The IP attorneys will have a field day. (Score:1, Troll)
Re:The IP attorneys will have a field day. (Score:2)
I wonder if this means I'll be able to set the copy protection bit on my phone convos.
*Sticks his tongue out at the local law enforcement HQ*
an easier way (Score:4, Funny)
Phreaking (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Phreaking (Score:1)
This brings back memories (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:This brings back memories (Score:1)
Re:This brings back memories (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:This brings back memories (Score:3, Insightful)
Just as well you didn't then; for $30 a month I get all the local and long distance I need on my cell phone. Sounds like the company would have failed anyway (not that it didn't sound like a good idea).
Re:This brings back memories (Score:5, Interesting)
What benefit of first to market? (Score:2)
Certainly didn't help MS to be number 2 to Lotus, Novell, Apple.... etc...
Re:What benefit of first to market? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:What benefit of first to market? (Score:2)
No it didn't. MS got by in spite of it. Partly because B.G. is paranoid (i.e., he's always looking for the next threat so he saw these coming), and partly because they already had quite a bit of money built up then thanks to good ol' DOS licensing.
Don't even bother with a Netscape / IE comparison either--same thing--MS didn't have "First Mover" advantage (B.G. terminology I believe) but it did have 1E50 lb. Gorrilia advantage, which, generally speaking, is enough to crush First Movers into itty bitty li
Re:This brings back memories (Score:2)
Re:This brings back memories (Score:2)
Re:This brings back memories (Score:2)
**Until such time as reliable and fast Internet service can be provided wireless for people that can't even get broadband. Until it is feasable to send faxes over a cellphone** that is already here too, covering the are that gsm covers(whole finland basically, gprs ain't bad compared to dialup hell, when there's no free local calls dialup gets pretty expe
Re:This brings back memories (Score:1)
Re:This brings back memories (Score:2)
Re:This brings back memories (Score:2, Informative)
He didn't say they could. He said they were buying dark fiber - the billions of dollars to lay the fiber had already been spent by someone else, but it wasn't being used, so they would buy it from them cheaply.
I'm not disagreeing that it's BS; I don't know.
Re:This brings back memories (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:This brings back memories (Score:2)
VoIP can suck. Ours didn't though. We had an exclusive license on a very slick compression technology. If I'm not mistake, the IP holder has since licensed this technology to just about every telco he can. We also had a very impressive and more importantly PRETTY proof of concept rig we toted around with us to VC meetings. That part is very important if anyone is going to actually take you seriously. We also had partnership agreements with all the big names we were using. We actually had an a
IP telephone service has come a long way (Score:5, Interesting)
Outdated infrastructure? (Score:4, Interesting)
AT&T plans to retire 270 legacy systems across the world by the end of 2005. Approximately 130 legacy systems were retired over the past 18 months, with another 140 systems slated for phase out over the next two years.
The article didn't define exactly what "legacy systems" were (switches? entire local networks?), but that sure sounds like a lot of high technology that's heading for the dustbin. We're talking technology that's currently in use creating a mobile communications system that would have been unimaginable just 15 years ago.
Will it all be scrapped out? Will barges full of misc parts be shipped to third-world scavenging companies to recover the precious metals? Or is there some way to move the equipment to areas that need it -- Afghanistan [bbc.co.uk] and Iraq [usatoday.com] come to mind right away, but I'd think that under-served (and under-reported) countries like Somalia [indymedia.org.uk] and the rest of Africa could make use of this supposedly outdated hardware.
Of course, we're back to the same old question -- when it costs more to recycle than to dump, how do you justify doing the Right Thing to shareholders whose only interest is in doing the Profitable Thing?
Re:Outdated infrastructure? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Outdated infrastructure? (Score:2)
The problem with your statements is that you only look to telephony. I want to be able to do alot, alot more at home (like reading Slashdot and watching movies) all that should come over a nice line. Fiber is the fourth utility...
Re:Outdated infrastructure? (Score:2)
They could....except for that fact that no copper wiring exists in these countries. It is much more economical to use wireless solutions for almost everything then to try and run wiring in these war torn countries.
I hope this doesn't mean what I think it will (Score:5, Interesting)
Without question, AT&T has been miles better than the rest. The other providers obviously use packet switching as evidenced by the intermittent delays as much as a couple of seconds. Sometimes you can get half-way through a sentence when you hear the other guy starting a sentence that he did when there was silence - it gets very annoying because both of you have to practice random backoff which can either result in empty silence or both of you speaking over each other.
I hope AT&Ts service doesn't go that way.
Dumb Dialup Question (Score:3, Interesting)
It may effect nothing, just wondering.
Re:Dumb Dialup Question (Score:2)
As far as dialup to bbs, etc. it should be possible. We recently put 2 buildings on a VoIP system at work, and they still have the old fax machines, etc. Whether the Big Carrier would keep those lines maintained, etc. is a different story.
Re:Dumb Dialup Question (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Dumb Dialup Question (Score:1)
Yes, i realize this (Score:2)
My only concern was if the effective analog bandwidth at the wall jack would be enough to get decent speed via analog modem.
Ive never actually tried doing analog data transfer across an IP voice network..
From what others say, it wont be any less bandwdith then we have now.. So I'm not too worried.
I can see a day soon when broadband is under too much restriction ( and surveillance ) to be useful for some of us old-timers, and a slow migration back to
Re:Dumb Dialup Question (Score:4, Interesting)
Modems, however, do not handle either latency or packet loss well -- part of the initial V.(90??) standards take a latency measurement at the beginning, expecting it to be some small number that doesn't change. In VoIP, not only isn't the number small (closer to 100ms than 20ms), but it can vary over the life of the call.
So, what ends up happening is that your local gateway (the thing that converts between traditional phone and packet communications) listens for your modem tones and kicks in a V./G.whatever codec to convert it into packet. Then, at the far end, the same thing happens.
This should keep some people employed... (Score:1)
Re:This should keep some people employed... (Score:2)
Will IP telephony work during a blackout? (Score:1, Interesting)
At least the phones did function during the recent blackout. Can you say the same for IP-based telephony?
Re:Will IP telephony work during a blackout? (Score:2, Informative)
You need to be worried about the new CLECs. Some of their connections into RBOCs are not even redundant - can you say outage?
Re:Will IP telephony work during a blackout? (Score:1)
Re:Will IP telephony work during a blackout? (Score:2)
what are they using on the VOIP servers? (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:what are they using on the VOIP servers? (Score:1)
Nathen
Dialup Users (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Dialup Users (Score:1)
Re:Dialup Users (Score:3, Informative)
On the other hand, if other comments are correct and VoIP takes in fact HIGHER bandwidth than the 64Kbps POTS, things aren't that bad after all. Of course it sounds funny - with potential compression of about 8-10Kbps, how come it takes higher bandwidth overall? Apparently, some protocol overhead. AT least this is what Tolly group claims, and I know Tolly quite well, their tests and conclusions are normally well founded.
So the best case scenario - nothing will
Re:Dialup Users (Score:2)
Re:Dialup Users (Score:2)
So one of the possible scenarios is that when the switch from 64Kbps POTS to VoIP takes place, pro
Re:Dialup Users (Score:2)
Heh. I already have a situation like this in my pocket. I have a cell phone (kyocera 6035) that runs PalmOS, and has a real web browser. To do something on the Web, what it does is makes a phone call and brings up a PPP connection on the "line".
This means that I have IP implemented on PPP over a voice line, which is emulated over a digital packet network. The resulting IP network probably runs at least 1000 times slower than just doing IP on the low-level packet network woul
Re:Dialup Users (Score:2)
It means they'll probably be lucky if they can get a CONNECT 9600.
Our national telephone service already pulled this crap over 15 years ago. When you complained about the low connect rate, they'd either say "speeds are not guaranteed over 2400" or "oh, sorry, we didn't know you were going to use this for a modem line" and they'd give you a dedicated line (what you paid for in the first place!).
Re:Dialup Users (Score:2)
Re:Dialup Users (Score:2)
This has two distinct advantages.
1. It allows Modems to use the full bandwidth available, and doesn't waste processing power at the POP doing something that is unnecessary, and unwanted.
2. It would allow more aadvanced things to go on. If the phones at each end support a newer VoIP code
Oh, great. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Oh, great. (Score:2)
Good!! (Score:5, Funny)
Now. About this encryption thing...
Re:Good!! (Score:2)
Now I just need a few hundred more amps and 5 tonnes of air conditioning in my basement...
Does AT&T get to avoid regulations now? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Does AT&T get to avoid regulations now? (Score:2)
Vonage, who uses no public lands for lines, should be completely unregulated (although I do think they should have to pay their share for 911 services).
Backbone upgrades? (Score:2)
With luck Verizon will upgrade theirs too, which _may_ benifit EVERYBODY.
(By the way, at school they use Cisco ip phones over the 100Mbps network, which seems to work fine.)
So, hopefully they'll upgrade their bandwidth capabilities (use that fiber optic already laid!), if not, they're smoking crack, and should be run outta town,
Skype (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Skype (Score:3, Funny)
Hmm, i wonder if we can expect spyware/gator crap with that...
"Hi, mom, i'm ready to move, i'll just have to call *[WHEN-U]* to ask them when they'll be here"
"But i thought you were going to use U-HAUL?"
"That's what' i said, *[WHEN-U]*!"
"aaaaaaarghhh!!!"
Spam (Score:2)
I wonder how much of the packet traffic in that ratio is accounted for by spam?
A=1/V=8 (Score:3, Funny)
That's because video porn takes so much more bandwidth than audio porn.
Successful VOIP anyone? (Score:2)
If you've been successfull, describe your topology. Do you have trusted end-nodes? I don't. So I need to either VLAN or run a separate physical network, right? Even w/ VLAN, that means separate wires for phone vs. data from the room to the closet. Yes this is conservative. Do you trust you can call the police/fire department etc. on an IP phone on a campus net
Re:Successful VOIP anyone? (Score:3, Informative)
Cold day in hell... (Score:2, Interesting)
Remember, we heard this before, and my then-employers couldn't have sold a VoIP GATEWAY with a gun. But we employed FULL TIME three retired and semi-retired switch-wizards to take care of all those AT&T^H^H^H^HLucent^H^H^H^H^H^HAvaya switches.
We've got to wait for a LOT of retirements (human) before we will see wide adoption of packet-telephony. It's homo sapiens sitting at the very e
Re:Cold day in hell... (Score:3, Interesting)
What about ATM? (Score:2)
Can you run IP over ATM reliably?
Chip H.
Re:What about ATM? (Score:2)
-psy
Re:Security risks? (Score:2)