==Phrack Inc.==
                    Volume One, Issue Two, Phile 6 of 9

               Toward Universal Information Services Via ISDN
               ~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~ ~~~ ~~~~
                                by Taran King

               From PROTO newsletter of AT&T Bell Laboratories
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        Phase one, the Present.
        ~~~~~ ~~~~ ~~~ ~~~~~~~~
        The local network of today, although still largely
        voice-oriented, is already on the path to Universal
        Information Services.  Lightguide fiber is dramatically
        expanding the capacity of local networks, helping to lower
        the costs and increase the demand for high-band width,
        Information Age services.  And public networks are
        increasingly digital and geared for data and special
        services.  For example:

        o The AT&T Network Systems 5ESS (TM <riiiight>) switch,
        designed by Bell Laboratories, can serve as the hub of a
        local deployment of remote modules at locations up to 100
        miles from a host central office.

        o The Integrated Special Services Network (ISSN) is a channel
        network that provides special services, customer control
        options and digital private lines rearrangeable under
        software control.  The ISSN incorporates digital carrier
        terminating equipment such as the D4 Channel Bank, D5 Digital
        Terminal System and Digital Access and Cross-connect System
        (DACS).

        o The New Centrex is bringing greater levels of customer
        control, improved services and a broad range of data
        capabilities to the business customer.

                Today's public networks consist of multiple or
        overlay networks.  The public switched network, or circuit
        network, mainly for voice, is the base network.  Two kinds of
        overlay networks provide special services.  Channel networks
        carry private lines leased by large customers and transmit
        much of today's data and image traffic; they also handle
        traffic for network operations support.  Packet networks
        carry data communications, while packet switching is used
        internally to public networks for common channel signaling to
        set up, route and take down calls, or to give customers
        information.
                "Overlay networks help telecommunications companies
        efficiently meet growing demand for digital transmission and
        special services," says Stan Johnston, Market Planning
        Manager, Network Systems Evolution, in AT&T Network Systems.
        "Their integration into a single network, however, would be
        still more effective."

        Phase two, the Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN).
        ~~~~~ ~~~~ ~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~
        The ISDN is a concept to which AT&T is committed - and it's
        the foundation for Universal Information Services.  The
        central idea of ISDN, as AT&T Network Systems sees it, is to
        provide an individual user a link to the local central office
        of generous band-width - a digital subscriber line that can
        carry 144,000 bits per second (sure beats 2400 baud!).  The
        band-width is subdivided into two 64,000-bit channels, which
        may carry voice or data or both, and one 16,000-bit channel
        for packetized signaling information or data transport.  Such
        a link provides convenient "integrated" network access by
        accommodating voice, data and signaling over a single line.
                The ISDN will make it easier for a customer to get
        varied services from public and private networks.  More
        bandwidth for big customers will be available through another
        ISDN access standard, the extended digital subscriber line,
        which provides 1.5 billion bits per second as 24 channels of
        64,000 bits each.
                In 1986, new software from Bell Labs will enable the
        5ESS switch to accommodate ISDN-sized 144,000-bit channels
        that standardize and simplify subscribers' use of local
        networks.  AT&T is committed to future products that will
        also be ISDN-compatible.  Other vendors, too, some of whom
        already plan to build premises, terminal, and other
        equipment to ISDN standards, will make ISDN a cooperative
        effort.
                By providing integrated digital access to networks,
        ISDN will make important progress toward the goal of
        Universal Information Services.  But overlay networks will
        continue to divvy up the transport job.  And messages needing
        less than 144,000 bits per second will not fill their
        allotted bandwidth, leaving capacity underutilized.

        Phase three, Universal Information Services.
        ~~~~~ ~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~
        Rooted in the fertile ground of 5ESS switches, ISDN equipment
        and technologies such as wideband packet transport, Universal
        Information Services will bear fruit during the 1990s.  From
        a single kind of network will hang services as different as
        apples, oranges and pears.  Just as network access was
        integrated in ISDN, transport functions will increasingly be
        integrated by powerful new network equipment evolved from
        equipment developed for the ISDN.  Where customers once got
        standard-sized ISDN channels, they'll get big bandwidth for
        large jobs, little bandwitdh for small jobs.