350 likes | 554 Views
Class #3. Chapter 3 -- The Evolution of Telecommunications Technology and Policy. Objectives. In this class, you will learn to: Describe the growth of telecommunications technology since the late 19th century Identify key inventions and their current equivalents in telephony technology
E N D
Class #3 Chapter 3 -- The Evolution of Telecommunications Technology and Policy
Objectives In this class, you will learn to: • Describe the growth of telecommunications technology since the late 19th century • Identify key inventions and their current equivalents in telephony technology • Explain the impetus for and impact of AT&T’s divestiture • Discuss how government has influenced the way in which consumers obtain telecommunications services • List current policy trends that affect the telecommunications industry
Early Signaling and Telegraphy • Semaphore - a type of signaling, in which visual cues represent letters or words. • Morse code - the transmission of a series of short and long pulses (dots and dashes) that represented characters. This is often referred to as the 1st communications protocol • Duplexing – An advance on the Morse system that allowed simultaneously transmitting a signal in both directions along the same wire. • Multiplexing – A further advance that allowed simultaneously transmitting an indeterminate number of multiple signals over one circuit.
Telephone Technology During the 1870’s, Gray and Bell were both working on early versions of the telephone. Both devices relied on electromagnetic coils that were prompted vibrating elements to convert sound to varying frequencies. Bell beat Gray to the patent filing office by 3 hours, thus securing his place in history. However, Gray’s invention is more like that of the modern phone.
Telephone Technology, cont. The most valuable advance in the late 19th century was Edison’s invention of a microphone made of carbon granules, whose resistance to electricity changed when vibrated. The carbon microphone was also smaller than the reed or water-filled apparatus previously used. This lead to the invention of the modern handset.
Telephone Technology, cont. • By 1990, 30,000 phones were in use in the US. This led to the problem of efficiently connecting one phone to another. • This led to the concept of the Central Office, or exchange, where operators would connect calls on large switchboards. • Local switching center (often called a local office) - a place where multiple phone lines from homes and businesses in one geographic area converge and terminate.
Telephone Technology, cont. • In 1913, Western Electric developed the crossbar switch. It used a grid of horizontal and vertical bars, with electromagnets at their ends. The horizontal bars could rotate up and down to connect to specific vertical bars and thus complete circuits. This, in conjunction with the rotary dialer on the phone, allowed for automatic call switching, eliminating many operators. • Tandem switching center - an exchange where lines from multiple local offices converge and terminate. • Toll switching center - an exchange where lines from multiple tandem switching centers converge and terminate.
Telephone Technology, cont. By 1976, Time division switching was developed - a transmission technique in which samples from multiple incoming lines are digitized, then each sample is issued to the same circuit, in a predetermined sequence, before finally being transmitted to the correct outbound line.
Wireless Technology • Telegraphs and telephones are examples of wireline, or wire-bound technology, because they rely on physically connected wires to transmit and receive signals. • Wireless technology - relies on the atmosphere to transmit and receive signals. • Original wireless technology was basically a brute-force method of creating a magnetic field in the air.
Wireless Technology, cont. • Vacuum tube - a sealed container made of glass, metal, or ceramic, that contains, in a vacuum, a charged plate that transmits current to a filament. This allowed for the detection of weaker magnetic fields. • Audion - patented in 1907 by DeForest, is a type of vacuum tube that contains an additional electrode in the middle of the positive and negative electrodes that was used for amplifying the current between the plates. • Frequency modulation - one wave containing the information to be transmitted (for example, on a classical FM radio station, a violin concerto) is combined with another wave, called a carrier wave, whose frequency is constant.
Satellite Wireless Technology • Geosynchronous - means that satellites orbit the earth at the same rate as the earth turns. • Uplink - a broadcast from an earth-based transmitter to an orbiting satellite. • At the satellite, a transponder receives the uplink, then transmits the signals to another earth-based location in a downlink.
Early Computing • Computing - the automatic manipulation of input based on logical instructions. • Difference engine - Babbage, an English mathematics professor, proposed an automated calculating machine as large as a locomotive and powered by steam. • Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer (ENIAC) - a multipurpose computer so large that it required its own 30 foot by 50 foot room.
Early Computing, cont. • Memory - in the mid-1940s, a U.S. scientist named Jon Von Neumann designed a computer that was capable of retaining logical instructions for use at any time, even after the computer had been turned off, then on again. • UNIVAC (Universal Automatic Computer) - the first computer designed for business (and not merely scientific purposes), became available in 1951. • By 1971, Intel has condensed the functions of storage, input, output, and processing onto one chip, which was the mass produced “4000” processor. • In 1981, IBM unveiled the predecessor of the modern PC.
Early Telephone Industry History • After acquiring dozens of new patents from other companies and exponentially increasing its value, the Bell Telephone Company became American Bell in 1880. • In 1882, American Bell gained a controlling interest in the Western Electric Company, and together, they became known as the Bell System. • In 1885, American Telegraph and Telephone (AT&T) was incorporated as a subsidiary of the Bell System, with the aim of constructing a long distance telephone network and providing long distance service (to Bell System subscribers only). • By 1899, AT&T bought out American Bell and became the parent company of the Bell System.
Early Telephone Industry History, cont. • Until 1984, AT&T consisted of the following: • AT&T, the parent company and long-distance provider • 22 Bell Operating Companies (BOCs), the telephone companies that provided local service in different regions of the nation • Western Electric, the manufacturing arm of the company • Bell Telephone Laboratories, the research and development arm of the company, responsible for innovation and new technology
Early Telephone Industry History, cont. • Kingsbury Commitment - fearing that the government might use its antitrust laws against it, AT&T approached the U.S. Department of Justice in 1913 with a proposal for reducing its monopoly. • As a result of the Kingsbury Commitment, AT&T functioned as a regulated monopoly from 1913 to 1984. Being a regulated monopoly meant that although AT&T was allowed to provide services without any competitors, it was subject to a great deal of constraints dictated by the government
The Communications Act of 1934 • From 1910 to 1934, the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) regulated telegraph and radio service. • In 1934, Congress passed the Communications Act of 1934, which established the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), state Public Utilities Commissions (PUCs), and initial guidelines for the telephone industry. • The Communications Act of 1934 also put into law the provisions of the Kingsbury Commitment.
Challenging the AT&T Monopoly • Hush-a-Phone decision - a Supreme court ruling that allowed "foreign attachments," or devices that were not manufactured by AT&T to be affixed to AT&T telephones. • However, the Hush-a-Phone decision did not allow other companies’ equipment to interconnect with AT&T lines
Challenging the Monopoly • The restriction against interconnecting to AT&T’s telephone network was challenged in 1965 and eventually lifted in 1968 through the Carterfone decision – which allowed non-Western Electric equipment to be connected to the phone line. • In 1969, a company called Microwave Communications International (MCI) began carrying business phone calls over a private microwave link between St. Louis, Missouri and Chicago. Because MCI didn’t use the Bell System, it did not have to pay AT&T for use of its infrastructure.
AT&T Divestiture • In the 1980’s AT&T started to do extensive research in to the fields of computing and automatic switching. The US Government felt that this would extend AT&T’s monopoly into fields outside those covered by the Kingsbury Commitment, and stifle competition and innovation in multiple areas. • The Modified Final Judgment (MFJ) - accompanied by over 500 pages of instructions detailing exactly how AT&T should be divided. • The Justice Department’s primary goal for breaking up AT&T was to spur innovation and competition in a field that would prove even more vital in the latter part of the century than it had in the first.
AT&T Divestiture • As part of the MFJ, AT&T was forced to divide. • From the 22 former Bell Operating Companies that provided local phone service and phone directories, the MFJ created seven Regional Bell Operating Companies (RBOCs). • The business that AT&T kept was separated into two divisions: AT&T Technologies, which handled the innovation and production of new technologies, and AT&T Communications, which handled long distance phone service. • The research and development business, formerly Bell Laboratories, became Bell Communications Research (Bellcore) and was jointly owned by the new RBOCs.
AT&T Divestiture • Until the divestiture of AT&T, the distinction between local service and long distance service was not clear. • In the MFJ, Judge Harold Greene subdivided each RBOC region into Local Access and Transport Areas (LATAs), roughly equivalent to area codes at that time. • Phone service within a specific LATA was known as intraLATA service. • Companies that supply local, or intraLATA telephone service are known as local exchange carriers (LECs).
AT&T Divestiture • InterLATA - a service that allowed for calls between LATAs was known. • Interexchange carriers (IXCs) - another name for InterLATA service providers. Examples of IXCs include Sprint, MCI (now WorldCom), and AT&T. • Equal access - requiring local phone companies to provide equal access to their facilities meant that AT&T no longer had an unfair advantage over new competitors in long distance services.
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 • The Act codified requirements for the interconnection of all local exchange carriers. These policies included: • Interconnecting with other service providers and not imposing any barriers to interconnection • Enabling nondiscriminatory resale of their services to competitors • Providing number portability, or the ability of telecommunications service users to retain their same telephone number without hampering the quality, reliability, or convenience of their phone service • Allowing competitors to access and connect to their facilities
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 • To increase competition in local phone service, the Act placed the following requirements on all ILECs: • Negotiating interconnection agreements in good faith • Providing competitors with the same type and quality of access to their facilities that they themselves could obtain at their cost • Providing competitors with access to subscriber information, such as telephone numbers and billing data • Offering nondiscriminatory, wholesale prices for telecommunications services to all competitors
Emerging Technologies • At this time, Congress is debating a bill that would remove all long-distance and high-speed Internet access service restrictions on RBOCs. • One issue that the RBOCs continue to battle is the access fees applied to each connection with a customer or another carrier. • In 1999, Congress mandated cable service providers to allow any Internet company to distribute content over its infrastructure without any extra cost
Summary • In 1837, Samuel Morse invented the telegraph, which consisted of an electromagnet and a hand-operated switch, known as a key, to alternately open or close an electrical circuit over a wire. What he transmitted was a series of short and long pulses (dots and dashes) that represented characters, known as Morse code. • To connect multiple subscribers, Alexander Graham Bell devised the telephone exchange, where subscriber lines terminated and operators connected the circuits to complete a call. • The first computer designed for business (and not merely scientific purposes), the Universal Automatic Computer (UNIVAC) became available in 1951.
Assignments • Review Questions 1-25
End of Class Quiz • What 20th century invention replaced the vacuum tube? • What company won the 1st battle against AT&T in providing long distance service? • What profession was virtually eliminated by automatic switching? • Why do RBOCs encounter more competition in urban areas than in rural ones? • What is an example of an RBOC?