Lucent Technologies 5 User Manual

Page of 429
MERLIN LEGEND Communications System Release 5.0
System Manager’s Guide  
555-650-118  
Issue 1
June 1997
About the System 
Page 2-2
Background 
2
Background
2
Alexander Graham Bell and his assistant, Thomas A. Watson, demonstrated the 
first working model of a telephone on March 10, 1876. Bell made the call from a 
transmitter in one room to a receiver a few rooms away.
The first telephone installations were set up like that first call, as direct 
connections between one telephone and another. When more and more 
telephones were installed, it quickly became impractical to have every phone 
connected directly to every other phone. Thus, the concept of 
switching 
developed, that is, all telephones connected physically to all other telephones, but 
each telephone could make the electrical cross-connection between itself and 
another phone so that the caller was connected to the called party. 
Again, as more and more telephones and lines were installed, it became 
impractical to have each telephone perform this switching function, so all lines 
from all phones were brought into a common place, called a 
central office (CO) 
or 
exchange
 (see 
) where human operators switched calls at 
switchboards. This 2-way connection between the telephone and the CO was 
(and still is) called the
 local loop. 
Eventually, more and more COs were created 
and interconnected, until the current global telephone network evolved (see 
As geographic areas expanded and the global telephone network evolved, and as 
technological advances became available, switches also evolved and are now 
fully automatic and controlled by computers. 
There are now also private switches that, rather than being located at the 
telephone company’s CO, are located on a company’s premises. These systems, 
called
 private branch exchanges
 (
PBXs
), made sense because most of a 
business’ calls are between telephones on site within the company.
The MERLIN LEGEND Communications System includes such a switch, located 
on a company’s premises, that offers access to even more powerful telephone 
network applications and services. It can operate as a PBX (
Hybrid/PBX mode
)
 
or 
can be set up to operate in one of two other modes that define how the system 
works. The system can also use state-of-the-art telephone equipment.
The next sections briefly describe the evolution of telephone equipment and 
switching. For more information, see