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 2-6
Background 
2
Digital Signal. Information transmitted in a coded form (from a computer) 
represented by discrete signal elements; for example, off and on or zero 
and one.
Switching Equipment
2
As described earlier, the telephone network is composed of a number of 
centralized switching locations, call
central offices 
(
COs
), where a telephone 
circuit is connected, or switched, to another circuit. That is, the caller’s line is 
connected to the called party’s line so the two can hold a conversation.
Telephone operators, who supplied the first manual switching, were slow and 
costly but afforded some special functionality: calls could be forwarded, messages 
taken, and calls interrupted. Electromechanical switching automated that manual 
labor and made telephone service universally affordable, but the technology was 
inflexible and did little more than switch calls. Now, with electronic, 
computer-controlled switches, both flexibility and functionality are affordable for 
everyone.
The Evolution of Switches
2
The method, type, capabilities, and capacities of switches have evolved as 
geographic areas expanded and technological advances became available. The 
following list describes each of these progressive innovations. 
 
illustrates this evolution of switching equipment.
Private-Line Service. In the first telephone installations, communication 
was directly from one telephone to another, as in Bell’s demonstration. 
Thus, one telephone could communicate with only one other telephone.
Party-Line Service. Several telephones were connected to one line so 
that a number of people could communicate in the same conversation. But 
there was no way to reach a telephone on any other line.
Station Switching. All telephones were connected to all other telephones. 
The telephone itself performed the switching and made the connection. 
This was workable for a small number of telephones, but quickly became 
impractical as hundreds of telephones were installed.
Centralized Switching. As the number of telephones grew, all the lines 
from all the telephones came to a common 
central office (CO)
 or 
exchange
so that the lines could be electrically cross-connected. Human operators 
made the connections.