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- Operating Companys of the US
- by hybr1d (http://dtmf.org/hybrid)
- (hybrid@dtmf.org)
- ----------------------------------
-
- The US phone network is split into different areas that are controled by
- RBOCs (Regional Bell Operating Comapnies). For example, if you live in Texas,
- your RBOC will be SouthWestern Bell. These LECs (Local Excahnge Carriers) and
- IXCs (Inter eXchange Carriers divide America into different call handeling
- sections. Here is a list of all of the RBOCs for different areas:
-
- Regional Bell Operating Companies (RBOCs)
-
-
- NYNEX - Covering New York and New England,
-
- Bell Atlantic - Covering the Mid Atlantic states,
-
- Bell South - Operating in the South Eastern states,
-
- Ameritech - Covering the Midwest,
-
- U.S. West - Covers the mountain states and northwest,
-
- Pacific Telesis - Operating in California and Nevada, and
-
- Southwestern Bell - Covers Texas and southern states west of the
- Mississippi.
-
-
- The Regional Bell Companies were set up as part of the Modified Final
- Judgment implemented in January 1984. Recent legislation has significantly
- altered how these regional bell companies can do business and what
- communications services they provide. As a result, some companies like Bell
- Atlantic, Ameritech, Pacific Telesis, Bell South and NYNEX have been
- aggressive in pursuing new business areas. They are now able to more freely
- compete than ever before. This means what we identify here today is likely to
- be changed tomorrow. For example, a merger between Bell Atlantic Mobile and
- NYNEX Mobile was completed on July 1, 1995 and resulted in the formation of a
- new company, Bell Atlantic NYNEX Mobile.
-
- RBOC 1998 Targeted Percent of Lines Using Digital Transmission
-
- NYNEX ....................................... 97.4
-
- Pacific Telesis ............................. 94.8
-
- Bell Atlantic ............................... 93.3
-
- Bell South .................................. 92.1
-
- Ameritech ................................... 89.9
-
- US West ..................................... 68.4
-
- Southwestern Bell ........................... 66.6
-
-
- RBOCs and Area of Coverage
- RBOC -- Original Local Exchange Carriers
-
- Local Access and Transport Areas (LATAs)
- ----------------------------------------
-
- Local Access and Transport Areas (LATAs) were established after divestiture
- to permit telephone companies to charge subscribers for access to local or
- regional exchanges and to the interexchange toll telephone network for
- sending and receiving intra-LATA and interstate calls.
-
- Local Access and Transport Areas (LATAs) are geographic areas generally
- smaller than a state that follow telephone boundaries (not state boundaries).
- They identify define areas within which the telephone companies offer
- exchange and exchange access services (local calling, private lines, etc.)
- to subscribers.
-
- Local Exchange Carriers (LECs)
- ------------------------------
-
- Telephone subscribers are provided basic telephone network access by physical
- connection from customer premises to a local central office. This connection
- is a dialed up connection or a dedicated trunk connection, like a leased T1
- (1.544 Mbps) channel.
-
- For dial-up connections, after the phone is dialed, the subscriber accesses a
- variety of telephone services and call handling features provided by the
- Local Exchange Carrier (LEC). These telephone services and functions were for
- connections in the LEC's Local Access and Transport Area. For dedicated trunk
- lines the local segment set up and maintained by LECs at each end, while the
- inter-LATA portion of the circuit is established and maintained by an
- Inter-eXchange Carrier (IXC). LECs were set up as part of the 1984
- Divestiture decision. However, the separate company designations are fading
- today. Recently, Bell Atlantic renamed its LECs to just Bell Atlantic.
-
- The Inter-eXchange Carriers (IXCs)
- ----------------------------------
-
- Calls to locations outside the LATA require the LEC to pass the call to a
- designated Inter-eXchange Carrier's (IXC) point of presence (POP). The IXC
- transports the call to a LEC at the destination LATA. Basically Inter-
- eXchange Carriers transport calls from LATA to LATA.
-
- Since the breakup of AT&T in 1984, Inter-eXchange Carriers have been required
- to interface with local telephone companies via points of presence. These are
- serving offices set up in each LATA. The POP is the point to which the local
- telephone company connects its customers for long distance dial-up and
- leased-line communications between LATAs.
-
- Inter-eXchange Carriers are AT&T, MCI, Sprint, and others.
-
- Telephone Network Segments
- Competitive Access Providers (CAPs)and Competitive Local Exchange Carriers
- (CLECs)
- -------
-
- Competitive Access Providers (CAPs) provide fiber optic and microwave
- communications links that connect to Inter-eXchange Carriers (IXCs). These
- links compete with Local Exchange Carriers' (LECs') networks in the top 25
- metropolitan areas nationwide as well as in many smaller metropolitan areas.
- Many metropolitan networks were formed during cable television's years of
- prosperity. Now CAPs compete with CATV service providers. Recent FCC rulings
- help CAPs quickly become viable competitors to LECs. If a CAP is providing
- local dial tone then it is often labeled a Competitive Local Exchange Carrier
- (CLEC).
-
- Metropolitan networks first appeared with the spread of cable television.
- Although, these networks were limited television signal distribution from
- satellite downlinks to residential communities, the early cable systems
- became the prototypes of Metropolitan Area Networks (MANs). In the early
- 1980s satellite uplink operators built teleports and local access networks to
- offer direct private satellite transmission services to large organizations.
- While 1984 breakup of AT&T increased competition in the long distance and
- communications markets, it left the local connectivity market monopoly
- essentially intact. However, entrepreneurs began to offer long distance
- service using teleport satellite circuits combined with private local access
- networks to their customers premises. Cable television companies also
- deployed fiber for high-traffic routes and explored using fiber for
- connections to subscriber premises. The spread of such metropolitan local
- access networks eroded the LEC monopoly over local loop connectivity to
- subscribers. Further, CAPs demanded access to LECs' operations centers and
- central offices (COs). CAPs exerted extensive pressure on the FCC to achieve
- these goals. LECs strongly resisted this encroachment on their business base.
- Today LECs are forced to allow CAPs to co-locate with their physical
- facilities. This is expanding to allow CAPs to directly connect with LEC
- central offices in some areas providing alternative access to the LECs' local
- switch.
-
- Competitive Access Providers (CAPs) have more than 27 individual networks
- supporting users with heavy data traffic. These CAP networks offer customers
- up to 100 Mbps transmission speed and redundant routing for point-to-point
- transmission at lower prices. Further, CAPs generally have more fiber optic
- transmission experience and deliver higher quality transmission facilities
- and circuits than do the LECs.
-
- Other Common Carriers
- ---------------------
-
- Other Common Carriers (OCC) are Specialized Common Carriers (SCCs) offering
- unique communications services, domestic and international record carriers
- supporting international communications, and domestic satellite carriers
- providing satellite communications services authorized by the Federal
- Communications Commission (FCC).
-
- MCI, Sprint, and other carriers are sometimes referred to as Other
- CommonCarriers.
-
- Services Piggybacked on Private Networks
- ----------------------------------------
-
- A private network is a network built and operated by a private organization
- or corporation for their specific benefit. Often the private network
- facilities have excess capacity. The private network organization in an
- effort to reduce its costs permits other organizations to use the excess
- capacity of private network facilities. Special multiplexers typically
- connect one or more voice, data, fax, or video channels to shared common
- channels leading to the private network backbone. This multiplexer equipment
- differs in price, support, and features offered. A feature is voice
- compression technique which determines the number simultaneous voice calls
- supported and the voice quality of each call. In selecting such multiplexers
- look beyond claims of impressively high capacity for simultaneous voice calls.
-
- Telephone Network with Competitive Access Providers
- ---------------------------------------------------
- Common Carrier Services
-
- Common carriers are organizations providing regulated telephone, telegraph,
- telex, and data communications services.
-
- Voice Grade Channels and Circuits
-
- Voice grade channels and circuits are designed to carry voice frequencies in
- the audio frequency speech transmission range of 300 to 3,400 Hz. Voice grade
- channels provide a bandwidth of about 3 KHz. This effectively limits the
- amount of information they can carry. Voice grade channels can be dial-up
- lines or leased lines. Dial-up lines use two wires (a single pass windows)
- while leased lines are four (4) wire service. A leased line is sometimes
- referred to as a private line or a dedicated line.
-
- The 500, 700, 800, and 900 Number Services
- ------------------------------------------
-
- There are several services available to businesses beyond basic dial-up
- services. The services described here 700, 800, and 900 services have been
- used differently by businesses during their relatively short lifetimes.
- Basically these services use voice grade channels but bill for them at
- special rates.
-
- 500 and 700 Services
-
- A single number telephone service for mobile individuals is provided using
- the 500 and 700 numbers. Telephone service providers offer nationwide
- "follow-me" phone numbers for mobile customers. The service uses both the 700
- and a newly activated 500 access code. Unlike geographic area codes such as
- 415, 213 or 916, the 500 and 700 codes cover the entire country like the 800
- and 888 area codes. A 500 or 700 number service lets customers be reached at
- any location and on any equipment. Instead of different numbers for business,
- cellular, fax and home phones, now one number can be called to reach you on
- any type phone, anywhere in the country. The 10-digit 500 and 700 service
- numbers (500-XXX-XXXX, 700-XXX-XXXX) represent an individual customer.
-
- 800 Service
-
- The 800 services are among the most famous carrier service. The 800 service
- and WATS services were introduced by AT&T in the '60s. WATS charges bulk
- rates for directly dialed station-to-station calls over the public switched
- telephone network. WATS provides switched, voice-grade channels for
- transmission of either voice or data. The 800 service provided today is a
- toll-free, inbound service for callers dialing an 800 number. Today because
- of the high use of 800 numbers, AT&T advertises both 888 and 800 numbers for
- 800 number services. An 800 number may be local, regional, national, or
- international in coverage and it can be assigned to any local access phone line
-
- 900 Service pr0n
-
- The 900 service charges the callers not the number being called. Today's 900
- service applications make revenue. Callers dial a 900 number and select
- information that is sent immediately to their fax. TV surveys are routinely
- performed via 900 services. Technical support lines for PC products use 900
- services rather than toll-free or local exchange numbers combined with credit
- card accounts.
-
- Dial-Up Telephone Services
- --------------------------
- North American Numbering Plan (NANP)
-
- The North American Numbering Plan (NANP) was originally designed by AT&T back
- in 1947. It is the system for assigning area codes, telephone numbers, and
- other important network codes throughout the U.S. and 17 other countries. The
- system covers the World Zone 1 calling area including the United States,
- Canada, Bermuda, and most of the Caribbean.
-
- After divestiture in 1984, Bellcore (Bell Communications Research) took over
- NANP administration, and not so surprisingly controversy over a conflict of
- interest began. The argument is that basically Bellcore, owned by the
- Regional Bell Operating Companies (RBOCs), favors both the RBOCs and AT&T
- with special numbering assignments. This controversy heightened with the
- exhaustion of area codes. All area codes were designated as having a 0 or a 1
- as their middle number. Today because of the proliferation of cellular phones
- and additional home phone lines for fax and data communications, several
- metropolitan areas have had to use additional area codes. Washington, D.C.
- now has 703, 301 and the newer 410 area codes. As a result the Federal
- Communications Commission (FCC) intervened in October of 1992. The
- involvement of the FCC caused Bellcore to withdraw as administrator of the
- NANP in August of 1993. Bellcore agreed to remain on as plan administrator
- for 12 to 18 months permitting the FCC to select a new administrator. Today
- Bellcore is still the administrator of the NANP.
-
- Area Code Exhaustion
- --------------------
-
- The phenomenal growth of telecommunications over the last 20 years is reason
- for the current area code shortage. High growth areas include:
-
- 1.) Cellular phones,
- 2.) Fax machines,
- 3.) Portable beepers,
- 4.) Multiple number services,
- 5.) Direct Inward Dialing DID numbers,
- 6.) Pay-per-view applications, and
- 7.) Special ringing features.
-
- These and many other applications consume large blocks of seven-digit
- numbers. Consequently, there are not enough seven-digit numbers to keep up
- with the demand.
-
- Current NAPA Numbering
- ----------------------
-
- NAPA geographic area codes are three-digit numbers formatted N(0 or1)X with N
- any digit 2 through 9, then either 0 or 1, and X any digit 0 through 9. The
- area code is followed by a seven-digit subscriber number. The subscriber
- number previously a NNX-XXXX format is now a NXX-XXXX allowing the use of 0
- or 1 as the second digit. The N(0 or 1)X format has a maximum of 8 2 10 or
- 160 combinations. As the demand for area codes in North America grew,
- Bellcore proposed an integrated numbering plan for World Zone 1, essentially
- North American and the Caribbean. The new plan went into effect in January
- 1995 and changed the numbering system from an N(0 or 1)X-NXX-XXXX format to
- an NXX-NXX-XXXX format. This change increased the quantity of available ten
- digit phone numbers from about 1 billion to 6 billion.
-
- [ Area Code Information is available from... ]
- [ http://www.bellcore.com/NANP/newarea.html. ]
- [ ]
- [ The FCC web site is... ]
- [ http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Factsheets/areacode.txt. ]
-
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