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- Path: sparky!uunet!opl.com!hri.com!spool.mu.edu!agate!ames!pacbell.com!rtech!odinba!phil
- From: phil@BofA.com (Phil Schlesinger)
- Newsgroups: comp.dcom.isdn
- Subject: ISDN FAQ
- Message-ID: <1993Jan27.195504.4198@BofA.com>
- Date: 27 Jan 93 19:55:04 GMT
- Sender: Phil Schlesinger
- Organization: Bank of America, Capital Products, RMTG #5906
- Lines: 569
-
-
- Archive-name: isdn-faq
- Last-modified: 1992/07/10
- Version: 1.0
-
- This is the first official monthly posting of this comp.dcom.isdn FAQ.
- Thank you all for your feedback on the initial draft. (That is not to
- say that this is finished by any means. Comments and suggestions are
- always welcome.)
-
- There have been a number of additions and a few corrections since the draft
- and the questions and answers are no longer direct quotes. As new information
- was brought to my attention, it became difficult to integrate direct quotes.
- If there are any problems with my editing as opposed to quoting, I'm sure
- someone will let me know. Now I just cite the sources at the end of each
- question. It still reads like it was written by 40 different people (because
- it was) but after a few revisions, I hope to have a much smoother document.
-
- I'm currently working on two additional questions having to do with the
- nitty-gritty of how ISDN is carried and Switched 56 Kbps (S56) as it
- relates to ISDN. Look for them next month.
-
- [Note to the moderator of news.answers: Sorry for all the trouble. Thanks.]
-
- -----
- Sean N. Welch \\/ welch@xcf.Berkeley.EDU
- Experimental Computing Facility /\\ University of California, Berkeley
- -----
-
- Frequently Asked Questions and Answers
- comp.dcom.isdn
-
- These questions and answers have (for the most part) been extracted from
- comp.dcom.isdn.
-
- Questions with answers:
-
- 1) What is ISDN?
- 2) What does an ISDN network look like?
- 3) What is ATM?
- 4) What will it look like in my house/office?
- 5) How does this compare to regular phone line services?
- 6) Is caller ID available on ISDN?
- 7) What do I get above and beyond plain old telephone service?
- 8) What do ISDN phones cost?
- 9) Can you use existing telephone equipment with the voice portion?
- 10) How do I find out about getting ISDN in my area?
- 11) Where can I find what all of these acronyms mean?
- 12) Who is shipping what?
- 13) How about that SPARCstation 10?
- 14) Why does certain ISDN TE only work with a specific ISDN switch?
- 15) Where can I read more?
- 16) Who do I have to thank for this list?
-
- Questions for which I have not yet put together an answer, but for which I
- am accepting suggestions:
-
- a) What is ISDN-1?
- b) What is the status of ISDN-1?
- c) What is B-ISDN and what does it have to do with ISDN?
-
- Suggestions for additional questions and answers are appreciated.
-
- ---
-
- 1) What is ISDN?
-
- ISDN stands for "Integrated Services Digital Networks", and it's a CCITT
- term for a relatively new telecommunications service package. ISDN is
- basically the telephone network turned all-digital end to end, using
- existing switches and wiring (for the most part) upgraded so that the
- basic "call" is a 64 kbps end-to-end channel, with bit-diddling as needed
- (but not when not needed!). Packet and maybe frame modes are thrown in
- for good measure, too, in some places. It's offered by local telephone
- companies, but most readily in Australia, France, Japan, and Singapore,
- with the UK and Germany somewhat behind, and USA availability rather spotty.
-
- eleskg@nuscc.nus.sg (Winston Seah)
- goldstein@carafe.enet.dec.com (Fred R. Goldstein)
- paul@suite.sw.oz.au (Paul Antoine)
- ---
-
- 2) What does an ISDN network look like?
-
- A Basic Rate Interface (BRI) is two 64K bearer ("B") channels and a single
- delta ("D") channel. The B channels are used for voice or data, and the D
- channel is used for signaling and/or X.25 packet networking. This is the
- variety most likely to be found in residential service.
- Another flavor of ISDN is Primary Rate Interface (PRI). Inside the US, this
- consists of 24 channels, usually divided into 23 B channels and 1 D channel,
- and runs over the same physical interface as T1. Outside of the US then PRI
- has 31 user channels, usually divided into 30 B channels and 1 D channel.
- It is typically used for connections such as one between a PBX and a CO or
- IXC.
-
- kevinc@aspect.UUCP (Kevin Collins)
- keyman@doorway.Eng.Sun.COM (Dave Evans)
- turtle@newshub.sdsu.edu (Andrew Scherpbier)
- ---
-
- 3) What is ATM?
-
- ATM (Asynchronous Transfer Mode) is a switching/transmission technique
- where data is transmitted in small, fixed sized cells (5 byte header,
- 48 byte payload). The cells lend themselves both to the time-division-
- multiplexing characteristics of the transmission media, and the packet
- switching characteristics desired of data networks. At each switching
- node, the ATM header identifies a "virtual path" or "virtual circuit"
- that the cell contains data for, enabling the switch to forward the
- cell to the correct next-hop trunk. The "virtual path" is set up
- through the involved switches when two endpoints wish to communicate.
- This type of switching can be implemented in hardware, almost essential
- when trunk speed range from 45Mb/s to 1Gb/s.
-
- For more information, read comp.dcom.cell-relay.
-
- art@acc.com (Art Berggreen)
- ---
-
- 4) What will Basic Rate (2B+D) ISDN look like in my house/office?
-
-
- An ISDN BRA U-Loop is 2 conductors from the CO to the customer premises.
- At the customer premises the U-loop is terminated by an NT1 (network
- termination 1). The NT1 drives a T-bus which is 4 wires. You can only have
- one device on the T-bus. If you run the T-bus into a NT2 which has an S-bus
- (the passive bus) on the other side, you can connect up to 8 physical devices.
- Electrically, the S and T reference points are the same (which is why they are
- almost always referred to as the S/T bus).
- Some NT1 may include between 24v and 53.5v power on the T-bus (making it 6
- wires), however this would be model/vendor dependent. There are also 8 wire
- T-bus connection (power + 2 extra?).
- Australia and Europe are similar except the NT1 is owned by the PTT. Either
- a ECH (Echo Canceling Hybird), like is used in the US, or a form of time
- division multiplexing using AMI is used to achieve bidirectional transmission
- an a single pair.
-
- +-+ S Bus +-------+ T Bus +-------+ U Loop |
- |?|=-=-=-=-=-=| NT2 |===========| NT1 |--------------[| wall
- +-+ 4-8 wires +-------+ 4-8 wires +-------+ 2-4 wires |
-
- Some ISDN hardware plugs into the U loop, some with the T Bus, and
- some with the S-Bus. In the US (at least) there is a power supply
- between the wall and the NT1.
-
- cliff@Berkeley.EDU (Cliff Frost)
- curt@kcwc.com (Curt Welch)
- dror@digibd.com (Dror Kessler)
- glarson@bnr.ca (Greg Larson)
- paul@suite.sw.oz.au (Paul Antoine)
- pturner@eng.auburn.edu ( Patton M. Turner)
- ronnie@cisco.com (Ronnie B. Kon)
- ---
-
- 5) How does this compare to regular phone lines?
-
-
- The ISDN line may act like two independent phone lines with two numbers.
- Depending on the CO equipment, conferencing features etc. may be available
- (conferencing in the telephone switch). BRA ISDN phones can support key-set
- features such as you would expect to get on an office PBX like:
- - multiple DNs / lines.
- - conferencing features.
- - forwarding features.
- - speed call.
- - call park.
- - call pickup.
- - ring again.
-
- curt@kcwc.com (Curt Welch)
- glarson@bnr.ca (Greg Larson)
- ---
-
- 6) Is caller ID available on ISDN?
-
-
- Caller ID (name or number display) may be supported (depending on the
- CO setup). The availability of caller ID for residential phones would
- depend on the capabilities of the local phone network and legislation
- allowing or disallowing caller ID.
-
-
- curt@kcwc.com (Curt Welch)
- glarson@bnr.ca (Greg Larson)
- ---
-
- 7) What do I get above and beyond plain old telephone service?
-
-
- One of the main features it that instead of the CO sending an AC ring
- signal to activate your bell, it sends a digital package that tells WHO
- is calling (if available), WHAT TYPE of call (speech, datacomm?), the
- NUMBER DIALLED (maybe one of your aliases) and some other stuff. Your
- equipment can then analyze this stuff and make an "intelligent" decision
- what to do with it. For example, a phone (with speech-only capacity)
- would completely ignore a datacomm call while a Terminal Adapter (ISDN
- "modem") or a phone with built-in datacom functions would respond to it.
- If you have several "aliases" tied to your line, you can program certain
- phones to answer calls for certain numbers only. Datacomm calls contain
- baud rate and protocol information within the setup signal so that the
- connection is virtually instantaneous (no messing around with trying
- different carriers until both ends match).
-
- curt@kcwc.com (Curt Welch)
- etxorst@eos.ericsson.se (Torsten Lif)
- ---
-
- 8) What do ISDN phones cost?
-
-
- The ISDN sets can cost between $180 for an AT&T 8503T ISDN phone from
- Pacific Bell up to $1900 depending on what/how many features are needed.
-
- keyman@doorway.Eng.Sun.COM (Dave Evans)
- huntting@futureworld.advtech.uswest.com (Brad Huntting)
- spike@coke.std.com (Joe Ilacqua)
- ---
-
- 9) Can you use existing telephone equipment with the voice portion?
-
-
- Terminal Adapters (TA'a) are available that will interface non ISDN terminal
- equipment (TE), called TE2 to the S/T interface. At least one RBOC provides
- a modem pool to allow for interchange of data with POTS subscribers. Bellcore
- may approve a standard to allow a analog pair to interface to POTS sets from
- a NT1. Also w/o a NT2 only one set can be connected to a B channel at a time. This prevents 2 sets from participating in the same voice call.
-
- pturner@eng.auburn.edu ( Patton M. Turner)
- spike@coke.std.com (Joe Ilacqua)
- ---
-
- 10) How do I find out about getting ISDN in my area?
-
-
- I work in the industry and suggest that you call the local telephone service
- center office and ask for the name and number of the Marketing Product Manager
- for ISDN services. If the service rep cannot make heads or tails of your
- question, ask to speak to the local service center manager for complex
- business services. This person should be able to direct you to the right
- place. For the Bell companies, this position is normally part of the
- telephone company's core marketing staff at their headquarters location.
-
- [I had been planning on listing particulars about local people to contact,
- but since people change jobs and I wasn't planning on continually verifying
- the names and numbers, instead I'll stick with listing the following.]
-
- Bellcore national ISDN information clearing house hotline
- 800 992 4736
-
- North American ISDN Users Forum (NIU) is an org. of ISDN-interested
- parties, coordinated by NIST (National Institute of Stds. and Tech.)
- Contact: Shukri Wakid
- Advanced Systems Division
- NIST
- Gaithersberg, MD
- (301) 975-2937/4853
-
- bharrell@garfield.catt.ncsu.edu (Ben Harrell)
- elitman@wam.umd.edu (Eric A. Litman)
- evans@zk3.dec.com (Marc Evans)
- varney@ihlpf.att.com (Al Varney)
- ---
-
- 11) Where can I find what all of these acronyms mean?
-
-
- An archive of telecommunication related files are maintained on
- lcs.mit.edu in the telecom-archives sub directory. There is a
- glossary of general telecom acronyms, as well as an ISDN specific
- list.
-
- jms@romana.Tymnet.COM (Joe Smith) asks:
- PMW1@psuvm.psu.edu (Peter M. Weiss)
- ---
-
- 12) Who is shipping what?
-
-
- [In this section, I'd like to expand a list of vendors shipping products
- related to work in ISDN. As it stands, the number is small, and the
- information is sparse. Additions and corrections are most welcome.]
-
- [Also - Network World from November 18th, 1991 has an extensive listing
- of products that were available at that time. It ranges from terminal
- adapters and PC cards to handsets to VME boards. I'm in communication
- with them trying to get permission to reproduce parts of the article
- here.]
-
- Digital Subscriber Controler
- AMD79C30A ISDN chip
- Combines IEEE 1.430 S/T interface transceiver B channel LAPD channel
- processor and audio processor in a single chip.
- Advanced Micro Devices
- 901 Thomson place
- Mailstop 126
- Sunnyvale, CA 94086
- (408) 732 2400 (voice)
-
- ISDN <-> other network converters
- Combinet
- 333 West El Camino Real, Suite 310
- Sunnyvale, California 94087
- (408) 522 9020 (voice)
- (408) 732 5497 (fax)
-
- ISDN <-> other network converters
- DigiBoard
- 6400 Flying Cloud Drive
- Eden Prarie, MN 55344
- (612) 943 9020 (voice)
- (612) 643 5398 (fax)
-
- Q-bus board, router, and PC cards
- Digital Equipment Co
- REO2 G/H2
- DEC Park
- Worton Grange
- Reading
- Berkshire
- England
-
- PC cards and standalone ISDN adapters
- Gandalf
- Cherry Hill Industrial Center
- Building 9
- Cherry Hill, NJ 08002
- 1 800 GANDALF (voice)
-
- Terminal adapters
- Hayes ISDN Technologies
- 501 Second St., Suite 300
- San Francisco CA 94107
- (415) 974-5544 (voice)
- (415) 543-5810 (fax)
- ISDN Product Manager: Chris Brock (cbrock@hayes.com)
- ISDN Developer Support: Bill Taylor (btaylor@hayes.com)
- ISDN Product Literature: Stephanie Lopez (slopez@hayes.com)
- ISDN Sales: Jon Hendricks (jhendricks@hayes.com)
-
-
- Terminal adapters
- Motorola UDS
- 5000 Bradford Drive
- Huntsville, AL 35805
- (205) 430 8000 (voice)
-
- PRI ethernet bridges
- Network Express
- Andrew Hasley
- VP, Marketing
- 2200 Green Road
- Ann Arbor, MI 48105
- (313) 761-5005 (voice)
- (313) 995-1114 (fax)
-
- Multi-protocol router
- Spider Systems
- UK France Germany
- Spider Systems Limited Spider Systems SA Spider Systems Limited
- Spider House Les Algorithmes Schadowstrasse 52
- Peach Street Saint Aubin 91194 D-4000 Dusseldorf 1
- Wokingham Gif-sur-Yvette Germany
- England Paris Cedex
- RG11 1XH France
- 0734 771055 (voice) (1) 69 41 11 36 (voice) (0211) 93 50 120 (voice)
- 0734 771214 (fax) (1) 69 41 12 27 (voice) (0211) 93 50 150 (fax)
-
- Handsets
- Telrad Telecommunications, Inc.
- 135 Crossways Park Drive
- Woodbury, New York 11797
- (516) 921-8300
- 1 800 645-1350
-
- ---
-
- 13) How about that SPARCstation 10?
-
-
- FYI, the hardware on the SS10 supports 2 B channels (64K+64K) and 1 D channel
- (16K) for a grand total 144K in marketing speak. On *each* BRI (Basic Rate
- Interface). The "DBRI" chip in the SS10 supports audio devices and *2*
- Basic Rate Interfaces. Typically you might use both B channels for data,
- 1 channel for voice and 1 channel for data, or 1 channel for data to 1 point
- and 1 channel for data to another point. In some parts of the world it's also
- popular to run X.25 over the D channel.
-
- Info from the SPARCstation 10 full announcement e-mail:
-
- - What Becomes Available When:
- o ISDN
- Chip on the motherboard Q3 CY92
- ISDN Drivers on Solaris 2.x Q4 CY92 Solaris 2.x
- Teleservices API Q1 CY93 Solaris 2.x
- Wide Area Networking software Q1 CY93 Solaris 2.x
- The chip on the motherboard provides a BRI (basic rate interface)
- ISDN connection that is integrated with workstation audio.
- The drivers provide a low level interface to the hardware.
- The Teleservices API enables application development for
- workstation/telephony integration - providing functions like
- call setup, transfer, hold, confer, etc. The API is hardware
- independent so that it will work with third party non-ISDN
- telephony hardware and software. The WAN software enables
- data communication - running IP over ISDN (in other words,
- applications that run over ethernet will run over ISDN).
- In the first release, Sun will support data communications
- in the US (for the AT&T 5ESS switch), the UK, France, Germany
- and Japan. We will support voice services in the US (for
- the AT&T 5ESS switch) only.
-
- dank@blacks.jpl.nasa.gov (Dan Kegel)
- kessler@Eng.Sun.COM (Tom Kessler)
- ---
-
- 14) Why does certain ISDN TE only work with a specific ISDN switch?
-
-
- In the bad current days before National ISDN-1, the ATT 5ESS switches and
- Northern Telecom DMS100 switches speak different call setup dialogues. That's
- why you will see ISDN TE listed as 5ESS, DMS100 or both.
-
- Jim.Rees@umich.edu (Jim Rees)
- jerry@watchman.sfc.sony.com (Jerry Scharf)
- ---
-
- 15) Where can I read more?
-
-
- "ISDN In Perspective"
- Fred R. Goldstein
- Addison-Wesley
- ISBN 0-201-50016-7
-
- "ISDN: Concepts, Facilities, and Services"
- Gary Kessler
- ISBN 0-07-034242-3
-
- "ISDN and Broadband ISDN" (2nd edition)
- William Stallings
- Macmillan
- ISBN 0-02-415475-X
-
- The 1990 ISDN Directory and Sourcebook
- Phillips Publishing Inc.
- 7811 Montrose Road
- Potomac, MD 20854
- (301) 340-2100
-
- ISDN Sourcebook
- Information Gatekeepers Inc.
- 214 Harvard Ave,
- Boston, MA 02134
- (617) 232-3111
- 1 800 323-1088
-
- Bellcore ISDN Availability Report
- WR-NWT-2102 ($103)
- 800 521 2673
-
- AT&T Technical Journal special issue on ISDN
- (Volume 65, Issue 1) January/February 1986
-
- [If anyone can tell me how to get ahold of the next two documents in terms
- of either ISBN, a publishing company, or an ftp site, I'd appreciate it.]
-
- "A subnetwork control protocol for ISDN circuit switching"
- Leifer, Gorsline, & Sheldon
-
- "Multiprotocol Interconnect on X.25 and ISDN in the Packet Mode"
- Malis, Robinson, & Ullmann
-
- EFFector. Issue 2.01, Issue 2.06, Issue 2.08
- ftp.eff.org:pub/EFF
-
- AT&T Documents
- --------------
- "5ESS(rg.tm) Switch National ISDN Basic Rate Interface
- Specification - 5E8 Software Release"
- AT&T document number 235-900-341
-
- "5ESS(rg.tm) Switch ISDN Basic Rate Interface
- Specification - 5E7 Software Release" {Custom BRI}
- AT&T document number 235-900-331
-
- "5ESS(rg.tm) Switch ISDN Primary Rate Interface
- Specification - 5E7 Software Release"
- AT&T document number 235-900-332
-
- "5ESS(rg.tm) Switch Interface Specification to a
- Packet Switched Public Data (X.75) Network -
- 5E8 Software Release" [as in CCITT X.75]
- AT&T document number 235-900-317
-
- "5ESS(rg.tm) Switch X.75' Intranetwork Interface
- Specification - 5E8 Software Release"
- [as in Bellcore's TR-000310]
- AT&T document number 235-900-325
-
- "5ESS(rg.tm) Switch Documentation Description
- and Ordering Guide"
- [list/description of 5ESS documents]
- AT&T document number 235-001-001
-
- AT&T documents ordering:
- 1-800-432-6600 USA
- 1-800-225-1242 Canada
- +1 317 352-8557 elsewhere
- AT&T Customer Information Center
- Order Entry
- 2855 N. Franklin road
- Indianapolis, IN 46219
- (317) 352-8484 (fax)
-
- Northern Telecom Documents
- --------------------------
-
- NTP 297-2401-100 ISDN System Description
- NTP 297-2401-010 ISDN Product Guide
-
- ---
-
- 16) Who do I have to thank for this list?
-
-
- Lots of people, in one way or another.
-
- sorflet@x400gate.bnr.ca (Winston WL Sorfleet)
- Jim.Rees@umich.edu (Jim Rees)
- PMW1@psuvm.psu.edu (Peter M. Weiss)
- SYSGAERTNER@cygnus.frm.maschinenbau.th-darmstadt.de (Mathias Gaertner)
- apsteph@cs.utexas.edu (Alan Palmer Stephens)
- art@opal.acc.com (Art Berggreen)
- awillis@athena.mit.edu (Albert Willis)
- bharrell@garfield.catt.ncsu.edu (Ben Harrell)
- blsouth!klein@gatech.edu (Michael Klein)
- cliff@Berkeley.EDU (Cliff Frost)
- craig@aland.bbn.com (Craig Partridge)
- curt@kcwc.com (Curt Welch)
- dank@blacks.jpl.nasa.gov (Dan Kegel)
- dror@digibd.com (Dror Kessler)
- dwight@hyphen.com (Dwight Ernest)
- earle@poseur.JPL.NASA.GOV (Greg Earle - Sun JPL on-site Software Support)
- eleskg@nuscc.nus.sg (Winston Seah)
- elitman@wam.umd.edu (Eric A. Litman)
- etxorst@eos.ericsson.se (Torsten Lif)
- evans@zk3.dec.com (Marc Evans)
- glarson@bnr.ca (Greg Larson)
- goldstein@carafe.enet.dec.com (Fred R. Goldstein)
- huntting@futureworld.advtech.uswest.com (Brad Huntting)
- jerry@watchman.sfc.sony.com (Jerry Scharf)
- jik@pit-manager.MIT.EDU (Jonathan I. Kamens)
- jms@romana.Tymnet.COM (Joe Smith)
- kessler@Eng.Sun.COM (Tom Kessler)
- kevinc@aspect.UUCP (Kevin Collins)
- keyman@doorway.Eng.Sun.COM (Dave Evans)
- kph@cisco.com (Kevin Paul Herbert)
- lmarks@vnet.ibm.com (Laurence V. Marks)
- paul@suite.sw.oz.au (Paul Antoine)
- pturner@eng.auburn.edu (Patton M. Turner)
- rachelw@spider.co.uk (Rachel Willmer)
- rdavies@janus.enet.dec.com (Rob Davies)
- rogers@eplrx7.es.dupont.com (Wade T. Rogers)
- ronnie@cisco.com (Ronnie B. Kon)
- sanjay@media.mit.edu (Sanjay Manandhar)
- spike@coke.std.com (Joe Ilacqua)
- tnixon@hayes.com (Toby Nixon)
- turtle@newshub.sdsu.edu (Andrew Scherpbier)
- varney@ihlpf.att.com (Al Varney)
- wb8foz@scl.cwru.edu (David Lesher)
-