Public Switched Telephone Network
The Standard Phone System: Circuit
Switching
Here's how a typical telephone call works:
Let's say that you talk for 10
minutes. During this time, the circuit is continuously open between the
two phones. In the early phone system, up until 1960 or so, every call had
to have a dedicated wire stretching from one end of the call to the other
for the duration of the call. So if you were in New York and you wanted to
call Los Angeles, the switches between New York and Los Angeles would
connect pieces of copper wire all the way across the United States. You
would use all those pieces of wire just for your call for the full 10
minutes. You paid a lot for the call, because you actually owned a
3,000-mile-long copper wire for 10 minutes. Telephone conversations over today's traditional phone network are somewhat more efficient and they cost a lot less. Your voice is digitized, and your voice along with thousands of others can be combined onto a single fiber optic cable for much of the journey (there's still a dedicated piece of copper wire going into your house, though). These calls are transmitted at a fixed rate of 64 kilobits per second (Kbps) in each direction, for a total transmission rate of 128 Kbps. Since there are 8 kilobits (Kb) in a kilobyte (KB), this translates to a transmission of 16 KB each second the circuit is open, and 960 KB every minute it's open. So in a 10-minute conversation, the total transmission is 9,600 KB, which is roughly equal to 10 megabytes (check out How Bits and Bytes Work to learn about these conversions). If you look at a typical phone conversation, much of this transmitted data is wasted.
While you are talking, the other party is listening, which means that only half of the connection is in use at any given time. Based on that, we can surmise that we could cut the file in half, down to about 4.7 MB, for efficiency. Plus, a significant amount of the time in most conversations is dead air -- for seconds at a time, neither party is talking. If we could remove these silent intervals, the file would be even smaller. Then, instead of sending a continuous stream of bytes (both silent and noisy), what if we sent just the packets of noisy bytes when you created them? That is the basis of a packet-switched phone network, the alternative to circuit switching.
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