CHAPTER THREE. Digitizing the Public Telephone Network: Telecommunications

2019 ◽  
pp. 40-90
Author(s):  
Jerry Berman ◽  
Henry Geller ◽  
John Podesta ◽  
Bob Peck ◽  
Eli Noam

1992 ◽  
Vol 16 (7) ◽  
pp. 538-552 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harmeet Sawhney

1989 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 6-10
Author(s):  
D M Leakey

The telephone network is a complex system of switching and transmission equipment to enable any of tens and internationally hundreds of millions of telephones to be interconnected in virtually any combination. To ensure optimum performance various performance criteria have to be agreed and then monitored and controlled. This network management function has to be effective in the presence of rapid modernisation where new generations of equipment have to interwork with older generations in a manner not directly evident to the customer.


1998 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 168-171 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. H. Vazir ◽  
M. A. Loane ◽  
R. Wootton

A pilot trial of a low-cost telepathology system was conducted. Avideo-codec operating to the CIF standard was used to transmit pictures over the public telephone network. Twenty-seven specimens from the routine pathology workload of a district hospital were examined. The average length of time spent examining each specimen was 14 min range 2-40 . The telepathology diagnoses were judged by conventional light microscopy of the specimens, performed by the same observer at a later date, and by a different observer. For the same observer, 23 diagnoses were correct 85 by telepathology, three were acceptable 11 and one was incorrect 4 . The results were slightly worse for a different observer: 21 diagnoses were correct 78 by telepathology, five diagnoses were acceptable 19 and one diagnosis was incorrect 4 . The technique was slower than conventional dynamic telepathology such as that based on communication by ISDN or leased circuits and picture quality was poor by comparison. However, these are not necessarily disadvantages in the context of the developing world, and since only a telephone connection is required, the technique could become an important method of improving the distribution of scarce resources, such as pathology expertise.


Res Publica ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 31 (2) ◽  
pp. 181-188
Author(s):  
Louis Vanvelthoven

Opening up as many sources of information as possible is particularly conducive to the development of workable policy plans and to efficient decision-making in a democratic political system. It follows that MPs can greatly benefit from using computerized information systems.As far as the parliamentary activities are concerned, we can distinguish between internal and external information flow. The contents of the parliamentary documents, the procedure for processing them and the information on the parliamentary control are part of the internal information flow. The external information on the other hand refers to the relations between the MPs and the executive and the judiciary branches, supranational and international institutions as well as the library.To date, the House of Representatives has been the only assembly that has set up a computerized information system . The data bases of the House comprise : the parliamentary documents and the state of advancement of all proceedings linked to these documents (bath in the House and in the Senate) until the publication of the text in the official state journal. Other databases relate to the parliamentary control : interpellations, motions, oral questions and the entire text of the written parliamentary questions.The record of the House will also be stored in a data base giving references. The library fund has been integrated in the interlibrary network DOBIS-LIBIS.  A data base was also designed for the press information, and linked to an image processing system.What has been realized in the House to date must also be feasible for the other parliamentary assemblies. Viewed from that perspective, it seems advisable that data bases be centralized in one parliamentary information DP centre. Access to this centre should be particulary user-friendly and uniform, so much so that all MPs can make maximum use of it.The system set up by the House meets with an ever increasing demand from other possible users. In this context, attention should be drawn to the interconnection of this system with other parliamentary assemblies, the extension of the system to other users in the House ofthe MPs and the external access to the system via the telephone network: direct access for the universities, and for certain public and private institutions and individual MPs, and the BISTEL and/ or VIDEOTEX access.The majority of the public data bases linked to the telephone network can be interrogated via the BISTEL system, hut many interesting applications are not accessible via the telephone network as they function in closed circuits.Opening up data bases by linking them to the telephone network, implies that the problem of cost and privacy be carefully examined. As to privacy, we should reflect on the public or confidential character of the data and its consequences, on safeguarding the information stored in the system and on the evolution ofcommunications technology from the perspective of a continental European communications network.


BMJ ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 286 (6377) ◽  
pp. 1545-1545 ◽  
Author(s):  
K J Dalton ◽  
A J Dawson ◽  
N A Gough

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