Telephone Switches
Telephone services were commonly offered by the first-generation millimeter wave wireless operators but seldom to date by networks operating in the lower microwave regions. Chapter 7 covers voice telephony and the protocols and equipment required to implement it, but here I will venture a few words as to how telephone switches figure into the central office environment. In traditional local exchanges, the switch was the primary piece of hardware occupying the central office. In broadband networks where the emphasis is on data, switches are of secondary importance and are lacking in many networks. As I stated earlier, I do not think provisioning circuit telephone services is a good business for a wireless broadband operator to enter, particularly a startup with limited financial resources. Class 5 circuit switches cost millions of dollars, and, considering that most wireless broadband networks start small and remain fairly small, acquiring at most a few thousand subscribers, paying millions of dollars for a device that is likely to yield a few dollars per subscriber per month simply does not make economic sense—not in a highly competitive service environment where infrastructure equipment has a far shorter life span than in the past. The full return on investment for a class 5 switch would require decades, by which time it would be completely obsolete. Also, given that telephone switches are not designed to interface with radios and that complex procedures for mapping voice channels onto airlinks, providing dial tone and ring tones, and assigning telephone numbers are required, the prospect of doing circuit voice appears distinctly uninviting—except perhaps in developing nations in regions where wireline telephone services are completely unavailable (such fixed wireless telephone services are known as wireless local loop). Cable operators, for reasons best known to themselves, have frequently offered circuit voice, and they have had to put in complete cable telephony hardware and software platforms to enable such services as well as the aforementioned class 5 switches. If anything, circuit over broadband wireless is even more problematic.
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