These old ESS switches are currently being retired en masse in favor of packet-based softswitches. For example, see the Verizon network disclosures page [1]. Every listing for "Planned Network Change" or "Switch Retirement" is another 5ESS or DMS100 being ripped out.
The holiday bombing in Nashville provided clear evidence of what we've lost in terms of PSTN resiliency. I don't think there would have been region-wide loss of service for greater than 24 hours in say 1994.
Who cares about reliability, it is not as if lives depend on it. /s
If I look at the availability of phone service in my home (German metro area, cable) it is way below anyone would gave dared to provide in the TDM/ISDN times. I strongly believe only the redundancies people have with also having a mobile phone has allowed this to continue with lives being lost and regulators clamping down.
I have had a landline phone fail--a tree fell over on the next block down and took the wires along. Also, many years ago, I was in a building where we found the phones would work without power, but they wouldn't ring. While waiting to go home, we would resort to "polling"--pick up a line and see whether anyone was on it.
Yeah, but also in an era of vastly less inter city capacity for long haul. Properly implemented Opus on a network with under 1% packet loss sounds great.
Yeah but how often are two people connected by networks that maintain <1% PL and low jitter for the entirety of a length of a call?
I'm thinking of just shipping 79xxs to my close friends and telling them to plug them directly into their routers, but even that will go to shit around 20:00 local as their residential networks overload.
The weakest link is absolutely the residential class last mile contended access networks. I've regularly seen 0.00% packet loss for weeks at a time on business class connections between two points in the continental US, but when one end is slightly flaky, all bets are off.
Not quite - there are a bunch of CS2K retirements listed there, which was the soft switch evolution of the DMS100. I'm personally a little sad about those retirements as my first professional job was on the small team at Nortel developing the prototype of a DMS100 call server controlling a packet switch fabric. We started with ATM but moved to Ethernet when it became clear that was going to be the packet fabric of choice. Still, it's had a good innings and they were fun times.
I hadn't heard the name Nortel in a long time - I used to work for a company that had a lot of Nortel phone switches. Wikipedia says that they're now defunct, which makes me a little sad.
The dot-com bubble, mismanagement, and accounting shenanigans took it from being ~1/3 of the entire value of the Toronto Stock Exchange and an employer of almost 100K employees to bankruptcy within the span of a decade.
[1] https://www.verizon.com/about/terms-conditions/network-discl...