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Narrow Band and Broad Band ISDN
The most important development in the computer
communications industry in the 1990s is the evolution of the integrated
services digital network (ISDN) and broadband ISDN (B-ISDN). The ISDN and
B-ISDN have had a dramatic impact on the planning and deployment of
intelligent digital networks providing integrated services for voice, data
and video. Further, the work on the ISDN and B-ISDN standards has led to
the development of two major new networking technologies; frame relay and
asynchronous transfer mode (ATM). Frame relay and ATM have become the
essential ingredients in developing high-speed networks for local,
metropolitan and wider area applications.
The ISDN is intended to be a worldwide public
telecommunications network to replace existing public telecommunication
networks and deliver a wide variety of services. The ISDN is defined by
the standardization of user interfaces and implemented as a set of digital
switches and paths supporting a broad range of traffic types and providing
value added processing services. In practice, there are multiple networks,
implemented within national boundaries but from the users point of view,
the eventual widespread deployment of ISDN will lead to a single,
uniformly accessible, worldwide network.
The narrowband ISDN is based on the use of a 64 kbps
channel as the basic unit of switching and has a circuit switching
orientation. The major technical contribution of the narrowband ISDN
effort has been
frame relay. The B-ISDN supports very high data rates (100s of Mbps) and
has a packet switching orientation. The major technical contribution of
the B-ISDN effort has been asynchronous transfer mode, also known as cell
relay
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