ISDN Connectivity
by Jeff Newman
and
David
Willis
Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN) is a service provided by most
telephone companies that allows high-speed digital communication across
already-existing public telephone network facilities. This high-speed service
can connect a wide variety of equipment in several ways--making it an ideal
medium for integration into existing wide area networking infrastructures
that have outgrown their traditional plain old telephone system (POTS) bandwidth
requirements. ISDN is the next logical step for connectivity of sites over
the wide area that need more bandwidth and reliability than POTS connections,
but don't need the volume of bandwidth and cost of very high-speed dedicated
links such as frame relay or T1.
Nothing comes for free. Most of the solutions to our problems that appear
too g
ood to be true either are too good to be true or they come at tremendous
sacrifices. In the case of networks, the solutions usually come at the sacrifice
of funding, flexibility and reliability of the technology that we are implementing.
Although it has taken ISDN years to evolve into a reality, ISDN is now popular
for being one of the most uncompromising solutions to wide area connectivity
and remote access, and it will hold that status for some time.
ISDN, however, is not too good to be true. It is not the easiest technology
to obtain, implement or manage. To be an effective remote access or wide
area network solution, it requires careful planning from start to finish.
In the following article, we will analyze the most common types of ISDN,
its applications, requirements and the necessary equipment. Whether it is
single-user remote access or LAN-to-LAN connectivity, ISDN will be explored
here to help you develop a concrete formula for choosing and implementing
ISDN into your current network.
What ISDN Is: BRI and PRI
Why ISDN Instead of POTS or Dedicated Leased Lines?
Problems With ISDN
ISDN Applications
Choosing the Equipment
Planning for ISDN
Updated May 16, 1996

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