The T1 Line – A Premier Choice In Voice And Data Communications
It is almost impossible to have a business today and not have a need for internet connectivity; many businesses have turned to T1 line technology. A T1 line is a guaranteed, bi-directional line that transfers data at 1.5 Mbps.
There are several different varieties of T1 lines because not every business will have the same needs. For 24 channels of nothing but phone service, there is the voice T1 line. For a data and voice combination, there is an integrated T1 line. To have several T1 lines combined into one big pipeline of T1 line, there is the bonded T1 line.
The number of companies offering T1 services in your area and the distance between you and the T1 company are the two biggest factors that will determine the price of the service. $200 to $1000 per month is the average cost per month for this internet connectivity. Using this technology will not hamper the ability for your business to grow. However; you should set aside a decent amount time for an upgrade, they can be time consuming.
Many businesses are looking to cut corners and find cheaper solution in an uncertain economy. Businesses are taking a hard look at fiber optics for internet and networking solutions. Data, video and voice traffic can all be handled by the same line of fiber optics. During times of high internet usage, fiber optic technology will handle data, voice and voice media and still not compromise on overall speed.
The drawback to fiber optic technology is it lack of availability to all areas. The overall cost of getting the fiber optic cabling from the company to your business can be rather expensive.
Another form of technology to consider is DSL. The reputation of DSL technology is that you will pay a lower cost for faster speeds. Only during certain times can DSL live up to its reputation. Closer scrutiny will reveal that the claims for DSL may fall a little short.
The bandwidth is shared with other customers that are on the same loop that your business is on; this means during periods of high internet usage you will probably experience lower transmission speeds. DSL is not asymmetrical, this means that you may download files at 1.5 Mbps but may only upload files at 256k. The downtimes that a DSL connection could experience are rather unacceptable for a fast moving business.
The better buy, due to reliability in speed and uptime and because of its accessibility, are T1 lines, even if they may cost a little more upfront.
The author Ron Legarski is a business advisor for T1 Line Services and Telecommunications Solutions. For more information please visit http://internett1.org
Dark Fibre or Dark Fiber, That Is The Question?
During the later part of the 1990s, a growing industry worldwide was fiber optics. Fiber optics allows information to be transmitted through light pulses rather than copper wire and electrical signals. As the industry grew, many fibers were laid that have never been used. These fibers are called dark fiber or dark fibre.
Dark fibre exists because it was found that it cost almost the same price to install large fiber cables as it did to install smaller cables. Due to the potential for future savings, telecommunications companies installed many these fibers in each cable that was used. Many of these optics are not being used even now.
Power companies also discovered that they could place fiber cables as power lines were being installed. Power companies saw the potential for eventual sales to the telecommunications industry.
The overbuilding of the fiber optics industry has left many dark fibers in existence. These fibers have a very long lifetime, and are still usable today. They offer a vast potential for many uses today.
During the 1900s, telephone companies never sold their fibre inventory. They felt that the potential for the dark fiber would be their ability to continue to grow. When their inventory was first sold, the price was 1200 dollars per mile. The excess of available dark fiber has driven the cost down today and dark fibre can be bought for as little as 200 dollars per mile.
The drop of the price of the optical fiber has lead to speculation of ways it can be used.
It has been suggested that universities could be linked through dark fiber. This would allow libraries as well as classes to be interlinked. This could be an answer to the many budget shortfalls that universities are experiencing. Distance learning centers could also be added to the network allowing universities to use already existing buildings and cutting the expense of capitol improvements.
Other suggestions are to allow physicist to be connected to national laboratories. They could perform experiments using equipment to which they might not otherwise have access.
With the current administration’s interest in centralized medical records the dark fiber could be used to connect doctors and clinics to the centralized bank over a network that was more secure than the internet.
Because of the availability of security on dark fiber, banks have also expressed interest in using dark fibre. Valuable customer information would be less available to hackers.
The possibilities are virtually endless with the advancement of technology.
Ron Legarski is a business advisor for Dark Fiber and Telecommunications Services. For more information please visit http://www.dark-fiber.org
T1 Broadband Lines and What You Should Know
Our revolutionary form of communication, education and entertainment known as the Internet, has been and is about to be revolutionized by the emersion of the T1 Broadband. What I mean is, traditional internet speeds are rather slow, especially dial up, and while that is a major source of frustration for many users, new technologies have been designed. The T1 broadband provides data transmission speeds that are 10-30 times faster than dial up, even when they are working at their lowest capabilities.
What this means to you is that all those files, movies, software updates and other things you chose to forego because of their hours of download times can now be downloaded in a period that is much more acceptable. They can be downloaded in times rated in minutes if not seconds. Broadband T1 Lines use multiple channels to achieve simultaneous transmissions of data.
So what exactly am I talking about? Well, it’s like this. A T1 line is a dedicated phone connection that provides you, the user, with data transfer rates of 1.544 megabits per second. To break it down, the T1 line is composed of 24 individual streams. Typically these “streams” are referred to as channels.
Commonly referred to as DS1, the T1 lines provide amazingly fast internet connections due to the 24 individual streams each providing data transfer rates of 64 kilobits per second. That is a huge data transfer capability. It is sure to be appreciated by businesses and home entrepreneurs alike. Many of the current T1 customers are made up of businesses, colleges and schools. The T1 line is fast becoming a commonplace for internet connections, as well as for voice applications.
The composition of the T1 line is comprised of fibre or two pair copper wiring. With their huge capabilities, it has been said that if you had an office that employed up to 100 people. All of their daily phone needs could be serviced from a single T1 line. Typical installations involve using traditional copper wire to run the T1 line into the building.
T1 lines all originate at a central office, with its destination in mind, is engineered to provide reliable service on an ongoing basis. When dealing with destinations that involve great distances, typically they will make use of components known as repeaters in order to maintain the integrity of the speed and quality of the data being transferred.
The performance of the T1 line is constantly being monitored in this central office where all the T1 lines originate. Whenever an issue is detected, it is acted upon immediately and many times can be remotely repaired. When applied to voice applications, T1 lines are reported to provide clear, crisp sound. The data transmission rates are said to be not only fast, but efficient and dependable.
As you would probably expect, installation of a T1 line will come with typical installation fees. However, it has been reported that many of the T1 broadband customers have made up this cost in the first year or being waived when signing a longer term contract with the service provider. On top of that many customers state that their monthly costs are much lower than what they were previously paying with traditional telephony service.
Ron Legarski is a business advisor for T1 Broadband applications and related Telecommunications Services. For more information please visit http://www.broadband-t1.com
The Advantage of T1 Line Bandwidth Circuit Connectivity
People who have to live in the more remote and rural areas of the planet often find themselves having to deal with a slow and unreliable internet connection. This is slowly becoming a thing of the past with the introduction of T1 bandwidth.
The T1 connection has actually been around for a while, but has primarily been used only for businesses and corporations who were looking for a fast and reliable connection. Now this amazing technology is becoming increasingly more popular for those who only need residential service. It has offered a great solution for anyone who hasn’t been able to obtain high speed internet due to their rural location.
One of the most incredible aspects of this technology is that it goes way beyond the boundaries of what other types of connections offer and you can easily have several users connected at one time.
Exploring the advantages
When it comes to a high speed T1 connection there are many benefits to be found. You will find a world of difference upon switching to this remarkable technology.
Reliable connection: This is vital to anyone who continually uses the internet to run their business or simply knock out a homework assignment for school. A dependable connection could also help when it comes to checking for an important email that you have been waiting for. T1 offers you reliability that you can trust.
Perimeters of service: One of the biggest benefits of this type of internet connection is that it covers virtually all areas. The only requirements that will need to be met is that the customer live within fifty miles of the service center and have a phone line activated in their home.
This is especially helpful to those who have always lived in a more isolated area that has had nothing but dial up. There will no longer be a necessity to have such slow internet service.
Cost of service: When it comes to how much any service costs people are choosy. After all, the times are tough and money is tight for almost everyone. T1 bandwidth offers not only a very reliable high speed connection, but an inexpensive one as well. Installation generally comes free and the monthly service fees are minimal compared to other similar services.
Rate of speed: One of the most appealing factors of T1 is the speed in which you can surf the World Wide Web. It offers a speed of almost 2 Mbps which is amazing when you consider the rate of dial up service. You can upload data and fly through online tasks at the speed of light.
Once you have made your choice to switch to T1 service you can go online and connect with a customer service representative who will help you set up service with one of your local providers. This is a good time to ask any questions that you may have too.
There is not a bunch of pricey equipment to purchase and set up will generally take a short amount of time.
Making the choice to switch your internet service to T1 bandwidth will be one of the best decisions that you ever made, and your internet tasks will suddenly go a lot smoother.
Ron Legarski is a business advisor for T1 Bandwidth Connectivity and Telecom Services. For more information please visit http://www.t1bandwidth.org
The Basic Info On A PRI T1 Line
What to know about a PRI T1 line is mainly that this digital telephone line can be easily understood even by those who do not have degrees from Harvard or MIT. They are not just the stuff of science geeks, and what they really are set up to do is handle calling volume in extreme amounts that far exceed what older style analog lines could handle. They can help increase productivity in a call center greatly, and such centers are quite lucrative these days.
Usually, PRI lines are referred to by the generic term “T1 lines”, and they can really come in handy when a call center has decided to updates workload from several lines to a dozen or more in an attempt to gain business and income. Going from the older analog lines to digital lines in this case can actually be very cost-effective due to how much more volume such lines can handle.
As far as being a great improvement over older analog or even relatively newer old T1 lines, the new PRI lines are a welcome improvement in digital phone line capability. Standing for “Primary Rate Interface”, one of these new style lines will build on the older T1 line that used all 24 of its channels or lines. A new PRI line uses only 23 channels yet is far more efficient.
Why this is so is due to what the 24th channel or line in the new style PRI is doing while the other three lines are busy handling calls. Generally, that other line is busy picking up much of the burden that all the other lines used to have to participate in handling. It is carrying the data that serves the other 23 lines, freeing them up to be super efficient.
These 23 lines can handle call volume much more efficiently and faster in addition to allowing for speedier set up and tear down of the call center workload for the day. No longer will and individual line have to deal with the grunt work that was shared out among them, because it will now all be handled by that 24th channel.
Technologically, a PRI T1 line allows call-center operators to make use of incoming caller ID modes and will let the call-center Place screens in front of the operator that will quickly identify the incoming caller and all of the necessary information that an operator will need in order to handle such a caller. Customer service inevitably improves when such capabilities are added.
When a call center sticks with a single PRI T1 line it is artificially restricting itself because the fact is that such a line can actually handle four or more lines quite easily, which means that the call center can grow even faster and with more efficiency to deal with large increases in call volume. And it is all due to that single PRI channel.
For the most part, call centers in Japan, Korea and North America are making increasing use of these new style lines. They’re very much more capable and considerably more versatile when it comes to handling huge amounts of voice and data streams, especially when compared to older style T1 lines that made use of all 24 channels to handle those streams.
As a great example of adding by subtracting, it’s hard to discount the PRI T1 line as an exemplar of such math. The 24th line is always out there picking up the burden for the other 23 lines that can then pick up a great deal more minor than capable of in the past. When added altogether and with an eye towards future expandability, it’s hard to see any downsides.
Ron Legarski is a business advisor for PRI T1 Lines and Telecom Services. For more information please visit http://www.t1pri.org

