Plain Old Telephone Service/Related Articles
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- See also changes related to Plain Old Telephone Service, or pages that link to Plain Old Telephone Service or to this page or whose text contains "Plain Old Telephone Service".
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- Public Switched Telephone Network [r]: Network of the world's public circuit-switched telephone systems, the is now almost entirely digital and includes mobile as well as fixed telephones. [e]
- RJ11 [r]: A 4-pin connector of the Registered Jack family, normally used with twisted-pair copper wire, which is the industry standard for 1- or 2-line analog (Plain Old Telephone Service) telephone connections; it will mate with the center of an RJ45 connector [e]
- Registered Jack [r]: The set of "RJ" series standard connectors needed to implement the Carterphone Decision by the Supreme Court of the United States, which required the then telephone monopolies of the U.S. to allow third-party, customer-owned devices to connect to the Public Switched Telephone Network, over a restricted number of well-defined interfaces [e]
- Telephone [r]: Telecommunications device that transmits and receives sound, most commonly the human voice, by converting the sound waves to pulses of electrical current, and then retranslating the current back to sound. [e]
- PSTN [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Public Switched Telecommunications Network [r]: Add brief definition or description
- U.S. intelligence involvement with World War II Nazi war criminals [r]: Actions by intelligence agencies, primarily in the U.S. Army, where Nazi strongly suspected of war crimes were not prosecuted in exchange for information, such information on the Soviet Union [e]
- Modem [r]: A communications device to convert digital signals to and from the format needed by an analog transmission system [e]
- Multiplexing [r]: A variety of techniques in electronic engineering, computer science, and network engineering, the most basic of which being multiple lower-speed information channels being combined to be sent over a higher-speed transmission channel, and broken out again at the receiver [e]