On Fri, Dec 31, 1999 at 04:02:47AM -0800, I Am Not An Isp wrote:
However, the phone system is almost completely useless. He has two phones in his office and cannot call one from the other. (Although he says they are on different exchanges, so they might not hit the same CO.) Dial tone is there, but after dialing numbers, just dead air. Which is weird, because when I called him it rang and he picked up, no static or anything. (We do have a switch in NZ, but we have to ride the local PTT to the destination phone.)
There was documented overloading in international calls in and out of New Zealand through CLEAR, Telecom NZ, Telstra NZ, Vodafone and Voyager. There was difficulty in seizing a line on Vodafone and Telecom NZ cell sites around central Auckland just after midnight, which is somewhat understandable considering there were several hundred thousand more potential cellphone subscribers in the area than is normal for a Friday night. There was, however, no widespread difficulty measured within NZ in obtaining dial tone, switching calls between local exchanges and tandems, or in interconnect between the main carriers.
This is causing unusual failure modes for some systems, especially ISDN routers which are common in .nz and .au.
ISDN routers are mainly only used in NZ where the calling and called station are attached to the same exchange, as this allows both stations to be combined in a centrex private dialling plan, which is billed on a flat-rate. Non-centrex ISDN is typically not used for nailed-up services here, since they incur a substantial per-minute charge from Telecom. Basic-rate services are available from other carriers, but Telecom is the only carrier with a widely-available copper access network. So although instability in a local exchange might give ISDN routers some connectivity problems, congestion on tandem trunks would be unlikely to impact them at all, at least, without roll-on instability problems. I believe Telecom NZ do use in-band R2 signalling from LXes which has been known to cause high LX processing load during periods of attack dialling, however, so it's possible that in individual cases ISDN centrex services might be affected. But again, no long-lasting or widespread problems have been reported.
So, overall, I would say that the world is probably not going to end. :)
It's still here as far as I can see. Mind you, I haven't been outside yet today :) Important lesson, I think, is to understand that individual isolated problems reported by individual operators do not necessarily signal the collapse of the PSTN. "The phone system is almost useless" is perhaps less accurate than "the one person I have talked to has reported some problems with his office handsets" :) Joe