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A
new emergency communications system has been developed by the Maryland
start-up TeleContinuity Inc. With initial support from the National
Institute of Standards and Technology's Advanced Technology Program
(ATP), TeleContinuity is creating a ‘survivable’ emergency
telephone system back-up network that helps provide business continuity
during disasters by seamlessly merging conventional phone lines
and the Internet.
Telecontinuity's system represents a shift from traditional disaster
recovery and business continuity solutions that historically have
focused on location-based backup facilities and centralised telecom
infrastructures.
The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, severely disrupted
phone service at the attack sites, particularly in New York, where
the collapse of the World Trade Center damaged a major local phone
central office. Days and even weeks later, many companies and individuals
were still without phone service. During this time, however, Internet
links, utilising different lines and network architectures, operated
continuously. TeleContinuity's founders realised that short-term,
emergency phone service could be activated quickly, on any scale,
by cross-linking surviving phone system links and Internet links
as necessary, a technique they are calling ‘shoelacing’.
The company says its initial version of the software for such an
emergency system is designed to reroute a user's phone service within
minutes of a major telephone outage by delivering the call to a
remote phone, cellphone or even a computer or PDA. By the end of
the ATP project in the spring of 2005, the company plans to develop
an enhanced version of the software that allows administrators and
users to monitor and control networks in an emergency with advanced
Web-based controls. Ultimately, commercialisation of the technology
will require a network of hundreds of nodes that can quickly lace
together phone and data network lines regardless of where in the
system an outage occurs.
Researchers from the University of Maryland and the University
of Pittsburgh assisted in developing the system.
Information on the TeleContinuity ATP project is at http://jazz.nist.gov/atpcf/prjbriefs/prjbrief.cfm?ProjectNumber=00-00-5885,
and the company's web site is at www.telecontinuity.com

•Date:
15th September 2004 • Region: N.America •Type:
Article •Topic: Telecoms
cont.
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