News0 min ago
Talk Talk And Landline
I have just contacted talk talk to ask about broadband and landline and they told me they are phrasing landline out, strange.
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by fruitsalad. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Convention copper-wired landlines are set to disappear altogether.
BT Openreach (which provides the cabling used by all phone service operators, except for Virgin Media) is ripping out the copper cables and replacing them with fibre ones. Every home will then need a broadband router (even if they don't need a broadband service, per se), with their home phone being plugged into that router (via an adapter, if necessary).
The new service is technically known as 'VoIP' (Voice over Internet Protocol) but BT are calling it 'Digital Voice' (with other providers free to choose their own names too).
So all phone service providers will only be offering internet-based services in the future. Some parts of the country have already switched to using VoIP, with everywhere else due to make the change by the end of next year.
From Ofcom:
https:/
We recently got stung with this by BT, we got changed to the new system without realising it
If we have a power cut we are up s-it creek without a paddle as we cant get a mobile signal at all and the landline would be useless as its through the wi fi.
Just a few days earlier we had had to dial 999 when my son collapsed and died. God knows what we would have done if the same thing had happened now.
You cant switch back to the old system either
^^^ No, Dave. It's the cabling to the cabinet in your street (or nearby) that's being switched to fibre.
In practice, it almost certainly is already, as nearly every home in the UK now has access to an 'FTTC' (= 'fibre to the cabinet') broadband service, whereas only a minority can use a much faster 'FTTP' (= 'fibre to the premises') one. It's simply that the old copper cables are being withdrawn from service everywhere (except between the cabinet and your home), meaning that your landline phone calls will then need to go via the internet.
There is one other equally important and perhaps more significant aspect to this.
As well as the copper/fibre transition perfectly explained by Chris, BT’s “Digital Voice” conversion programme also includes the abandonment of the “Public Switched Telephone Network” (PSTN). However your voice signals get to your local telephone exchange (whether via copper or fibre) they have to be routed to their destination. This is achieved initially by your “home” exchange and, if the number you are calling is outside your home area, by a number of intermediate exchanges until its destination is reached. This happens between the time you key the last digit until you hear ringing tone.
There are around 5,500 local exchanges and about 350 “trunk” switching centres across the UK and these make up the BT’s PSTN. There are similar networks abroad which come into play when callers make international calls.
Up to a few years ago, the PSTN was the only way that voice calls could be switched. However, as Internet technology developed, voice calls became possible using internet protocol (hence Voice Over Internet Protocol – or VOIP).
Most of BT’s PSTN exchanges are now getting on for 40 years old. The modernisation programme which saw the replacement of the earlier electro-mechanical exchanges with digital versions (“System X” and “System Y”) took place from the early to mid 1980s. Technology has advanced, spare parts are no longer available so they need replacing.
The internet is now perfectly capable of handling all of BT’s voice traffic. So the decision has been taken not to replace the PSTN but to abandon it entirely. Internet Protocol can only handle digital signalling so an internet router (or its equivalent) must be used between the telephone handset and the outside network.