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An experimental distributed switching system to handle bursty computer traffic
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Source Applications, Technologies, Architectures, and Protocols for Computer Communication archive
Proceedings of the first ACM symposium on Problems in the optimization of data communications systems table of contents
Pine Mountain, Georgia, United States
Pages: 1 - 3  
Year of Publication: 1969
Authors
W. D. Farmer  Bell Telephone Laboratories, Inc., Holmdel, New Jersey
E. E. Newhall  Bell Telephone Laboratories, Inc., Holmdel, New Jersey
Sponsor
SIGCOMM: ACM Special Interest Group on Data Communication
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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Downloads (6 Weeks): 2,   Downloads (12 Months): 25,   Citation Count: 28
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ABSTRACT

An experimental switching system has been built using commercially available integrated semiconductors to switch data. Data messages to be handled by the system may vary in bit rate (100 bits/sec - 4 × 106 bits/sec), message length, and rate of message occurrence. The system uses a synchronous transmission facility with a crystal stabilized clock rate of approximately 6 MHz. The signaling format chosen facilitates data interchange between a number of similar small sequential machines that share a common transmission facility. Efficient data transmission over common carrier systems requires a change in signal format at the channel inputs. Systems involving interconnected loops are discussed briefly; however, the traffic handling capacity of such systems must be analyzed to determine the memory requirements at the junction points. This paper is concerned primarily with the detailed organization of a single loop.


CITED BY  29

Collaborative Colleagues:
W. D. Farmer: colleagues
E. E. Newhall: colleagues