Followup on the Tele2 fiasco
I have been remiss in updating this
blog and there have been some noteworthy events that I will now
belatedly relate.
First, I was more or less right about
the cause of the big Tele2 crash
on July 14. It was, as I said in a previous post, a “piecashit”
gadget that brought down the house, but after talking to Tele2
technical director Ervīns
Kampāns, the picture was a bit more complicated. What actually
happened was that the system that was supposed to warn about a
failure of the cooling system did itself fail, but not all the AC to
DC transformers went down at once. When the first ones did, the UPS
attached to the Nokia-Siemens
core switch did kick in, but shared the power-supplying load with the
diminished flow of current from the failing transformers. What
resulted was that at some point, both the supply of current from the
transformers and the UPS (which is intended to work for a short time
until reserve generators kick in) was degraded and finally the core
switch and all the complex systems it sustained crashed. It was,
indeed, a perfect storm kind of event. According to Kampāns, Tele2
has now added additional backup and security systems, so that a
repetition of the highly unlikely July 14 event is even more
unlikely.
Lattelecom to go all IMS by 2017
On July 20,
Lattelecom and China's Huawei announced
they had signed an agreement to convert the entire Lattelecom
fixed line network to run on IMS (IP Multimedia Subsystem)
standards by 2017, with the first pilot tests to take place in early
2012. Migrating to IMS would expand the services available to
fixed-line subscribers as well as offering them a kind of global
mobility. Lattelecom
would be one of the first
telcos in the region to go all-IMS (globally, as far as I can see,
there aren't too many other operators who have made a conversion,
although IMS is used by some for a limited range of services)
People
would be able to take their fixed-line Lattelecom
numbers (actually, IP
addresses attached to their handsets) anywhere in the world where
there was a fixed or WiFi internet connection. Lattelecom
CEO Juris Gulbis also
told this blogger that the telco operator would develop applications
for smart phones that would make it possible to call on the IMS
network. With most Lattelecom
subscribers on flat-rate, “free” calling plans, calls between two
Lattelecom numbers
anywhere in the world would cost only what the respective internet
connection costs.
Technically,
the move to IMS would mean eliminating most, if not all local
switches and replacing them with two redundant switches to run the
whole network. Existing copper landlines would be turned into DSL
connections, while optical internet customers are already on the
internet and would simply have their voice services upgraded to IMS.
The
deal with Lattelecom is
also another achievement for Huawei,
which has succesfully
challenged traditional infrastructure suppliers in the region, such
as Sweden's Ericsson
and the Finnish-German
Nokia-Siemens. The
project will be handled from the Chinese company's Swedisj office,
which is located about a kilometer from Ericsson's
headquarters in the Stockholm suburb of Kista.
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