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An Aspect of the Dialing Behavior of Subscribers and Its Effect on the Trunk Plant
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References
1948
Year
Congestion ManagementAdmission ControlBotanySocial BehaviorTrunk PlantDialing BehaviorSupervision (Telephony)Hell System CompaniesCall Detail RecordCommunicationLower LimitMarketingQueueing TheoryQueueing SystemsSender Shortage
During the war it became necessary for the Hell System Companies to lower many service standards. Among these was the standard for the provision of trunks for handling subscriber-dialed calls. In the interest of economy the number of trunks for a given volume of traffic was lowered. It is evident that for any given case there is a lower limit to the number of trunks that should be provided for handling subscriber-dialed calls. Below this limit congestion of calls gets beyond control. The control of congestion is important. In the case of operator-handled calls it is possible to control congestion by filing tickets and placing calls in an orderly fashion. In the case of subscriber-dialed calls the subscriber may with impunity make many, indeed very many, successive dialing attempts to complete a call that is blocked due to a shortage of trunks. If, in a particular office enough subscribers do this simultaneously, a sender shortage may develop with its resulting reaction on the whole office.