A note for the guys hanging on to those POTS lines…It won’t really help.  One 
of our sites in Dubuque Iowa had ten CenturyLink PRIs (they are the LEC there) 
homed off of a 5ESS switch.  These all were unable to process calls during the 
CenturyLink problem.  The ISDN messaging returned indicated that the CL phone 
switch had no routes.  This tells me that either their inter-switch trunking or 
SS7 network or both are being transported over the same optical network as the 
Internet services.  So, even if your local line is POTS or traditional TDM it 
won’t matter if all of their transport is dependent on the IP world.

Looking at the Reddit comments on the Infinera devices being a problem, that 
makes more sense because that device blurs the line between optical mux and IP 
enabled devices with its Ethernet mapping functions.  One advantage of the pure 
optical mux is that it does not need, care, or understand L2 and L3 network 
protocols and are largely unaffected by those layers.  Convergence in devices 
moving across more network layers exposes it to more potential bugs.  
Convergence can easily lead to more single points of failure and the traffic 
capacity of these devices kind of encourages carriers to put more stuff in one 
basket than they traditionally did.  I understand the motivation to build a 
single high speed IP centric backbone but it makes everything dependent on that 
backbone.

Steven Naslund
Chicago IL

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