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Title:
Object Oriented Software Technologies in Telecommunications
Reviewer:
Mark Easterbrook
Subject:
object oriented; networks
The list of contributors to this book lead one to have high expectations
for this book that it fails to live up to. The title and preface suggest
it is a study of current telecommunication technology and the part OO
could play in developing the new services and technologies demanded
in an increasingly rapidly changing industry sector. This it fails to
do, ignoring a number of key areas, such as SDH (Synchronous Digital
Hierarchy), playing down the importance of the current infrastructure,
such as circuit switch networks and glosses over key requirements
of the telecommunication network such as high availability and high
reliability. It also fails to recognise the significance of the vast
investment in existing equipment that the incumbent operators are
not about to throw out and that has to workwith and alongside new
technologies and services. However, treated as a theoretical text
concentrating on some popular emerging technologies and assuming that
telecommunication networks can be built from scratch or displace existing
infrastructure, then it contains plenty of information, although it is
likely to become dated quickly as the market fails to follow predictions
and large former national operators inhibit the rapid introduction of
broadband services.
The book is split into three parts. Part I and II provide an
introduction to telecommunication networks and software engineering
techniques discussed later in the book. These contain useful information
but not in an easily digestible form and as they only cover material
required for the third and final part, are insufficient for a broader
understanding of the technologies. Part III is a case study of a
Distributed Intelligent Broadband Network. This seems to be more an
academic exercise rather than a real world example, its object-oriented
content limited to a few UML diagrams and the telecommunication element
no longer valid as the technologies have developed in a very different
way since the material was written.
The book overall is only really of use as an academic paper and it
is priced so high as to be unattractive to most students studying in
this area.