Title :
A historical perspective of CSTA
Author :
Anschutz, Thomas A.
Author_Institution :
Lucent Technol., Middletown, NJ, USA
fDate :
4/1/1996 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Computer-supported telecommunications applications (CSTA) is one of the more important standards for computer-telecommunications interfaces, addressing service and protocol definitions used to provide a link between computers and telecommunications systems. The services provided on a CSTA link between a telecommunications and computer network work much like the services that telecommunication network provides to a user at an access point. At the point of attachment to a telecommunications network, the "phone numbers" are sufficient to describe the desired object for involvement with a service. If a new object were created for the purposes of CSTA (e.g., a monitoring group), an identifier which would work like a phone number in that network would be assigned to that object. Additional handle-identifiers are created and provided after a service is initiated to differentiate between instances of the service being provided. To show this relationship, a functional model was created.
Keywords :
computer networks; protocols; telecommunication computing; telecommunication networks; telecommunication services; telecommunication standards; CSTA; access point; computer network; computer-supported telecommunications applications; computer-telecommunications interfaces; functional model; protocol definitions; service definitions; standards; telecommunications network; telecommunications systems; Analog computers; Application software; Communication switching; Computer aided manufacturing; Computer networks; ISDN; Prototypes; Switches; Telecommunication computing; Telephony;
Journal_Title :
Communications Magazine, IEEE