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circuit switching |
Also found in: Wikipedia | 0.06 sec. |
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A networking technology that provides a temporary, but dedicated, connection between two stations no matter how many switching devices the data are routed through. Circuit switching was originally developed for the analog-based telephone system in order to guarantee steady, consistent service for two people engaged in a phone conversation. Analog circuit switching (FDM) has given way to digital circuit switching (TDM), and the digital counterpart still maintains the connection until broken (one side hangs up). This means bandwidth is continuously reserved and "silence is transmitted" just the same as digital audio. See connection oriented. Contrast with packet switching and message switch.
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| VT-Stream bridges the gap between circuit-switching technology and packet technology, and leverages the advantages of both. Our competitors are now publicly confirming the efficiencies of packet switching, reporting that packet switching will allow them to provide high quality services they have today, and realize efficiencies which do not exist in today's circuit-switching environment. As a result, circuit-switching technology is inherently less efficient than packet-switching technology which allows data packets representing multiple conversations to be carried over the same line. |
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