Тёмный

AT&T Archives: Operation Desert Switch 

AT&T Tech Channel
Подписаться 104 тыс.
Просмотров 22 тыс.
50% 1

For more from the AT&T Archives, visit techchannel.att.com/archives
The Gulf War of 1990-91 left Kuwait a damaged country with severely impaired utilities. After the Iraqi invasion, Kuwait had no phone service that could reach outside of the country to the rest of the world - the Kuwaitis were cut off.
In the first week of March 1991, less than a week after the February 28th cease-fire, AT&T announced it would re-establish Kuwait's international phone service. The company first installed a station in Kuwait City to provide 120 outgoing lines to Kuwaiti citizens, the press, and Operation Desert Storm soldiers. The station was established when a group of AT&T technicians drove from Saudi Arabia and erected a portable satellite ground station overnight. The station, which was the first to link Kuwait to the outside world, soon was handling 10 to 12 thousand calls per day. A more permanent station was established later in 1991, with 720 lines.
In 2012, AT&T still provides resources to call home for overseas military personnel, with camp calling centers located in different areas around the world.
Footage courtesy of AT&T Archives and History Center, Warren, NJ

Наука

Опубликовано:

 

1 апр 2012

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 48   
@markemanuele1929
@markemanuele1929 3 года назад
I remember this project, I worked on part of this in Bell Labs in Holmdel and Lincroft at the time.
@watomb
@watomb 3 года назад
That’s pretty amazing back then. Guessing it’s the one moment the engineers remember over a lifetime of engineering.
@kirbyyasha
@kirbyyasha 5 лет назад
I love how they reference the old Bell System toward the end.
@michaelmallory4958
@michaelmallory4958 3 года назад
I also worked in Holmdel and Middletown. It was a great experience and great company to work for. I believe it was managed to it's demise.
@wecontrolthevideo
@wecontrolthevideo 3 года назад
“I’m going to tell my grand children about the job we did here” - It’s been 30 years, there here now.
@Chris_at_Home
@Chris_at_Home 3 года назад
I was there in April putting in a trunked radio system with an small telecom company. Years later I worked at ATT and got to know many of the techs that did this work over there. I saw days over there where looking at the sky was like looking at coal the sky was so black with oil,smoke.
@d.m.4815
@d.m.4815 4 года назад
That is awesome!! Not one company in the world today could pull that off!
@WhitfieldProductionsTV
@WhitfieldProductionsTV 3 года назад
Give the resources cisco could.
@gextreme2381
@gextreme2381 3 года назад
Today, this could be done in a few days. This isn't very impressive anymore. Many companies would run circles around AT&T while they are still having conference calls deciding what to do.
@WhitfieldProductionsTV
@WhitfieldProductionsTV 3 года назад
@@gextreme2381 For the time, and how we just didnt have resources on resources back than, yeah it's amazing, but now. true. but with starlink, can you imagine this never being needed, all you need to do is throw up a dish and go? amazing where we are going.
@coshiro1
@coshiro1 3 года назад
I didn't even know you could just put a semi on a plane like that and fly to wherever
@bryanp.1327
@bryanp.1327 3 года назад
The C5 is to the sky what the tractor-trailer is to the road, that's how the military gets all their big equipment to places, quickly.
@markarca6360
@markarca6360 3 года назад
Now, it's the C-130. This is also used by U.S. allies like the Philippines.
@Stache987
@Stache987 2 года назад
@@markarca6360 no wonder half the call centers we call into are answered in the Phillipines. You gotta love telling them something, them having to give sickening false empathy repeating it back, then you corrected them, and they repeat that back, and you still have to correct them until you're blue in the face, or should I say red faced in anger.. all this to save a $ here and there in labor, and having more and more unemployment here, and companies failing, communities folding due to no jobs, but some stockholders making some dividends, then the CEO's making more than half of the hourly payroll in salary.
@williamjones4483
@williamjones4483 2 года назад
@@Stache987 They do it that way because that is how they are instructed to do it. As far as call centers being in the Philippines or elsewhere for that matter, only a handful of equipment is needed to establish a call center.
@yfs9035
@yfs9035 3 года назад
AT&T using it's dominance for good
@mxfilip
@mxfilip 6 лет назад
8:38 - That's deep
@eastdoors
@eastdoors 3 года назад
Amazing story
@mogwopjr
@mogwopjr 7 лет назад
I know this was all temporary, but I never liked that style of COSMIC frame. We have one in an office and it just does not have the space to contain the sheer number of jumper wires from OE's, TIE's and EXC/PG pairs I understand the need to conserve space, but after a while there are too many jumpers to be contained and dressed properly.
@Stache987
@Stache987 2 года назад
Couldn't they have separate trucks to do these tie ins, and use cables to connect them together, somewhat similar to remote terminal architecture.. in the early 90s I was a RBOC service representative and we had some #5ESS served offices that were ORM remotes, we had some restrictions of course, such as dual service being unavailable, I'm sure there were others beyond my training.
@FG-lq4pz
@FG-lq4pz 3 года назад
I feel like I was there.
@NikHYTWP
@NikHYTWP 3 года назад
I wonder what happened to this trailer
@Hot80s
@Hot80s 5 лет назад
7:18 The phony cold medina
@bradwilmot5066
@bradwilmot5066 4 года назад
ESS Medina... :-)
@etsabc123
@etsabc123 3 года назад
We take away and then look like the good guy when we give it back
@dick4042
@dick4042 6 лет назад
I wonder what ever happened to that 5ESS?
@uploadJ
@uploadJ 5 лет назад
Parted out to other 5ESS in-country ...
@Stache987
@Stache987 2 года назад
And to think before a item comes off the assembly line now, it's obsolete.. this was 30 years ago, Western Electric, who manufactured these switches was closed and the product sold to another succession of companies.. to this day, I think parts availability is limited to machines taken out of service, and remanufactured parts.
@jamielacourse7578
@jamielacourse7578 3 года назад
Wow......a corporation actually helping. Re- evolution is possible.....
@KentHenry8
@KentHenry8 3 года назад
They didn't do it for free. Kuwait surely paid a fortune for that system
@markarca6360
@markarca6360 3 года назад
1991 Gulf War
@gwernette5971
@gwernette5971 3 года назад
If this had been a poor country this would have been a much different video. Of course AT&T can do this when you're talking about the richest country in the world
@aquatrax123
@aquatrax123 7 лет назад
The aladdin music when they interview the Kuwaiti people is a little over the top.
@non-human3072
@non-human3072 3 года назад
Bold intelligence gathering...here use our phones
@rtel123
@rtel123 7 лет назад
Had this destruction happened 15 years later, Kuwait would have done what other countries that were hopelessly lagging in switching capacity: quickly install a cell network and call it done. Or put in VOIP landlines.
@imark7777777
@imark7777777 2 года назад
Yeah totally different now a lot. the one benefit of POTS was the ubiquity of user equipment. Cell phones or avoid would've meant and user equipment which would've had been replaced anyway where as most POTS stuff if it still somewhat worked could be reused. And then there's power POTS was the equivalent of POE but on a much larger scale end of aces didn't have to have power available.
@Stache987
@Stache987 2 года назад
@@imark7777777 I stoll believe in a backup wireline. I had one accessible when my grandmother had a stroke.. it held a solid connection until the ambulance arrived. Now I live in a community who installed fiber and deprecated the copper. If there's a power outage, it's not going to work as it's VOIP based, let alone our local cell tower is on the same grid, and is most likely cabled through our independent telco.. now I'm imagining how the trunking is planned out, city to city, one by one? Lots of power for one out of town call.
@ronniedelahoussayechauvin6717
@ronniedelahoussayechauvin6717 3 года назад
I don’t understand all this, I was never given information. I was never in the Military.
@irgski
@irgski 3 года назад
Oooooo, the “evil” corporation helping bring communication back to a country....
@imark7777777
@imark7777777 2 года назад
I know times are different now but I'm thinking yes and how many spy recorders were in that thing? Oh probably none because they had to wear it from one side and back so they could send every call outwards too?
@ohmusicsweetmusic
@ohmusicsweetmusic 7 лет назад
Damn the MONEY we spend to tear somethin up just to have to build it back again. CRAZY!! Do we do this everywhere the military goes? HOLY FUCK!
@digitalrailroader
@digitalrailroader 7 лет назад
ohmusicsweetmusic actually, it was the Iraqis that destroyed and looted Kuwait's telephone system; they basically ripped everything out that was bolted down, packed up everything that wasn't bolted down, and trucked it all to Iraq. anything they couldn't take, they destroyed.
@imark7777777
@imark7777777 2 года назад
No we don't do this everywhere but we do still end up paying for it just look at Korea....
Далее
AT&T Archives: The Dew Line (Bonus Edition)
30:19
Просмотров 69 тыс.
Наташа Кампуш. 3096 дней в плену.
00:58
Every NYC Subway Store is Closing… Over Crime
15:06
Просмотров 186 тыс.
AT&T Archives: Seconds for Survival
28:09
Просмотров 30 тыс.
Edward Snowden: How Your Cell Phone Spies on You
24:16
AT&T Archives: Family of Products (1985)
19:36
Просмотров 31 тыс.
AT&T Archives: Microworld (Bonus Edition)
16:11
Просмотров 19 тыс.
CIA video briefing for Reagan: Moscow summit, 1988
17:56
AT&T Archives: 600 Million Calls A Day
13:37
Просмотров 4,9 тыс.
КРУТОЙ ТЕЛЕФОН
0:16
Просмотров 7 млн
КРАХ WINDOWS 19 ИЮЛЯ 2024 | ОБЪЯСНЯЕМ
10:04