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Pandemic Planning for Business Continuity
Business Continuity Planning (BCP)
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Binomial International
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The Binomial Bookstore
Rothstein Associates Inc.
Telecommunications, Networks
QOS:
MEASUREMENT AND EVALUATION OF TELECOMMUNICATIONS QUALITY OF SERVICE by William C. Hardy “If you need to get to grips with QoS, this is the place to start. “Quality of Service (QoS) is continuously growing in importance in the telecommunications industry because competition is growing fiercer by the day. By drawing on 30 years of experience, William C. Hardy explains how to examine specific tools and techniques that he has developed for the measurement and evaluation of QoS and understand the underlying analysis perspectives and methodologies. - Details the basic concepts of QoS, together with the methodologies for organizing, structuring, and carrying out analyses of QoS from scratch. - Describes the attributes of the telecommunications service that determine user perception of quality in non-technical terms. - Discusses specific measures, measurement techniques and evaluation criteria for all of the factors that affect user perception of QoS. - Addresses user concerns including: - Will I be able to get to the service when I want to use it? - How long does it take before I know a connection is being set up? - How good will voice sound over a connection? Includes valuable tips for QoS analysis and the perspectives vital for describing QoS in ways that are useful and operationally meaningful. “Whether you have a limited technical background or are a telecommunications professional this simple and straightforward approach will be an essential tool to understanding QoS.” - - - - - - - - - “...provides a straightforward and very accessible approach to measurement and evaluation of QoS in telecommunications networks strongly recommended for all people, either experienced professionals or graduates, involved in the area of networking...” - IEEE Communications Magazine, February 2002. - - - - - - - - - EXCERPT FROM THE INTRODUCTION “The purpose of this book is to define and describe a family of measures of quality of telecommunications services that have been demonstrated in their successful application over many years to be useful both to telecommunications service users, as a basis for understanding and assessing possible differences between competing services, and to service providers, as a means of determining what improvements in service performance are needed to assure customer satisfaction. The distinguishing characteristic of these measures is that they have in every instance been designed to simultaneously achieve two ends: 1. The credible, reliable assessment of the likelihood that users will find a particular service to be satisfactory; and 2. The determination of how system performance must be changed when that assessment shows that users are not likely to be satisfied. “This kind of complementary utility in a measurement scheme is not hard to achieve. However, it is, in fact, frequently absent in proposed quality of service (QoS) metrics, because definition and development of particular measures have failed to take into account both the concerns of the users of telecommunications services and the perspectives of the engineers and technicians who must design, build, and operate the systems that deliver those services. It is, therefore, a secondary, but equally important objective of this book to describe the analytical perspectives and discipline that have reliably guided the development of the specific measures that are presented here. “To this end, the material in this book is divided into two parts: - Part I presents the concepts and perspectives that have guided the development of the measures. This section first presents what might be thought of as a theory of measurement. It begins with an examination of the possible reasons for developing measures and proceeds with a formal description of the process by which the measures discussed here were developed. This part of the book also contains a chapter that briefly defines and describes basic telecommunications functions and the processes by which those functions are used to deliver telecommunications services. - Part II then discusses a complete family of measures of QoS of telecommunications services, keyed to the user concerns and different types of telecommunications services defined in Part I. “Under this organization of the material, then, Part II comprises the source material that can be researched for specific measures and applications, while Part I comprises both the background necessary to follow the development of the particular measures, and the "how to" manual for those who may be called upon to develop measures of QoS for new services or new ways of delivering services. “This structure allows for a variety of approaches to the material. “Persons who are conversant with telecommunications services and QoS measurement may choose to begin with Part II, and then revert to Part I for purposes of understanding the perspectives that supported development of the measures. Alternatively, a seasoned QoS analyst might read through Part I and readily acquire an understanding of the analytical discipline and techniques sufficient for purposes of developing measures for new services that are useful both to service users and to telecommunications system operators and engineers. Finally, persons with lesser background and experience in QoS will find that reading Part I first to get the grounding in the basics will make it much easier to follow the reasoning that justifies the selection of the measures described in Part II as being particularly well-suited for purposes of measuring and analyzing the particular aspect of QoS each describes. “Whatever the background and experience of the reader, I hope that this book shall clearly convey, both by force of reasoning and by example, three principles to be applied in defining and developing measures of QoS: 1. Meaningful measurement of quality of a telecommunications service must begin with a consideration of the concerns of the users of that service to develop a set of evaluative concepts that will guide the definition of measures and measurement schemes, 2 Useful measurement of QoS must be based on measures that can be readily interpreted by users, but are also clearly related to the performance characteristics of the systems that deliver the service, and 3. Cost-effective measurement of QoS can be realized only when the means of quantifying or estimating any measure is consciously selected on the basis of consideration of both the intended use of the measure and readily available sources of data.” - - - - - - - - - EXCERPT FROM THE FOREWORD “My involvement in analysis of quality of telecommunications services began almost by accident in June, 1967, when I started my first full-time job out of graduate school. The job was with the Operations Evaluation Group of the Center for Naval Analyses. It seems that what they happened to need the day I reported was someone to fill a slot as a communications analyst. Since I was there, I was anointed, never mind that I knew absolutely nothing about telecommunications systems, electrical engineering, or even electricity, since I had skipped that part of the college physics curriculum, and almost nothing of my graduate education in mathematics was relevant to understanding Navy tactical voice and teletype communications over radio frequency channels. “Because my career started with such a complete lack of practical experience and technical skills, my analytical efforts have never been marred or impeded by technical expertise or conventional wisdom. Rather, what I discovered was that all I really needed to do to be effective as a problem solver in this area was to: - Imagine myself using the system I was studying; - Decide what I would be concerned about if I were using it; - Research the technology of the system to the extent necessary to understand the mechanisms affecting performance of the system with respect to those concerns; and - Formalize the relationships between system performance and user perception of quality of service gleaned from this drill. “When I did this, everything else needed to solve the problem would readily follow - the user view would suggest concerns; concerns would suggest measures of quality and effectiveness; understanding of the mechanisms would suggest measures of performance and their relationship to measures of quality; measures would suggest quantifiers; quantifiers would suggest data requirements; and so on, all the way down the analytical chain. “This book is based on more than 30 years experience in successfully applying this approach in analyzing issues of quality of service of telecommunications systems to produce practicable solutions to quality problems. Because of the very basic nature of the approach, this book is apt to be viewed by some as being short on technical content and long on formulation of evaluative concepts and generic measures. However, I refuse to apologize for this, because the perspectives on quality of telecommunications services that I am trying to lay out here are exactly those that I would want all of my employees to share, were I ever to become the CEO of a telecommunications company, so that, for example: - My marketing and sales forces would know how to communicate with customers in a way that would demonstrate their understanding of customers' concerns; - My system engineers would know how to design my networks to satisfy customer expectations, rather than simply meet industry design standards; • My operations managers would know the comfortable levels of performance affecting quality of services that must be achieved and maintained to assure user satisfaction; - My service technicians would know how to troubleshoot user complaints with the same competence that they identify, diagnose, and correct technical problems; and - Everyone involved anywhere in the company would have a very good idea of exactly how their day-to-day activities affect user perception of the quality of our services. “To this end, what I have tried to present here is a treatise on the ways and means of measuring and evaluating telecommunications services that is simple and straightforward enough to be appreciated by anyone, but sophisticated enough to be informative and useful to telecommunications professionals. The only way you can judge whether I have succeeded is to turn the page...” - William C. Hardy WorldCom, USA - - - - - - - - - CONTENTS PREFACE FOREWORD INTRODUCTION PART I BASIC CONCEPTS 1 DEFINITIONS 1.1 Quality of Service 1.1.1 Intrinsic vs. Perceived Quality of Service 1.1.2 Perceived vs. Assessed Quality of Service 2 MEASUREMENT AND EVALUATION 2.1 Function of Measurement and Evaluation 2.1.1 Audience and Utility 2.2 More Definitions 2.2.1 Data vs. Information 2.2.2 Measures vs. Quantifiers 2.2.3 Concerns 2.2.4 Objectives 3 THE ANALYSIS PROCESS 3.1 Phase 1: Formulation 3.1.1 Identify the Audience 3.1.2 Determine Decision-Making Responsibilities 3.1.3 Specify Analysis Objectives 3.1.4 Identify Concerns 3.1.5 Define Measures 3.1.6 Select Quantifiers 3.1.7 Example 3.2 Phase 2: Data Handling 3.2.1 Data Acquisition 3.2.2 All the Statistics You Need to Know to Read this Book 3.2.3 Data Organization 3.2.4 Data Manipulation 3.3 Phase 3: Evaluation 4 TELECOMMUNICATIONS CONCEPTS 4.1 Basic Systems and Processes 4.1.1 Injection/Extraction 4.1.2 Encoding 4.1.3 Routing 4.1.4 Signaling Systems 4.1.5 Switching Systems 4.1.6 Types of Service 4.1.7 Types of Connections 4.1.8 Set Up 4.1.9 Billing Method 4.2 Basic User Concerns with Service Quality 4.3 Preview PART II EVALUATIVE CONCEPTS, MEASURES, AND QUANTIFIERS 5 OVERVIEW 6 ACCESSIBILITY 6.1 Evaluative Concepts 6.1.1 Examples 6.1.2 Variations with Type of Service 6.2 Intermittently Used Services 6.2.1 Concerns 6.2.2 Generic Measure 6.2.3 Quantifier 6.2.4 Availability vs. Accessibility 6.2.5 Adjustments of OCC Axis Values using Delta[SO,SIlty] 6.2.6 Evaluation 6.3 Continuously Used Services 6.3.1 Concerns 6.3.2 Measure 6.3.3 Quantifiers 6.3.4 Evaluation 7 ROUTING SPEED 7.1 Evaluative Concepts 7.2 Circuit-Switched Services 7.2.1 Concerns 7.2.2 Measure 7.2.3 Quantifiers 7.2.4 Evaluation 7.3 Packet-Switched Services 7.3.1 Concerns 7.3.2 Measures 7.3.3 Quantifiers 7.4 A Note on Data Acquisition 8 CONNECTION RELIABILITY 8.1 Evaluative Concepts 8.2 Concern 8.3 Measure 8.4 Quantifiers 8.4.1 Perceived QoS 8.4.2 Voice 8.4.3 Intrinsic QoS 8.4.4 Answer-Seizure Ratio (ASR) 8.5 Evaluation 8.5.1 Assessment of Likely User Perception of Quality 8.5.2 Assessment of Intrinsic QoS 8.5.3 Diagnosis 8.5.4 Monitoring 9 ROUTING RELIABILITY 9.1 Evaluative Concepts 9.2 Concern 9.3 Measure 9.4 Quantifiers 9.4.1 Perceived QoS 9.4.2 Intrinsic QoS 9.5 Evaluation 10 Connection Quality - Voice 10.1 Background 10.2 Evaluative Concepts 10.3 Concerns 10.4 Measures 10.5 Service Attribute Tests 10.6 Quantifiers 10.6.1 Perceived Connection Quality 10.6.2 Intrinsic Connection Quality 10.6.3 Evaluation 11 CONNECTION QUALITY - DATA 11.1 Evaluative Concepts 11.2 Concern 11.3 Measure 11.4 Quantifiers 11.4.1 Dedicated/Circuit-Switched Set Up 11.4.2 Store-and-Forward Relay 11.5 Evaluation 12 CONNECTION CONTINUITY 12.1 Evaluative Concept 12.2 Concern 12.3 Measure 12.4 Quantifiers 12.4.1 Perceived QoS 12.4.2 Intrinsic QoS 12.5 Evaluation 13 DISCONNECTION RELIABILITY 14 THE OTHER STUFF 14.1 Evaluative Concepts 14.2 Typical concerns 14.3 Service Level Agreements 14.4 Quality vs. Economy Afterword APPENDIX A APPENDIX B APPENDIX C ABBREVIATIONS INDEX - - - - - - - - - 2002, 230 Pages. 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