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27:
391:. Digital technology quickly replaced analogue systems at national and major regional switching centres and new international gateway switches were installed. The oldest electromechanical step-by-step exchanges and manual operator-manned local exchanges were the first to be converted to digital technology. More modern electromechanical crossbar exchanges, using Ericsson ARF, Hitachi and
527:, a more flexible system with a vast array of English-language content, it quickly faded from public attention. The Irish Minitel system had been planned as early as 1988 and envisioned building an ecosystem similar to its French counterpart, with shopping, banking and information services. Minitel Ireland was ultimately shut down due a small and dwindling user base.
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TeleCentre – this was
Telecom Éireann's retail arm, which was later renamed eircom Store and then shut down as eircom moved away from physical customer contact centres. Since the closure of the stores, customers can only contact eircom online or by
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Phonewatch – Provides monitored alarm services to both residential and business customers. The company was rebranded as eircom PhoneWatch. It is one of the largest players in the Irish home security market and was sold to a
Norwegian company in
429:, after both companies purchased a combined 35 percent stake in Telcom Éireann. The alliance was completed by 2001, when Telia and KPN exited Ireland. During the time of the alliance it was headquartered in
844:
325:; meaning "Telecommunications of Ireland") was an Irish state-owned telecommunications company that operated from 1983 to 1999. Prior to then a telephone and postal service was provided by the
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694:"Bord Telecom Éireann" is misspelled "Board Telecom Éireann" in the relevant clause in the online text; it is spelled correctly in the printed text and elsewhere in the online text.
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in 1993. GSM service rapidly replaced the TACS network as customers migrated over to new digital technology. Within a few years, the TACS network was obsolete and taken off air.
854:
523:. The system went live after 3 years of trials and development but due to poor uptake, probably due to its relatively late launch that coincided with the beginning of the
558:
This system was then controlled and operated by Voxpro
Communications, formerly Pageboy (www.voxpro.ie) until the closure of the National Paging System in August 2011.
474:) in 1984, with operations commencing in 1986. The company deployed a national mobile telephone network based on a first generation mobile technology known as the
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By the early 1990s, the Irish network was amongst the most modern and most digitalised in the world and by the mid-1990s and had become 100% digitally switched.
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638:, the fixed-line business which also inherited other minor divisions, such as the Eirpage pager system and the Telecom retail arm. Eircell was sold to
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Pentaconta technology dating from the 1960s and 1970s were converted to digital bit by bit through the late 1980s and early 1990s. These
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based payphones across
Ireland. The Telecom Éireann CallCard was one of the earliest implementations chip-based cards in the world.
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337:. Telecom Éireann was established by the Postal and Telecommunications Services Act, 1983; its full formal title was "
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345:". "Telecom Éireann" may be translated as "Telecom of Ireland". In 1999, the company was privatised and renamed as
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Telecom Éireann rolled out digital telephone switching technology, across the country along with an extensive
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Launched in 1984 to replace
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were capable of providing voice service that was comparable to digital switching technology.
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in May 2001, and later changed its name to the dual-brand
Eircell Vodafone before becoming
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This unit sold business systems and office telephone systems to business customers.
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In 1997, Telecom Éireann established
Telecom Internet also known as Tinet, the
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804:, a phone with a Telecom Éireann logo appears in the episode "Gotcha". In the
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772:"Eircell Announces Details of Eircell/Vodafone Brand Integration Strategy"
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photographed in 2009, dating from the
Telecom Éireann network upgrade.
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videotext system in
Ireland in 1991 in a joint venture with
747:"How the internet came to Ireland 1987-97 - timeline - ISP"
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backbone. Two digital switching systems were selected; CIT-
16:
Irish telecommunications company active from 1983 to 1999
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Former state-sponsored bodies of the
Republic of Ireland
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Telecom Éireann was privatised in 1999 and renamed as
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the company rapidly became one of the partners in the
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network in the late 1980s, which saw the rollout of
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51:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
825:Postal & Telecommunications Services Act, 1983
676:"Postal and Telecommunications Services Act, 1983"
850:Telecommunications companies established in 1984
551:Telecom Éireann established Eirpage, a national
815:a Telecom Éireann kiosk is seen near the end.
840:Telecommunications in the Republic of Ireland
8:
444:The company also did a major upgrade to the
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855:Technology companies disestablished in 1989
577:TEIS (Telecom Éireann Information Systems)
122:
111:Learn how and when to remove this message
707:
667:
482:for short. This technology, similar to
409:was formed between Telecom Éireann of
717:Acts of the Oireachtas as Promulgated
634:), the mobile networks business, and
320:
7:
49:adding citations to reliable sources
543:and is today known as eircom net.
343:The Irish Telecommunications Board
327:Department of Posts and Telegraphs
14:
865:1989 disestablishments in Ireland
476:Total Access Communication System
329:(known as "P and T" or "P⁊T" in
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25:
503:Minitel Ireland (joint venture)
36:needs additional citations for
860:1984 establishments in Ireland
322:[ˈtʲɛlʲəkəmˠˈeːɾʲən̪ˠ]
1:
341:or, in the English language,
181:; 25 years ago
163:; 41 years ago
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624:. It was later split into
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732:French Technical Bulletin
656:Communications in Ireland
541:Internet Neutral Exchange
537:Internet service provider
466:Telecom Éireann launched
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599:In 1988, it sponsored
389:AXE telephone exchange
368:
507:The company launched
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355:Upgrading the network
719:. Stationery Office.
339:Bord Telecom Éireann
318:Irish pronunciation:
45:improve this article
555:system in Ireland.
291:Number of employees
142:State owned company
125:
684:. Section 10(1)(b)
681:Irish Statute Book
407:strategic alliance
369:
333:), as part of the
218:St Stephen's Green
152:Telecommunications
431:St Stephens Green
397:crossbar switches
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62: –
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56:Find sources:
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34:This article
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809:
799:
793:
775:. Retrieved
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756:12 September
754:. Retrieved
751:TechArchives
750:
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686:. Retrieved
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619:
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603:until 1999.
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375:and digital
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212:Headquarters
138:Company type
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55:
43:Please help
38:verification
35:
18:
777:24 February
601:RTÉ Weather
427:Netherlands
383:'s E10 and
373:fibre optic
261:Cable radio
234:Area served
834:Categories
811:Father Ted
798:TV series
702:References
586:telephone.
450:smart card
197:Privatised
71:newspapers
813:(Speed 3)
806:Channel 4
377:microwave
301:Divisions
202:Successor
101:June 2009
801:Coupling
688:26 April
650:See also
640:Vodafone
492:Ericsson
446:payphone
385:Ericsson
249:Landline
245:Products
148:Industry
808:Series
794:In the
631:Eircell
595:Support
547:Eirpage
509:Minitel
468:Eircell
462:Eircell
456:Eircell
425:of the
411:Ireland
381:Alcatel
306:Eircell
276:Revenue
239:Ireland
226:Ireland
184: (
176:Defunct
166: (
158:Founded
85:scholar
636:eircom
620:eircom
613:Eircom
562:Eirpac
553:paging
439:Dublin
419:Sweden
348:eircom
295:13,100
222:Dublin
206:eircom
87:
80:
73:
66:
58:
662:Notes
590:2012.
478:, or
470:(now
415:Telia
92:JSTOR
78:books
779:2013
758:2023
690:2016
572:X.28
570:and
568:X.25
519:and
484:AMPS
480:TACS
433:and
421:and
284:1993
194:Fate
186:1999
179:1999
168:1983
161:1983
64:news
796:BBC
622:plc
525:Web
517:AIB
488:GSM
423:KPN
417:of
393:ITT
387:'s
280:IR£
47:by
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