Knowledge (XXG)

Telecom Éireann

Source 📝

360: 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. 131: 585:
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
589:
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 849: 839: 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. 494:
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 402:
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.
864: 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 334: 859: 395:
Pentaconta technology dating from the 1960s and 1970s were converted to digital bit by bit through the late 1980s and early 1990s. These
44: 475: 452:
based payphones across Ireland. The Telecom Éireann CallCard was one of the earliest implementations chip-based cards in the world.
326: 110: 91: 63: 730: 48: 70: 824: 483: 337:. Telecom Éireann was established by the Postal and Telecommunications Services Act, 1983; its full formal title was " 77: 345:". "Telecom Éireann" may be translated as "Telecom of Ireland". In 1999, the company was privatised and renamed as 37: 655: 540: 536: 59: 371:
Telecom Éireann rolled out digital telephone switching technology, across the country along with an extensive
800: 388: 675: 264: 746: 217: 486:, was also used in the UK by Vodafone and Cellnet. Eircell launched their digital network based on 410: 300: 238: 225: 141: 771: 84: 680: 600: 566:
Launched in 1984 to replace Euronet, Eirpac is the Irish public switched data network supporting
516: 406: 151: 520: 430: 399:
were capable of providing voice service that was comparable to digital switching technology.
643: 471: 305: 256: 642:
in May 2001, and later changed its name to the dual-brand Eircell Vodafone before becoming
434: 396: 268: 359: 524: 512: 380: 321: 833: 414: 364: 252: 581:
This unit sold business systems and office telephone systems to business customers.
130: 426: 372: 330: 260: 26: 535:
In 1997, Telecom Éireann established Telecom Internet also known as Tinet, the
810: 804:, a phone with a Telecom Éireann logo appears in the episode "Gotcha". In the 449: 805: 376: 772:"Eircell Announces Details of Eircell/Vodafone Brand Integration Strategy" 639: 491: 445: 392: 384: 248: 630: 508: 467: 461: 367:
photographed in 2009, dating from the Telecom Éireann network upgrade.
618: 612: 438: 418: 347: 221: 205: 279: 552: 358: 571: 567: 479: 795: 487: 422: 20: 735:. Economic Section of the French Embassy in the U.S.A. 1968. 511:
videotext system in Ireland in 1991 in a joint venture with
747:"How the internet came to Ireland 1987-97 - timeline - ISP" 379:
backbone. Two digital switching systems were selected; CIT-
16:
Irish telecommunications company active from 1983 to 1999
845:
Former state-sponsored bodies of the Republic of Ireland
617:
Telecom Éireann was privatised in 1999 and renamed as
539:
the company rapidly became one of the partners in the
448:
network in the late 1980s, which saw the rollout of
299: 289: 275: 244: 232: 211: 201: 193: 175: 157: 147: 137: 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 123: 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 129: 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 881: 624:. It was later split into 610: 459: 732:French Technical Bulletin 656:Communications in Ireland 541:Internet Neutral Exchange 537:Internet service provider 466:Telecom Éireann launched 128: 599:In 1988, it sponsored 389:AXE telephone exchange 368: 507:The company launched 362: 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 311: 310: 285: 282:788 million 121: 120: 113: 95: 60:"Telecom Éireann" 872: 783: 782: 780: 778: 768: 762: 761: 759: 757: 743: 737: 736: 727: 721: 720: 715:Ireland (1983). 712: 695: 693: 691: 689: 672: 644:Vodafone Ireland 626:Eircell 2000 plc 531:Telecom Internet 490:technology from 472:Vodafone Ireland 405:In June 1996, a 324: 319: 283: 257:Cable television 189: 187: 182: 171: 169: 164: 133: 126: 116: 109: 105: 102: 96: 94: 53: 29: 21: 880: 879: 875: 874: 873: 871: 870: 869: 830: 829: 821: 792: 790:Popular culture 787: 786: 776: 774: 770: 769: 765: 755: 753: 745: 744: 740: 729: 728: 724: 714: 713: 709: 704: 699: 698: 687: 685: 674: 673: 669: 664: 652: 615: 609: 597: 521:Crédit Lyonnais 500: 498:Other divisions 464: 458: 435:Harcourt Street 357: 317: 314:Telecom Éireann 292: 269:Cable telephony 235: 228: 216:Ardilaun Hall, 185: 183: 180: 167: 165: 162: 124:Telecom Éireann 117: 106: 100: 97: 54: 52: 42: 30: 17: 12: 11: 5: 878: 876: 868: 867: 862: 857: 852: 847: 842: 832: 831: 828: 827: 820: 819:External links 817: 791: 788: 785: 784: 763: 738: 722: 706: 705: 703: 700: 697: 696: 666: 665: 663: 660: 659: 658: 651: 648: 611:Main article: 608: 605: 596: 593: 592: 591: 587: 579: 578: 564: 563: 549: 548: 533: 532: 513:France Telecom 505: 504: 499: 496: 460:Main article: 457: 454: 356: 353: 309: 308: 303: 297: 296: 293: 290: 287: 286: 277: 273: 272: 265:Cable Internet 246: 242: 241: 236: 233: 230: 229: 215: 213: 209: 208: 203: 199: 198: 195: 191: 190: 177: 173: 172: 159: 155: 154: 149: 145: 144: 139: 135: 134: 119: 118: 33: 31: 24: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 877: 866: 863: 861: 858: 856: 853: 851: 848: 846: 843: 841: 838: 837: 835: 826: 823: 822: 818: 816: 814: 812: 807: 803: 802: 797: 789: 773: 767: 764: 752: 748: 742: 739: 734: 733: 726: 723: 718: 711: 708: 701: 683: 682: 677: 671: 668: 661: 657: 654: 653: 649: 647: 645: 641: 637: 633: 632: 627: 623: 621: 614: 607:Privatisation 606: 604: 602: 594: 588: 584: 583: 582: 576: 575: 574: 573: 569: 561: 560: 559: 556: 554: 546: 545: 544: 542: 538: 530: 529: 528: 526: 522: 518: 514: 510: 502: 501: 497: 495: 493: 489: 485: 481: 477: 473: 469: 463: 455: 453: 451: 447: 442: 440: 436: 432: 428: 424: 420: 416: 412: 408: 403: 400: 398: 394: 390: 386: 382: 378: 374: 366: 365:manhole cover 361: 354: 352: 350: 349: 344: 340: 336: 335:civil service 332: 331:Gaelic script 328: 323: 315: 307: 304: 302: 298: 294: 288: 281: 278: 274: 270: 266: 262: 258: 254: 253:digital cable 251:, Analog and 250: 247: 243: 240: 237: 231: 227: 223: 219: 214: 210: 207: 204: 200: 196: 192: 178: 174: 160: 156: 153: 150: 146: 143: 140: 136: 132: 127: 115: 112: 104: 93: 90: 86: 83: 79: 76: 72: 69: 65: 62: –  61: 57: 56:Find sources: 50: 46: 40: 39: 34:This article 32: 28: 23: 22: 19: 809: 799: 793: 775:. Retrieved 766: 756:12 September 754:. Retrieved 751:TechArchives 750: 741: 731: 725: 716: 710: 686:. Retrieved 679: 670: 635: 629: 625: 619: 616: 603:until 1999. 598: 580: 565: 557: 550: 534: 506: 465: 443: 404: 401: 375:and digital 370: 346: 342: 338: 313: 312: 212:Headquarters 138:Company type 107: 98: 88: 81: 74: 67: 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 836:: 749:. 678:. 646:. 515:, 441:. 437:, 413:, 363:A 351:. 267:, 263:, 259:, 224:, 220:, 781:. 760:. 692:. 628:( 316:( 271:) 255:( 188:) 170:) 114:) 108:( 103:) 99:( 89:· 82:· 75:· 68:· 41:.

Index


verification
improve this article
adding citations to reliable sources
"Telecom Éireann"
news
newspapers
books
scholar
JSTOR
Learn how and when to remove this message

State owned company
Telecommunications
eircom
St Stephen's Green
Dublin
Ireland
Ireland
Landline
digital cable
Cable television
Cable radio
Cable Internet
Cable telephony
IR£
Divisions
Eircell
[ˈtʲɛlʲəkəmˠˈeːɾʲən̪ˠ]
Department of Posts and Telegraphs

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.