Publicly Available Telephone Services
Publicly Available Telephone Services (PATS) means a service available to the public for originating and receiving national and international calls and access to emergency services through a telephone number or numbers in a national or international telephone numbering plan, and may, where relevant, also include one or more of the following:
- (a) operator assistance,
- (b) directory assistance facilities,
- (c) directories,
- (d) pay telephones,
- (e) service under special terms,
- (f) specific facilities for end-users with a disability or with special social needs, and
- (g) non-geographic services [1]
Resilience
A plain old telephone service has high reliability and is unlikely to be affected by local power outages. More modern systems require battery back-up to guard against local power outages. The United Kingdom telephone regulator, Ofcom, has published a guidance note for telephone service providers: "Protecting access to emergency organisations when there is a power cut at the customer’s premises".[2]
gollark: <@301092081827577866> go ≈ bad
gollark: (the answer is an IDE mapping tabs to 4 spaces, obviously)
gollark: BAN HIM!
gollark: To <#477912057560432680>, then...
gollark: Also, <@333530784495304705> wrote the Xenon HTML/CSS thing. Probably - it is their shop.
References
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