EPSS Roger Scantlebury was seconded from the
National Physical Laboratory to the British
Post Office Telecommunications division (BPO-T) in 1969. He had worked with
Donald Davies in the late 1960s pioneering the implementation of
packet switching and the associated
communication protocols on the local-area
NPL network. By 1973, BPO-T engineers had developed a packet-switching communication protocol from basic principles for an Experimental Packet Switched Service (EPSS) based on a
virtual call capability. However, the protocols were complex and limited; Donald Davies described them as "esoteric".
Ferranti supplied the hardware and software. The handling of link control messages (acknowledgements and flow control) was different from that of most other networks. The EPSS began operating in 1976, the first
public data network in the UK. EPSS was interconnected with
SATNET and the
NPL network.
IPSS The
International Packet Switch Stream (IPSS) was an international network service, based on the X.25 standard, launched by the international division of BT. This venture was driven by the high demand for affordable access to US-based database and other network services. A service was provided by IPSS to this market, which started operation in 1978. IPSS was later linked to PSS and other packet switched networks around the world using
gateways based on the
X.75 standard. IPSS was interconnected with SATNET.
JANET connections were available via IPSS.
PSS A period of pre-operational testing with customers, mainly
UK universities and
computer manufacturers, began in 1980. Packet Switch Stream launched as a commercial service on 20 August 1981 based on X.25/X.75. The experimental predecessor network (EPSS) formally closed down on 31 July 1981 after all the existing connections had been moved to PSS. The network was initially based upon a dedicated modular packet switch using DCC's TP 4000 communication processor hardware. The operating system and the packet switching software were developed by
Telenet (later on
GTE Telenet). BT bought Telenet's system via
Plessey Controls of Poole, Dorset who also sold Telex and traffic light systems. PSS was launched before Telenet's own upgrade of its network and, at the time, most other networks still used general purpose mini-computers as packet switches. For a brief time the EEC operated a packet switched network,
Euronet, and a related project
Diane to encourage more database and network services to develop in Europe. These connections moved over to PSS and other European networks as commercial X.25 services launched. Later on the InterStream gateway between the
Telex network and PSS was introduced based on a low speed PAD interface. In addition, BT used Telematics packet switches for the Vascom network to support the
Prestel service. The network management systems were based in
London and
Manchester. Packet switches were installed at major trunk exchanges in most major conurbations in the UK. Network management was run on a system of 24
Prime 63xx and 48xx computers running a modified versions of Revisions 20 and 22 of the
Primos operating system. The
DNICs used by IPSS and PSS were 2341 and 2342 respectively. The last PSS node in the UK was finally switched off Wednesday, 28 June 2006. == Description ==