User Contributed Dictionary
- Plural of marker
Extensive Definition
- For other meanings, see the disambiguation page Marker
Markers were sometimes referred to as special
purpose computers but,
lacking
stored program control, they were not computers according to
the understanding of the middle 20th Century. After unfruitful
German efforts in the 1920s, they were successfully developed at
Bell
Labs in the 1930s to support the then new generation of
crossbar
switches which were replacing the Step-by-Step
switches and Panel
switches of the first generation of automatic switching.
Markers were built from relays (wire
spring relays and other kinds). Different types of markers
performed various specialized hard-wired operations. For example,
1XB
switches had separate markers for incoming and outgoing calls.
5XB
switches had dial tone markers to select one of a number of
shared digit receivers (termed originating registers) and connect
it to a subscriber who wished to make a telephone call. The digit
receiver would collect the digits of the call and make them
available to other markers which would use them for routing
purposes. In this case the Completing Marker would mark a proper
path of idle links for the call to make through the mechanical
voice switching matrix.
Markers were used in the design of switches from
the 1930s until the late 1960s when they were replaced with
software controlled electronic computers of modern design.
The term marker came from its use to mark a path
of links through the switching
fabric. A marker's comprehensive view of the switching fabric
allowed it to find and assemble a path from one terminal to
another, if the links were available, unlike the earlier graded
progressive systems in which a path might not be found.
During the middle 20th Century markers in Bell
System exchanges, being complex common
control circuits with short holding time, acquired other
functions that were only needed once or twice per telephone
call, including outgoing digit translation and enforcement of
different policies upon different classes of
service in the provision of features
to customers. This practice evolved into Customer Groups, allowing
the addition of Centrex features to
5XB
switch. These were the most complex markers made, and were
abandoned in the 1970s and 1980s when
Stored Program Control became mature.
Markers were mostly associated with crossbar
switches, but many non Bell System crossbar exchanges did not use
them. Where those exchanges had markers, for example in the British
TXK or the
Ericsson ARM, they were simpler, the digit translation jobs that
were added to Bell System markers being handled by other
equipment.