U.S. patents available from 1976 to present.
U.S. patent applications available from 2005 to present.

Automatic intercept system interface for electromechanical telephone central office

Patent 4791666 Issued on December 13, 1988. Estimated Expiration Date: Icon_subject June 19, 2007. Estimated Expiration Date is calculated based on simple USPTO term provisions. It does not account for terminal disclaimers, term adjustments, failure to pay maintenance fees, or other factors which might affect the term of a patent.

Patent References

3894193

Method and apparatus for revertive automatic intercept message delivery in a telephone system Patent #: 4446337
Issued on: 05/01/1984
Inventor: Cofer

Inventors

Assignee

Application

No. 07/065018 filed on 06/19/1987

US Classes:

379/213.01, Intercept (e.g., dead or changed number)379/84At switching facility (e.g., central office, switchboard)

Examiners

Primary: Dwyer, James L.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

International Class

H04Q 3/00 (20060101)

Abstract

A method and apparatus for connecting an electromechanical telephone central office having a step-by-step or cross bar type switching equipment to a remotely located automatic intercept message system. The terminating sleeve leads of a plurality of subscriber telephone numbers are connected to a scanner circuit. The sleeve leads correlate to preassigned telephone numbers and are continuously scanned for seizure. Upon detection of a service request to a disconnected or changed telephone number, the scanner seizes an outgoing trunk to a distant automatic intercept message playback system. When the outgoing trunk has been seized and a connection made to the AIS, a multifrequency spill of the telephone number which has been changed or disconnected is provided to the AIS, which in response provides an appropriate intercept message back over the trunk and is connected to the calling party. The system is microprocessor controlled, and contains a data base associating sleeve numbers with telephone numbers which form the multifrequency spill. The system makes changed number referral automatic and obviates the use of operators for providing operator number identification. A conventional DTMF telephone is employed for programming the telephone numbers and sleeve leads.

Other References

  • Notes on the Network, AT&T, 1980, pp. 12-14 of Section 4, pp. 82-88 and 101-103 of Section 5, pp. 9-11 of Section 8
PatentsPlus Images
Enhanced PDF formats
loading...
PatentsPlus: add to cart
PatentsPlus: add to cartSearch-enhanced full patent PDF image
$9.95more info
PatentsPlus: add to cart
PatentsPlus: add to cartIntelligent turbocharged patent PDFs with marked up images
$18.95more info
 
Sign InRegister
Username  
Password   
forgot password?