Les dispositifs de mise en réseau jouent un rôle crucial en facilitant la communication et le transfert de données au sein des réseaux informatiques. Des concentrateurs aux commutateurs en passant par les ponts et les routeurs, chaque dispositif a une fonction et une utilité spécifiques. Pour maîtriser l'art de la mise en réseau, il est essentiel de bien comprendre ces dispositifs et leurs différences. Cet article fournit une analyse détaillée de chaque appareil, en expliquant leur fonction et en explorant les avantages et les inconvénients qu'ils présentent. En pénétrant dans les méandres des concentrateurs, des commutateurs, des ponts et des routeurs, les lecteurs acquerront les connaissances nécessaires pour prendre des décisions éclairées lorsqu'il s'agit de concevoir et de gérer leur infrastructure réseau.


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What is a PBX?
A PBX or Private Branch Exchange, is the part of a private telephone system that manages phone calls both internally and externally for an organization.

The PBX was developed to provide large companies a cost reduction in their telecommunications bill by letting them handle their own telephone system routing while still providing a telephone line for calling outside the companies’ network to the Public Switched Telephone Network or PSTN.

A PBX can be located on premise, in the cloud, or through a hybrid of the two. Generally speaking cloud based systems are no longer referred to as a PBX but as a Unified Communication (UC) solution or UC as a service (UCaaS).

From the technology perspective, there are four different types of phones or end points on a PBX: Analog, Digital, Voice over IP, and Session Initiation Protocol (or SIP). A PBX takes one or more of these languages and translates it so that the PSTN can understand and connect calls. To get to the PSTN, a PBX must use either a telecommunications service provider (TSP) or an internet service provider (ISP) such as AT&T, CenturyLink, Sprint, etc.

The PBX reduces costs by sharing trunk lines between multiple stations. Instead of subscribing to 100 trunk lines for 100 stations, a PBX delivers multiple stations for only one trunk line.

Maintaining and updating an organizations' PBX is an important part of keeping an organization connected. The PBX serves as a critical component of an organization’s telephone network, so minimizing system downtime is utterly vital, which includes continually keeping the network's software up to date. Complex PBX systems often require professional telephony engineers to diagnose and fix problems, which is why many companies choose to form an ongoing maintenance relationship with a specialized PBX service provider.

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