NZ280767A - Mobile phone interconnections: one subscriber outside home base - Google Patents

Mobile phone interconnections: one subscriber outside home base

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Publication number
NZ280767A
NZ280767A NZ280767A NZ28076793A NZ280767A NZ 280767 A NZ280767 A NZ 280767A NZ 280767 A NZ280767 A NZ 280767A NZ 28076793 A NZ28076793 A NZ 28076793A NZ 280767 A NZ280767 A NZ 280767A
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NZ
New Zealand
Prior art keywords
subscriber
mobile
call
telephone
service
Prior art date
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NZ280767A
Inventor
Walter Ghisler
Johan Falk
Jan Swerup
Bjorn Jonsson
Johan Olsson
Original Assignee
Ericsson Telefon Ab L M
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Publication date
Priority claimed from SE9202373A external-priority patent/SE500197C2/en
Application filed by Ericsson Telefon Ab L M filed Critical Ericsson Telefon Ab L M
Publication of NZ280767A publication Critical patent/NZ280767A/en

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Description

Priority Date(s): l.Slfc],32..
Complete Specification Fiied: Class: (6) ..BQ.^Ert..BQHcQ^.l^.'SS..
Publication Date: 2..6..Hffi!..S8&.
P.O. Journal No: ).!±.V9. 28 0 7 67 Under tb« provisions o# («#»en 23 (1) IS? - Specificttiion has fc-vsn to 19 *32? ---x jfcSL , .
NEW ZEALAND PATENTS ACT, 1953 No: 280767 Date: 13Jh?Jv.l993 Divided out of New Zealand Patent Specification No. 254306 COMPLETE SPECIFICATION £ A SUBSCRIBER TELEPHONE SET FOR A MOBILE RADIO NETWORK We, TELEFONAKTIEBOLAGET LM ERICSSON, a Swedish company, of S-126 25 Stockholm, Sweden, do hereby declare the invention for which we pray that a patent may be granted to us, and the method by which it is to be performed io be particularly described in and by the following statement: (followed by page - la -) la 28 0 7 67 TECHNICAL FIELD The present invention relates to a communication network and more " 5 specifically, but not exclusively, to a mobile radio network which includes service nodes that are spread over the regions served by different operators of wire-connected systems or radio systems and terminals that can - operate together with these nodes in a manner best suited to the users. The invention relates specifically to 10 a subscriber telephone set for use in such a network.
BACKGROUND ART The users of telecommunication networks have become progressively more mobile, due to the new possibilities afforded by radio tech-15 nology. For instance, cellular mobile telephone systems have enabled users in several countries to communicate on a.person-to-) person basis irrespective of where the parties are located. Even the wire-connected networks afford considerable mobility to present-day subscribers, for instance as a result of the forward 20 connection facilities of such networks.
However, servicing of mobile users is still deficient, partly because the various areas, such as countries or regions in large countries, are controlled by mutually independent wire-connected network or radio network operators, and partly because different 25 standards are applied, for instance standards such as AMPS, TAC5, NMT, and so on, and because cooperation between these operators is insufficient.
This deficiency, or shortcoming, is particularly pronounced in the case of long-distance traffic in large countries ai^d^n inter-30 national traffic.
WO 94/05129 PCT/SE93/00629 280767 Although the U.S.A. applies standard EIA/TIA IS-41 which enables cellular radio telephony subscribers to obtain services from other operators than their own, the functionality level of such services controlled by foreign operators is lower than the ovr* operator and 5 consequently only a minimum of functions are standardized in EIA/TIA IS-41. Furthermore, the standards of competing operators are applied only when forced by their subscribers, and not at all over the whole of the U.S.A.
Different countries, for instance European countries, each have 10 one or more operators. The cooperation between these operators is configured such that they cooperate mutually solely with functions which provide them with income. For instance, if a subscriber in France connected to the global mobile radio system GSM calls a GSM-subscriber who resides in Sweden and the Swedish subscriber is 15 in Spain on business and carries his GSM-mobile station with him, the agreement is that the Swedish operator may not divulge information from his Home Location Register, HLR, so as to enable the French-Spanish connection to be established directly, despite being technically possible in the GSM-system, and the call must be 20 connected through France-Sweden-Spain, because the Swedish operator would have no income from the call if it were established directly.
Interstandard roaming is another problem in long-distance traffic. If a Swedish NMT (Nordic Mobile Telephone Network) subscriber 25 travels to England on business and there hires a TACS mobile telephone, it is impossible for him to debit his NMT subscription, and only a limited possibility (only a certain number of digits can be stored for the number referred to) of directing an incoming call from Sweden directly to England. All he can do is to leave a 30 message on an NMT telephone answering machine in Sweden asking the caller to call a given number in England.
The published European Patent Application EP-A2-454,647 describes a mobile communication system in which the exchange which is located nearest a given A-subscriber who requests an outgoing call 35 to a given B-subscriber collects information concerning the place 280767 of residence of the B-subscriber and then establish a connection to this place of residence through the shortest route instead of via domestic exchange of the B-subscriber. The drawback with this solution to finding an optimal connection route is that it can only be used when the mobile radio exchanges concerned belong to one and the same operator or belong to operators which cooperate with one another. It would be desirable to find a general solution which is operator-independent and which can be achieved outside the mobile radio systems concerned in the network.
Swedish Patent Application 9200465-4 describes a method and an arrangement which can be used together with the present invention to solve the aforesaid problems.
DISCLOSURE OF THE INVENTION Several inventions are described in the present specification and in NZ 254306 from which the present specification has been divided.
It is an object of the inventions to make possible effective international and interregional traffic with high functionally to and from persons who otherwise can only reach one another via complicated procedures or can be reached only by non-optimal route selection, or which are given unsatisfactory functionality levels in cooperation between the national or regional operators. When referring to different countries in the following text, this reference is also meant to include the regions of a large country.
This object is realized in accordance with the inventions by spreading an international overlay-network of service nodes (SN) over several countries. Subscribers to cellular or stationary networks are able to subscribe to the SN-services, which stores and maintains updated information concerning the functionality of the subscribers and in which countries the subscribers are located. The subscribers contribute towards maintaining the SN-services updated with regard to their functionality and country of residence, by automatically or manually registering calls with the SN-services when moving from one country to another. The SN-services use the registered information to connect calls with the desired functionality and over the cheapest route to desired B- subscriber. The SN-service has at least one access node ("service node" or "gateway") per country.
The access nodes form superior hone location registers (HLR) , in which solely information concerning countries of residence is 5 stored, whereas detailed information concerning places of residence is handled by the cellular mobile telephone system of the country concerned, in its or their home location registers. The SN-nodes are mutually connected through the agency of data links between which information is exchanged with regard to the 10 countries of residence, and are mutually connected via traffic channels (e.g. telephone lines) for subscriber speech and data traffic. Long-distance calls are initiated, for instance, with a service-prefix (020 in Sweden, 800 in the U.S.A., etc.), plus a service number, for instance 123456, which identifies the SN-15 service and which enables connection to the nearest located SN-node. The desired B-number, for instance 010 3487685, is then sent to the SN-service, which organizes the remainder of the call connection.
Another object is to offer to subscribers various services which they cannot obtain in the public networks, for instance different call qualities at different prices in the case of long-distance calls, by using different speech coding rates.
A further object is to offer these services to subscribers without subjecting them to new procedures, as far as 25 possible. This is achieved by special terminals which translate normal number dialling to the special number dialling, e.g. 020 123456 010 3487685, required to connect outgoing long-distance calls via the nearest SN-nede. The special terminals may include an analyzer which determines in which cases calls shall be 30 connected via the SN-node and In which cases they shall be set-up directly. The analyzer decision table can be updated from an SN-node in a new country in which the subscriber has just arrived, by sending an updated table to the special terminal. 280767 A communication network and a method for establishing connections in one such communication network is claimed in NZ 254306.
A telephone set for use in the communication network is claimed 5 in the present specification while a regiscrauion procedure used in such a telephone set is claimed in NZ 254JG6.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS The invention will now be described in more detail with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which Figure 1 is a block diagram which illustrates a communication network having three mobile radio systems in accordance with the 15 invention; Figure 2 is a flowchart associated with the systems according to Figure 1 and illustrating a known method of setting calls; Figure 3 is a flowchart associated with the systems according to Figure 1 and illustrates the inventive method; Figure 4 is a block diagram which illustrates a known mobile telephone set that has been modified in accordance with the invention; and Figures 5-6 are flowcharts which illustrate respectively call connection and registration in accordance with the invention.
BEST MODES OF CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION Figure 1 is a block diagram which illustrates schematically three different mobile radio systems in which those blocks relevant to 30 the description of the present invention have been included. All three systems utilize one and the same standard, although the systems have mutually different system identification and may have mutually different operators. It is assumed by way of example and with the intention of facilitating the following 35 description that WO 94/05129 PCT/SE93/00629 280767 -the common standard is the EIA/TIA IS-54 standard, i.e. the standard adopted by the U.S.A. for mobile radio systems. It is also assumed that the systems SI, S2, S3 are utilized by different operators, i.e. two different operators utilize the systems S2 and > S3 and SI, respectively and cooperate mutually so that the three different systems can communicate with one another. Each of the systems has a system identification number (SID) which is characteristic for the system concerned and which is used by the mobile radio units when registering, for instance.
In the illustrated case, the mobile radio system si includes a known mobile services switching centre MSC1 which is connected to the wire-connected public switched telephone network PSTN, which connects wire-bound calls to and from subscribers within the area or region covered by the system SI and which also connects 15 interurban calls to and from the system SI to remaining systems S2, S3 and between systems in other areas or regions, for instance abroad, when the systems S1-S3 all belong to a certain country.
A given mobile subscriber A, for instance a mobile telephone, is able to establish a connection, or have a connection established }20 with the mobile services switching centre MSC1 via a base station (not shown in detail) in a known manner, make a call to another mobile or wire-connected subscriber within or outside the system SI. A wire-connected subscriber Al, for instance a typical telephone, may have a connection established at the public (25 switched telephone network PSTN for calls to another wire-connected or cordless subscriber.
In the illustrated case, the mobile radio system S2 also comprises a mobile services switching centre MSC2 of known kind, which is connected to the public switched telephone network PSTN. The 30 illustrated system S2 also includes a first register HLR, a so-called Home Location Register , which contains typically a list of all mobile subscribers that belong to the system S2, the so-called home mobiles, irrespective of where these mobiles are located. The illustrated system S2 also includes a second VLR, (a so-called 35 Visitor Location Register), which includes a list of the mobiles WO 94/05129 „ PCT/SE93/00629 280767 that have roamed into the system S2 as visitors but which belong to other mobile radio systems. similarly, the illustrated mobile radio system S3 includes a mobile services switching centre MSC3 and associated home location 5 register HLR3 and visitor location register VLR3. It is assumed that the subscriber referenced B in Figure 1 with whom the A-subscriber in system SI wishes to establish a call has roamed from his home system, system S2, and at the time of the call from subscriber A is located in system S3.
If the subscriber A in system SI wishes to set up a call to the subscriber B who has roamed into the system S3, as illustrated in Figure 1, this can be achieved in accordance with the earlier known technique through the home system S2 of the B-subscriber, in accordance with the flowchart shown in Figure 2.
In this flowchart, it is assumed that the mobile subscriber A will establish a connection with the subscriber B now located in system S3. Subscriber A therefore calls his mobile services switching centre MSC1, which establishes a connection with the mobile services switching centre MSC2 in system S2 (block 2 in the flow-20 chart).
Because subscriber B belongs to the system S2, the mobile services switching centre MSC2 makes an inquiry at its home location register HLR2 and is informed that subscriber B is located in system S3 (blocks 3 and 5).
The mobile services switching centre MSC2 then connects the connection incoming from MSC1 to the mobile services switching centre MSC3 via PSTN. The mobile services switching centre MSC3 then connects the mobile subscriber B after having localized subscriber B by making an inquiry in the visitor location register 30 VLR3, and subscriber A has therewith been connected with subscriber B, block 6, 7 in Figure 2. The operator of system S2 will therewith bill a certain fee for the time of the call over the connection from system S2 to system S3.
WO 94/05129 g PCT/SE93/00629 280767 According to the proposed invention, mobile communication networks, for instance a network of the kind illustrated in Figure 1, is provided with service nodes and terminals capable of cooperating with these nodes, i.e. a new subscriber service is 5 introduced into those systems within which the subscribers can move when roaming from one system to another. Accordingly, transit exchanges, preferably PABX-exchanges, are introduced into the system complex illustrated in Figure 1, these exchanges functioning as access nodes and service nodes for the subscribers of 10 those systems served by each of the nodes. In the illustrative embodiment shown in Figure 1, a node (PABX-exchange) solely serves a given system, although it will be understood that such a node may also be extended to serve several systems, each being characterized by its system identification number (SID).
In the present case, the designation PSTN stands for the public switched telephone network, in this case covering the whole of the U.S.A., including, among other things, local exchanges, transit exchanges and connections therebetween.
Connected to the PSTN-network is a known PABX-exchange, PABX1, so as to form a subscriber service node within the system si. The exchange PABX1 may comprise, for instance, a so-called private exchange MD 110, which is described in "System ASB 501 04" with document number 1551-ASB50104 Uen from ERICSSON, and is connected, for instance, to a local exchange in the public network PSTN by 5 means of a typical PABX-route to the local exchange. The subscriber A, whether a mobile subscriber or a wire-connected subscriber, is therefore able to connect with the PABX-exchange PABX1 in a conventional manner.
The private exchange PABX2 is also connected to the public 30 services telephone network PSTN, for instance connected to a local exchange in the network PSTN in a similar manner as the private exchange PABX1 is connected to a local exchange in the PSTN-network at syetem S2. Finally, a service node is formed in the system S3 by connecting a private exchange PABX3 to the public .WO 94/05129 PCT/SE93/00629 280767 network PSTN in a similar manner. The reference PSTN has the same significance in this case as that before mentioned.
The private exchanges PABX1~PABX3 store and update information concerning the functionality of associated subscribers, including 5 the location of these subscribers. Updating of the country or region in which the subscribers are located is done by the subscribers themselves, either automatically or manually, for instance by dialling a code which gives access to the home node, i.e. in this case to the exchange PABX2, and which discloses to where 10 the subscriber has moved, in this case to the region of the system S3. This will be described in more detail below, with reference to Figure 6.
Updating can also be effected by associated (serving) mobile telephone exchanges, in the present case the exchange MSC2, with 15 the aid of the register HLR2, for those mobile telephone subscribers who subscribe to this service with their mobile telephone operator. This assumes, however, that the mobile telephone operators cooperate in accordance with the inventive service. In this case, the subscribers are able to use known standard mobile 20 telephone sets which need not register themselves (according to that described with reference to Figure 6) in addition to the standardized registration.
A signal path S is formed between the nodes PABX1, PABX2 and PABX3, and may consist of existing data transmission connections with 25 associated modem equipment in respective switching centres or exchanges PABX1, PABX2 and PABX3. Information concerning the place of residence and possibly also the functionality of the subscribers in respective systems is exchanged over this connection, from and to said exchanges. Thus, the subscriber B whose home system is 30 S2 but who has moved to system S3 sends information to his home service node, i.e. the exchange PABX2, concerning this move. The service node of the subscriber B has a certain memory space and when the subscriber has roamed into another system, in this example system S3, the code for this system is written into the 35 memory space. The service node of the system SI, i.e. the exchange WO 94/05129 PCT/SE93/00629 k 10 280767 PABX l, is therefore able to collect information concerning roaming of the subscriber through the data connection S.
Similarly, when subscriber A belonging to system SI has roamed into another system, subscriber A will inform his PABX of the code 5 of the system into which he has roamed, this code being written into the memory space reserved for subscriber A in his PABX. The present invention is not concerned with such roaming, and will not therefore be described here.
According to the aforegoing, the exchanges PABX1-PABX3 which form 10 respective nodes of the systems S1-S3 can be considered as transit exchanges and as superior home registers HLR in addition to those registers HLR1-HLR3 which belong to respective systems S1-S3.
The case when a subscriber A wishes to establish a call connection in accordance with the proposed method will now be described in IS more detail with reference to the flowchart shown in Figure 3.
The subscriber A, for instance a mobile telephone subscriber, calls his base station (not shown here) and is connected to the nearest mobile services switching centre MSCl. The call includes a service number which indicates that subsc iber A wishes to be 20 connected via the service given by the service node belonging to the home system SI of the subscriber. Block 1 in the flowchart.
The service call is connected to PABX1, for instance over a local exchange in PSTN and a PABX-route, block 2 in the flowchart, and PABX1 sends to subscriber A a query concerning the number of 25 subscriber B, block 3 in the flowchart.
The exchange PABX1 receives the number of subscriber B and signals to the exchange PABX2 over the signalling route S and learns that subscriber B has roamed into system S3. Blocks 4-5, 8 in the flowchart. When the exchange FABX2 indicates that subscriber B is 30 located in his home system, "Yes", the call is connected via PABXl and PABX2, according to blocks 6, 7 in Figure 3. fcWO 94/05129 PCT/SE93/00629 f 11 28076 When PABX1 establishes that subscriber B is located in system S3, ("No" in block 5), P&BX1 requests a connection with PABX3 over the public switched telephone network PSTN. This is effected through a PABX-number, prihciply in the same known manner as that by means 5 of which a normal subscriber would be connected from PABX1 to PABX3 by PSTN. However, PABX1 at the same time sends a request to PABX3 asking to be first connected with subscriber B in system S3, blocks 9, 10 in the flowchart. In this case, if PABX3 confirms that subscriber B is connected in system S3 ("Yes" at block 10), a 10 connection is established (block 11) between the subscribes A and B over a route: A - MSCl - PSTN - Trans it PABX1 - PSTN - Transit-PABX3 - PSTN - MSC3 - B. This connection route has been shown with arrows in Figure 1.
If the B-subscriber has not been connected by PABX3, this may be 15 because the B-subscriber has not yet answered. A certain length of time is then allowed to pass before connecting the call through PABX1-PABX3, block 11.
The main difference between the novel call and call-connection method according to the present invention and the earlier known 20 technique is that with the inventive system, the home system of the called subscriber B need not engage in any call-connecting procedure and need not be encumbered with call time which shall actually be handled by the visited system. The advantages afforded thereby are obvious, the extent to which the home system is 25 occupied is considerably smaller for all roaming home subscribers, therewith greatly increasing the capacity of the home system for non-roaming home subscribers and for visiting subscribers which are unable to utilize the inventive method. Furthermore, the B-subscriber does not have to pay for the unnecessary additional 30 cost of routing the call via the home system.
In another communication network than tne aforedescribed, there is found a subscriber A from a given country (France) who wishes to call a roaming subscriber B from his home country (Sweden), but who is located in a third country (Spain). Although the operators 35 in these three countries are mutually different, the standard used WO 94/05129 12 PCI7SE93/00629 280767 by the three different systems in said countries is the same, similar to Figure l. The global mobile radio system GSM is taken as an example of a common standard, this standard being common to several European countries, such as Sweden, France and Spain, for 5 instance. The principles of a service call to the service node PABXl, queries and call connection are the same as in the case illustrated in Figure 1.
A third communication network case differs from the earlier cases in that, in addition to several countries and several operators, 10 several standards are also applied. For instance, it can be assumed that the countries concerned are France which employs the GSM-standard, system SI, Sweden which employs the NMT-standard, system S2, and Italy which employs the TACS-standard, system S3.
In the case of three different standards, GSM, NMT and TACS, it is 15 totally impossible to connect a call from subscriber A in. France to a Swedish subscriber B who has roamed to Italy by means of the earlier known method. This is because the NMT-mobile telephone services switching centre MSC2 in Sweden is not programmed to connect a subscriber with the TACS-mobile telephone services 20 switching centre MSC3 in Italy, compare Figure 1. Thus, in this particular case, there is no realistic alternative to the inventive method.
In this third case, the inventive method is the same as that employed in the case according to Figure 1. The only difference is 25 that the service node PABX2 in Sweden sends to the French service node PABXl the TACS-number which the Swedish subscriber uses in Italy in addition to the number of the node PABX3 in Italy.
The problem with which the exchange PABXl is faced is that the exchange cannot know the TACS-number which the roaming subscriber 30 B has been given in Italy. Subscriber B may have hired a TACS-set and been given a number which cannot be found available in exchange PABXl. Consequently, subscriber B effects a registration at his home service node, by calling the exchange PABX2 in a manner which will be described further on with reference to Figure 6. dVO 94/05129 13 PCT/SE93/00629 280767 This exchange is then able, in turn, to inform PABXl of the new subscriber B number, in accordance with the method earlier described in conjunction with signalling between PABXl and PABX2.
It is assumed that the exchange PABXl has been informed of the 5 subscriber B TACS-number, in the aforesaid manner. The exchange PABXl sends this number to the exchange PABX3, which with the aid of the mobile services switching centre MSC3 and associated home and visitor location registers HLR3, VLR3 establishes that subscriber B is located in Italy and calls the subscriber. The 10 call is then connected in the same manner as that described with reference to Figure 1.
The inventive method and inventive system of obtaining access to the service nodes PABX1-PABX3 requires minor modification to the mobile telephone set used in the mobile radio systems S1-S3 and 15 having signed a subscription to the inventive services.
Figure A is a block diagram which illustrates a known mobile station according to Swedish Patent Application 9200336-7, which has been modified so as to enable, e.g., subscriber A to use the mobile station in accordance with what has been described with 20 reference to Figure 1.
The mobile station 700 has an antenna 710. A transmitter 720 is connected to the antenna 710 and is controlled by a transmitter control unit 752. The transmitter is also connected to a signal processor unit 740. Similarly, a receiver is connected to the 25 antenna and is used in time multiplex together with the transmitter. The receiver 730 is also connected to the signal processor unit 740. The blocks 720 and 730 also include radio equipment for modulating and demodulating, and equalizers.
The signal processor unit 740 includes channel coding, channel 30 decoding and signal processing of speech in both an incoming and outgoing direction. The signal processor unit 740 is also connected to a microphone and telephone receiver in block 741, and to control logic 750. In turn, this control logic is connected to WO 94/05129 PCT/SE93/00629 14 280767 the transmitter control unit 752 and to an I/O-block 753 which adapts the signals for keypads and display windows in block 760. Modification of the mobile station in accordance with the invention is realized in the form of data or a program seguence in 5 the control logic 750 and has been designated 751 "supplementary logic".
The flowchart of Figure 5 illustrates more clearly the modus operandi of the mobile radio telephone set shown in Figure 4 when its subscriber uses the service nodes according to Figure 1 and 10 the Figure 3 flowchart.
The subscriber A in Figure 1 wishes to make a call to the subscriber B who has roamed from his home region SI to region S3, a fact of which subscriber A is unaware. Subscriber A dials the number of subscriber B on the keypad 760 of his telephone set, according to 15 Figure 4, and the number is analyzed by the AL-unit 751 in the mobile telephone set control unit 750. Blocks 1 and 2 in Figure 5.
The logic 751 investigates whether or not the dialled subscriber number belongs to a subscriber within the same system SI as the own subscriber is located, or whether the dialled number belongs to 20 another system. In the Figure 1 example, subscriber B belongs to system S2 (San Francisco) but has roamed to system S3 (Los Angeles) , whereas subscriber A is located in system SI (Chicago) . If the logic 751 now finds that the dialled subscriber B is a foreign subscriber (i.e. a subscriber which does not have its home 25 in system SI), "No" in block 3 of the Figure 5 flowchart, the telephone set calls its nearest service node, i.e. in this case the PABX-exchange PABXl, by means of a typical call to such an exchange and over the public switched telephone network PSTN. The procedure then followed in connecting a call between subscriber A 30 and subscriber B is the same as that earlier described with reference to Figure 1. When the telephone set A has established that the called subscriber B belongs to the same system as subscriber A, "Yes" in block 3 of the flowchart, the B-subscriber is called in a fully normal and known manner in accordance with the WO 94/05129 PCT/SE93/00619 fe 15 280767 standard prescribed for the system, block 4, in the illustrated case the American standard IS-54.
Each subscriber connected to the service which can be handled by the service nodes according to the above must register with these 5 nodes in order for the service node of the calling subscriber to obtain information as to the system into which the called subscriber has roamed. Consequently, the subscriber telephone set, either an own telephone set which has been carried to the visiting system or a hired telephone set, must have a program in its control logic 10 750 which carries out this registration. This is illustrated in the Figure 6 flowchart. Compare, however, what has been said above with regard to the case in which the mobile telephone operators cooperate with one another and in which updating can be effected by associated mobile telephone exchanges.
It is assumed that subscriber B, who is connected to the services and is located in visitor system S3, has hired a telephone set which contains supplementary logic according to the aforegoing, and activates the telephone set with the intention of being able to receive incoming calls. The telephone set receives a so-called "overhead message train1* (OMT, which is standard in the U.S.A.) from the mobile services switching centre MSC3 of the visitor system, this switching centre containing, among other things, the system identification number SID3. Stored in the telephone set is a system identification number SID2 for the preceding place of (^5 residence, in this case the system S2, and the telephone set ascertains whether or not these two identification numbers are the same, blocks 1-3 in Figure 6. If the two identification numbers are the same, "Yes1* in block 3, no further measures are taken by the telephone set. On the other hand, if the numbers are not the 30 same, **NoH, the telephone set calls its home service node, i.e. the exchange PABX2, and registers itself with this exchange, since the subscriber is at home in system S2. the telephone set registers its identity and its system identification SID in the system S3 in which the subscriber is visiting.
WO 94/05129 ,, PCT/SE93/00629 16 280767 When the subscriber roams into the visitor system S3 with his hired telephone set activated, registration is effected in the same manner as that described above, beginning with the telephone set reading the aforesaid OMT.
Registration in accordance with the aforegoing, i.e. transmission of the subscriber call and identity, can be effected conveniently over a traffic channel, as opposed to typical registration between a mobile station and a mobile telephone switching centre effected by means of standardized signalling.
Another type of call which may be necessary to effect in conjunction with the use of the service nodes in accordance with the .invention is the so-called "characterization call". Such a call is primarily concerned with loading new data in the block AL in the mobile telephone set according to Figure 4, primarily the 15 telephone number of the nearest service node (PABX). Other parameters in the subscriber telephone set may also be concerned, however. A call of this nature can be initiated by a service node (PABX) or can be made in conjunction with the aforesaid registration procedure, when a given service node, for instance the 20 exchange PABX2, is connected to the subscriber, in this case subscriber B, due to new SlD-registration. The exchange PABX2 loads the logic in the control unit 751 of the subscriber telephone set with the new information according to the above.
The invention has been described with reference to examples in 25 which the nodes are comprised of private exchanges PABX connected in the PSTN in the subscriber multiple. It will be obvious to those skilled in this art, however, that the nodes may alternatively be comprised of switches in the public switched telephone network PSTN, wherewith calls may be connected to these switches with a 30 simple prefix in front of the desired B-number, for instance 300 010 3487685, where 300 is the prefix, or without any prefix at all when the public switched telephone network PSTN uses the inventive services for all subscribers.
.WO 94/05129 PCT/SE93/00629 280767 The invention has also be described in the aforegoing with reference to examples in which the nodes are all found in the telephone network. It will be obvious to those skilled in this art, however, that the nodes may alternatively be connected to 5 other networks, for instance to mobile data networks or to several networks simultaneously, as described in Swedish Patent Application 9200465-4 mentioned above. Among other things, this enables the B-subscriber to be paged in several networks simultaneously.
The storage function can also be centralized in the nodes, by 10 combining information concerning the system in which the roaming subscriber B is located, from the individual PABX-exchanges (according to Figure 1) to a remote central unit which is connected to PSTN. 18

Claims (2)

WHAT WE CLAIM IS: 280767
1 . A subscriber telephone set having a given identity in a mobile radio system, for use in conjunction with establishing a telephone connection between a first mobile subscriber and a second mobile subscriber by means of a number of service nodes, each of which is assigned one of a number of mobile radio systems, of which a first system constitutes the system in which the first subscriber is located and a second mobile radio system constitutes the home system of the second subscriber but where the second subscriber has roamed to a third mobile radio system, wherein the first subscriber sends a call for the establishment of a connection over associated service nodes, said telephone set comprising: transmitter/receiver means, a control unit together with signal processing means to control and to process the transmitting and receiving of telephone speech calls to and from the set, and a keyboard/display means characterized by: a) arithmetic-logic means for storing a number of instructions relating to those subscribers which are connected to a service afforded by said service nodes, and for analyzing a telephone number of a called subscriber with regard to residence based on said stored instructions for deriving from these instructions the home system and an associated functionality of said called subscriber; b) means in said control unit for activating said signal processor means in conjunction with said call and when the called subscriber belongs to a mobile radio system other than the system of the calling subscriber; and » , I »< 19 28076 c) means responsibe to the activation of said signal processor means to initiate said transmission means to transmit a call to the service node which is assigned to the system in which the calling 5 subscriber is located, for requesting that this service node establishes a connection with the called subscriber in cooperation with the service node of the called subscriber. 10
2. A subscriber telephone set substantially as herein described with reference to Figures 3 to 6 of the accompanying drawings. 15 DATED THISl^DM OC^ 19<^° I, PABK & SON FOR THE APPUCAOTS 25
NZ280767A 1992-08-18 1993-07-15 Mobile phone interconnections: one subscriber outside home base NZ280767A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
SE9202373A SE500197C2 (en) 1992-08-18 1992-08-18 Communication network, method of establishing a connection and registration method in such a network
NZ254306A NZ254306A (en) 1992-08-18 1993-07-15 Mobile radio communication routing of call to subscriber away from from home system

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
NZ280767A true NZ280767A (en) 1996-11-26

Family

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Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
NZ280767A NZ280767A (en) 1992-08-18 1993-07-15 Mobile phone interconnections: one subscriber outside home base

Country Status (1)

Country Link
NZ (1) NZ280767A (en)

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