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Plain old telephone service

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Plain old telephone service, or POTS, is a term which describes the voice-grade telephone service that remains the basic form of residential and small business service connection to the telephone network nearly everywhere in the world. The name is a reflection of the telephone service still available after the advent of more advanced forms of telephony such as ISDN, mobile phones and VoIP. It has been available almost since the introduction of the public telephone system in the late 19th century, in a form mostly unchanged to the normal user despite the introduction of Touch-Tone dialing, electronic telephone exchanges and fiber-optic communication into the public switched telephone network (PSTN).

The system was originally known as the Post Office Telephone Service or Post Office Telephone System in many countries. The term was dropped as telephone services were removed from the control of national post offices.

POTS services include:

Many calling features became available to POTS subscribers after computerization of telephone exchanges during the 1970s and 1980s. The services include:

among other services.

The communications circuits of the PSTN which provide POTS continues to be modernized by advances in digital communications however, other than improving sound quality, these changes have been mainly transparent to the POTS customer. The function to the local loop presented to the customer for connection to telephone equipment is practically unchanged and remains compatible even with telephones built in the early 20th century.

Due to the wide availability of POTS, new forms of communications devices such as modems and facsimile machines are designed to use a telephone line as a digital communications channel.

Reliability

While POTS provides limited features, low bandwidth and no mobile capabilities, it does provide greater reliability than other telephony systems (mobile phone, VoIP, etc.) Many telephone service providers attempt to achieve "dial-tone availability" more than 99.999% of the time the telephone is taken off-hook. This is equivalent to having no dial-tone available less than five minutes each year.

See also