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TELECOM Digest Wed, 30 Mar 2005 16:30:00 EST Volume 24 : Issue 137 Inside This Issue: Editor: Patrick A. Townson Secret Service DNA - "Distributed Networking Attack" (Monty Solomon) Re: Fax Station ID (Gary Breuckman) Re: Fax Station ID (Steve Sobol) Re: Fax Station ID (Dave Garland) Re: Fax Station ID (Robert Bonomi) Re: Fax Station ID (NOTvalid@surplus4actors.INFO) Re: Fax Station ID (jmeissen@aracnet.com) Arguments in 'Brand X' Case (Daily Lead from USTA) Re: Verizon, VoiceWing and Portability (Zorro) Re: FCC: Telcos do not Have to Sell DSL as Stand Alone (Lisa Hancock) Re: More 'Tweens' Going Mobile - Health Risks (Lisa Hancock) Blackboards vrs. Whiteboards (Lisa Hancock) Re: Verizon, Voicewing and Portability (Robert Bonomi) Re: Verizon, Voicewing and Portability (John Levine) Re: Verizon, Voicewing and Portability (jmeissen@aracnet.com) Re: LNP Transfer From McLeodUSA to Vonage (Steve Sobol) Re: Time for the Recording Industry to Face the Music (John Smith) Re: Time for the Recording Industry to Face the Music (Lisa Hancock) Re: Last Laugh! was Re: Job Opportunity (NOTvalid@surplus4actors.INFO) Re: Horrible Voice Quality on skypeout (Koos van den Hout) Re: GSM-900 (Jason) Re: Science and Society: Anatomy of a Techno-Myth (Lisa Hancock) Re: Last Laugh! was Re: Job Opportunity (NOTvalid@surplus4actors.INFO) Telecom and VOIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) Digest for the Internet. All contents here are copyrighted by Patrick Townson and the individual writers/correspondents. Articles may be used in other journals or newsgroups, provided the writer's name and the Digest are included in the fair use quote. By using -any name or email address- included herein for -any- reason other than responding to an article herein, you agree to pay a hundred dollars to the recipients of the email. =========================== Addresses herein are not to be added to any mailing list, nor to be sold or given away without explicit written consent. Chain letters, viruses, porn, spam, and miscellaneous junk are definitely unwelcome. We must fight spam for the same reason we fight crime: not because we are naive enough to believe that we will ever stamp it out, but because we do not want the kind of world that results when no one stands against crime. Geoffrey Welsh =========================== See the bottom of this issue for subscription and archive details and the name of our lawyer; other stuff of interest. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Wed, 30 Mar 2005 09:07:19 -0500 From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com> Subject: Secret Service DNA - "Distributed Networking Attack" DNA Key to Decoding Human Factor Secret Service's Distributed Computing Project Aimed at Decoding Encrypted Evidence By Brian Krebs washingtonpost.com Staff Writer For law enforcement officials charged with busting sophisticated financial crime and hacker rings, making arrests and seizing computers used in the criminal activity is often the easy part. More difficult can be making the case in court, where getting a conviction often hinges on whether investigators can glean evidence off of the seized computer equipment and connect that information to specific crimes. The wide availability of powerful encryption software has made evidence gathering a significant challenge for investigators. Criminals can use the software to scramble evidence of their activities so thoroughly that even the most powerful supercomputers in the world would never be able to break into their codes. But the U.S. Secret Service believes that combining computing power with gumshoe detective skills can help crack criminals' encrypted data caches. Taking a cue from scientists searching for signs of extraterrestrial life and mathematicians trying to identify very large prime numbers, the agency best known for protecting presidents and other high officials is tying together its employees' desktop computers in a network designed to crack passwords that alleged criminals have used to scramble evidence of their crimes -- everything from lists of stolen credit card numbers and Social Security numbers to records of bank transfers and e-mail communications with victims and accomplices. To date, the Secret Service has linked 4,000 of its employees' computers into the "Distributed Networking Attack" program. The effort started nearly three years ago to battle a surge in the number of cases in which savvy computer criminals have used commercial or free encryption software to safeguard stolen financial information, according to DNA program manager Al Lewis. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A6098-2005Mar28.html ------------------------------ From: Gary Breuckman <puma@catbox.com> Subject: Re: Fax Station ID Date: Tue, 29 Mar 2005 20:55:03 -0600 Organization: Posted via Supernews, http://www.supernews.com Reply-To: puma@catbox.com John Schmerold wrote: > Anyone know if it's a law or regulation that requires faxes to include > station identification at top of every page sent ? It's part of 47 U.S.C. 227. Put that in Google and you'll find lots of references. That section also covers unsolicited calls made by recording systems, etc. -- Gary Breuckman ------------------------------ From: Steve Sobol <sjsobol@JustThe.net> Subject: Re: Fax Station ID Date: Tue, 29 Mar 2005 20:19:40 -0800 Organization: Glorb Internet Services, http://www.glorb.com John Schmerold wrote: > Anyone know if it's a law or regulation that requires faxes to include > station identification at top of every page sent ? I believe it's part of the TCPA, which would make it a law. (47 USC 227 IIRC, someone correct me if I'm wrong about this rule being part of the TCPA.) JustThe.net - Apple Valley, CA - http://JustThe.net/ - 888.480.4NET (4638) Steven J. Sobol, Geek In Charge / sjsobol@JustThe.net / PGP: 0xE3AE35ED "The wisdom of a fool won't set you free" --New Order, "Bizarre Love Triangle" ------------------------------ From: Dave Garland <dave.garland@wizinfo.com> Subject: Re: Fax Station ID Date: Tue, 29 Mar 2005 23:43:35 -0600 Organization: Wizard Information It was a dark and stormy night when John Schmerold <john@katy.com> wrote: > Anyone know if it's a law or regulation that requires faxes to include > station identification at top of every page sent ? I haven't tracked down the original rule, but according to a law firm's website at http://tinyurl.com/6l4h7 (the very first hit from googling on "fax number header") in the US the FCC: rules ... require every fax (not just unsolicited advertisements) to identify in the top or bottom margin on each page or on the first page the date and time it is sent, the sender's identity (the originator of the fax, not the name of the broadcast fax service), and the fax number of the machine sending the transmission or the telephone number of the sender. If a broadcast fax service (which likely includes an outside marketing firm retained for such purposes) is used and the fax broadcaster is responsible for the content of the fax or for supplying the fax numbers to which the faxes are sent, then the fax broadcaster's name also must be identified in the header. ------------------------------ From: bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com (Robert Bonomi) Subject: Re: Fax Station ID Date: Wed, 30 Mar 2005 11:40:25 -0000 Organization: Widgets, Inc. In article <telecom24.136.4@telecom-digest.org>, John Schmerold <john@katy.com> wrote: > Anyone know if it's a law or regulation that requires faxes to include > station identification at top of every page sent ? United States Federal statute requires: 1) sender ID on the top of every page *or* 1) sender ID on the _first_ page See <http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/47/227.html> 47 USC 227 ------------------------------ From: NOTvalid@surplus4actors.INFO Subject: Re: Fax Station ID Date: 30 Mar 2005 07:11:46 -0800 Organization: http://groups.google.com John Schmerold wrote: > Anyone know if it's a law or regulation that requires faxes to include > station identification at top of every page sent ? Yes ... but Only if made after a certain year. My 4800bps fax card from my XT which I still use is exempt. ------------------------------ From: jmeissen@aracnet.com Subject: Re: Fax Station ID Date: 30 Mar 2005 17:05:06 GMT Organization: http://extra.newsguy.com In article <telecom24.136.4@telecom-digest.org>, John Schmerold <john@katy.com> wrote: > Anyone know if it's a law or regulation that requires faxes to include > station identification at top of every page sent ? US Code Title 47 Chapter 5 Subchapter II Part I Section 227.d.2: Telephone facsimile machines: The Commission shall revise the regulations setting technical and procedural standards for telephone facsimile machines to require that any such machine which is manufactured after one year after December 20, 1991, clearly marks, in a margin at the top or bottom of each transmitted page or on the first page of each transmission, the date and time sent, an identification of the business, other entity, or individual sending the message, and the telephone number of the sending machine or of such business, other entity, or individual. John Meissen jmeissen@aracnet.com ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Mar 2005 12:31:13 EST From: Telecom dailyLead from USTA <usta@dailylead.com> Subject: Arguments in Brand X Case Focus on Information vs. Telecom Rules Telecom dailyLead from USTA March 30, 2005 http://www.dailylead.com/latestIssue.jsp?i=20451&l=2017006 TODAY'S HEADLINES NEWS OF THE DAY * Arguments in Brand X case focus on information vs. telecom rules BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH * Verizon wins MCI; Qwest may up ante * Juniper buys Kagoor * Cisco's acquisition of Airespace puts heat on rival gear makers * Tellabs, Occam strike a deal * Cablevision's Charles Dolan pledges $400M for Voom USTA SPOTLIGHT * Tomorrow! VoIP 101: How to Rapidly Roll Out VoIP, 1:00 p.m. EST EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES * Extreme unveils new family of Gigabit Ethernet switches REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE * Supreme Court mulls impact on innovation in Grokster case Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others. http://www.dailylead.com/latestIssue.jsp?i=20451&l=2017006 ------------------------------ From: Zorro for the Common Good <zftcg@yahoo.com> Subject: Re: Verizon, Voicewing and Portability Date: 30 Mar 2005 11:25:14 -0800 Pat, Thanks for the reply. VoiceWing is not a separate company, but rather Verizon's own VOIP product. That's why it makes such little sense that current Verizon DSL customers would be unable to sign up. Also, I just re-upped with VDSL for another year in order to get the $30 rate, so switching to a cable modem isn't an option. ZftCG [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Ah yes, the cheaper rate if you agree to go for one year. When SBC sensed I was getting unhappy and about to toss them out, they tried that on me also. Re-up for one year on DSL, get it for thirty dollars per month. When I reminded them that they had earlier promised (and lied) about having a cheaper rate on DSL as long as I also subscribed to Cingular Wireless [which I do] -- then they later claimed that would not apply in my case and would not honor the rate; and when I reminded them they had earlier also promised a thirty dollar rate if I subscribed to a whole truckload of unwanted and sometimes useless 'custom calling features' including voicemail,[which at the time they said they would turn on, then a day or two later a technician told me they could not do on this exchange] and they later told me they had not promised any such thing; then you have to forgive me if I did not want to take any more chances on them. I am on a very fixed income and cannot afford something as expensive as Southwestern Bell DSL when a bunch of hollow, bogus lies come as part of the package. Maybe you will have better luck getting Verizon to honor a promise of a thirty dollar rate. Watch and see how the bill slowly starts to creep up with invoices of a dozen or more pages written in hierogliphics arrives. You call them each month to complain about the increase and what they promised you in the re-up, they say 'so sorry, our mistake we will re-rate you next month and pro-rate the credit you have due.' Then the next month your bill arrives, two or three times as many hierogliphics as the month before and if you wade through all the re-rates and pro-rates you see they actually did the same thing again. For that, you get to wait in their voicemail hell 'as a valued customer' for 30-45 minutes each time. Anyway, if you did not actually _sign anything_ as part of the re-up, don't worry about it. Just tell them, as I did, "well, I lied about it, I never promised, etc." They'll never be able to get their act together well enough to produce any paperwork anyway. I'd suggest that unless there is paperwork to the contrary, you just back out of the deal and go with cable and some CLEC. It will work out cheaper for you in the long run. My cable internet, Prairie Stream telephone line -and- my VOIP phone line turn out to be less each month than SBC was costing. PAT] ------------------------------ From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com Subject: Re: FCC: Phone Companies Don't Have to Sell DSL as a Stand-Alone Date: 30 Mar 2005 10:15:10 -0800 TELECOM Digest Editor noted in response to Jack Decker: > [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I have said before that the best > thing to do, IMO, is go with cable internet _whenever possible_ and > try to avoid Bell and its DSL completely, for just these same > reasons. Bell has a long, sordid history of being very tricky and > difficult to deal with. If cable internet is not available, then of > course take Bell service and its DSL, but watch for any possible > opportunity -- such as cable being installed or expanded in your area > to break away to a competitive CLEC and cable internet, such as I > have done, now two years ago with Prairie Stream and Cable One. PAT] But many cable broadband carriers won't give you that unless you buy their TV service as well (which is a lot more expensive than a basic POTS wireline.) Seems to me there's a double standard when it comes to expectations from the telephone companies vs. the cable companies. My own cable company keeps jacking up its rates -- a few years ago I paid $35/month and now pay $55. They added some Spanish language channels which is curious since very few Spanish speaking people live in this particular service territory. As soon as Bell finishes their high speed fibre work I plan to switch to them for TV as well. [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: True, some won't see it stand alone, but many will, and anyway, people may want television as well. PAT] ------------------------------ From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com Subject: Re: More 'Tweens' Going Mobile; Long-Term Health Risks Unclear Date: 30 Mar 2005 10:21:00 -0800 Tony P. wrote: > That is what we get for fleeing the urban core cities. The costs of that > are coming back in spades. > [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: There are lots of things wrong with the > urban core, inner city. I am sorry you feel that those of us who > wanted something better in life did what you call 'fleeing'. I know > you would _never_ get me back to Chicago for example. PAT] When once-nice city neighborhoods decayed and the people were forced to leave their homes, nobody (govt, politicians) cared and did anything. Indeed, those people themselves got blamed for "fleeing" even though their wants -- decent schools, safe streets, no vandalism -- were perfectly acceptable and met elsewhere. If anyone challenged the anti-social behavior of the new people moving into the neighborhoods and causing trouble, they were accused of being a snob or worse (esp if there were ethnic differences). Yet when the opposite happens -- when affluent people move back into the city and fix up a decayed neighborhood -- rebuilding rotted buildings, chasing drug dealers away, opening new stoers in empty shells -- everyone worries about the people who previously lived there (the ones who failed to keep up the neighborhood). Seems to me the ones already there are benefiting -- at no cost to them -- of a nicer living area. [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Well, one thing I really appreciate about living here in Independence is that this is a very integrated community, which is how I would want it. We are not a rich community (although there is a 'rich part of town' [north of Taylor Road near the country club]) and there are areas which tend to have more minority residents than others, but we all seem to get along okay. PAT] ------------------------------ From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com Subject: Blackboards vs. Whiteboards Date: 30 Mar 2005 10:25:59 -0800 I heard my school district will modernize and replace the classic "blackboard" (or greenboard) with modern 'whiteboards'. I can't help but wonder if this is a dumb idea. AFAIK, blackboards last forever. Lots of old schools still have their original ones. In contrast, whiteboards seem sensitve to nicks and scrapes. I believe black/greenboards cost less than whiteboards. But most significantly is the chalk vs. marker. Chalk is much cheaper than markers. Markers always run out quickly. Someone forgets and uses the wrong kind permanently staining the whiteboard. Lastly, markers have that weird chemical smell. Seems to me there's nothing wrong with blackboards and nothing to be gained by whiteboards. Thoughts anyone? ------------------------------ From: bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com (Robert Bonomi) Subject: Re: Verizon, Voicewing and Portability Date: Wed, 30 Mar 2005 13:06:27 -0000 Organization: Widgets, Inc. In article <telecom24.136.5@telecom-digest.org>, <zftcg@yahoo.com> wrote: > Please tell me if this makes sense: > I live in Manhattan and currently have Verizon local and DSL. I would > like to switch my local service to VoiceWing 500 (same as regular > VoiceWing with 500 minutes of outgoing calls/month, for $19.95). I > just got off the phone with multiple Verizon customer service people; > they all told me varying things, but the basic upshot is that because > I'm a DSL customer, I can't get VoiceWing on the same line, since DSL > requires a regular land line. That seems to me to be completely > backwards -- after all, wouldn't the most obvious customers for > VoiceWing be current DSL customers? Yet they're telling me those are > the exact people who are ineligible for the service (unless I'm > willing to sign up for an entirely new phone line, which would be > completely pointless and cost me an additional $20/month). What's > more, while at least one person had told me this situation could > change in the near future, the last guy I spoke to said it was a > structural problem that could never be rectified. > Now, as I said, I got different answers from different people, and in > general, people seemed to be a little confused about how VoiceWing > works, most likely because it's still relatively new. Can anyone out > there shed any light on this riddle? Does anyone currently have both > VoiceWing and Verizon DSL, with no additional phone lines? The current regulatory environment *requires* that the ILEC (Verizon, in your case) transfer the _exclusive) use of that wire-pair to the CLEC, when you go with a CLEC as the dial-tone provider. IF the _CLEC_ does not offer line-shared DSL -- either their own offering, or access for third-party providers -- you are SOL as far as getting DSL on _that_ wire-pair. In those situations where the CLEC does not offer line-shared DSL, you simply have to get another wire-pair for your DSL service. Covad and MCI, at least, in your area, can do this. It costs a little more ($5-10/mo) than line-sharing. _AT_THIS_TIME_, Verizon does not have any 'non-line-shared' DSL offering, They did, last year, announce their intention to offer 'naked' DSL -- DSL on it's own wire-pair, without voice service on it; *BUT* the projected roll-out of the service (originally scheduled for 'early 2005') has been pushed back, and no firm availability date has been set. In theory, *IF* the CLEC offered the functionality, Verizon could piggy- back their service on the CLEC-controlled wire-pair. Verizon _would_, in that situation, however, have to *pay* the CLEC for the privilege of using the CLEC-controlled wire-pair to provide your DSL. Methinks Verizon would be loathe to do so, _if_ it were technically viable. _Very__Few_ CLECs have the installed equipment to support shared-line DSL. Those that do, do not make it available for 3rd-party use -- rather they use it for _their_own_ shared-line offering. Verizon apparently restricts their DSL offerings to situations where _they_ "own" the wire-pair. And, at this time, do =not= offer "non-shared" line service. Thus, _IF_ you change dial-tone providers, you *will* have to change Internet access providers as well. This is not necessarily a bad thing. Check out panix.com, and world.std.com, a couple of _good_ providers in your area. *IF* you have a _reliable_ cable TV provider, they may offer Internet access, and could be worth checking out. If, like many places, the cable TV service is subject to frequent short-duration outages, you should take into consideration what effect similar outages will have on your Internet use. [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: In the nearly two years since I decided to ditch Southwestern Bell (for everything) and go with CableOne for my high speed internet, I do not think there has been five minutes of downtime. Well, there was one time I decided to move a television set into my computer room so I could watch television while working on the Digest, and in the process of hooking up a splitter to the cable line and attaching a television/radio combination to the cable which (at that point in my system) had just been the internet, I got a splitter installed incorrectly. I had that same day installed a Cisco router for the computers, and between the ill-advised television/radio on the cable line in my computer room and the Cisco router, the Motorola SB-4220 Surfboard Cable Modem (supplied by CableOne) somehow lost track of what it was doing. But the tech guy at CableOne very graciously got me back on line in about 10 minutes once I decided to call them and ask for help. Cable only rarely goes off line, I have found. PAT] ------------------------------ Date: 30 Mar 2005 05:52:18 -0000 From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com> Subject: Re: Verizon, Voicewing and Portability Organization: I.E.C.C., Trumansburg NY USA > they all told me varying things, but the basic upshot is that because > I'm a DSL customer, I can't get VoiceWing on the same line, since DSL > requires a regular land line. Does it make sense? No. Is it true? Unfortunately, yes. Just this week the FCC ruled that it has jurisdiction over DSL, not the states, and it affirmed its ill-considered finding that telcos do not have to provide "naked" DSL. I agree that you're probably better off with a cable modem. Regards, John R. Levine, IECC, POB 727, Trumansburg NY 14886 +1 607 330 5711 johnl@iecc.com, Mayor, http://johnlevine.com, Member, Provisional board, Coalition Against Unsolicited Commercial E-mail [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: And have you noticed, as I have, how cable internet is usually _much faster_ than DSL? Both downloads and uploads go amazingly fast. And our local CableOne office gave me a choice of either a 'full T-1' or 'half-speed' which is apparently a smaller 'pipeline', but in either event, quite enough for most residential use. Anyway, our original correspondent should enjoy reading all the outrageous offers Verizon starts making to him once he does a 'Terri Shivo' on them and pulls the plu. PAT] ------------------------------ From: jmeissen@aracnet.com Subject: Re: Verizon, Voicewing and Portability Date: 30 Mar 2005 17:11:59 GMT Organization: http://extra.newsguy.com In article <telecom24.136.5@telecom-digest.org>, <zftcg@yahoo.com> wrote: > Please tell me if this makes sense: > I live in Manhattan and currently have Verizon local and DSL. I would > like to switch my local service to VoiceWing 500 (same as regular > VoiceWing with 500 minutes of outgoing calls/month, for $19.95). I > just got off the phone with multiple Verizon customer service people; > they all told me varying things, but the basic upshot is that because > I'm a DSL customer, I can't get VoiceWing on the same line, since DSL > requires a regular land line. > [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: You will need to do the very same thing > as I did. You will need to, in this order, (1) install cable internet > to replace DSL; then once the cable internet is installed in order to > avoid any network downtime, (2) tell Verizon to get their DSL off of > your line, ASAP, immediatly, etc. (3) Once the DSL has been removed, > _then and only then_ can you tell VoiceWing to port your existing number VoiceWing is Verizon's VoIP offering. The ironic part of all of this is that because of Verizon's policy of only providing DSL over a line that also has regular Verizon phone service, if you live in a Verizon DSL territory you can't get their VoIP service unless you ALSO have regular Verizon phone service. And thanks to the FCC decision this week, that's not about to change. John [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: The same thing is true in Southwestern Bell territory. TerraWorld (our local ISP here in southeastern Kansas) also brokers Bell's DSL on their ISP lines, but Bell will not let Duane Shaub (TerraWorld owner) install DSL on any of his Prairie Stream lines. Makes no sense at all to me or Duane; he says it would be a win-win situation for everyone, including Bell and Prairie Stream's puny little slice of business they have taken away from Bell. But Prairie Stream/TerraWorld's attitude on this is very pragmatic: "Just go up the street to Mike Flood (local CableOne manager) and ask him to turn on cable internet timed with when Bell disconnects their DSL. Prairie Stream and CableOne -- two local business places -- start making the money that Bell loses out on. What a terrible loss for Bell! hahahahahaha." But you see, Bell is so tied up with regulations and rules -- mostly of their own making -- they cannot begin to think out of the box, in a creative way. PAT] ------------------------------ From: Steve Sobol <sjsobol@JustThe.net> Subject: Re: LNP Transfer From McLeodUSA to Vonage Date: Tue, 29 Mar 2005 20:09:56 -0800 Organization: Glorb Internet Services, http://www.glorb.com wondering wrote: > I am wondering is anyone has successfully ported their home number out of > McLeodUSA to Vonage. I have been trying for eight months. I am > beginning to believe it is impossible. I would have filed a complaint with my state PUC long ago. Vonage isn't a regulated LEC, but McLeod most certainly is. JustThe.net - Apple Valley, CA - http://JustThe.net/ - 888.480.4NET (4638) Steven J. Sobol, Geek In Charge / sjsobol@JustThe.net / PGP: 0xE3AE35ED "The wisdom of a fool won't set you free" --New Order, "Bizarre Love Triangle" ------------------------------ From: John Smith <user@example.net> Subject: Re: Time for the Recording Industry to Face the Music Date: Wed, 30 Mar 2005 04:26:08 GMT hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote: > People have a Constitutional right (and a moral one too) to be > compensated for their creative efforts. Wow! That's a wild interpretation of the Constitution. You know, by writing this message, I have just made a creative effort. Where the hell's my check!? In fact, nobody has a Constitutional right to be compensated just because they wrote a song. If they did, there would be a lot fewer out-of-work song writers in the world. What the Constitution /really/ says is that Congress has the power "[t]o promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries". Authors certainly don't have the right to get compensated; they only have the right to prevent OTHER people from publishing or using their work. And they only have that right for a limited time, and only if Congress grants it to them, which it has the power to, but is under no Constitutional obligation to do. In fact, Congress only has that power if it finds that doing so will promote the "useful arts". That's a far cry from "everyone has a right to get paid". ------------------------------ From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com Subject: Re: Time for the Recording Industry to Face the Music Date: 30 Mar 2005 10:10:03 -0800 Organization: http://groups.google.com Joseph wrote: > Perhaps if the recording companies weren't so greedy charging $18 for > a disc of music and perhaps if the recording companies shared a bigger > portion of profits from CDs people would see it differently. Well then, what would be an appropriate royalty for musicians and price for CDs? Well-known recording artists seem to be living quite well. Stuff by the Beatles done 40 years ago is still selling new at full price. ['course then there's people like me who buy that stuff used for 50c at yard sales.] Actually, in thinking about it, the price of album when I was a kid is lower today considering inflation. (The cost of a 'single', if you can even find one, is much more.) While I can't help but suspect CD prices should be lower, in fairness to the record companies, they have their unseen costs as well. They go to plenty of expense to select new talent and market and distribute it. Often times a CD doesn't sell and that expense is wasted. They also have to deal with tempermental artists, fickle consumer tastes, normal distribution channel issues, investors, and basic business issues. There's a hopeful singer Analise van der Pol. She did a pop song "Over It" that got repeated play, but she was not signed for a record deal. I think she's very talented, but the mass market obviously didn't think so. So it goes. [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Not only are the Beatles still doing okay on their work from forty years ago, but lots of the very old classical music stuff -- from the 78 rpm era and the very early 33 rpm era is now getting re-issued on CD and selling pretty well. I had some ancient 78 rpm and 33 rpm 'long playing' records of Virgil Fox which were lost in the tragic fire Bill Pfieffer endured in the mid 1990's. I just assumed I would never see them again. They dated back to the early 1950's and late 1940's, when LP records were very heavy in the old fashioned cardboard sleeves. Well, you can imagine my surprise when I received a very small box of CDs the other day including all those ancient recordings now on Compact Disk, re-issued, including a newer DVD-style disk which had a bunch of other old things of Fox on it, including a thirty minute 'Quick Time' movie file of Fox from his 1964 visit to the Wanamaker store in Philadelphia and one of his performances there. Lisa H, you said you have visited Lord and Taylor in recent years. Would you like a copy of that DVD of Fox from when it was Wanamaker's? PAT] ------------------------------ From: Koos van den Hout <koos+newsposting@kzdoos.xs4all.nl> Subject: Re: Horrible Voice Quality on Skypeout Date: 30 Mar 2005 07:31:11 GMT Organization: http://idefix.net/~koos/ John Levine <johnl@iecc.com> wrote: > My new USB handset showed up so I tried a couple of Skypeout calls to > regular phone numbers. Ewww. It sounded really awful. > Is this the USB handset, Skypeout, or am I just unlucky? Have you tried calling the 'echo test' number (search for 'echo test' in Skype)? This eliminates the 'skypeout' and 'other phone networks' part of the callpath. And the USB handset is supposed to be a normal audio device to what you are using on the computer (my guess). Have you tried recording a bit of audio from the handset and playing it back? I have just started playing with Skype and I noticed I need to find a good microphone. Which may explain the sudden interest in microphones at work ;) Greetings, Koos van den Hout Koos van den Hout, PGP keyid RSA/1024 0xCA845CB5 via keyservers koos@kzdoos.xs4all.nl or DSS/1024 0xF0D7C263 -?) Fax +31-30-2817051 Visit the site about books with reviews /\\ http://idefix.net/~koos/ http://www.virtualbookcase.com/ _\_V ------------------------------ From: Jason <cheanglong@gmail.com> Subject: Re: GSM-900 Date: 30 Mar 2005 05:04:16 -0800 Organization: http://groups.google.com Thank you all for the explanation. It really helps. But may I know for a trasnmitter and a receiver, will the trasnmitting frequency be different than the receiving frequency? I know there are such cases. But why they make it this way? Kindly help. Thank you, Jason ------------------------------ From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com Subject: Re: Science and Society: Anatomy of a Techno-Myth -- Economist.com Date: 30 Mar 2005 09:57:11 -0800 Organization: http://groups.google.com Marcus Didius Falco wrote: > http://economist.com/printedition/displayStory.cfm?Story_ID=3D3786384 > The debate over the safety of mobile phones has little to do with > science. I don't think the scare of using cell phones while pumping gas ever got too far. It'd be a very easy thing to check -- what were the causes of gas station fires and technically could a cell phone cause that? As an all-electronic device, cell phones normally don't generate sparks. One does wonder why so many gas station attendants smoke a cigarette while pumping. Many of these 'scares' come from grandstanding politicians who want to come off as being concerned about their constituents' well being. Cheap, non-attackable, tasteful free publicity. Another source is the news media, particularly local TV and cable TV news. My local TV stations regularly run teaser ads 'A NEW DANGER ABOUT APPLES, FIND OUT AT EYEWITNESS AT 11!", or, 'WHAT YOUR DOCTOR ISN'T TELLING YOU!" or 'IS YOUR CHILD AT RISK?' and then they tell you about something that's a 1 in 634 trillion chance to happen. Many news shows about have medical segments that are pure quackery. You don't need to be a scientist to see through this crap, only some common sense and some careful thinking is needed. ------------------------------ From: NOTvalid@surplus4actors.INFO Subject: Re: Last Laugh! was Re: Job Opportunity Date: 30 Mar 2005 07:35:28 -0800 Probably this is to tranship cameras, VCRs etc bought with stolen credit cards. When the sh*t hits the fan ... all merchandise was shipped to you ... all payments were made to you. [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Please don't have ugly thoughts like that! 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