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TELECOM Digest     Thu, 28 Apr 2005 23:38:00 EDT    Volume 24 : Issue 187

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Verizon Reports Continued Strong Results With EPS Growth 8.6 (Solomon)
    Infinity Tries All-Podcasting Radio Format (Monty Solomon)
    Disney Suspends Video-On-Demand Trial (Monty Solomon)
    A Phone That Takes Dictation: Testing Voice-to-Text Function (Solomon)
    Ads That Know What You Want (Monty Solomon)
    Audit Finds Potential for Data Leaks (Monty Solomon)
    Michigan PSC Issues Order on VoIP (Jack Decker)
    Looking For Call Forwarding Service Similar to yac.com (Frans Keijer)
    Invitation to Montenegro, Italy, and Slovenia 2005 (IPSI Conferences)
    Re: The End of Analog TV (Danny Burstein)
    Re: Guess Who Works for Microsoft With a Salary of $20k/mo. ? (mc)

Telecom and VOIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) Digest for the
Internet.  All contents here are copyrighted by Patrick Townson and
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               ===========================

See the bottom of this issue for subscription and archive details
and the name of our lawyer; other stuff of interest.  

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Thu, 28 Apr 2005 15:16:41 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Verizon Reports Continued Strong Results With EPS Growth of 8.6


Another Record-Breaking Quarter at Verizon Wireless; Solid Increases in
     Wireline Data and Broadband; $1.8 Billion in First-Quarter Earnings

    NEW YORK, April 27 /PRNewswire/ --

                  FIRST-QUARTER HIGHLIGHTS

     Consolidated Results

     - 63 cents in diluted EPS (earnings per share), up 8.6 percent
       year-over- year from 58 cents in adjusted EPS (non-GAAP
       measure)

     Wireless

     - First-quarter Verizon Wireless record of 1.64 million net customer
       additions, up 18.0 percent; 45.5 million total customers,
       up 16.8 percent

     - Total quarterly revenues up 20.4 percent, to $7.4 billion;
       average monthly service revenue per customer up 2.1 percent;
       churn (customer turnover) of 1.33 percent, a new record low for
       the second consecutive quarter

     Wireline

     - Verizon's best-ever quarterly DSL line growth; 385,000 net new
       broadband connections (DSL and FiOS data customers), 3.9
       million total broadband connections

     - Data revenues up 11.6 percent; long-distance revenues up 8.3 percent

     Notes: Growth percentages cited above compare first quarter 2005
     with first quarter 2004.  See the schedules accompanying this
     news release and http://www.verizon.com/investor for
     reconciliations to generally accepted accounting principles
     (GAAP) for the non-GAAP financial measures included in this
     announcement.  Discontinued operations in the prior-year
     quarterly period presented includes the operations of Verizon
     Information Services Canada, following an agreement to sell that
     business.

Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE:VZ) today reported first-quarter
2005 earnings of $1.8 billion, or 63 cents per diluted share, as
quarterly revenues increased 6.6 percent, driven by the fifth
consecutive quarter of more than 20 percent total revenue growth
year-over-year at Verizon Wireless.

The $1.8 billion in reported first-quarter 2005 earnings compares with
$1.2 billion, or 43 cents per share, in the first quarter 2004.
Verizon's 63 cents per share in first-quarter 2005 earnings increased
8.6 percent compared with 58 cents per share in the first quarter
2004, when 2004 results are adjusted for special items, primarily for
pension settlements associated with a voluntary separation plan
(non-GAAP measure).  No special items or adjustments are included in
first-quarter 2005 results.

Consolidated revenues of $18.2 billion in the first quarter 2005
increased 6.6 percent, or $1.1 billion, compared with the first
quarter 2004.

Verizon Wireless contributed $7.4 billion, or 40.8 percent, of first-
quarter 2005 consolidated revenues.  This compares with wireless
revenues of $6.2 billion, or 36.1 percent of consolidated revenues, in
the first quarter 2004.  Total wireless revenues have increased by
more than 10 percent year- over-year for 11 consecutive quarters,
including the 20 percent-plus year- over-year increases for the past
five quarters.

Operating revenues for Domestic Telecom, the company's U.S. wireline
business segment, were $9.5 billion in the first quarter 2005, a 1.2
percent decrease compared with $9.6 billion in the first quarter 2004.
This is the segment's lowest rate of revenue decline in nearly four
years.

     - http://finance.lycos.com/home/news/story.asp?story=48665385

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 28 Apr 2005 15:36:28 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Infinity Tries All-Podcasting Radio Format


By SETH SUTEL AP Business Writer

Infinity Broadcasting Corp., a terrestrial radio company whose
business model is being challenged by the iPod phenomenon, is
borrowing a page from its rival's playbook.

Next month, Infinity will convert an underperforming station in San
Francisco to a format that will play only "podcasts," or amateur
recordings distributed via the Internet to listeners' iPods and other
digital music players.

Infinity, which is part of the Viacom Inc. media conglomerate that
also owns CBS and MTV, announced Wednesday that it would convert its
KYCY-AM station in San Francisco to the new format on May 16.

Infinity said it would be the first time a radio station anywhere
played an all-podcast format. Robert Unmacht, a radio consultant in
Nashville who tracks radio formats, confirmed that it would be the
first such station in the United States.

      - http://finance.lycos.com/home/news/story.asp?story=48698920

     Infinity Broadcasting Launches KYOURADIO, the World's First
     Podcasting Radio Station, on Monday, May 16
     - Apr 27, 2005 10:00 AM (PR Newswire)

New Radio Platform To Be Featured on San Francisco's KYCY-AM And
KYOURADIO.COM

NEW YORK, April 27 /PRNewswire/ -- Joel Hollander, Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer, Infinity Broadcasting, announced today the creation
of KYOURADIO, the world's first-ever podcasting radio station.
KYOURADIO's content will be created exclusively by its listeners and
available in San Francisco at 1550 KYCY-AM and streamed online at
http://www.kyouradio.com beginning on Monday, May 16.

     - http://finance.lycos.com/home/news/story.asp?story=48672968


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Something I guess I do not understand.
What is the difference -- if any -- between 'podcasting' and the
video/audio streaming from broadcasting stations which we have had
for many years?  Is it 'podcasting' (as opposed to 'streaming a/v')
because there is no 'over the air' outlet as well (some of them are
internet only) or is it because they sell little terminal devices
which are limited in what internet they can recieve (streams only
instead of general purpose internet). What, generally, is the
technical distinction between 'streaming' and 'podcasting' if any?

Someone wanted to sell me a computer; the best I can describe it
is that it was very specialized, it was intended to be only a 
constant stream of whatver 'radio' you wanted to send out over the
net. Mostly turn-key in operation, it was supposed to take about
two hours daily to program a 24 hour program format. He said it was
being sold for $7500 per unit with financing available and that I
should be 'easily able' to sell advertisements on it to make my
money back many times over. Look at http://www.ellsworthcountyradio.com
to see an example of it at work. Or look at http://www.nextgen101.com
for more details. I didn't (and still don't) know what to do about it,
but I do not think Infinity is going to be first.  PAT]

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 28 Apr 2005 22:22:02 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Disney Suspends Video-On-Demand Trial


BURBANK, Calif. (AP) -- The Walt Disney Co. on Thursday suspended its
MovieBeam video-on-demand service in the three cities where it was
being tested, citing plans to upgrade the technology behind the
system.

Disney launched the service September 2003 in Salt Lake City,
Jacksonville, Fla., and Spokane, Wash. It transmits movies over the
same broadcast signal used to transmit television programs and stores
them on a hard drive in the MovieBeam unit.

      - http://finance.lycos.com/home/news/story.asp?story=48741059

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 28 Apr 2005 22:24:53 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: A Phone That Takes Dictation: Testing Voice-to-Text Function


A Phone That Takes Dictation: Testing Voice-to-Text Function

By WALTER S. MOSSBERG

Cellphone text messaging, long popular abroad, is finally catching on
in the U.S., especially among younger users. But cellphones are
notoriously frustrating to use for entering text.

If you're unfamiliar with using a numerical keypad to enter text
(lucky you), spelling out a simple word like "dance," for example,
would require pressing 3, 2, 66, 222, 33. Typing out full sentences
using this method is even more annoying, leading users to get creative
with abbreviations and short-spellings. "R u goin 2 b l8?"  is
text-speak for "Are you going to be late?"

Phone makers have tried to solve this problem by squeezing little 
keyboards into the bodies of some phones. But these keyboards usually 
make phones bigger and bulkier than normal, and often show up only on 
costlier models, like the Treo or BlackBerry.

This week, my assistant Katie Boehret and I tested a new phone that 
attempts to solve the text-entry problem in a novel way that doesn't 
involve typing, and can be used on a small, inexpensive phone with 
just a numerical keypad. This new phone lets you dictate your text 
messages by just speaking into the phone.

The Samsung p207, $79.99 with a two-year contract from Cingular
Wireless, has built-in "speech-to-text" technology: It turns what you
say into text on the screen. This technology, called VoiceMode, was
created by a small Massachusetts company called VoiceSignal
Technologies Inc. If it works properly, VoiceMode should make
composing a text message as simple as dictating a voice-mail message.

Unfortunately, it doesn't work very well. In our tests, the system 
made so many errors requiring tedious corrections that it might have 
been faster for us to peck out our messages the old-fashioned way -- 
especially if we used the abbreviations and shorthand phrases so 
common among text-messaging fans.

http://ptech.wsj.com/archive/solution-20050427.html


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: The Cingular Wireless lady here in
Indpendence also sells Erickkson phones in addition to Nokia. The
Erickkson phones she offers have a tiny little minature typewriter
like attachment which plugs on the bottom of the phone; it is 
called a 'chat board'. Although it will (apparently) match up with 
the Nokia 6100 series phone like I have, the 'pinout' does not quite
work the same way.  It would be nice if it did, however.  PAT]

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 28 Apr 2005 22:52:07 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Ads That Know What You Want


By Joanna Glasner

SAN FRANCISCO -- Picture this: You're shopping online for a new
minivan, surfing automaker websites and buying guides. You then head
to the homepage of your local paper to check out the headlines, and at
the top of the page is an ad for a local car dealer, offering rebates
and low financing on new minivans.

If you're like many web users, you probably find it creepy that your
local paper knows you're looking for new wheels. Even so, advertisers
are betting you're far more likely to click on the car dealer's ad
than a random banner for a dating site or DVD rentals.

That's the theory behind behavioral marketing -- a growing niche in
the online advertising industry focused on targeting promotional
messages to an individual's online activities. Some might call such
tracking across websites by a less flattering name: adware. Marketers
call it a promising revenue stream.

Behavioral marketing was a prominent buzzword at this week's Ad:Tech
conference in San Francisco. The conference, held in the midst of a
boom period for internet ad sales, devoted considerable resources to
identifying ways for online publishers to generate bigger profits from
advertising. Many of the most popular strategies involved mining more
information about individuals.

Targeted marketing is nothing new in the online world, as anyone who's
ever received personalized book recommendations from Amazon.com can
attest. However, by recording peoples' movements over networks of web
properties rather than just individual sites, some marketers are
betting that they will be able to improve response rates to online ad
campaigns dramatically.

http://www.wired.com/news/ebiz/0,1272,67365,00.html

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 28 Apr 2005 23:21:07 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Audit Finds Potential For Data Leaks


Audit finds potential for data leaks
Resale computers still contained files

By Christi Parsons and Rudolph Bush, Tribune staff reporters. Christi 
Parsons reported from Springfield, and Rudolph Bush reported from 
Washington. Tribune reporter Ray Long also contributed to this report.

Warning of the potential for an embarrassing breach of security, state
auditors said their recent review of used state computers warehoused
for public sale found that nearly one-third had not had their hard
drives wiped clean of information as required by Illinois law.

In a little-noticed finding contained in Auditor Gen. William
Holland's blistering report on Gov. Rod Blagojevich's Department of
Central Management Services, the auditor said that several state
agencies had shipped computers to the department for resale that
contained potentially sensitive information. Among the computers
Holland mentioned were some once used by the secretary of state's
office, which tracks driver's licenses and a wide range of other
personal data.

Despite a state law requiring that hard drives be scrubbed clean
before a state computer can be sold, 15 of 50 computers offered for
resale by Central Management Services and tested by auditors during a
two-week period last year had not been cleaned.

On five of those units, auditors still couldn't access the hard-drive
data, but on 10 others, they could. They accessed instant message
programs, "my documents" folders, video games and, in the case of one
University of Illinois computer, student homework.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/technology/chi-0504280242apr28,1,5203560.story

------------------------------

From: Jack Decker <jack-yahoogroups@withheld_on_request>
Date: Thu, 28 Apr 2005 17:53:31 -0400
Subject: Michigan PSC Issues Order on VoIP


The order is at this URL (PDF file):
http://cis.state.mi.us/mpsc/orders/comm/2005/u-14073_04-28-2005.pdf

The most significant part of the order is this: "The Commission
requests the Legislature to amend the Michigan Telecommunications Act
so as to specifically empower the Commission to assess the effect of
Voice over Internet Protocol service on Michigan's citizens, to
adopt non-intrusive registration and certification mechanisms by which
customer complaints regarding voice communication services may be
forwarded to the appropriate companies, and to ensure that all
citizens of this state have the benefit of enhanced 9-1-1 services."

In other words the Commission would like the our legislators to pass a
law (as part of this year's revision of the Michigan Telecommunications
Act) that would let them require VoIP providers to be licensed and, to
some degree, regulated by the Commission.  The problem with that is
that the Federal Communications Commission has already ruled that VoIP
will be regulated at the federal level, so what the MPSC is in effect
asking the legislature to do is put Michigan into the position of
being in a "turf war" with the federal government.  If the legislators
are smart they will not take this bait, at least not without taking a
good hard look at what limitations are placed on the states by the
federal ruling.

Note that the comments filed in this case were made approximately one
year ago, and things are changing in the VoIP industry on almost a
daily basis.  As I posted earlier today, there are reports out that
the FCC will soon require VoIP companies to offer some type of 911
access.  So these issues will get worked out at the federal level, and
there is no good reason the state should attempt to impose licensing
or regulation requirements beyond the normal consumer protection
regulations that apply to all businesses.

How to Distribute VoIP Throughout a Home:
http://michigantelephone.mi.org/distribute.html

If you live in Michigan, subscribe to the MI-Telecom group:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MI-Telecom/

------------------------------

From: Frans.Keijer@gmail.com (Frans Keijer)
Subject: Looking for Call Forwarding Service Similar to yac.com
Date: 28 Apr 2005 17:06:21 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Hi,

I am looking for a call forwarding service (in Europe or the US) that
offers similar functionality like yac.com -- but that allows me to
forward a call to Germany, even when it ORIGINATES in Germany. (The
Ofcom doesn't allow this in the UK, therefore it doesn't work with the
Yac Number service.)

Any idea? :-)

I need:

- Instant call forwarding (I would be happy with the self recorded
greeting the caller hears during the time it rings, like the Yac Number
offers it)

- Automated fax recognition at the same number (voice calls ring
normally at my line, the fax beep will be recognized and any faxes
stored in the faxbox or forwarded via e-mail)

Cheers,

F.K.

------------------------------

Subject: Invitation to Montenegro, Italy, and Slovenia 2005
From: IPSI Conferences <bled2005@ipsiconferences.org>
Date: Thu, 28 Apr 2005 23:08:15 +0200


Dear potential Speaker:

On behalf of the organizing committee, I would like to extend a
cordial invitation for you to attend one of the upcoming IPSI BgD
multidisciplinary, interdisciplinary, and transdisciplinary
conferences.


The first one will take place in Sveti Stefan, Montenegro:

IPSI-2005 MONTENEGRO
Hotel Sveti Stefan (arrival: 1 October 05 / departure: 8 October 05)
Deadlines: 1 May 05 (abstract) / 1 July 05 (full paper)


The second one will take place in Venice, Italy:

IPSI-2005 VENICE
Hotel Luna Baglioni (arrival: 9 November 05 / departure: 14 November 05)
Deadlines: 1 June 05 (abstract) / 1 August 05 (full paper)

The third one will take place on the Bled lake, Slovenia:

IPSI-2005 SLOVENIA
Hotel Toplice (arrival: 8 December 05 / departure: 11 December 05)
Deadlines: 1 July 05 (abstract) & 1 September 05 (full paper)

All IPSI BgD conferences are non-profit. They bring together the elite
of the world science; so far, we have had seven Nobel Laureates
speaking at the opening ceremonies. The conferences always take place
in some of the most attractive places of the world. All those who come
to IPSI conferences once, always love to come back (because of the
unique professional quality and the extremely creative atmosphere);
lists of past participants are on the web, as well as details of
future conferences.

These conferences are in line with the newest recommendations of the
US National Science Foundation and of the EU research sponsoring
agencies, to stress multidisciplinary, interdisciplinary, and
transdisciplinary research (M+I+T++ research). The speakers and
activities at the conferences truly support this type of scientific
interaction.

One of the main topics of this conference is "E-education and
E-business with Special Emphasis on Semantic Web and Web Datamining"

Other topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

* Internet
* Computer Science and Engineering
* Mobile Communications/Computing for Science and Business
* Management and Business Administration
* Education
* e-Medicine
* e-Oriented Bio Engineering/Science and Molecular Engineering/Science
* Environmental Protection
* e-Economy
* e-Law
* Technology Based Art and Art to Inspire Technology Developments
* Internet Psychology

If you would like more information on either conference, please reply
to this e-mail message.

If you plan to submit an abstract and paper, please let us know
immediately for planning purposes. Note that you can submit your paper
also to the IPSI Transactions journal.


Sincerely Yours,

Prof. V. Milutinovic, Chairman,
IPSI BgD Conferences

------------------------------

From: Danny Burstein <dannyb@panix.com>
Subject: Re: The End of Analog TV
Date: Fri, 29 Apr 2005 00:15:56 UTC
Organization: PANIX Public Access Internet and UNIX, NYC


In <telecom24.186.13@telecom-digest.org> hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com writes:

> Why the heck should consumers be forced to upgrade to get the same
> old broadcast garbage?

but, but, but ... the Big Number of Purchases (of new tvs) will help
all those American manufacturers of digital television sets, so
lots of companies will hire lots of people here for lots of jobs.

(that's sarcasm, son).

_____________________________________________________
Knowledge may be power, but communications is the key
		     dannyb@panix.com 
[to foil spammers, my address has been double rot-13 encoded]

------------------------------

From: mc <mc_no_spam@uga.edu>
Subject: Re: Guess Who Works for Microsoft With a Salary of $20k/mo. ?
Date: Thu, 28 Apr 2005 21:04:52 -0400
Organization: Speed Factory (http://www.speedfactory.net)


This is what happens when non-political organizations or companies
decide to be politically active.  They can try to play both sides of
an issue and lose both sides.  Why should Microsoft be either
promoting or opposing gay marriage -- never mind both at once,
incurring all the unpopularity of both positions?



[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: The trouble right now for Microsoft
is that for _so long, so many years_ they have taken a rather 
progressive, liberal attitude on these things. Now they claim they
are trying to back out of it gracefully, but entirely.  See our
news on this topic in http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/nytimes.html
today, in the lower right corner, news from http://salon.com the
'firing line' news items.   PAT]

------------------------------


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