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Date: Wed, 29 May 1996 16:11:22 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
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To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #251

TELECOM Digest     Wed, 29 May 96 16:11:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 251

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    ISDN News From NM (Roy A. McCrory)
    New Area Codes in California, etc. (Linc Madison)
    Reverse-911: Now Police Can Contact You (TELECOM Digest Editor)
    Re: Collect Telephone Sleaze (Edward Connors)
    Loop-Around Pairs (Martin McCormick)
    Re: AT&T 8130 Protocol Request (Bruce A. Pennypacker)
    Re: Caller-ID Delay in California (Larry Lee)
    Re: MCI Cellular (Chris Wysocki)
    Re: Around and Around With Jeff Boy (TELECOM Digest Editor)
    Re: More CID Frolics! (Mark J. Cuccia)
    Re: More CID Frolics! (Linc Madison)
    Telecom Archives CDROM Ordering Details (TELECOM Digest Editor)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Roy A. McCrory <mccrory@erebus.fc.dna.mil>
Subject: ISDN News From NM
Date: 29 May 1996 15:50:38 GMT
Organization: Los Alamos National Laboratory


US West Appeals ISDN Prices, the headline in this morning's paper.
Looks like US West wants to do us a favor. All typos are mine. -Roy

By Maggi Seiger, Journal Staff Writer

US West asked the State Corporation Commission (our 'PUC' -Roy) on
Tuesday to allow it to begin offering ISDN service immediately -- at
higher rates than previously approved by the commission.

The telephone company filed a motion Tuesday appealing the lower rates
set by the corporation commission.

The commission on May 13 ordered US West to offer residential
Integrated Services Digital Network lines for a flat rate of $40.86 a
month.  The commission set a separate rate of $75.97 a month for
business customers.

But US West wants to begin service now, charging $75-a-month for both
business and residential service for unlimited access, or $50 a month
for up to 40 hours of service.

US West, New Mexico's largest telephone company, fears it would be
unable to recover the $1 billion investment necessary to to make New
Mexico ISDN-ready under the commission's proposed rates, said Mack
Haley, spokesman for the company.

The company has found that less than one-tenth of a percent of
customers have subscribed to the service in other states served by US
West, he said.

"We know there obviously are are segments of New Mexico that are very
interested in (ISDN service)," Haley said.  "Our concern is that our
data shows the widespread interest needed to recover our investment is
not there."

US West said in a news release that allowing it offer service now
would prevent further delays for customers who want ISDN.

ISDN stands for ...  Using ordinary copper phone lines, it offers a
computer connection four times faster than a 28,800 bit-per-second
modem.

Gloria Tristani, chairwoman for the corporation commission, called US
West's motion "unusual."

"I don't know what rationale there would be to accept their prices
over the prices we ordered," she said.  "If they want to start
offering (ISDN) service immediately, I'd think tyey'd use our prices
and if we rehear the case and decide to change, then they could change
the prices."

End of quoted article. It's very hard to keep a straight face while
typing this!


Regards,

Roy McCrory

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

From: Telecom@Eureka.vip.best.com (Linc Madison)
Subject: New Area Codes in California, etc.
Date: Wed, 29 May 1996 10:22:29 -0700
Organization: Best Internet Communications


I just realized something about the new area code for southern
California and the eastern Sierras.  The new NPA is 760, but for many
years (when I still kept track of such things), 760 was a test prefix,
at least in 415 and 510.  In some CO's, dialing 760 would immediately
give you voice ANI readback; in others, you had to dial 760-xxxx,
where the last four digits were changed from time to time and from CO
to CO.  Whenever a sales clerk asked for my phone number in a
situation where I felt there was no need for it, I would rattle off
760-xxxx and make up a four-digit number.  Give the telemarketers a
little fun.

As for the Bay Area, I did a little looking at prefix assignments and
the "master list" of NPA assignments, and peered into my crystal ball.
I'm guessing that the new NPA for the 415 split will be 870, and the
new NPA for the 510 split will be 350.  My guess is based on frequency
of use as a prefix in other California NPA's, weighted by proximity.
I emphasize that it's only a guess -- don't print your new stationery
yet!

Incidentally, I spoke with Bruce Bennett about Pacific Bell's lagging
in activating new area codes in their switches, and his assistant got
back to me, reporting that the word has been sent out, but it will
take up to three weeks to update all the switches.  I *still* cannot
dial either area code 268 for Antigua and Barbuda or area code 561 for
West Palm Beach, Florida, although those area codes have been in
permissive dialing since 4/1/96 and 5/13/96, respectively.

Interestingly, though, since I spoke to Bruce Bennett's office, the
point at which calls to 561 get intercepted changed.  I used to get
intercepted immediately at 1-561, but I now have to dial 1-561-xxx-x
before I get an intercept telling me that it is not necessary to dial
a '1' before this number -- an invalid intercept message, since the
switch should no longer ever assume that I could be trying to dial
1-NXX-XXXX without the NPA.  The 415-561 prefix is also right here in
the same rate center, San Francisco 1.  The test numbers are
1-268-268-4482 (1-ANT-ANTIGUA) and 1-561-615-8484.

I was assured that word would go out well in advance for the next round
of NPAs -- four of them going into effect on 7/1/96 (three in small
Caribbean territories and one in Virginia).

Lastly, I finally resolved some of my confusion about the revised
713/281 split plan.  The summaries I had heard referred to splitting
along the "beltway" around Houston, which I had assumed referred to
Interstate 610, "The Loop."  It turns out that the "beltway" referred
to is much farther out from town, the Loop 8 beltway including the
West Sam Houston Tollway.  The new boundary approximates the freeway,
to the extent possible with existing exchange boundaries.


Linc Madison  *  San Francisco, Calif. *  Telecom@Eureka.vip.best.com

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

Date: Wed, 29 May 1996 13:56:57 EDT
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Subject: Reverse-911: Now Police Can Contact You


DuPage County, Illinois police can now make hundreds of telephone
calls an hour to residents in an area where a crime has taken place or
a suspect is on the loose. 

The DuPage County Sheriff last week inaugurated the 'Reverse-911'
community communications system. It transmitted a recorded message to
one thousand homes in an unincorporated area of Lombard, Illinois to
warn residents about two suspected burglars driving in a Ford Taurus,
Chief Deputy Sheriff Robert Soucek said. 

"For the first time, we are able to saturate an area with hundreds of
phone calls an hour, and advise citizens of burglaries, a missing
child, suspicious activities and any other circumstances where we
could utilize our citizens to help us solve a crime," Soucek said.

Using several telephone lines, the $30,000 system can quickly call,
for examples, all homes on a certain street, or all day-care centers
in the county. 

Some people who have information about a crime do not call the police
and wait for police to question them according to Soucek. That problem
might be solved by a phone canvass asking residents who have witnessed
a crime to call investigators. 

The DuPage Sheriff is the first law enforcement agency in Illinois to
use the system according to Jackie Bianchi of Sigma Micro of Indianapolis,
Indiana, the company that designed the system. Nationwide, eight
police departments are using Reverse-911, Bianchi said.

In Portsmouth, VA, tips from businesses alerted by the Reverse-911
system led to the arrest of a man charged with passing counterfeit
checks and the filing of charges against another man for passing bad
checks Portsmouth police Sergeant John Holloway said. 

In addition, after police made calls about a rash of burglaries in one
area and a string of car burglaries in another, both crime waves
dropped to almost zero as neighbors became more watchful. A burglary
suspect was later arrested.

The Village of Vernon Hills, Illinois purchased the service and plans
to begin using it in July according to Vernon Hills Police Chief Gary
Kupsak. 

The system has been used for three years in Merrillville, Indiana and
Police Chief Lance Huish said, "our citizens really like having this
information come to them."

The data base in each Reverse-911 system can be constructed from the
existing 911 data base, except it is set by default to exclude unlisted
or non-published phone numbers. Citizens who specifically want to be
added or deleted can request this from the police. 

According to Soucek, citizens are demanding more and more of police
and the answer seems to be in community policing. He said, "it is very
simple to encourage citizen involvement. Law enforcement agencies must
do all they can to enlist the help of citizens they serve. Most
citizens would be willing to help if only they knew how."

In addition to warnings to the community from police, the system can
also be used to communicate with residents about other emergecies in
the town such as a pending storm, a gas leak or a fire. 

System messages that are not answered or are met with a busy signal
are called several additional times in an attempt to deliver the
message which can be of varying lengths. If the caller hangs up the
phone then the system also disconnects. As noted above, making entries
in the data base is quite easy, and citizens can opt to be included or
not following the initial default loading and installation.


PAT

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

Date: Wed, 29 May 1996 13:09:08 EDT
From: Edward Connors <econnors@freenet.columbus.oh.us>
Subject: Re: Collect Telephone Sleaze


In the TELECOM Digest Volume 16 Issue 246 message 6 of 11
perry@netplaza.com wrote about billing by Telephone Billing Service
("TBS,Inc.") in behalf of Goldphone (Miami, Florida).

Today 5-28-96 I telephoned to the customer service number 1-800-798-4309 
and spoke to "Shirley" at TBS, Inc.  She stated that this 800 number
is intended for billing inquiries by customers who have accounts at
TBS,Inc. and not for public use otherwise.  She stated that I have no
account with TBS, Inc. and that TBS,Inc. will not "block" charges for
third-party or collect calls to me, because although TBS Inc. does
process bills for Goldphone, she says TBS Inc.  does not block calls
to certain phone numbers.  Shirley said she has no capability to log
when an individual who is not a TBS customer has called to TBS Inc.
Customer Service seeking to forbid all toll calls that might be
claimed by Goldphone thru TBS Inc. in the future.

(There is a technical name for a computerized process used by some
carriers which, analogous to a credit authorization, will prevent toll
calls from being connected if a customer's account has been flagged
for possible fraud.  I think Shirley is saying TBS Inc. does not have
this kind of remote data base administration online, i.e., TBS Inc.
has no information that a toll call is about to be made, TBS only sees
the toll charges claimed after a call occurred.)

The TELECOM Digest message cited above did indicate that TBS Inc.  may
"block" third-party or collect calls, but this is not so, according to
Shirley.

Shirley asked where did I read the misleading information about TBS
Inc., and where did I get their 800 number.


econnors@freenet.columbus.oh.us  <Edward C Connors>


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Shirley may have not been correctly
informed. Other representatives there might possibly have a different
answer; you know how that goes in telco customer service deparments.
None the less, you will want to keep Shirley's 800 number handy so
that in the event you are incorrectly billed by TBS you can call to
get the neccessary adjustment. PAT]  

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

From: Martin McCormick <martin@dc.cis.okstate.edu>
Subject: Loop-Around Pairs
Date: 29 May 1996 15:36:57 GMT
Organization: Oklahoma State University  Stillwater, OK


What exactly are loop-arounds anyway?  I have heard about them for many years.


Martin McCormick WB5AGZ  Stillwater, OK 36.7N97.4W
OSU Center for Computing and Information Services Data Communications Group


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Loop-arounds are phone lines which,
when you dial into them you are immediatly connected to another pair
going right back out to new dial tone in the location where the loop
is located. For example, for many years , dialing various Chicago
numbers of the form 312-any exchange-9909 got you fresh Chicago dial
tone via same-exchange-9910. What you then *did* with that new dial
tone was where the problems arose. Whatever you did, it appeared that
the new call originated from 9910 (which is correct) rather than from
wherever you actually were. Consider loop arounds much like anonymous
email re-forwarding services on the net. 

Loop-arounds were never intended for public use. They are not a public
service provided by telco for people who need to make anonymous and
hard to trace calls. <g>. They are intended for telco testing purposes
in most cases. In the case of 9909/9910 cited above, if you waited a
few seconds after dialing 9909 and hearing the new dial tone issued to
9910, a dialer would come on the line and send out '611'. That went 
back to the days when a telephone repairman might be working in some
territory other than his own, but he needed to contact his own office. 
Dialing 611 would get him the office in the territory where he was at
that time. To get 'his own 611' he would dial exchange-9909 in his own
territory and let it give him a jump to the 611 where he worked out of.
That was the idea behind that one. 

What the phreaks disovered however was that when they heard that dial
tone offered to 9910 (which had gone off hook which 9909 latched it)
they had about five seconds to dial *whatever they pleased* before the
dialer would wake up and do its thing. And by the time it did wake up
and give out '611' it was too late: the network had already heard
seven or ten or eleven digits from the phreak and was processing that
call, not listening any longer to the poor dialer box. And what it
pleased them to dial were all sorts of long distance and international
calls; calls to 900/976 numbers, etc. Had the phreaks limited themselves
to local area unmeasured, untimed calls and used those loop-arounds
for the purpose of concealing themselves or confusing the issue when
someone down the line started looking for them, all would have been
well and fine. But in their greed, they started making five hour long
distance calls, etc. 

Now even the Telephone Company gets phone bills. Department managers
at telco get bills for the phone calls made in their office which they
have to approve for 'payment', i.e. being charged against their budget,
etc. Supervisors in Repair -- in the frames, etc -- started getting
bills for all these calls being billed to whatever-9910; phones they
had probably long forgotten even existed in the spaghetti-bowl of 
central office wiring, etc. 

Most loop-arounds are there for legitimate technical reasons: telco
needs to test line conditions from some remote location but actually
use a line in the desired place, etc. Some loop-arounds are owned by
private companies too lazy or ignorant to know how very important 
it is to protect themselves against phreaks and hackers. As an example,
for many years there was a local seven digit number here in the north
suburbs of Chicago which which dialed gave the caller a hook right
into the United Air Lines (Unitel) phone network. Just sitting there
wide open so anyone calling that number got in response a Unitel dial
tone. It was *intended* for executives of United Air Lines working at
home to enable them to call directly to the desired centrex extension
of UAL at the airline headquarters here. What they seemed to have
forgotten -- but the phreaks knew quite well -- was that there were
all these nifty three-digit tie line codes which in turn connected the
caller to UAL facilties and associated centrexes all over the USA,
each of them with in turn their own tie lines to wherever and nine-level
outgoing local calls (in those respective communities, etc). And it
sat there wide open for years. One three-digit code connected to outgoing
WATS lines; another connected to outgoing Canadian WATS; still another
connected to the centrex at Boeing Aircraft since UAL is or was about
the largest customer of that Seattle firm. 

Loop-arounds now days are usually passcoded. Now and then one will
show up where the owner forgot to properly lockdown his voicemail
system against people calling in and getting a dialtone back out or he
forgot about or never was told of the remote access port on his PBX
which allows the company which installed it to repair it from off site.
Maybe he knew about the DISA, but never bothered to change the default
passcode which every phreak knows.

When the Dimension PBX was a big thing back in the 1970's from AT&T,
the passcode to the remote access port was always defaulted to '0000'.
No one ever told the customers, and most people at AT&T did not know
it either, but you can bet all the phreaks knew it. The Chicago and
Northwestern Railroad had to learn it the hard way to the tune of
about a hundred thousand dollars in one of the first major loop-around
fraud scandals around 1975. Illinois Bell ate the loss, but not before
they had security guys traveling far and wide talking to recipients of
some of the long distance calls. General Motors had the same thing
happen to them about 1975 or so, but it was closer to a million dollars
before they finally locked out all the loop-arounds completely. 

Loop-arounds are still available, and phreaks still discover the
passcodes for them. They are still used to 'anonymize' calls to places
where the caller would rather not be personally associated. I hope
this answers your question.    PAT]

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

From: Bruce A. Pennypacker <brucep@stylus.com>
Subject: Re:AT&T 8130 Protocol Request
Date: 29 May 1996 12:43:20 GMT
Organization: Stylus Products Group, Artisoft Inc.


In article telecom16.246.9@massis.lcs.mit.edu, tony@ics.com (Tony
Aiuto) said:

> Does anyone know the protocol spoken by the AT&T 8130 telephone?  It
> has a little serial port out the back which passes caller id
> information out to a computer.  It works fine with the provided
> Windows software, but I want to make it talk to my own applications.
> I have been trying to decipher it, but still can't make sense of
> their caller id info.  It is NOT the standard ascii stream, but some
> binary protocol.

I'm not sure about the actual protocol, but the AT&T 8130 did at one
point have a TAPI service provider (driver) available for it.  I'm not
sure if you can still obtain it since the phone itself was discontin-
ued by AT&T shortly after it hit the store shelves (a terrible shame,
IMHO).  If you can track down the TAPI service provider then it's
pretty straightforward to communicate with the phone via the serial
port.

FYI, I might be able to track down a copy of the service provider
here.  We got one of those phones for testing our TAPI software but
never actually used it since it got discontinued.


Bruce Pennypacker   |  Stylus Products Group  |  Phone: +1 617 621 9545
Software Engineer   |     Artisoft, Inc.      |  Fax:   +1 617 621 7862
Resident TAPI guru  |      201 Broadway       |  http://www.stylus.com
brucep@stylus.com   |   Cambridge, MA 02139   |  sales: sales@stylus.com

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

From: lclee@primenet.com (Larry Lee)
Subject: Re: Caller-ID Delay in California
Date: 29 May 1996 06:10:02 -0700
Organization: Primenet


In article <telecom16.246.2@massis.lcs.mit.edu> TELECOM Digest Editor
noted in response to lauren@vortex.com (Lauren Weinstein) who had
written about a delay in implementing Caller ID in California:

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I find it just incredible that you seem
> to have so many people in California on this kick. What is with all 
> these people who seem to feel they have this right to hide themselves
> when they make calls no matter whose time they waste or whatever fool-
> ish calls they originate?  I'll be glad to see 'blocked number blocking'
> (where recipients have the right to block calls from persons who hide
> their phone numbers) become universal. I am going to encourage everyone
> to sign up for it.   PAT]

If you had any idea of the amount of negative ads that the phone
companies have run and are continuing to run on radio and TV, you
wouldn't find it incredible.  I have not heard one positive or
encouraging statement about caller id.

It's my understanding that we can buy 'blocked number blocking' from
Radio Shack and don't need to bother the phone companies!

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

Date: Wed, 29 May 1996 09:56:06 -0400
From: Chris Wysocki <chris@datalife.com>
Subject: Re: MCI Cellular


> I just received a soliciation to join MCI's cellular service and receive
> a Nokia 100 phone for free (golly!!!).

> Here in NYC, we already have an "A" and "B" system provider. Where
> does MCI fit into this system? Can there be multiple "A" system
> providers in the same market? I thought not ...

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: There is just one A/B in each area. 
> What MCI is doing is reselling either A or B, depending on whatever
> was the best deal they could cut for themselves with one of the two.

MCI bought Nationwide Cellular Service which is a reseller of both the
A (AT&T Wireless) and B (Bell Atlantic / Nynex) carriers in the New
York metro area.  They run specials on one or the other carrier
depending on which one is currently offering them the best deal.  I
have their service (with Bell Atlantic / Nynex as the underlying
carrier) and have been generally pleased with it.  Roaming has been
relatively painless and auto call delivery works.  They did insist
that I get a PIN code though.


Christopher Wysocki  | chris@datalife.com | +1 201 239 7500 x232
Data Life Associates | 500 Bloomfield Ave | Verona, NJ 07044 USA
URL: http://wyvax.datalife.com/chris      | +1 201 239 0943 Fax 

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

Subject: Re: Around and Around With Jeff Boy 
Date: Wed, 29 May 1996 11:04:17 -0500
From: TELECOM Digest Editor <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>


Here's an update from a reader:

I think this system is probably connected to an ISDN line because I
have never heard a ring.  He appears to have the ability to lock out
"problem" numbers because one can call the 800 number from some
anonymous place and pester him for a while and then you notice that
calls from that number no longer do anything but disconnect
immediately.  Going to another payphone gives one a whole new lease on
life in making Jeffy understand what harrassment is all about.

	If you send any tones during the announcement, it stops
abruptly and a female voice tells you to leave a recording.  I am not
sure of the upper limit on time, but it is pretty long.  I am not sure
if the recording time you get this way goes to the same mailbox as
what you get if you just let the geek's message run its obnoxious
course.  I sure hope he's having a fun time listening to all the
interesting program material that folks are probably leaving.  It
takes a whole village to razz a cad.  :)
     
                         ------------------

Another reader wrote to say he had already made Slaton's hit list
and sent a copy of the letter Slaton wrote him as proof:

   Date: 29 May 96 14:07:50 EDT
   From: "Clifford D. McGlamry" <102073.1425@CompuServe.COM>

Pat,

I got a nastygram from Jeff Slaton.  It is attached.  All I did was
asked him to remove me from his spam mail list.  As you can see, his
address is on the mail.  I've already sent a notice to
abuse@interamp.com for them to deal with him, but don't know what good
it will do.

Has anyone possibly checked with the State of New Mexico to see if
this corporation exists and who/where the registered agent is?

  > Date: Sat, 25 May 1996 10:41:55 +0130
  > To: 102073.1425@CompuServe.COM
  > From: exd917635@interramp.com (LIGHTNING BOLT v2.0)
  > Subject: CLIFFORD D. MCGLAMRY Congratulations!

> CLIFFORD D. MCGLAMRY Congratulations!

> You have been listed as an INTERNET HARASSER.

> Those who call to harrass will have their names, addresses and phone
> numbers posted in alt 2600, phrack,crack and hack for ALL to have fun.
> Have a nice day;) WANK!

> PS
> We will be adding your SSN in the very near future so that there is a
> complete file on you.

> Best Regards,

> Eunuchs, Etc.

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


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Cliff, from all us here at the Digest,
our heartiest congratulations on this award from Jeff boy. As far as
I know, you are the first in what may be a large number of netizens
to receive this badge of accomplishment, and I hope you display it
proudly. 

News from other places on the net is that a community goal for June
is to cause Jeff boy to have a phone bill of at least one-hundred
thousand dollars via his 800 number. I'm told the goal is to raise
at least one-hundred thousand dollars monthly for the coffers of 
whatever telco Jeff boy chooses as his 800 carrier. Of course, this
is a big project, and it is hoped everyone in the community will
participate. 

It is *not* harrassment to call 800*351*8085 and ask to be removed
 from any and all mailing lists or data bases the company maintains,
although Jeff boy may choose to award you the honor anyway as he
did for Cliff as noted above. If it is harrassment you have planned,
then I cannot help you with that; you are on your own, but bear in
mind he is collecting ANI and issuing 'awards' to phone callers.  PAT]

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

Date: Wed, 29 May 1996 12:43:28 -0700
From: Mark J. Cuccia <mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu>
Subject: Re: More CID Frolics!


On Wed, 29 May 1996, Stan Schwartz <stan@vnet.net> wrote:

> Today, I received another "interesting" call.  There was no message on
> the machine, but all of my CID devices have the name "WASHINGTON" (for
> the state, I assume), and a number 206-959-0525.  This number is not
> only not dialable, but 959 does not exist in either the 206, 360, or 509
> NPA's.

> Can anyone help me with TODAY'S mystery???

The NPA-959 prefix, at least in *geographic/POTS* NPA's (i.e. those
NPA's *not* of the N00 form, 888, 456, 710?, etc), has for *decades*
been reserved by AT&T Long-Lines ("The Bell System"), now Bellcore for
test functions. 959 'itself' usually doesn't show up in numerical
listings of NXX's by NPA in most Bellcore and other numbering/routing
documents. In Bellcore (and other) materials, 959 will usually be
indicated in a section of "special" or "universal" central office
codes (such as 950, 976, 555, etc). Historically the 55X, 95X, 97X and
57X couldn't be used for EXchange names, as there are no vowels on the
5, 7 and 9. It was difficult to compose a name for these four 'NN'
numerical combinations. Notice how many "special" central office codes
and test codes (ANAC, Ring-Back, Test Board) have been used in many
places using such codes.

Personally, I really don't think that a US West, AT&T or GTE test
center in Washington state was calling you. A few months back, a
friend of mine in the New Orleans area received several calls over a
week's time where the CID box displayed a number 407-511-0000, and the
word "FLORIDA". Now 407 *is* an area code in Florida. BellSouth serves
New Orleans and many exchanges in the 407 Florida NPA. If a CID number
transmits via a toll carrier and both the originating and receiving
exchanges are both BellSouth, then the receiving end BellSouth switch
does a database lookup in the BellSouth LIDB (Line Information
DataBase) to get a "name" for the number. If the calling number is not
in BellSouth's LIDB, then the receiving end switch gets a
City/Ratecenter name and the two-letter abbreviation of the state,
from the NPA-NXX of the calling number. On calls I've received from
Canada, it seems that the lookup doesn't go down as far as the central
office NXX code. It only gets the (primary) province name of the
originating NPA. So on calls from Yukon (Area Code 403) or the 403
portion of the Northwest Territories, I get "ALBERTA" spelled out, as
the primary province that 403 (presently) covers is Alberta. On calls
to me from Prince Edward Island (902) where CID is carried, I also get
"NOVA SCOTIA" spelled out, as 902's primary province is Nova Scotia.

Well, in my friend's situation where he got "FLORIDA" and the number
407-511-0000, we know that N11 codes are *not* used as regular POTS
central office codes -- they are *three-digit local service or special
codes*, although I think that Pac*Bell has used local area only
seven-digit numbers of the form 611-xxxx or 811-xxxx to reach their
telco business office and repair service specialized departments. But
you weren't able to dial a Pac*Bell NPA plus the N11-xxxx numbers from
outside of Pac*Bell territory.  Since the receiving end switch
couldn't determine the City/Ratecenter name from 407-511, it simply
'defaulted' the name display to show "FLORIDA" as Area Code 407 is one
of Florida's NPA's.

It turned out that my friend was at home on one occasion when this
407-511-0000 call rang in. He has a close relative who is frequently
in and out of local area hospitals, 'half-way' houses and 'care
centers' due to an emotional condition. His close relative wouldn't
really have much money, sometimes not even pocket change, when from
time-to-time has 'slipped-out' of the care center, unauthorized. It
turned out that the relative was *calling collect, locally*, from
within the New Orleans area, from a *private payphone* (COCOT) which
diverted the call to and through some *AOSlime private operator*,
apparantly located in the Orlando FL area! This AOSlime somehow
'identified' its ANI or 'line' number (via SS7?) to/through itself (if
the AOSlime company was 'carrying' the call itself) or whatever IXC
*actually* carried the call back to the New Orleans BellSouth LATA as
407-511-0000. My friend doesn't remember which AOSlime verbally
identified itself (if it even did) that there was a 'collect' call. He
refused the charges, as the relative *knows* that they had better
return to the care center, pronto! He *still got charged* by AOSlime,
via the AOSlime or OAN pages which came with the BellSouth monthly
bill, some *three months later*, but after one single call to
BellSouth (and explaining to Bell that he would also be complaining to
the La. Public Service Commission and the FCC), the charges were
removed by Bell!


MARK J. CUCCIA   PHONE/WRITE/WIRE:     HOME:  (USA)    Tel: CHestnut 1-2497
WORK: mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu |4710 Wright Road| (+1-504-241-2497)
Tel:UNiversity 5-5954(+1-504-865-5954)|New Orleans 28  |fwds on no-answr to
Fax:UNiversity 5-5917(+1-504-865-5917)|Louisiana(70128)|cellular/voicemail

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

From: Telecom@Eureka.vip.best.com (Linc Madison)
Subject: Re: More CID Frolics!
Date: Wed, 29 May 1996 10:04:31 -0700
Organization: Best Internet Communications


In article <telecom16.250.3@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Stan Schwartz
<stan@vnet.net> wrote:

> Last week, we heard about the calls I'm receiving where my CID displays
> show the first 10 digits of my account number with a regional bank.

> Today, I received another "interesting" call.  There was no message on
> the machine, but all of my CID devices have the name "WASHINGTON" (for
> the state, I assume), and a number 206-959-0525.  This number is not
> only not dialable, but 959 does not exist in either the 206, 360, or 509
> NPA's.

959 has (or at least had) the singular distinction of being the
least-used prefix in the NANP.  Only in Hawaii (808) is it in use as a
regular prefix.  Some telcos, I am told, use it for various test
numbers and such.


Linc Madison  *  San Francisco, Calif. *  Telecom@Eureka.vip.best.com

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

Subject: Telecom Archives CDROM Ordering Details
Date: Wed, 29 May 1996 10:42:16 -0700
From: TELECOM Digest Editor <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>


People have been asking how to order the Telecom Archives CDROM by
mail order. Not everyone has been able to find it in a store as of
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The Telecom Archives is a fifteen year collection of the stuff which
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Please buy a copy, as the royalties will help me a lot. Also, if sales
are good, there will be an update with the 1996 material on it at
some future point. 

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thier address above, or authorize them to charge your credit card, etc.
As noted also, customers outside the USA need to pay additional 
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If you can find it in a retail outlet then you save shipping and
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PAT

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

The Telecom Archives remains a free resource for the Internet and
is available using anonymous ftp massis.lcs.mit.edu.

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
public service systems and networks including Compuserve and America
On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
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------------------------------

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #251
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Wed May 29 17:07:25 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id RAA06871; Wed, 29 May 1996 17:07:25 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Wed, 29 May 1996 17:07:25 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199605292107.RAA06871@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #252

TELECOM Digest     Wed, 29 May 96 16:32:48 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 252

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Video Compression, Aug.5-8, Portland (Fu Li)
    Re: Unbundling Local Loop Access (Yves Blondeel)
    Ameritech/MFS Interconnect Agreement (Yves Blondeel)    
    Re: Cellular Caller ID (Lynne Gregg)
    Still Seeking Corporate Sponsorship (TELECOM Digest Editor)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: fli@ee.pdx.edu (Fu Li)
Subject: Video Compression, Aug.5-8, Portland
Date: 29 May 1996 13:02:34 -0700
Organization: Portland State University, Portland, OR


               Image and Video Compression: 
        Fundamentals, Applications, and Standards
                A 4-Day Intensive Course 

For more information, please see our WWW homepage at
http://www.ee.pdx.edu/short_courses/image_compression/

Seats are very limited, early registration is encouraged!

About the course:

Recent years have witnessed a surge in the need for storage and
transmission of digital images and video. Digital cameras and scanners
have proliferated the use of digital images in various consumer and
commercial applications.  Digital broadcast systems and digital video
on CD-ROM, which can be played back by affordable multimedia-enabled
PC's, have made digital video part of everyday life. Despite the
increases in storage and transmission capacities, efficient storage
and transmission of images and video is still the foremost challenge.
Thus, image and video compression plays a key enabling role for almost
all consumer, commercial, and scientific applications.

Digital image and video compression is a current focus of research and
international standardization. Recent standards such as JPEG, JBIG,
H.261, H.263, MPEG-1 and MPEG-2, and the emerging standards such as
MPEG-4, reflect the state-of-the-art algorithms, and are important in
facilitating interoperability among various imaging systems and
wide-spread, cost-effective deployment of the technology.  Emerging
technologies such as wavelets have shown promise in replacing some of
the current standards as they might provide more functionality than is
available from today's standards.

The course provides a detailed description of the fundamentals, a
working knowledge of the various image and video compression
standards, and a technical description of the emerging technologies.
Upon completion of the course, students will be equipped with the
background in information theory that will help them understand the
performance limitations of various compression solutions. Further,
they will gain a solid understanding of the basic principles and
standards of digital image and video compression in such a way as to
optimize their use for a particular application. Finally, they will
gain a technical understanding of the emerging technologies, such as
wavelets and fractals, that will enable them to assess their value in
serving niche markets not addressed by the current standards, as well
as their impact on the development of future standards.

The course starts on the first day with a broad set of product and 
application examples that establish the need for compression. This 
is followed by a brief description of the existing and emerging 
image and video compression standardization activities, their scope 
and their functionalities. Next, the three main components of 
compression systems, representation, quantization, and symbol 
modeling and encoding are discussed.  The topic of symbol modeling 
and encoding is studied in detail where fundamental concepts, such 
as Markov models, entropy, and Shannon's noiseless coding theorem, 
are discussed. A working knowledge of various encoding strategies, 
such as Huffman coding, arithmetic coding, LZW coding, and Rice coding, 
is presented and their relative merits and shortcomings are compared. 
Finally, lossless encoding algorithms, such as the current and emerging 
JPEG lossless standard and bit plane/JBIG coding, are explained.

The second day focuses on lossy image compression and the JPEG
standard.  It also builds the foundation for video compression schemes
such as the MPEG and the H.26x family of standards. First, a brief
review of various quantization strategies, such as scalar, vector, and
trellis-coded quantization, is provided and their performance merits
are compared.  This is followed by a detailed description of transform
coding with particular emphasis on the discrete cosine transform
(DCT), the fundamental building block of all image and video
compression standards.  Next, the JPEG international standard for the
compression of continuous-tone color still images is studied and its
baseline, extended, and enhanced modes of operation are described in
detail.  Various issues regarding the implementation of JPEG in
practical systems, such as the design of Q tables, the effect of
multiple coding and software and hardware speed, are discussed.
Numerous image examples supplement the technical descriptions.

The third day deals with emerging technologies and video compression.
Wavelet and sub-band encoding schemes and their performance merits
relative to DCT are studied both analytically and by subjective
evaluation of many image examples. The basics of fractal image
compression are reviewed.  Video compression, and the major components
of a video compression system, pre-processing, encoding, decoding, and
post-processing, are discussed.  Fundamental principles of motion
estimation and an overview of widely used motion estimation
algorithms, such as block matching and hierarchical block matching,
are presented. Motion estimation utilizes the temporal redundancies in
video sequences to increase compression efficiency. It also
facilitates the development of multi-frame pre- and post-processing
algorithms that are more powerful than their single-frame
counterparts. Principles and algorithms of motion-compensated noise
suppression and defect removal are presented as examples of
pre-processing. Pre-processing is often among the differentiating
factors used in evaluation of an entire video compression system due
to its significant impact on the resulting compression efficiency.
Video format standards conversion is an important post-processing
step, especially in multimedia applications where the decoded video
may have to be displayed by a system adhering to a different video
format standard. Techniques for interlace-to-progressive scan
conversion and frame rate conversion are discussed and the importance
of motion information in standards conversion is demonstrated.
Finally, a detailed discussion of the fundamentals and the working
principles of the MPEG1 video compression standard is provided.

The final day is devoted to MPEG2, MPEG4, H.261 and H.263 standards.
The MPEG2 video compression standard is presented with emphasis on its
differences from MPEG1. Its applications in digital video disk (DVD)
and Advanced TV (ATV) standardization are also discussed. An overview
of the emerging MPEG4 standard is presented which targets new
application areas with increased interactivity and extendibility. The
second half of this day is devoted to video conferencing standards
beginning with H.261 which targets ISDN at data rates of multiples of
64 k-bits/sec. The newly developed standard, H.263, incorporates
several recent innovations over H.261 and targets data rates less than
64 k-bits/sec. It has demonstrated acceptable quality over PST-N
networks using 28.8 k-bit/sec modems and promises to bring video
conferencing to the mass consumer market. Details of H.261 and H.263
will be presented, followed by demonstrations of video quality using
simulations and product demos.

Instructors:

Majid Rabbani,    Eastman Kodak Company

M. Ibrahim Sezan, Sharp Laboratories of America
Thomas Gardos,    Intel Corporation

Organizers:
Fu Li
Rolf Schaumann
Portland State University

Course Outline:

Introduction:

 -- Need for compression (application and product examples.)
 -- Statistical redundancy and perceptual irrelevancy, examples
 -- Compression building blocks transformation, quantization, 
    symbol modeling and encoding
 -- Brief overview of lossless and lossy compression standards

Symbol Modeling and Encoding:

 -- Markov modeling and entropy
 -- Huffman coding
 -- Arithmetic coding
 -- Rice coding
 -- LZW coding

Lossless Compression Techniques:

 -- Differential Pulse Code Modulation (DPCM)
 -- Bit plane encoding and JBIG
 -- Current and emerging JPEG lossless standards

Quantization Strategies:

 -- Uniform scalar
 -- Nonuniform MM-SE scalar (Lloyd-Max)
 -- Entropy constrained quantization (ECQ)
 -- Vector quantization (VQ)
 -- Trellis-coded quantization (TCQ)

The JPEG International Standard:

 -- Discrete cosine transform (DCT)
 -- Baseline JPEG
 -- Extended JPEG features
 -- Enhancements to JPEG (adaptive quantization for fixed-rate JPEG, etc.)
 -- JPEG implementation issues (fast DCT's, effect of multiple coding, 
    design of quantization tables, etc.)

Emerging Technologies:

 -- Wavelets (analysis and synthesis filter design, quantization and coding 
    strategies, comparisons to JPEG, etc.)
 -- Fractals (Jacquin's technique, weighted finite automata (WFA))

Motion Estimation:

 -- Overview of widely used algorithms (block matching, hierarchical block 
    matching)

Pre-and Post-Processing:

 -- Motion-compensated noise filtering as pre-processing
 -- Video format conversion: interlace to proscan and frame rate conversion.

Video Compression Standards:

 -- The MPEG1 standard
 -- The MPEG2 standard (including discussions on rate control, bit-stream 
    syntax and utilization in Digital Video Disk and Advanced TV 
    standardization).
 -- The H.261 and H.263 standards.
    Examples of silicon and board-level implementations of standards.
 -- Actual product demonstrations 

About the Instructors:

MAJID RABBANI - received his Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering
from the UW-Madison in 1983. He is currently a Research Associate and
the head of the image compression and video processing group in the
Imaging Science Division of Eastman Kodak Research Laboratories. He is
also involved in many educational activities among which are teaching
graduate courses at Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT), satellite
courses for NTU (National Technological University), and short course
for SPIE, IS&T, SID, and other technical Societies.

He is the recipient of the 1988 C. E. K. Mees Award (Kodak's highest
award for for excellence in research) and the co-recipient of the 1990
Emmy Engineering Award in recognition of the Kodak Still-Video
Transceiver System. He represents Kodak at the International JPEG and
MPEG organizations. Dr. Rabbani has testified as an expert witness for
the digital processing of images and video in several court cases,
including the digital enhancement of the Rodney King beating videotape
in 1993.

His current research interests span the various aspects of digital
signal and image processing where he has published over 40 technical
articles and holds 11 patents. He is a fellow of SPIE and a senior
member of IEEE. He also was the general Symposium Chair for the 1996
SPIE/IS&T co-sponsored Electronic Imaging Symposium in San Jose. He is
the coauthor of the book "Digital Image Compression Techniques"
published in 1991, the editor of the SPIE Milestone Series on "Image
Coding and Compression", published in 1992.

IBRAHIM SEZAN - received his Ph.D degree in Electrical, Computer and
Systems Engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in 1984. He
is currently the Senior Manager of Digital Video Processing at Sharp
Laboratories of America, Camas, Washington. He also holds an adjunct
Associate Professor position at the Electrical Engineering Department
at the University of Rochester. From 1984 to 1996, he worked at
Eastman Kodak Company, Rochester, New York, where he headed the Motion
and Video Technology Area in the Imaging Research and Advanced
Development Laboratories from 1992 to 1996.

Dr. Sezan was the co-recipient of the A. B. Du Mont award at
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in 1984. During 1988-1992, he served
as an Associate Editor of the IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging.
From 1992 to 1994, he was an Associate Editor of the IEEE Transactions
on Image Processing. He contributed to the books Image Recovery:
Theory and Application (Academic Press, 1987), Mathematics in Signal
Processing (Oxford, 1987), Handbook of Signal Processing (Marcell
Dekker, 1988), Digital Image Restoration (Springer Verlag, 1991),
Real-Time Optical Information Processing (Academic Press, 1994), and
edited Selected Papers in Digital Image Restoration (SPIE Milestone
Series, 1992). He is the co-editor of the book Motion Analysis and
Image Sequence Processing, published by Kluwer in 1993. His current
research interests include video modeling, analysis and processing,
and their applications to video compression and digital video
databases. Dr. Sezan is a participant in the MPEG standards; he
actively publishes and teaches in the area of image and video
processing.

THOMAS GARDOS - received his Ph.D. in electrical engineering from the
Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, Georgia in 1993.  He is
currently senior engineer in the Intel Architecture Labs of Intel
Corporation where he is technical lead on development of
standards-based and propriety video compression algorithms for video
conferencing applications. He represents Intel at the ITU H.263
standards group and is principal representative to ISO's MPEG4 group.
He chairs the audio/video compression subcommittee of the Intel
Research Council which is the formal channel of interaction to
academia at Intel.

He also is an adjunct instructor at Portland State University and
Oregon State University where he teaches courses on digital image and
video processing. He has served as Image Processing conference and
session chairs at the SPIE Electronic Imaging Symposia in San Jose. He
won the Best Student Paper award at SPIE's 1992 Visual Communications
Conference and was awarded an NSF Fellowship in the 1991 Japan Summer
Institute. His current interests are in image and video compression as
well as multidimensional signal processing where he has authored
numerous articles and patent applications.

Registration Information:

Dates:  Monday, August 5 - Thursday, August 8, 1996
Times:  Regular sessions will begin at 8:30 AM and end at 5:00 PM.

Refreshments will be served at 8:00 AM daily and at breaks.  Lunch
periods will be from 12:00 to 1:30.

Location:  Classes will be held at Portland State University,
(PSU), located in downtown Portland.  Detailed information will be
sent to registrants.

For further information:

Phone:  (503) 725-3806 or 1-800-547-8887 ext. 3806
Email:  laura@ee.pdx.edu
WWW:  http://www.ee.pdx.edu/short.course/image_compression/

Early Registration:  $1195. Registration form and payment must be
postmarked JULY 10, 1996.

Late Registration:  $1295.  Registration form and payment postmarked
AFTER JULY 10, 1996.

All registration materials must be received JULY 25, 1996. Fees include 
lecture, course materials, refreshments and a Certificate of Completion.

A 15% discount will be granted when 6 or more people from the
same company location register for the course.

Refund: A full refund will be given for cancelations
received at PSU by mail, phone, or e.mail, prior to July 25, 1996.
NO REFUND will be made for a cancelation notice received after July
25, 1996, or for no attendance.  A substitute may attend in place of
the registered participant.

Accommodations:  For reservations made by July 15, 1996,
special rates for participants have been arranged with:

Airline-Carlson Travel: 1-800-634-2306, 5% Airline discount 
(Credit Cards Only). Ask for Catherine.

Days Inn City Center:  1-800-899-0248, $64 single and double occupancy

Red Lion Inn, Portland Center:  (503) 221-0450, $105 single, $120 double

Mention Video and Image Compression when making reservations.  Both 
hotels are a pleasant 10 minute walk to PSU.  Buses and MAX trains 
in the downtown area are free, so it should not be necessary to rent 
a car.  Other nearby hotels:

		The Benson:(503)228-2000
		Heathman Hotel:(503)241-4100
		Hilton Hotel:(503)226-1611
		Mallory Hotel:(503)223-6311
		Marriott Hotel:(503)226-7600

Excursions:  Spousal/Companion activities will be arranged
depending on interest.

Intensive Course Registration

Image and Video Compression: Fundamentals, Applications, and Standards

August 5 - 8, 1996

Portland State University, Portland, Oregon


Name_____________________________________________

Company__________________________________________

Address__________________________________________

City/State/Zip___________________________________

Work Phone_____________________Email address_____________________________

Payment Options:

  $1195 if postmarked BY July 10, 1996
  $1015 per person for six or more registrations from one company location.

  $1295 if postmarked AFTER July 10, 1996
  $1100 per person for six or more registrations from one company location.

Enclosed is a check made payable to Portland State 
University - Electrical Engineering Department

Please charge the registration fee to my credit card:

Visa __________    MasterCard __________

____________________________________________
Account Number, Expiration Date

____________________________________________
Signature

I would like to receive information on the Spousal/Companion activities.

MAIL OR FAX FORM TO:

Portland State University
Department of Electrical Engineering
Image and Video Compression
P.O. Box 751
Portland, OR  97207-0751

Phone:  (503) 725-3806  Fax: (503) 725-3807
Email: laura@ee.pdx.edu

All registration materials must be received by July 25, 1996

For more information, please see our WWW homepage at
http://www.ee.pdx.edu/short_courses/image_compression/

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

From: Yves Blondeel <yblondee@vnet3.vub.ac.be>
Subject: Re: Unbundling Local Loop Access
Date: Wed, 29 May 1996 20:09:46 +0200
Organization: Brussels Free Universities VUB/ULB
Reply-To: yblondee@vnet3.vub.ac.be


Hello Andrew, and greetings to Stefan Stanislawski,

Your question:

> Does anybody know of the practical experience of unbundling of access
> to the local loop (ie interconnecting at the line side of the central
> office)?

I am a regulatory affairs specialist rather than a technical expert,
but I believe that relevant information (conceptual rather than
technical) should be (or should soon become) available based on
important interconnection agreements reached between Ameritech and MFS
and between Frontier Telecom (RochesterTel) and Time Warner Cable.

In both these cases, I understand that line-side access is explicitly
included in the agreement and that the agreements are filed with the
State regulatory authorities. I don't have the filed documents. In
fact, I would be most interested in obtaining them.

Do note that MFS and Time Warner Cable are local (access) network
operators. Also, they both run advanced access networks rather than
traditional twisted-pair networks.

For your information, in the next message is a press release on the
Ameritech-MFS interconnect agreement (MFS press release) and an
extract from the Frontier Open Market Plan which can be found on their
Web page:

http://www.frontiercorp.com/corporate/open_market_plan.html


Yves Blondeel, T-REGS
yblondee@vnet3.vub.ac.be
(Stefan may recall that I contributed to the ONP Local Loop Study).

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

From: Yves Blondeel <yblondee@vnet3.vub.ac.be>
Subject: Ameritech/MFS Interconnection Agreement
Date: Wed, 29 May 1996 20:09:46 +0200
Organization: Brussels Free Universities VUB/ULB
Reply-To: yblondee@vnet3.vub.ac.be


MFS COMPLETES LANDMARK REGIONAL CO-CARRIER INTERCONNECTION AGREEMENT 
WITH AMERITECH First Such Agreement Since Telecommunications Act of 1996 
Passed 

OMAHA, NEB., May 22, 1996 -- MFS Communications Company, Inc. (MFS)
announced today that -- in line with the pro-competitive provisions of
the Telecommunications Act of 1996 -- it has entered into a
comprehensive co-carrier interconnection agreement with Ameritech,
covering Ameritech's entire marketing region, which includes Illinois,
Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin.

This is the first agreement between a Regional Bell Operating Company
(RBOC) and a facilities-based competitor, which seeks to satisfy
specific requirements of the Telecommunications Act of 1996.
"Ameritech is to be commended for its quick action and efforts to meet
its obligations under the new law," said James Q. Crowe, chairman and
chief executive officer of MFS. "Ameritech understands our commitment
to offer high quality local switched services and that this agreement,
coupled with effective implementation by both companies, is key to
accomplishing our goal."

Under the new law, many of the new rights enjoyed by the RBOCs are
contingent upon their ability to foster competition in their local
markets. The Act mandates a specific 14 point co-carrier "check list"
that defines various pro-competitive actions that RBOCs must take
before being allowed to provide interLATA long-distance service within
their own service territories.

Under the sweeping agreement, MFS will be able to begin implementing
broad based local exchange services throughout Ameritech's service
territory. The agreement is designed to allow the prompt development
of local competition in an economically efficient and technically
feasible basis. In 1995, MFS reached a more limited interim
interconnection agreement with Ameritech and is currently offering
competitive local switched services in Chicago and Detroit markets.

"For the first time in Ameritech's entire five-state region, a
competitive carrier is in position to efficiently and cost-effectively
offer customers a meaningful choice for local telephone service over
its own fiber optic networks, augmented by unbundled leased local
phone lines from Ameritech," said Crowe. "We entered this agreement
because MFS is committed to offering extensive local switched services
in the Ameritech region. This agreement provides us the specific tools
to do so and accelerates our provision of competitive local services
in this region.

"This agreement is state-of-the-art in terms of promoting effective
local telephone competition and establishes a benchmark for
negotiations with other RBOCs," said Crowe.

Agreement Provides Blueprint For Provision of Competitive Services The
MFS-Ameritech agreement provides a detailed and comprehensive
blueprint for the provision of competitive local services. It builds
on MFS' practical experience of providing local services in other
markets and addresses the myriad complex procedures necessary to
effect local competition and the interconnection of the two companies'
networks.  Included in the agreement are provisions providing for:

Interconnection at any technically feasible point within Ameritech's 
network, equal in quality to what it provides itself or to affiliates, 
including via a dual fiber optic SONET network connection. 

Access to the poles, ducts, conduits and right-of-way owned or 
controlled by Ameritech at just, reasonable and nondiscriminatory rates. 

Unbundled and reasonably priced network elements including local loop
transmission from Ameritech's central offices to the customer's
premises, distinct from local switching or other services.

Exchange of all local traffic at a fully reciprocal and identical $.009 
rate per minute, regardless of the point of interconnection. 

Receipt by MFS of terminating access charges for long-distance calls 
made to its customers. 

Nondiscriminatory access to 911 and emergency 911 services; directory 
assistance services to allow MFS customers to obtain telephone numbers; 
operator call completion services and white pages directory listings for 
MFS' customers. 

The agreement specifies the procedures for Ameritech to provision and
implement these activities on a detailed, technical and practical
basis.  under the agreement, will subject Ameritech to damages and
other penalties. The agreement will be submitted for approval to the
individual state regulatory agencies and ultimately, the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC).

MFS Quick To Initiate Telco Act Implementation On February 8, 1996 --
the same day President Clinton signed the Telecommunications Act of
1996 into law -- MFS contacted Ameritech and all the other RBOCs and
independent telephone companies active in its markets to initiate
co-carrier interconnection negotiations. Teams of regulatory,
operational and technical experts from the two companies began almost
immediately negotiating the terms of this agreement. MFS is also
engaged in interconnection discussions with other RBOCs and
independents.

Crowe credits the President and Congress for having created the
progressive telecommunications environment making this agreement
possible. "This agreement underscores the effectiveness of the
provisions of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, which clearly
encourages the RBOCs to cooperate and reach mutually acceptable
agreements with competitive carriers," said Crowe.

MFS is a leading provider of communication services for business and
government. Through its operating company subsidiaries, MFS provides
one-stop shopping for integrated local and long distance services as
well as a wide range of high-quality voice, data and other enhanced
services and systems specifically designed to meet the requirements of
business and government customers. MFS' common stock is traded on the
Nasdaq National Market under the symbol MFST. MFS is headquartered in
Omaha, Nebraska.

                               ***** *****
From:

http://www.frontiercorp.com/corporate/open_market_plan.html


Competitor Benefits

Complete access to Rochester Telephone's existing, fully digital network 
Full interconnection of competing local networks 
Reciprocal compensation for network usage 
Equal access to network databases 
Equal access to local telephone numbers 
Convenient telephone number portability 

"We applaud the move. We are fast approaching the day when all services 
will be competitive."- Ameritech spokesperson

By the end of the first quarter of 1995, the following companies had
begun to offer or announced their intention to offer various
telecommunications services in Rochester, New York. Many of them are
using the Rochester Telephone local network as their platform for
customer service:

ACC 
AT&T 
Citizens Telecom 
Frontier Communications of Rochester 
ICS/Executone Telecom, Inc. 
MFS (Metropolitan Fiber Systems) 
TeleChoice Network 
Time Warner 

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

From: Lynne Gregg <lynne.gregg@attws.com>
Subject: Re: Cellular Caller ID
Date: Wed, 29 May 96 11:11:00 PDT


doc_dave@bga.com (David Brod) wrote:

> I am not a paranoid regarding caller ID, but I am rather upset about
> this. Since cellular users must pay for incoming calls, this seems a
> valid reason to not have to pass around my cellular number via caller
> ID. Additionally, since cellular phones do not offer caller ID, we
> do not have the option not to answer the phone either.

As Product Manager for AT&T Wireless' Caller ID service, let me assure
you that we completely understand your position.  When AT&T Wireless
originally launched Caller ID on its cellular network in early 1995, I
personally felt that the majority of consumers might feel just as you
do.  Therefore in the first few markets that offered service, Per Line
Blocking was offered as a DEFAULT.  We sent notices to customers
offering to remove Line Blocking at no charge.  We also explained the
use of *67 and *82.  However, during 1995, the FCC Order on Calling
Number Services kicked in.  

This Order states that all phone companies -- including cellular
companies -- MUST pass CPN (Calling Party Number in this case is your
cellular number).  They further cited an example similar to what we
had been doing (defaulting to Line Blocking) and stated that this
could no longer occur.  So, to comply with the FCC Order, AT&T
Wireless no longer offers Per Line Blocking as a default.  We do send
notices to all active customers (by way of Bill Letter -- so watch
your invoices) prior to launch of Caller ID.  This notice now offers
Per Line Blocking at no charge (one or two States do not allow Line
Blocking, so we have a couple of exceptions).  If you call Customer
Care or mail in your request on the Bill Letter, we will act on your
order.

I am pleasantly surprised to find that the majority of our customers
DO want to send their cellular numbers (especially those calling wired
users who have Anonymous Call Rejection).  We have received numerous
requests to remove Line Blocking in those markets where we applied a
default (prior to FCC Order).  In markets that offered Per Line
Blocking, far less than expected numbers of customers are opting for
the service (it *is* free).

I believe that Caller ID is more valuable for cellular users.  Since
they do pay for incoming calls, knowing who's calling is clearly more
valuable.  also understand the flip side of this, which is of concern
to you.  By disclosing your cellular number, you may increase the
incidence of unwanted inbound calls which result in a charge.  By all
means, order Per Line Blocking or use *67.

Regarding the transmission of "other" numbers.  The FCC is very clear
that no substitutions occur.  CPN is CPN.  Despite numerous petitions,
the FCC is standing firm on their Order.  I believe that they are
attempting to strike a balance among consumers.  I also believe the
primary concern is with the consumers who PAY for Caller ID.  This
issue came before the FCC because consumers who paid for Caller ID
infrequently saw numbers appearing on their displays.  In a nutshell,
consumers were not getting what they were paying for.  Also, there
were inconsistencies among telephone companies in terms of passing and
blocking CPN.  So the FCC Order goes a long way to address these
issues.

Finally, AT&T Wireless WILL offer Caller ID to digital cellular
subscribers in all cities by Fall, 1997.  Please feel free to post to
me directly if you have comments or questions.  I'm glad to help.


Regards,

Lynne Gregg
lynne.gregg@attws.com

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

From: TELECOM Digest Editor <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Subject: Still Seeking Corporate Sponsorship
Date: Wed, 29 May 1996 17:00:00 EDT


This is just a note to remind Digest readers that corporate sponsorship
of the Digest effective July 1 is still urgently needed. The grant
given by Microsoft to me last year expires at the end of June. If
there is any way your company can be of assistance, please  do so.


PAT

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
public service systems and networks including Compuserve and America
On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. 

Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:

                 * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu *

The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
Townson of Skokie, Illinois USA. You can reach us by postal mail, fax 
or phone at:
                      Post Office Box 4621
                     Skokie, IL USA   60076
                       Phone: 500-677-1616
                        Fax: 847-329-0572
  ** Article submission address: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu

Our archives are located at mirror.lcs.mit.edu and are available by using
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*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from the              *
* International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in Geneva, Switzerland    * 
* under the aegis of its Telecom Information Exchange Services (TIES)   * 
* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
* ing views of the ITU.                                                 *
*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
yourself who provide funding in amounts deemed appropriate. Your help
is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of twenty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #252
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Thu May 30 14:19:20 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id OAA15517; Thu, 30 May 1996 14:19:20 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 14:19:20 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199605301819.OAA15517@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #253

TELECOM Digest     Thu, 30 May 96 14:19:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 253

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Bell Atlantic Simplifies Richmond, VA Dialing (Tad Cook)
    Security Alert (kellyb@pipeline.com)
    "Thank You For Choosing Bell South!" (Chris Telesca)
    AT&T Movie Placement (Judith Oppenheimer)
    International Conference on Spoken Language 96 Update (Jim Polikoff)
    Information Wanted on Athena International (Carter Thomasson)
    Re: Cellular Caller ID (Mark Gabriele)
    Re: Cellular Caller ID (Andrew C. Green)
    Re: Cellular Caller ID (Boyd Roberts)
    AIN/SS7 Question (Adam H. Hersh)
    I Hate Hayes (Dennis Toeppen)
    Last Laugh! It Makes a Young Girl Cry (Kevin Tieskeotter via Kelly Breit)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Tad Cook <tad@ssc.com>
Subject: Bell Atlantic Simplifies Richmond, VA Dialing
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 09:23:56 PDT


Bell Atlantic Simplifying Local Calls Between Richmond, Va., and Tri-Cities
By Michael Martz, Richmond Times-Dispatch, Va.

Knight-Ridder/Tribune Business News

May 30--"Seven digits, not 11," is the new rule for Bell Atlantic-
Virginia customers to remember when calling between the Richmond and
Tri-Cities areas.

Don't dial 1 or 0, and don't dial the area code. Just call the
seven-digit local number.

Beginning Saturday, calls between the Richmond and the Petersburg-
Colonial Heights-Hopewell areas no longer will be subjected to
long-distance tolls. The same applies to calls between parts of the
Richmond area and Cartersville, Cumberland, Fife and West Point, and
between Chester and the Dinwiddie, McKenney, and Waverly exchanges.

But consumers beware: Seven-digit dialing comes at a price.

Bell Atlantic's Community Choice local calling plan, already
implemented among exchanges on the Eastern Shore, replaces
long-distance tolls with three optional rates.

All of them are much cheaper than Bell Atlantic's current long-distance
tolls, but they're more expensive than a local telephone call. And, by
the way, monthly local telephone rates will increase in all of the
affected exchanges except for those in the Richmond area.

The monthly increases range from $1.69 in Petersburg, Colonial
Heights, Hopewell and Waverly to $3.44 in Cartersville, Fife and West
Point. The rate will rise by $2.42 a month in McKenney and $2.76 in
Cumberland.

In return, customers in those exchanges will be able to call the
Richmond area at reduced rates. Currently, for example, a four-minute
call from Petersburg to Richmond costs 83 cents -- 32 cents for the
first minute and 17 cents for each additional minute.

Beginning Saturday, customers will have these choices for paying to
make the same call:

-- By the minute, the call would cost 22 cents (7.9 cents for the
first minute and 4.5 cents for each additional minute);

-- By five-minute blocks, the call would cost 20 cents;

-- By flat rate, a residential customer would pay $15 a month to make
unlimited calls.

Anyone who doesn't choose will pay by the minute. Customers can change
options without charge for six months, but then the company will make
them pay to switch ($9 for residences, $17 for businesses).

Some people will be able to get a jump on seven-digit dialing because
the company has been carrying out the plan gradually. "For a number of
phones right now, you can dial it locally," said spokesman Paul T.
Miller Jr.

But until Saturday, they'll be billed at the old toll rates.

The State Corporation Commission approved the Community Choice plan in
December.  One commissioner, Hullihen W. Moore, dissented because he
believed state regulation requires a public hearing that never was
held.

The plan represents the third part of Bell Atlantic's 1993 strategy of
expanding local calling areas and options, both in response to
customer demand and in preparation for competition in so-called
short-haul longdistance markets.

The company expanded calling in the Richmond area and eliminated tolls
on calls between contiguous areas, including those separated by water,
such as Newport News and Norfolk.

Bell Atlantic estimates that it will lose about $27 million a year in
revenue for the three initiatives, but the company avoids having to
compete with long-distance carriers to serve the affected routes.

         -----

FOR ONLINE SERVICES:

Visit Gateway Virginia, the online edition of the Richmond (Va.)
Times-Dispatch.  On Prodigy, jump: Gateway Virginia. On the World Wide
Web, point your browser to http://www.gateway-va.com

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

From: kellyb@pipeline.com
Subject: Security Alert
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 13:34:42 GMT
Organization: PSINet/Pipeline USA


<<<<<<<SECURITY*ALERT>>>>>>>>

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Target your Web Browser to: http://www.spyzone.com

Our products can capture spies, stop competitors, provide competitive
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what to whom and how they do it. You want additional information about
this fascinating category. You want to speak with real live SPIES. You
can look forward to these SPYZONE features by month's end. Meanwhile
take a look at BEST SOURCES, check out the most comprehensive LINKS to
other security sites in our RESOURCES section or for more complete
information regarding security solutions and services please contact
us online, FAX (USA) 212-983-1278 or call 212-557-3040. If you need
solutions for actual problems you're facing send us an E mail or give
us a call.

For every monitoring system there is a counter measure to defeat it.
Each threat to personal protection can be met with an equally
effective solution. Body armor, bullet proof vehicles and kidnap
protection defend against extreme threats to personal safety. Secure
radio, telephone and fax as well as voice and data encryption carry
communications safely from point to point. Recording nullifiers render
tape recorders useless. Access controls and sophisticated airport
security guard against unwanted and dangerous intrusions.

BODY ARMOR: Armored Jacket-A weatherproof sporting jacket designed to
protect you during outdoor surveillance operations. Protection between
Full front side and rear coverage. Available as vest and as full
length coats. All sizes and styles. For complete product line and
pricing, contact us.
 
BULLET PROOF VEHICLES: CCS has been armoring cars for over 40 years
and in that time we have accumulated many demo models which are
completely fitted with fully functional armor. Most vehicles are in
excellent condition with about 1,200 to 10,000 miles on them. These
vehicles are reduced in price and ready for immediate delivery. 

KIDNAP PROTECTION: "We want $400,000 in cash or your chief executive
dies". Be prepared for the real possibility of kidnap. The AJ1800 PKR
transmitter is specifically designed to alert security personnel of
kidnap and to track the victim thus facilitating rescue. Track
contraband, find stolen vehicles, protect VIPs, rescue kidnap victims.


PERSONAL SAFETY "Theft Proof Briefcases": A thief grabs your briefcase
full of valuables, cash and important papers. You press a remote
button which you carry on your key chain. Instantly 35,000 volts of
electric power sizzle through the stolen briefcase handle.  The thief
drops the case and runs.

The Security Blanket AL-22: Completely immobilize any attacker with a
blinding burst of light. This safe and proven "flashlight type" device
is a must for any home or office. For complete product line and prices
contact us online at ;

Our Web Page          http://www.spyzone.com
Our Email               spyzone@webscope.com
Phone/East Coast-USA       1-800-722-4490
Phone/West Coast-USA       1-800-779-7055
Overseas please Phone      1-212-688-8500
FAX Number                 1-212-983-1278
  
For many more info on our products or great links to related Security
objectives.

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

From: Chris Telesca <ctelesca@ncsu.campus.mci.net>
Subject: "Thank You For Choosing Bell South!"
Date: 30 May 1996 04:10:04 GMT
Organization: CampusMCI


What's the deal with that recorded message thanking me for choosing Bell
South for my local home telephone service.  I don't have any freaking
choice what company I get my local service from -- at least not yet.  If
given the choice, I will not choose the company that nickle and dimes me
with all these local calling area options.  I'm tired of all this crap,
and with AT&T's Long-Distance calling plan.  Just give me the lowest
flat-rate for long-distance calls, and extend the local calling area. 
When I used to live in Hershey and Mechanicsburg, PA, I used to be able
to call friends in the other communities as local calls -- even though
they were in different counties and were probably 30 to 40 miles apart. 
Stop screwing around making us think that were getting a "special deal".
and just lower the prices, like you assured us would happen with the new
Telecommunications Bill.


Chris Telesca
PO Box 98102 / Raleigh, NC  27624-8102
Voice/Fax (call first for fax): (919)676-2597
Check out the NOREDNC web page at - 
http://www.angelfire.com/pages0/norednc

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

From: callbrand@aol.com (CallBrand)
Subject: AT&T Movie Placement
Date: 29 May 1996 21:44:25 -0400
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Reply-To: callbrand@aol.com (CallBrand)


Anyone know how much AT&T paid for placement in the movie, "The Truth
About Cats & Dogs"?


Judith Oppenheimer, President, Interactive CallBrand
A leading source of information on 800 issues.
CallBrand@aol.com, 1 800 The Expert, (ph) 212 684-7210, (fx) 212 684-2714
http://www.users.nyc.pipeline.com:80/~producer/

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

From: polikoff@asel.udel.edu (Jim Polikoff)
Subject: International Conference on Spoken Language 96 Update
Date: 29 May 1996 19:21:45 -0400
Organization: AI duPont Institute


======================================================================
                 ICSLP 96  -- Update and Reminder
======================================================================

    Fourth International Conference on Spoken Language Processing
 
                              ******
                        October 3-6, 1996
                   Wyndham Franklin Plaza Hotel
                      Philadelphia, PA, USA
                              ******

We would like to announce the availability of the preliminary program
for ICSLP 96 on our WWW site at http://www.asel.udel.edu/icslp. This
site will provide up-to-date listings of the full contents of the
preliminary program and allow authors and prospective attendees to
search the ICSLP 96 abstract database by content. Visitors may use this
web site to locate the session assignments of papers and to read
abstracts of papers accepted for presentation (if available in machine
readable form).

Please note that the deadline for early registration is July 1,
1996. The registration form and hotel accommodation information are
available at the ICSLP 96 web site. The registration form (in
postscript) can be copied, printed and returned by post with payment
enclosed. If fees are to be paid by credit card, the form may also be
returned by FAX.

  ___________________Registration Information______________________________

      Full registration includes:
	  Admission to technical sessions, Reception, Banquet,
	  Proceedings (printed & CD-ROM)

      Limited registration includes:
	  Admission to technical sessions, Reception, Proceedings on CD-ROM

      Early Registration fees:
			      Member*  Non-Member  Student
	      Full		$425	  $525	     $250
	      Limited		$300	  $400	     $150

      Late registration:
	      After July 1, add $60
	      After August 9, add $100

      Additional Tickets:
	      Banquet		 $60
	      Reception		 $50

      Additional Proceedings:
	      Printed		$125
	      CD-ROM		 $15

* Sponsoring and Cooperating Organizations: 
      The Acoustical Society of America
      The Acoustical Society of Japan
      American Speech and Hearing Association
      Australian Speech Science and Technology Association
      European Speech Communication Association
      IEEE Signal Processing Society
      Incorporated Canadian Acoustical Association
      International Phonetic Association
      Linguistic Society of America


   ICSLP 96
   A.I. duPont Institute
   P.O. Box 269
   Wilmington, DE 19899
   E-mail: ICSLP96@asel.udel.edu
   URL: http://www.asel.udel.edu/icslp
   Phone: +1-302-651-6830
   Fax:   +1-302-651-6895

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

Date: Wed, 29 May 1996 16:23:07 EDT
From: CThomasson@ASSOCDATA.COM (Carter Thomasson)
Subject: Information Wanted on Athena International


Looking for information on Athena Intenational. They offer
international call back, smart card and other services.  The services
they offer seem to be good and well priced. Has anyone used them or
compared them to others in this crowded field?


Thanks,

Carter Thomasson  (CThomasson@assocdata.com)
Associated Data Services

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

From: gabriele@rand.org (Mark Gabriele)
Subject: Re: Cellular Caller ID
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 09:59:01 -0700
Organization: RAND


In article <telecom16.252.4@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Lynne Gregg
<lynne.gregg@attws.com> wrote:

> As Product Manager for AT&T Wireless' Caller ID service, let me assure
> you that we completely understand your position.  When AT&T Wireless
> originally launched Caller ID on its cellular network in early 1995, I
> personally felt that the majority of consumers might feel just as you
> do.  Therefore in the first few markets that offered service, Per Line
> Blocking was offered as a DEFAULT.  [snip]...

> So, to comply with the FCC Order, AT&T
> Wireless no longer offers Per Line Blocking as a default. 

This raises a problem that is particularly irritating in some
circumstances with which I am familiar.  I post it only to ask if this
type of situation is being given proper consideration.

I can fully understand people setting "anonymous caller rejection" on
their home phone lines.  However, there are times when it is problematic. 
For example:

A person calls a physician's office (after hours) with a medical
emergency.  The person's call results in the physician being paged to call
the patient.

The physician calls the patient from their phone (home or cellular),
with blocking set ON.  The physician's call is rejected because the
patient has the "anonymous call rejection" set ON.  Ooops.  Now, in
order to perform their ethical duty, the physician has to send caller
ID to the patient in order for the patient to receive the call.  Now,
the patient can jot down the physician's home or cellular phone number
and call at their convenience (such as the next time little Johnny is
throwing up at 3:00 am, or when Sally suffers a mental health crisis
because her beaux dumped her).

This is not a desirable circumstance for the physician.

What I would propose is that CID should be capable of sending a
*different* number registered to the same person (or a corporate
number, with the permission of the corporation or on a business line).
This provides protection for people who for legitimate professional
reasons may wish to retain their personal privacy.  Unfortunately, I
have not heard of any such capability in any jurisdiction with which I
am familiar.

I'm curious about why this seems to have escaped consideration, and
what, if anything, ought to be done about it.


Thanks,

Mark Gabriele   (PGP public key available upon request)
gabriele@rand.org


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: This has been discussed here in the
past and I think that some people are annoyed with the idea that a
professional person with whom they are dealing thinks their time 
or privacy is more important than the person they are dealing with.
They do not feel that the 'professional' should be able to call them
at home at their leisure (for example) and yet they are not able to
do the same in return. Some people are annoyed for example by lawyers
who always want to have your home number to reach you but refuse to
give you their home number in return. I think that is where the problem
arises here. I am not taking sides on it either way.   PAT]

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

Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 10:51:58 -0500
From: Andrew C. Green <acg@frame.com>
Subject: Re: Cellular Caller ID


doc_dave@bga.com (David Brod) wrote:

> I am not a paranoid regarding caller ID, but I am rather upset about
> this. Since cellular users must pay for incoming calls, this seems a
> valid reason to not have to pass around my cellular number via caller
> ID.

On a related note, I was wondering whether, in the three years or so
that I've had my cellular phone(s), the fact that I've had not one
single unwanted call (read: telemarketer) was simply dumb luck, or due
to my phone's exchange being earmarked somewhere as a cellular prefix.

While I myself would never give out the number, phone numbers in general
do have a way of, shall we say, propagating to certain undesirables after
a certain amount of time; indeed, I was amazed at how fast we started
getting junk calls following our new home number some years back. 

Obviously a telemarketer calling a list of cellular numbers is likely
to get primarily hostile (make that _very_ hostile) responses. While
I'd like to think that no one in their right mind would want to call
only cellular phones to give a sales pitch, is there some more-official
reason why this doesn't occur more often? And has anyone out there had
a call from a telemarketer intentionally going after cellphone users?


Andrew C. Green            (312) 266-4431
Datalogics, Inc.
441 W. Huron               Internet: acg@frame.com
Chicago, IL  60610-3498    FAX: (312) 266-4473

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

From: boyd@france3.fr (Boyd Roberts)
Subject: Re: Cellular Caller ID
Date: 30 May 1996 12:03:24 GMT
Organization: France 3


In article <telecom16.252.4@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, lynne.gregg@attws.com 
says:

> doc_dave@bga.com (David Brod) wrote:

> As Product Manager for AT&T Wireless' Caller ID service, let me assure
> you that we completely understand your position.  ... Per Line
> Blocking was offered as a DEFAULT.

Caller ID should be mandatory.  If you're not prepared to identify
youself you shouldn't make the call.  If you want to make an
'anonymous' call use a phone booth.


Boyd Roberts                                    

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

From: ahhersh@newstand.syr.edu (Adam H Hersh)
Subject: AIN/SS7 Question
Date: 30 May 1996 11:56:04 GMT
Organization: Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY (USA)
Reply-To: ahhersh@mailbox.syr.edu


I understand that it is possible to set up b/c of AIN the ability to
type #lotto on the local phone and have a call routed to your phone
bank with todays lotto numbers.  But how do I explain what I want to
do to Ameritech, TCG, or MFS?


Adam Hersh

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

From: dennis@net66.com (Dennis Toeppen)
Subject: I Hate Hayes
Date: Wed, 29 May 1996 18:57:53 -0600
Organization: Net66


Over the past five months or so, I have purchased nine Hayes Century-8
rack modems. They suffer from the following problems:

* Individual modem cards often hang, which requires power-cycling to
restore modem operation.

* When a modem is power-cycled, multiple modems in a rack of 8 often reset,
even though the product is advertised as hot-swappable.

* The power supply connector on the back of the Century-8 is extremely
prone to disconnecting.

All of these problems result in significant inconvenience to users, and
waste a large amount of sysop time.

Hayes advertises that they will advance ship replacement modems when a
unit fails, so that the user does not experience any downtime. When we
requested this service, we were told that they didn't have any
available to ship out, so we'd have to wait until our modems were
repaired. Not until I had threatened to sue Hayes for non-performance
did they offer to make good on their warranty.

Hayes provided four advance-shipped replacement (of the nine we
requested!).  When the four replacements were recieved, only *ONE* of
them worked properly.

Today, I spent nearly an hour waiting on hold, trying to reach Hayes
customer service. I finally gave up and sent an email to support
indicating my dissatisfaction. Here is the reply I got:


> Dennis,

> Firstly, the following email addresses:

> legal@hayes.com
> dennis@hayes.com
> sales@hayes.com

> do not exist.

> Secondly, this address (support@hayes.com) is set up to give tech support
> only; I am not authorized to handle refund requests.  If you wish to pursue
> this matter, you will need to contact our customer service department at 
> (770) 441-1617.

> Glenn -- Hayes Online Services

And thus begins yet another HAYES RUNAROUND!

Anybody had similar experiences? Any advice on dealing with these
people?  Anybody had favorable experiences with another modem vendor
(a vendor who manufactures rack-mount modems)?

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

Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 08:19:43 -0500
From: kelly.breit@netalliance.net (Kelly Breit)
Subject: Last Laugh! It Makes a Young Girl Cry


Forwarded FYI to the Digest:

  Date: Tue, 21 May 1996 18:58:57 -0400
  From: MacWay@aol.com
  To: macway@solutions.apple.com
  Subject: It Makes a Young Girl Cry

This tidbit is from:

<albtrssp@javanet.com> (Kevin Tieskoetter)

This is a letter that was apparently sent to Apple, was posted on the
Always Apple web site, was retrieved by a friend of mine, sent over a
small mailing list, and has now wound up on your computer. My
apologies if you've already seen it a thousand times.

The author of this letter is unknown.

Dear Apple,

My daughter didn't want to go to kindergarten this morning and when I
asked why she sort of shuffled before coming up with the infamous
"throw-up and maybe a headache" excuse. After a little chat, during
which she admitted she wasn't sick, she began to cry. When I asked
what was wrong she said that today was computer-lab day and she didn't
like it because it was too hard.

It was as if she had admitted a sin. She cried some more while I
explained that making mistakes and learning from them was what school
was all about. Besides, she was a pro on her computer at home
(Performa 6200) so I knew she would get the hang of it. At that point
she sat back, let out a big wailing sob and said, "But Daddy, these
aren't Macintoshes and it's no fun."

What's important about this story is that she thought computers were
fun because she had learned on a Macintosh.

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
public service systems and networks including Compuserve and America
On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. 

Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:

                 * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu *

The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
Townson of Skokie, Illinois USA. You can reach us by postal mail, fax 
or phone at:
                      Post Office Box 4621
                     Skokie, IL USA   60076
                       Phone: 500-677-1616
                        Fax: 847-329-0572
  ** Article submission address: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu

Our archives are located at mirror.lcs.mit.edu and are available by using
anonymous ftp. The archives can also be accessed using our email
information service. For a copy of a helpful file explaining how to
use the information service, just ask.

*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from the              *
* International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in Geneva, Switzerland    * 
* under the aegis of its Telecom Information Exchange Services (TIES)   * 
* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
* ing views of the ITU.                                                 *
*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
yourself who provide funding in amounts deemed appropriate. Your help
is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of twenty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #253
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Thu May 30 15:38:19 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id PAA24736; Thu, 30 May 1996 15:38:19 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 15:38:19 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199605301938.PAA24736@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #254

TELECOM Digest     Thu, 30 May 96 15:38:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 254

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    FTC Halts Internet Pyramid Scam (Tad Cook)
    415 NPA Relief Options (Tad Cook)
    Book Review: "Celebrities on the Internet" by Berry (Rob Slade)
    Seeking T-1 Vendors (Themos Pentakalos)
    Siemens Rolm - Northern Telecom Switch Combinations (David Payne)
    New URL for ICB - FYI (Judith Oppenheimer)
    Nortel Power Touch 350 Telephone - Serial Cable (Justin Hamilton)
    Thoughts About Spam and the Net (Lisa Hancock)
    Re: Reverse-911: Now Police Can Contact You (Peter Laws)
    Re: Reverse-911: Now Police Can Contact You (Dr. Robert Jacobson)
    Re: Reverse-911: Now Police Can Contact You (Boyd Roberts)
    Good Bye Ma Bell (Harry Lynn Beck)
    Help Needed Developing CTI System (S. Santosh)
    Re: Banned by Motorola - They Don't Like My Homepage (Steve Bagdon)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Tad Cook <tad@ssc.com>
Subject: FTC Halts Internet Pyramid Scam
Date: Wed, 29 May 1996 22:03:50 PDT


FTC halts Net pyramid scheme

WASHINGTON (Reuter) - The Federal Trade Commission said Wednesday it
halted an illegal pyramid scheme advertised on the Internet that
bilked thousands of investors for more than $6 million.

The FTC said the case was its largest to date involving fraud on the
worldwide computer network. The agency obtained a federal court order
temporarily halting the scheme, carried out by a company called
Fortuna Alliance of Bellingham, Wash.

The temporary restraining order freezes the company's assets and
appoints a receiver to manage the company. The FTC also asked the
court to issue a permanent injunction that would provide remedies for
consumers hurt by the alleged scam.

"Behind all the techno-jargon and the mathematical mumbo jumbo, this
is just an elaborate, electronic version of a chain letter," said
Jodie Bernstein, director of the FTC's bureau of consumer protection.

"People are told that if they sign up and send money, they'll
eventually end up at the top of the pyramid, collecting from those at
the bottom. But most people never make it to the top."

She added that while early entrants to the scheme may make some money,
"eventually the pyramids collapse and most of the 'members' are left
holding the bag."

The FTC charged that Fortuna Alliance L.L.C. and five officers
marketed the pyramid scheme through a home page on the World Wide Web,
the multimedia portion of the Internet.

The agency said the scheme's promise of huge investment returns
spurred thousands of investors to plunk down anywhere from $250 to
$1,750 to join. The company claimed that members would receive more
than $5,000 a month in "profits" as others were induced to "enroll,"
the FTC said.

It also charged that Fortuna and its officers provided advice and
promotional materials for members to set up their own Web sites on the
Internet to recuit new members.

Officials at the company were not immediately available for comment.

In papers filed with the court, the FTC contended that Fortuna already
has taken in more than $6 million from consumers and transferred at
least $3.5 million of that money to a bank in Antigua, West Indies.

The FTC is seeking to have the money returned. The agency was tipped
off to the scheme by police in Bellingham, who were flooded with
consumer complaints, as well as by the Better Business Bureau serving
northwest Washington.

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

From: Tad Cook <tad@ssc.com>
Subject: 415 NPA Relief Options
Date: Wed, 29 May 1996 22:27:48 PDT


415 Area Code Relief Options Unveiled Publicly; For The First Time
Customers Will Get Chance To Comment On Plans At Three Public Meetings
In June

SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 29, 1996--Bay Area residents will
have an opportunity to comment on plans for adding a new area code in
the 415 region at a series of public meetings in June.

Bruce Bennett, California area code relief coordinator, said a new
area code is needed as early as December 1997 to keep up with the
increasing demand for new telephone numbers, which is being spurred by
the high-technology explosion of fax machines, pagers and cellular
phones as well as competition in the local telephone industry.

The 415 area code currently serves San Francisco, San Mateo and Marin
counties, the northern portion of Santa Clara County and a small
portion of Santa Cruz County.

Dates and locations of the meetings are:

Monday, June 24

San Francisco
California Public Utilities Commission
Auditorium
505 Van Ness Avenue Noon to 2 p.m.

San Rafael
Marin County Civic Center
Board of Supervisors Chambers, Rm. 322
3501 Civic Center Drive, Third Floor
7 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Tuesday, June 25

San Mateo
City Council Chambers
330 West 20th Avenue
Noon to 2 p.m.

During the meeting, two and possibly three plans will be presented to
the public for comment. Three plans were proposed for 415 by the
telecommunications industry -- two adding the area code through a
geographic split, the other using the overlay method. However, an
administrative law judge with the California Public Utilities
Commission (CPUC) ruled earlier this month that the number of 415
geographic split options should be narrowed to one. The judge ordered
telecommunications industry representatives to meet with local
government officials before June 19 to seek consensus on one of the
geographic splits. The judge's ruling does not affect the presentation
of the overlay option at the public meetings.

If consensus is reached at the industry-local government meeting,
scheduled for June 17, Bennett said one geographic split and the
overlay option will be presented to the public for comment. If
consensus is not reached, public comment will be taken on the overlay
option and both split plans.

In a geographic split, the area served by the existing area code is
divided with roughly half the customers being required to change the
area code portion of their phone number and the remaining customers
keeping the old area code. In an overlay, the new area code is placed
over the existing area code. Both have the same geographic boundaries.
The new area code would be given to people who request a new phone
number. Existing customers would keep their present area code.

None of the plans would impact the price of calls. Call distance
determines call price and is not impacted by the creation of a new
area code.

Currently, the options under consideration for the 415 area code are:
+ Geographic Split -- Option 1.

In this option, the city and county of San Francisco, the northern
portion of San Mateo County including the cities of Brisbane, South
San Francisco, the eastern portion of Daly City, the northern half of
Millbrae and most of the city of San Bruno (including the San
Francisco International Airport) would stay in the 415 area code. The
remaining 415 area including Marin County, the rest of San Mateo
County, the northern part of Santa Clara County and a small portion of
Santa Cruz County would receive a new area code. This would create a
non-contigious area code, with Marin County and most of San Mateo
County in the new area code, but separated by the city and county of
San Francisco which would stay in the 415 area code. 

+ Geographic Split -- Option 2.

This option is identical to Option 1, with the exception that Marin
County would also stay in the 415 area code.

While fewer customers would change to the new area code in this
option, the reconstituted 415 area code would run out of telephone
numbers again in less than four years.

+ Overlay --

In the overlay option proposed for 415, the new area code would be
placed over the existing 415 area code. The two codes would have the
same geographic boundaries. The new area code would be given to people
requesting a new phone number. Existing 415 customers would keep their
area code. If an overlay is chosen, the CPUC has determined that 1 +
10-digit dialing (1+the area code and the seven-digit telephone
number) will be required for all calls within and between the new and
old area codes. 

At the meetings, to be moderated by representatives of the CPUC's
Consumer Advisory and Compliance Division, details of the plans will
be outlined followed by a public comment period.

Under state law, the telecommunications industry is required to meet
with customers and consider their input before a final area code
relief plan is filed with the Commission. The Commission makes the
final decision on area code relief. Customers unable to attend a
meeting can send written comments to:

Bruce Bennett
California Area Code Relief Coordinator
2600 Camino Ramon, Room 1S900V
San Ramon, CA 94583

For information on the 415 area code public meetings and any other
updates, customers may call 1-800-544-0355.

http://www.businesswire.com

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

Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 13:57:24 EST
From: Rob Slade <roberts@decus.ca>
Subject: Book Review: "Celebrities on the Internet" by Berry


BKCELINT.RVW   960514
 
"Celebrities on the Internet", Colin Berry, 1996, 0-7821-1811-9, U$12.99
%A   Colin Berry cpberry@aol.com
%C   2021 Challenger Drive, Alameda, CA   94501
%D   1996
%G   0-7821-1811-9
%I   Sybex Computer Books
%O   U$12.99 510-523-8233 800-227-2346 Fax: 510-523-2373 jjigarjian@sybex.com
%P   191
%S   Pocket Tour
%T   "Celebrities on the Internet"
 
In "E-Mail Addresses of the Rich and Famous", (cf. BKEMALRF.RVW) Godin
provided a poorly researched, error prone, and generally misleading
list of celebrity contacts.  Berry has compiled a much more realistic
resource.  Drawing primarily from Web sites, newsgroups, and mailing
lists, this work is a quick guide to online promotion, fandom, and
gossip about the notorious.
 
Although most of the entries arise from Hollywood, TV, and sports,
there is also a section on politics and a welcome inclusion of the
fine arts.  Each entry is annotated, and the author is quite ready to
explain the reasons for choosing this particular site over possible
alternatives.
 
Although I'm still not fully convinced of any *need* for this type of
book (but then, what would you expect from an AOLer?  :-), Berry has
compiled a good quality handbook for the star-struck.

 
copyright Robert M. Slade, 1996   BKCELINT.RVW   960514. Distrobution
permitted in TELECOM Digest and associated publications. 

DECUS Canada Communications, Desktop, Education and Security group newsletters
roberts@decus.ca    slade@freenet.victoria.bc.ca    Rob_Slade@mindlink.bc.ca
Author "Robert Slade's Guide to Computer Viruses" 0-387-94663-2 (800-SPRINGER)

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

From: themos@umbc.edu (Mr. Themos Pentakalos)
Subject: Seeking T-1 Vendors
Date: 30 May 1996 14:12:24 -0400
Organization: University of Maryland, Baltimore County


Hello,

	We need to establish a frac-T-1 between Atlanta and Chicago.
Can someone point me to some reliable and not overpriced vendors?

Thanks. Please email,

Themos

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

Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 09:02:59 -0500
From: DAVID PAYNE <DPAYNE@LHSC.ON.CA>
Subject: Siemens Rolm - Northern Telecom Switch Combinations


The London Health Sciences Centre (950 bed Teaching Hospital in
London, Ontario) is interested in establishing contacts with any
organization that has or knows of a established Rolm - SL-1 network
configuration.

Presently we have two SL-1 Option 71 (release 20) switches and we
would like to network them to either a Rolm 9751 or a Rolm 9000
switch.  Other SL-1 or Rolm switches may be added later.

Our goal is to establish:

-  a coordinated dialing plan; 
-  a common switchboard with CAS and maybe NAS;
-  a common voice mail system or networked voice mail system;
-  trunking consolidation.

A external consultant led us to believe there were less than five
already networked Rolm - SL-1 combinations in North America.  Is this
true?  This seems a pretty small number to me!

Your readers comments and thoughts would be appreciated. 


Thanks, 

David Payne
Technical Analyst, Telecom
London Health Sciences Centre
dpayne@lhsc.on.ca

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

From: callbrand@aol.com (CallBrand)
Subject: New URL For ICB - FYI
Date: 30 May 1996 14:44:53 -0400
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Reply-To: callbrand@aol.com (CallBrand)


My home page is now located at http://pwp.usa.pipeline.com/~producer/,
and includes current industry comments regarding 800 portability and
replication.


Judith Oppenheimer, President, Interactive CallBrand
A leading source of information on 800 issues.
CallBrand@aol.com, 1 800 The Expert, (ph) 212 684-7210, (fx) 212 684-2714
http://pwp.usa.pipeline.com/~producer/

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

From: Justin.Hamilton1@Bridge.BellSouth.Com (Justin Hamilton)
Subject: Nortel Power Touch 350 Telephone - Serial Cable
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 11:10:15 GMT
Organization: BellSouth ATG lab


Having just got my PowerTouch 350 phone all hooked up to the telephone
network, I am now looking to connect my PC via the port on the back of
the 350 Module.

Called BellSouth, whom I bought it through, told me to call Nortel.

Called Nortel, they want $50 (FIFTY  BUCKS !!) for the cable.

So I decided I would rather build one myself.

If anyone has details of the pinouts then it would be much appreciated
if you could post or email them to me.

If not, then I shall do some experimenting and let y'all know the
results.


Thanks,

Justin Hamilton
http://www.mindspring.com/~tmenet
JHamilton@mindspring.com
Justin.Hamilton1@Bridge.BellSouth.Com

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

From: hancock4@cpcn.com (Lisa)
Subject: Thoughts About Spam and the Net 
Date: 29 May 1996 23:06:10 GMT
Organization: Philadelphia City Paper's City Net


I received one sales pitch with an 800 number, for which I was tempted
to call from a pay phone, and let them know I didn't appreciate their
pitching unsolicited over email.

But then I thought the whole thing may be a joke or harassment -- that
is, the 800 number might be for a legitimate business who's been
targeted for harassment.  I decided to ignore it.

My employer (a large organization) gave us a lecture on their new web
page and how enthused they are about the Internet.

In my opinion, I think we have a while to WAIT before the Internet
truly kicks off because of security problems.  Until forged e-mail,
unauthorized Usenet postings/forgeries and the like are stopped dead,
the Internet is simply not secure to conduct business over.  Sadly,
there are some sick people out there, and some of them are very good
with a computer and not at all hesitant to be malicious.

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

From: plaws@comp.uark.edu (Peter Laws)
Subject: Re: Reverse-911: Now Police Can Contact You
Date: 30 May 1996 15:17:41 GMT
Organization: University of Arkansas


ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (TELECOM Digest Editor) writes:

> DuPage County, Illinois police can now make hundreds of telephone
> calls an hour to residents in an area where a crime has taken place or
> a suspect is on the loose. 

Great.  Police phone spam.  How nice.  I'll stick with my scanner ...


Peter Laws
Desktop Unix Support Team
Academic, Research and Client Services
Computing Services, University of Arkansas
+1 501 575-2905


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I have a couple scanners also but folks
like you and I -- and many readers here -- are in the minority. Most
people don't own one. Plus, the information heard on the scanner is
not going to be presented in the same way it will be presented to the
general public via telephone.    PAT]

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

From: Dr. Robert Jacobson <bob@worldesign.com>
Subject: Re: Reverse-911: Now Police Can Contact You
Date: Wed, 29 May 1996 22:52:15 -0700
Organization: Worldesign Inc. Seattle-Information Design [www.worldesign.com]


TELECOM Digest Editor wrote:

> DuPage County, Illinois police can now make hundreds of telephone
> calls an hour to residents in an area where a crime has taken place or
> a suspect is on the loose.

> The DuPage County Sheriff last week inaugurated the 'Reverse-911'
> community communications system. It transmitted a recorded message to
> one thousand homes in an unincorporated area of Lombard, Illinois to
> warn residents about two suspected burglars driving in a Ford Taurus,
> Chief Deputy Sheriff Robert Soucek said.

> "For the first time, we are able to saturate an area with hundreds of
> phone calls an hour, and advise citizens of burglaries, a missing
> child, suspicious activities and any other circumstances where we
> could utilize our citizens to help us solve a crime," Soucek said.

> Using several telephone lines, the $30,000 system can quickly call,
> for examples, all homes on a certain street, or all day-care centers
> in the county.

[Stuff deleted]

Similar systems have been in operation in California for over a
decade, for use by emergency services in the event of natural
disasters and, more sinisterly, nuclear plant meltdowns.  In case
Diablo Canyon reactor went critical, San Luis Obispo had a system in
place to get people out of the plume-affected regions.


Bop

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

From: boyd@france3.fr (Boyd Roberts)
Subject: Re: Reverse-911: Now Police Can Contact You
Date: 30 May 1996 11:59:51 GMT
Organization: France 3


In article <telecom16.251.3@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, ptownson@massis.lcs.
mit.edu says:

> DuPage County, Illinois police can now make hundreds of telephone
> calls an hour to residents in an area where a crime has taken place or
> a suspect is on the loose. 

Trivial to do with GSM cell broadcasts, which all the phones in a cell
receive, if they've subscribed to cell broadcasts and the particular
message type.

Vodafone UK uses them to indicate your current cell(s) and area code,
which is kinda neat.


Boyd Roberts                                    

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

Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 10:00:22 -0800
From: Harry Lynn Beck, P.E. <beck@alaska.net>
Organization: HLB Engineering
Subject: Good Bye Ma Bell


Do you have any information/opinions about the integration of voice
telephony with LAN technology, not in the current contexts, but in the
context of completely eliminating the POTS (plain old telephone
system).  I'm working on just such an application here in Alaska.  I
would appreciate your comments.


Thanks.


Harry Lynn Beck, P.E.
   HLB Engineering
   P.O. Box 210606
Anchorage   Alaska 99521

By the way, I am electric power consulting engineer and journalist.

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

From: santosh@ece.iisc.ernet.in (Santosh S)
Subject: Help Needed Developing CTI System
Date: Thu, 30 May 96 12:15:56 GMT


Hello,

I'm working on a project at Indian Institute of Science, India for
developing a CTI system to provide voice messaging, fax-on-demand and
other facilities.We plan to use a dual processor approach in which we
are using a DSP for speech and tone (DTMF and call progress tones )
processing. Because of availability I have an option of using Analog
Devices' (ADSP 2105, 2101) or TI's (TMS320CXX) DSPs only. I would like
to know which would suit my application. I feel ADSP 2105 is
inadequate for FAX.

Thank you for any kind of info regarding the above.


Regards,

santosh    e-mail- santosh@ece.iisc.ernet.in

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

Date: Wed, 29 May 1996 19:02:49 -0500
From: bagdon@rust.net (S and K Bagdon)
Subject: Re: Banned by Motorola - They Don't Like my Homepage!


> Motorola cellular does not like my homepage. They sent me a nasty
> letter. Check it out on my homepage ...

> http://www.trilli.com/users/jyee

Welcome to the big leagues, Jeff.

You published a web page, which makes you responsible for researching
the *origin* of anything that you published. Big corporations can get
*very* sensitive of how their products are displayed, and I put
Motorola up there almost with Disney. They get even *more* sensitive
when you display a *very* recognizable piece of artwork, and they go
*ballistic* when you copy 'camera-ready' art.

At once time in my sordid past, I worked at a newspaper -- the Editor
recieved a nasty letter from JetSki(r), because they published a
picture of a JetSki(r) on the 'Local' section front page (owner
airborne off of a wave), stated that it was a JetSki(r) in the
by-line/slug, but left out the 'registered' mark. A corporate lawyer
actually took the time to write a letter, because the reference was
lower case and not 'registered' properly.

I am disappointed that your message to TELECOM Digest was so short --
you are almost attempting to curry favor, by just telling your side of
the story. How about something along the line of 'Motorola lawyers
sent me a letter requesting that I remove a copyrighted picture of
theirs from my web page'.

I'm sure they loved your web page -- free advertising. What they
*didn't* like was your use of their copyrighted material. Did you
*ask* before 'publishing' this material? I'm sure they would have
given you carte-blance (almost), if you had run it by their
advertising/legal department, and followed their requests (copyright
notices, etc). Heck, you might even have been able to publish it
*without* their approval, if you had referenced the material as
'Copyright Motorola, 1996' -- remember the 'fair-use' rule?

People, didn't we learn anything from MoToRoLa's experiences?


Steve B.

bagdon@rust.net (h) USFMDDKT@ibmmail.com (w)
http://www.rust.net/~bagdon
Katharine aNd Steve (KNS)

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
public service systems and networks including Compuserve and America
On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. 

Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:

                 * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu *

The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
Townson of Skokie, Illinois USA. You can reach us by postal mail, fax 
or phone at:
                      Post Office Box 4621
                     Skokie, IL USA   60076
                       Phone: 500-677-1616
                        Fax: 847-329-0572
  ** Article submission address: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu

Our archives are located at mirror.lcs.mit.edu and are available by using
anonymous ftp. The archives can also be accessed using our email
information service. For a copy of a helpful file explaining how to
use the information service, just ask.

*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from the              *
* International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in Geneva, Switzerland    * 
* under the aegis of its Telecom Information Exchange Services (TIES)   * 
* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
* ing views of the ITU.                                                 *
*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
yourself who provide funding in amounts deemed appropriate. Your help
is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of twenty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
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should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #254
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Thu May 30 16:30:42 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id QAA00953; Thu, 30 May 1996 16:30:42 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 16:30:42 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199605302030.QAA00953@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #255

TELECOM Digest     Thu, 30 May 96 16:30:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 255

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Re: Cellular Caller ID (Jeffrey Rhodes)
    Re: Cellular Caller ID (Chris Hudel)
    Re: Caller-ID Delay in California (Dr. Robert Jacobson)
    Re: Caller-ID Delay in California (Rich Greenberg)
    Re: Sprint Sends Caller ID Today! (Charles A. Cremer)
    Re: LD Carriers and CID -- 5/96 Results (Matthew Stone)
    Re: CID Question (Sy Weiss)
    Re: MCI Cellular (macaw@ix.netcom.com)
    Re: United States Cellular's Stupidity (Jeff Carroll)
    Re: ANSI Spec For T1 Signaling Bits (kenshalo@anc.ak.net)
    Re: Seeking NEBS Standards (kenshalo@anc.ak.net)
    916 NPA Relief Options (Tad Cook)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: jeffrey.rhodes@attws.com
Subject: Re: Cellular Caller ID
Date: Thu, 30 May 96 10:13:37 PDT
Organization: AT&T Wireless Services, Inc.


In article <telecom16.250.11@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, <doc_dave@bga.com>
writes:

> On June 15, in Austin, Tx, AT&T Wireless Communications will begin
> passing cellular subscriber numbers through to the caller ID system.

> I am not a paranoid regarding caller ID, but I am rather upset about
> this.  Since cellular users must pay for incoming calls, this seems a
> valid reason to not have to pass around my cellular number via caller
> ID. Additionally, since cellular phones do not offer caller ID, we do
> not have the option not to answer the phone either.

It may be annoying but *67 prefix will always prevent display of your
Mobile Identification Number (MIN) for calls created at AT&T Wireless
systems. If any system does not recognize *67 then you can be sure
that Caller ID has not been offered in that cellular carrier's market
yet.  (*67 may be recognized but that will not guarantee that the
display will be "Private", it may be "Out-of-Area"; the display is
guaranteed to NOT be the MIN after per-call blocking *67 prefix has
been dialed per FCC order).

It is good advice to always use *67 prefix when roaming. You never
know what surprises can occur as a result of using your cellular phone
in a non-home system. Carry your home system's Customer Care number
with you when roaming to help recover from roamer-freezes and other
anti-fraud protection policies.
 
More comments follow:
  
> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Except that the number you are referring
> to would be essentially worthless to the recipient of the Caller-ID
> information, and lend itself to confusion if they tried to dial it back.
> For example, that number you are referring to *is* in fact available
> and given to customers who get ANI. Invariably on trying to dial in to
> it the response is the number is for outgoing calls only or it may not
> be dialable at all, etc. My cellular phone is 847-727-xxxx and yet 
> the ANI it shows when I dial an 800 number is 708-870-something; a
> totally different thing. I personally would say send nothing at all
> unless it can be a two-way thing with cellular customers able to get
> the same information in return subject to the technical requirements
> of their phone, etc. Will *67  (number blocking) be available on your
> outgoing cellular calls? That might be one way to partly solve your
> problem.   PAT]
 
Pat,

I assure you that if you bring your cellular phone to Seattle and
complete an 800 call on AT&T Wireless (Band A) that the ANI presented
will be your MIN 847-727-xxxx. AT&T Wireless has Equal Access
agreements with LD carriers that require the cooperation of the LEC's
Equal Access Tandem switch to interconnect to all carriers. An
cellular 800 call either routes on Type1 trunks without ANI and the
LEC creates a new 800 call (like in your home system) using a fixed
ANI for the Type1 trunk, or the 800 call routes on Type2 Feature Group
D Equal Access trunks like it does here in US West and GTE-NW land
passing the ANI (read MIN) to the 800 provider's carrier.

FGD signaling can pass ANI (but not Caller ID information!). An 800
number belongs to a specific long distance carrier and the 800 owner
pays for the long distances charges. FGD signaling provides Carrier
Information Code (CIC) of 110 to indicate that the LEC's Equal Access
Tandem must complete one-stage call completion rather than the normal
two-stage which sends the dialer's Preferred Interexchange Carrier as
the CIC (288 or 0288 for AT&T) in the first stage, allows the LEC to
set-up to the indicated carrier, and then passes MF tones for ANI and
dialed number in the second stage "cutting through" to the long
distance carrier's switch (faster call setup with two-stage "cut-thru"
compared to two one-stage sequences).

Cellular ISUP signaling direct to long distance carriers has yet to
happen to my knowledge. Bell South Cellular did an ISUP trial with
Bell South LEC two years ago. Even when AT&T Wireless is able to offer
ISUP direct connect to long distance carriers, the 800 call will
probably be handled with non-SS7 FGD signaling on LEC Type2 trunks
because all cellular switches currently lack the "intelligence" to
look up the 10 digit carrier translation for portable 800 numbers.
This would imply that it will be a couple of years before both the ANI
and the Caller ID of a cellular MIN will be available to 800 owners,
even though a cellular ANI for 800 calls is indirectly available
currently here in the Northwest US.

AT&T Wireless is pursuing Type2 FGD interconnect for 800 calls with
all LECs but the LEC isn't forced to have to do this if they don't
want. I think the LEC makes more money on Type1 800 calls.


Jeffrey Rhodes at jeffrey.rhodes@attws.com

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

From: hudel@hppad.waterloo.hp.com (Chris Hudel)
Subject: Re: Cellular Caller ID
Date: 30 May 1996 19:27:34 GMT
Organization: Hewlett Packard (Panacom Division)


Sorry if this has been suggested already, but how about "Name only
Caller-ID?"  Afterall, don't you want to know *who* is calling more
than you want to know *what phone number* they are calling from?

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

From: Dr. Robert Jacobson <bob@worldesign.com>
Subject: Re: Caller-ID Delay in California
Date: Wed, 29 May 1996 22:48:56 -0700
Organization: Worldesign Inc. Seattle-Information Design [www.worldesign.com]


Larry Lee wrote:

> In article <telecom16.246.2@massis.lcs.mit.edu> TELECOM Digest Editor
> noted in response to lauren@vortex.com (Lauren Weinstein) who had
> written about a delay in implementing Caller ID in California:

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I find it just incredible that you seem
> to have so many people in California on this kick. What is with all
> these people who seem to feel they have this right to hide themselves
> when they make calls no matter whose time they waste or whatever 
> foolish calls they originate?  I'll be glad to see 'blocked number 
> blocking' (where recipients have the right to block calls from persons 
> who hide their phone numbers) become universal. I am going to encourage 
> everyone to sign up for it.   PAT]

My friend Pat sees the world from an entirely too egocentric position.

I worked to help pass California's Caller ID law, which instructs the
PUC on the implementation of Caller ID.  There are good reasons for
being cynical about Caller ID, whatever its limited merits as a way of
screening one's home calls.

First, the service was devised to collect information on callers to
businesses.  This was stated explicitly several times by telephone
company advocates when the service was introduced.  The idea was that
a business could cue its internal records on incoming phone call num-
bers, to serve you, the caller, faster and better -- but also, by
using the phone number as a surrogate ID number, companies could trade
data about their customers and build big dossiers.  Better than with
your Social Security number, as the HMOs do.

That's why whenever line blocking was proposed or made law in some
states, the telcos moaned, "but that will take the economic value out
of the service."

Second, as the many posts here continue to testify, there are a
hundred ways around Caller ID, from using new phone numbers or public
telephone booths to simply fooling the underlying SS7 switching
service.

The woman who championed the Caller ID law, by the way, was secretary
to an Assembly member who actually carried the bill, Mr. Eaves (now a
supervisor in San Bernardino or Riverside County, I believe).  She was
worried, as a single mother, that a molester or other heinous
character might record _her_ phone number during a call and track it
back to her house, to savage her or her child.  It was a reasonable
fear.

Caller ID sucks on a number of levels.


Bob Jacobson

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

From: richgr@netcom.com (Rich Greenberg)
Subject: Re: Caller-ID Delay in California
Date: Wed, 29 May 1996 22:32:09 GMT


In article <telecom16.251.7@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Larry Lee
<lclee@primenet.com> wrote:

[snip]

> If you had any idea of the amount of negative ads that the phone
> companies have run and are continuing to run on radio and TV, you
> wouldn't find it incredible.  I have not heard one positive or
> encouraging statement about caller id.

Very true.  I was speaking to a PaBellDroid about an unrelated matter
a few weeks ago and asked about that.  She confirmed my suspicion that
the wording of these ads was forced on Pa and GTE by the CPUC.  Don't
blame the LECs on this one.  They don't like it either.  


Rich Greenberg N6LRT TinselTown, USA Play: richgr@netcom.com 310-649-0238
Pacific time.  I speak for myself & my dogs only.  VM'er since CP-67
Canines: Val(Chinook,CGC), Red(Husky,(RIP)), Shasta(Husky)

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

From: ao474@yfn.ysu.edu (Charles A. Cremer)
Subject: Re: Sprint Sends Caller ID Today!
Date: 29 May 1996 23:36:49 GMT
Organization: St. Elizabeth Hospital, Youngstown, OH
Reply-To: ao474@yfn.ysu.edu (Charles A. Cremer)


In a previous article, bellaire@iquest.net (James Bellaire) says:

> I just received a call from a relative who has been a long time Sprint
> Business customer (he has been paying their business rates for at
> least ten years, so I know he won't switch or 10xxx another service) ...

> Usually his phone comes up 'OUT OF AREA' on caller id, but now he
> shows up with a complete phone number and his business name.

I've confirmed this also, from Austin, Texas to NYNEX near Boston.
Will wonders never cease?


Charlie <ao474@yfn.ysu.edu>

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

From: mstone@io.org (Matthew Stone)
Subject: Re: LD Carriers and CID -- 5/96 Results
Date: 29 May 1996 06:02:25 GMT
Organization: Internex Online (shell.io.org), Toronto, Ontario, Canada


Stanley Cline (scline@usit.net) wrote:

> For the past several months, I've been periodically testing IXCs'
> delivery of CID, using 1+, 0+ (calling card), and 800/calling-card
> calling methods, as well as checking to see if the privacy flag (*67)
> is recognized.

> MCI:

>  1+ = CID delivered, *67 displays "private"
>  0+ = "Out of Area"
>  800# calling card = Not tested
>  1-800-Collect = Not tested

My friends and I have used 1-800-Collect and this is the results.  Las
Vegas Nevada to Toronto, Ontario, Canada (905) area code ... a local
416 number shows up.  When dialing the 416 number a Bell Canada
message comes up saying there is "no service at that line".  From
Toronto, Ontario, Canada (905) area code to Lansing, Michigan (517)
area code it shows up as "Out Of Area" on my friends CID.  Dunno what
to make of that ...


Matthew Stone, 23 Roosevelt Drive, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Canada L4C6V1
               Pager (416)339-9052

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

Date: 30 May 96 13:32:18 EDT
From: Sy Weiss <72007.2462@CompuServe.COM>
Subject: CID Question


We have a request from a client (a large bank) to design and produce
a product that will dial out to a central site when the device detects
a failure condition. All the device will do is detect the failure, go
off hook, dial a pre-set number, pause about ten seconds, and then go
back on hook.  About 250 locations will be equipped with this
out-dialer.  At the central location, the remote site calling will be
identified and logged using a CID device. The call will not be
answered, all that is required is to identify the calling site that
has a failure. The product would have to be part 68 registered as a
dial line interface.

Question: Could CID be used in this manner?  I have in mind the fact
that information is transferred without the call being answered.

Your input would be greatly appreciated.  


Sy Weiss  72007.2462@compuserve.com
Dataprobe Inc.  sweiss@dataprobe.com 
                http://www.dataprobe.com       


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: What if for some reason the number
being called is busy (another such device is ringing the line at the 
same time) or there is some other problem, i.e. network congestion
'call cannot be completed right now, please try again in a few
minutes' and the calling line does not establish contact with the
recipient; that is, is unable to get its ID displayed on the called
line?  If all you are going to do is go off hook for ten seconds and
disconnect, what assurance to you have that the ID got delivered?
How critical are these possible failures? What if one gets missed 
due to a condition like described above?  Most alarm notification
systems require the recipient of the call to at least do something
such as press a button or two on the phone to acknowledge receipt. 
Of course if you are not paying for the call, you don't get that
luxury. :)  Have you thought about that?     PAT] 

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

From: macaw@ix.netcom.com (Macaw)
Subject: Re: MCI Cellular
Date: 30 May 1996 18:54:48 GMT
Organization: Netcom


In <telecom16.248.8@massis.lcs.mit.edu> schuster@panix.com (Michael
Schuster) writes: 

> I just received a soliciation to join MCI's cellular service and receive
> a Nokia 100 phone for free (golly!!!).

> Here in NYC, we already have an "A" and "B" system provider. Where
> does MCI fit into this system? Can there be multiple "A" system
> providers in the same market? I thought not ...

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: There is just one A/B in each area. 
> What MCI is doing is reselling either A or B, depending on whatever
> was the best deal they could cut for themselves with one of the two.
> Frontier is also a reseller of cellular; mostly the B side except they
> resell A in some communities. You can get pretty good deals on prices
> using the resellers I have found.  PAT]

In Boston there is Cellular One and Nynex now there are two other cell
companies starting to put up their antennas. They are AT&T and Sprint.
Cellular One is Southwestern Bell. I myself don't know how this will
be done also. If anyone knows please let me know. The reason I know
about the other two cellular companies is because Cellular One is
renting from me. They have a cell site on my building and Sprint
contacted me about setting up one of there cell sites on my building
also.


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: When cellular phone service was being
developed in the early 1980's -- it started as of 1983 I believe --
probably no one could ever imagine there would be a time when more
than two carriers would ever be in existence in a given community and
in most cases just one. Thus the A/B arrangement, with no real provision
for a 'C' or 'D' carrier, or whatever they might be called. Does anyone
know of any plans to open the market to a third or fourth (a 'C' or 'D'
or whatever you would call them) carrier?  I do not mean just as a
reseller of A/B as happens now, I mean genuine infrastructure for
a third or fourth cellular company in some markets?    PAT]

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

From: Jeff Carroll <xfrosch@indy.net>
Subject: Re: United States Cellular's Stupidity
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 11:16:04 -0500
Organization: bigendian
Reply-To: xfrosch@indy.net


Stanley Cline wrote:
 
> PS:  Has anyone noticed that USCC's and 360 Communications' HQ are in 
> the same city, zip code, and even PHONE PREFIX (312-399)?  These are  
> the very carriers that BellSouth and other carriers HATE (one much
> more than the other, of course.)  Weird coincidence ...

They're practically sitting on a runway at O'Hare. Dunno if that has 
anything to do with it or not.


jkc

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

From: kenshalo@anc.ak.net
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 14:57:56 -0800
Subject: Re: ANSI Spec For T1 Signaling Bits


rich@netcommcorp.com (Rich Dodge) wrote:

> Does anybody know which ANSI specification, if any, details the T1
> signaling bits as they relate to setting up a phone call? Your help
> would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.

You might try:

ANSI T1.102, Digital Hierarchy - Electrical Interface Standard
ANSI T1.107, Digital Hierarchy - Format Specifications
AT&T TR 62415 - Access Specification for High Capacity (DS1/DS3) Dedicated 
Digital Services

I only have the above AT&T TR, where reference is made to the above
two ANSI specs, but gives no specific information about the uses of
the signaling bits used with SF and ESF formats.  If you find any
concrete data, please let me know.


Richard Kenshalo
kenshalo@anc.ak.net
Matanuska Telephone Association

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

From: kenshalo@anc.ak.net
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 10:02:59 -0800
Subject: Re: Seeking NEBS Standards


> Can someone tell me where I can find the NEBS standards?

Try:

Bellcore TR-EOP-000063, Network Equipment-Building System
(NEBS) Generic Equipment Requirements

Bellcore TR-TSY-000487, Generic Requirements for Electronic
Equipment Cabinets


Richard Kenshalo
kenshalo@anc.ak.net
Matanuska Telephone Association

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

From: Tad Cook <tad@ssc.com>
Subject: 916 NPA Relief Options
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 12:08:41 PDT


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: In an earlier issue of the Digest today
an almost identical announcment was printed pertaining to 415.  PAT]

916 Area Code Relief Options Unveiled Publicly For The First Time;
Customers Will Get Chance To Comment On Plans At Three Public Meetings
In June

SACRAMENTO, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 30, 1996--Northern California
residents will have an opportunity to comment on two plans for adding
a new area code in the 916 region at a series of public meetings in
June.

Bruce Bennett, California area code relief coordinator, said a new
area code is needed as early as December 1997 to keep up with the
increasing demand for new telephone numbers, which is being spurred by
the high-technology explosion of fax machines, pagers and cellular
phones as well as competition in the local telephone industry.

The 916 area code currently serves all or portions of 23 Northern
California counties from Sacramento north to the Oregon border, and
the Mono County community of Coleville. Dates and locations of the
meetings are: Wednesday, June 26 South Lake Tahoe Tahoe Seasons Resort
3901 Saddle Road Noon to 2 p.m.  Roseville Maidu Community Center
Reception Hall 1550 Maidu Drive 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Thursday, June 27
Chico City Hall City Council Chambers 421 Main Street 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.
Redding City Hall City Council Chambers 1313 California Street 7 p.m.
to 9 p.m.

Two plans proposed by the telecommunications industry -- one adding
the area code through a geographic split, the other using the overlay
method -- will be presented at the meeting.

In a geographic split, the area served by the existing area code is
divided with roughly half the customers being required to change the
area code portion of their phone number and the remaining customers
keeping the old area code. In an overlay, the new area code is placed
over the existing area code. Both have the same geographic boundaries.
The new area code would be given to people who request a new phone
number. Existing customers would keep their area code.

Neither plan would impact the price of calls. Call distance determines
call price and is not impacted by the creation of a new area code.

The options under consideration for the 916 area code are:

- Geographic Split -- In the proposed geographic split option, the 916
portion of Sacramento County, south Placer County including the cities
of Roseville, Loomis and Rocklin and the city of West Sacramento in
Yolo County would stay in the 916 area code. The remainder of the 916
region would receive a new area code. This includes the rest of Placer
County, the majority of Yolo County (excluding West Sacramento), the
916 portion of El Dorado County, all of Nevada, Yuba, Sutter, Colusa,
Sierra, Butte, Glenn, Plumas, Tehama, Lassen, Shasta, Trinity, Modoc
and Siskiyou counties, the 916 portion of Alpine County and small
portions of Solano, Mendocino, Lake and Humboldt counties as well as
the Mono County community of Coleville.

- Overlay -- In the overlay option proposed for 916, the new area code
would be placed over the existing 916 area code. The two codes would
have the same geographic boundaries. The new area code would be given
to people requesting a new phone number. Existing 916 customers would
keep their area code. If an overlay is chosen, the California Public
Utilities Commission (CPUC) has determined that 1 + 10-digit dialing
(1 plus the area code and the seven-digit telephone number) will be
required for all calls within and between the new and old area codes.

At the meetings, to be moderated by representatives of the CPUC's
Consumer Advisory and Compliance Division, details of the plans will
be outlined followed by a public comment period.

Under state law, the telecommunications industry is required to meet
with customers and consider their input before a final area code
relief plan is filed with the Commission. The Commission makes the
final decision on area code relief. Customers unable to attend a
meeting can send written comments to: Bruce Bennett California Area
Code Relief Coordinator 2600 Camino Ramon, Room 1S900V San Ramon, CA
94583

For information on the 916 area code public meetings and any other updates, 
customers may call 1-800-544-0355.


CONTACT: Pacific Bell

Dave Miller,
(916) 972-2811

Bill Kenney,
(916) 972-6604

http://www.businesswire.com

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
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Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
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The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
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*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from the              *
* International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in Geneva, Switzerland    * 
* under the aegis of its Telecom Information Exchange Services (TIES)   * 
* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
* ing views of the ITU.                                                 *
*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
yourself who provide funding in amounts deemed appropriate. Your help
is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of twenty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #255
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Thu May 30 20:12:01 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id UAA21117; Thu, 30 May 1996 20:12:01 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 20:12:01 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199605310012.UAA21117@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #256

TELECOM Digest     Thu, 30 May 96 20:11:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 256

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Fight Turns Nasty: Ameritech/AT&T Take Off Gloves (TELECOM Digest Editor)
    Cellular One Chicago Announces 'Freedom Plus' (TELECOM Digest Editor)
    Internet Spam From AOL (Joe A. Machado)
    Wireless Ethernet Transceivers (Thaddeus Cox)
    Re: Cellular Caller ID (Tony Harminc)
    Re: Cellular Caller ID (Lynne Gregg)
    Re: Network Outages (David Chessler)
    Re: Hurting Public Utilities Hurts Public Service (Jeff Carroll)
    Re: Preventing Pickup on Busy Line (Tad Cook)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 19:32:04 EDT
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Subject: Fight Turns Nasty: Ameritech/AT&T Take Off Gloves


Forget about minor marketing skirmishes. Now Ameritech and AT&T are
engaged in full battle -- and customers of both companies are left in
the middle, especially those with a calling card issued by either
company.

On Wednesday, Ameritech said a federal judge had ordered AT&T to stop
using shared information from the two companies calling cards to try
to convince Ameritech customers to switch to AT&T calling cards.

AT&T called Ameritech's characterization of the court ruling
outrageous.

Also:

o   Ameritech claims that as of Friday AT&T will bar its card holders
    from making local calls within Ameritech's calling area.

o   AT&T has offered Ameritech customers three months of free local
    toll calls -- local calls of 15 miles or more -- if they switch to
    AT&T before June 30.

o   AT&T has filed new local toll call rates with the Illinois Commerce
    Commission to be extremely competitive. 

The developments Wednesday are the latest in what has become a very
nasty fight in the 'telephone war' between Ameritech and AT&T that
started out more than a year ago when Ameritech launched its 'Customers
First' plan, its strategy to enter the long distance market. 

In the latest skirmish over calling cards, Ameritech had accused AT&T
of abusing an agreement that allows each company to handle traffic
using the calling card of the other company. Under the agreement,
neither company was allowed to use any customer data for the purpose
of soliciting customers to switch companies. 

Ameritech Chairman Richard Notebaert said his company discovered AT&T
was illegally targeting Ameritech customers when some 'names on the
list' started getting mailings sent by AT&T. He said there was no way
'those names' would have gotten anything like that in the mail had not
AT&T been abusing their access to the Amertech data base.

The mailings from AT&T to Ameritech customers offered fifteen minutes
of free calling time if Ameritech customers signed up for an AT&T card
and promised to use it instead of their Ameritech card in the future.

Notebaert said the only way AT&T could have found out which customers
to make that offer to was by 'getting into the data base illegally'.

AT&T responded late Wednesday by saying no evidence of this was ever
presented in court and the only ruling the judge made was to grant
the parties' request for a stay. 

"There was no ruling and there was no finding that AT&T did anything
wrong," an AT&T spokesman said. The court "simply granted a request
for a stay, which will allow the parties to resolve the matter through
arbitration."

Ameritech now contends that AT&T must give some free time to the
customers who responded to the AT&T promotion. AT&T refused to say how
they will deal with the customers 'left hanging' in the process.
Some Ameritech customers had received a new AT&T card which they will
now apparently not be able to use on the Ameritech network.

As matters now stand, effective Friday, May 31, AT&T calling cards
will not be accepted by Ameritech and Ameritech calling cards will not
be accepted by AT&T.  

It is unclear at this point what results will occur if a person with
an Ameritech card uses a payphone which was defaulted to AT&T to make
a long distance call. 

Isn't this a shameful state of affairs when customers have to get
caught up in the middle of the fight?  


PAT

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

Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 19:40:41 EDT
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Subject: Cellular One Chicago Announces 'Freedom Plus'


Cellular One of Chicago announced Thursday a new system for Chicago
area subscribers which will mimic the system which GTE has had
available for some time. 

This new system called 'Freedom Plus' allows users to plug a phone
base into a wall jack at home to use the same phone both there and on
the road. The new system works like a cordless phone when at home and
like a cellular phone as soon as you leave home. When the unit is in
your home, the base 'senses' the portable is nearby and incoming
cellular calls are automatically routed thorugh the normal land line
system. 

Cellular One, which is a subsidiary of Southwestern Bell's SBC Commun-
ications said the system including the base unit would retail for
about $200. All current cellular customers would have to purchase the
new phone if they wanted the new service. In addition, Cellular One
will charge $4.95 per month for the service. 

The system is manufactured by Motorola. Cellular One said it should be
available to customers later this summer.


PAT

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

Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 17:57:26 -0500
From: Joe A. Machado <jmach@ionet.net>
Subject: Internet Spam From AOL


I have received over 35 mail messages from folks at AOL during the
past few days. The mailing list is similar but the senders vary. Many
of the messages contain words of frustration from other recipients and
the content expressed variest.  Responding to the messages with REMOVE
or some statement to be taken off the mailing list at times causes
repetition of the mailings, or the request being ignored. And many of
the messages are the same but mailed several times -- three to five
times at once!

One mail message said that all complaints regarding these mailings
should go to TOSEMAIL2@AOL.com but today I received another message
stating that mailing to this person does not work. I have redirected
all the junk mail to that ID but have as yet received a confirmation
or had the mailings stop.

Commenting on the wasted bandwidth, lack of following internet
etiquette, or such arguments may be fruitless.

The real issue is my belief that I have a right not to receive such
mail. I wonder whether AOL has a duty to screen outgoing mass mailings
or whether my ISP should consider complaints and initiate action on my
behalf. In the non cyber world the U.S. Post Office delivers unwanted
junk mail in order to gain the revenue from doing so. Is there a
similar situation developing in cyberspace? Is there a benefit to
censorship? By investigating user mailings are sender rights not being
infringed? And do I care as long as the junk mail stops coming my way?

With Universal Email a looming possibility is the public not to be
protected from unwanted mail? Will the cost of junk mail not be a
factor in the Universal Email debate? Should society tolerate Email
entrepeneurship? Is there a benefit by not legislating E-Mail?

There might be interest to some in how people try to entice others to
participate in money making schemes via E-Mail.

In the meantime I am looking for an email package that will allow me
to screen mail from AOL and await any suggestions or comments from
this group.


Thanks,

Joe A. Machado
http://mweiser.bus.okstate.edu/students/jmachado/homepg.htm

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

Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 16:43:43 PDT
From: Thaddeus Cox <coxt@mail.oit.osshe.edu>
Subject: Wireless Ethernet Transceivers


I am researching wireless ethernet transceivers and would like to tap
the vast knowlege of the digest readership for suggestions.

I'm a student at a smallish college and would like the dorms here to
be wired for ethernet.  This seems to be a very daunting task due to
the composition of the building (concrete and steel) and the lack of
any useful existing conduit for cabling.  Wiring the building
conventionally would require major renovation, drilling through
structural members/concrete, etc.

Currently we have small local networks established by running a single
coax thinnet cable alongside heating pipes which run from room to
room, spanning the length of each hall.  This works fine for our local
network.

What we are looking for is a (pair of) devices which could be
connected to one of these local networks and serve as a wireless
connection between it and the campus-wide, internet-connected ethernet
which appears in another part of the building, approximately 300-400'
through concrete and steel construction.  I don't know what kind of
throughput these sort of devices offer, but I was thinking somewhere
in the 1 to 2 megabit range.

I'm interested in information on new or used equipment which would
meet the requirements as I've laid them out, and any ideas about
alternative solutions would also be gladly accepted.  Email replies
and I will forward them in condensed form to the digest if anyone is
interested.


Thaddeus Cox - coxt@mail.oit.osshe.edu
Oregon Institute of Technology
(541) 885-0212 voice (503) 497-7050 pgr/vm

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

Date: Thu, 30 May 96 18:30:30 EDT
From: Tony Harminc <EL406045@BROWNVM.BROWN.EDU>
Subject: Re: Cellular Caller ID


gabriele@rand.org (Mark Gabriele) wrote:

> I can fully understand people setting "anonymous caller rejection" on
> their home phone lines.  However, there are times when it is problematic.
> For example:

> A person calls a physician's office (after hours) with a medical
> emergency.  The person's call results in the physician being paged to call
> the patient.

> The physician calls the patient from their phone (home or cellular),
> with blocking set ON.  The physician's call is rejected because the
> patient has the "anonymous call rejection" set ON.  Ooops.  Now, in
> order to perform their ethical duty, the physician has to send caller
> ID to the patient in order for the patient to receive the call.  Now,
> the patient can jot down the physician's home or cellular phone number
> and call at their convenience (such as the next time little Johnny is
> throwing up at 3:00 am, or when Sally suffers a mental health crisis
> because her beaux dumped her).

> This is not a desirable circumstance for the physician.

Or when the physician calls from another patient's home phone while
making a housecall (no jokes please -- some still do make housecalls).
Then the second patient calls the first one demanding to speak to the
doctor.

> What I would propose is that CID should be capable of sending a
> *different* number registered to the same person (or a corporate
> number, with the permission of the corporation or on a business line).
> This provides protection for people who for legitimate professional
> reasons may wish to retain their personal privacy.  Unfortunately, I
> have not heard of any such capability in any jurisdiction with which I
> am familiar.

> I'm curious about why this seems to have escaped consideration, and
> what, if anything, ought to be done about it.

Exactly this service is available in Bell Canada territory.  You can
have any number that is installed at the same premises and billed to
the same subscriber set up as your call display number.  I have even
seen an 800 number used this way.  There is no charge to set this up,
but an admin charge to change it thereafter.


Tony Harminc

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

From: Lynne Gregg <lynne.gregg@attws.com>
Subject: Re: Cellular Caller ID
Date: Thu, 30 May 96 14:23:00 PDT


Andrew C. Green <acg@frame.com> wrote:

> I'd like to think that no one in their right mind would want to call
> only cellular phones to give a sales pitch, is there some more-official
> reason why this doesn't occur more often?

NPA/NXX's of cellular phones are not published.

hudel@hppad.waterloo.hp.com (Chris Hudel) wrote:

> Sorry if this has been suggested already, but how about "Name only
> Caller-ID?"  Afterall, don't you want to know *who* is calling more
> than you want to know *what phone number* they are calling from?

The FCC Order on Calling Number Services is very clear on this:

If the caller blocks his number, NAME cannot be presented -- even
alone (with no accompanying number).  The Order also states that
auto-callback *69 cannot be used either, if the caller blocks his
number.


Regards,

Lynne

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

Subject: Re: Network Outages
From: david.chessler@neteast.com (DAVID CHESSLER)
Date: Thu, 30 May 96 14:56:00 -0400
Organization: Online Technologies, Inc. - Modem:  301-738-0000
Reply-To: david.chessler@neteast.com (DAVID CHESSLER)


On 24 May 96, 03:26am, JONATHAN WELLS wrote to ALL
on the subject of "Network Outages":

> I am a student at the U of Penn, doing a graduate thesis. 

> I am trying to compile information about telco network outages.  I
> have searched all of the newsgroups hoping for a thread, but have not
> found much.  Could anyone help me?

> If you have any information available about carrier network outages
> which effected your business, or you know where I might find such
> information, I would be very thankful.:)

The FCC collects data on all outages affecting more than 50,000
phones.  This is in the ARMIS series, available on the FCC Common
Carrier "Statelink" BBS 202-418-0241 (it is not available on the Web
Site, but you might be able to reach this BBS through fedworld.gov).

ARMIS data is collected and maintained by the Accounting Division of
the Common Carrier bureau. Someone from that division gave a presen-
tation at the NARUC winter meetings.


david.chessler@mix.cpcug.org   david.chessler@neteast.com
chessler@capaccess.org         chessler@trinitydc.edu
E-mail: ->132   1:109/459      david.chessler@mix.cpcug.org

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

From: Jeff Carroll <xfrosch@indy.net>
Subject: Re: Hurting Public Utilities Hurts Public Service
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 12:17:30 -0500
Organization: bigendian
Reply-To: xfrosch@indy.net


Lisa wrote:

> This kind of attitude will hurt the consumer.  Despite massive
> protest when the nuke plant was built, today its power is very much
> needed in hot summers for air conditioning (and PCs, faxes, etc.)  Had
> that plant not been built, we'd have power shortages.  (Some regions
> face that on bad summer days.)  The company would not have built the
> plant, or not as big a plant if it felt the venture was too risky.  As
> a regulated monopoly, the power company had reduced risk.

I agree with your position as it applies to nuclear plants. Obviously
the construction of a nuclear power plant is something in which the
community at large holds a huge stake, not just economically but in
terms of public safety. Any locality which permitted wholesale,
unregulated construction of nuclear plants would be begging for
disaster.

Another example which comes to mind is that of airline service.
Clearly we have only one airspace to share, and that airspace MUST be
managed as a public resource.

In the days in which radio technology dictated narrowband channelized 
broadcast, it was necessary to regulate broadcasting since we have only
one terrestrial electromagnetic spectrum.

It used to be the case that construction of telecommunications networks
was such a huge cost that society could only afford to bear it once. 
With the proliferation of cable TV, mobile phones, and (especially) 
digital wireless systems, this is clearly no longer so.

Unless and until wireless communication is shown to be a hazard to 
public health (as I believe it never will), therefore, neither of the
foregoing conditions mandating government regulation are satisfied.

> Another benefit of regulation is lower rates.  Because a service
> territory is guaranteed, the government dictates a low rate of return.
> Nobody gets rich on utility stocks.  Further, the government dictates
> service standards.

This is a canard. Neither high standards of service nor low rates are
guaranteed by utility regulation. The only conceivable explanation of
why 2B+D ISDN is still $98/month in Indiana (as it was last time I 
checked) is the intransigence of the public utility commission and a 
cozy relationship with the telecom utilities.

What government regulation really insures is that your technology will 
lag the state of the art by years if not decades.

> But, like telephones, the electric company will lower its rates to
> large users to meet competition, and raise rates to residences and small
> businesses since nobody will want to serve them.

In other words, they will rationalize their price structures. This
would be a problem for customers of a power utility; in today's
environment, however, the telecom consumer has an already broad (and
still-expanding) range of local "loop" options; s/he will migrate
toward the technology which serves him/her most effectively.


> I'm a small potatoes consumer.  Who's looking out for me?  The
> utility companies don't really want my $25/month account...

My commercial bank really doesn't want my individual small potatoes
account. My ISP really doesn't want to have to support my shell
account; they'd rather make me use the same crippled winsock interface
they give everyone else. My insurance company doesn't really want to
carry my auto insurance policy; they'd rather focus on their main
business, commercial liability. My local Chevrolet dealer would rather
deal with fleet buyers than sell me one car. The airline I'm flying
this weekend would rather serve me in my capacity as a corporate
employee than as an individual consumer. My local supermarket would
rather sell lots of groceries to rich people and corporations.
Computer manufacturers prefer to build high-priced laptop models that
are not affordable to most of us as individuals, because they can sell
lots of them to large corporate customers.

You don't have to look around America in 1996 for very long before
this kind of argument starts to seem very silly. Regulated telecom was
the only way to run a pair of copper wires to every residence back
when that was the goal; today running a pair of copper wires to a
residence is far from being a cost-effective solution in many cases.
For those of us who essentially live out of automobiles, a pair of
copper wires is completely unworkable.

Prices ARE being kept artificially high and technology IS being
restrained by government regulation. People have an amazing array of
communications choices today, and, as long as antitrust legislation is
properly enforced, the consumer has little if anything to fear from
telecom deregulation save the mild stress of adapting to new
technology.


jkc

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

From: Tad Cook <tad@ssc.com>
Subject: Re: Preventing Pickup on Busy Line
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 16:36:40 PDT


A. Padgett Peterson <PADGETT@hobbes.orl.mmc.com> wrote:

> Pat, I have a real telco hardware question: I have been told that
> there is a simple (e.g. one diode) circuit that can be used to prevent
> a phone from picking up on a busy line. With FAX, modem, or other data
> traffic picking up a handset can disrupt it.

Proctor & Associates makes a variety of exclusion devices, either
voltage operated or current operated, including current operated group
exclusion modules that always give priority to one user.

Contact Proctor at 206-881-7000, or via fax at 206-885-3282 or email
at 3991080@mcimail.com.

Ask for information on exclusion modules.

> At the same time I need the phones to be able to pick up on either
> line on request (push button?) when used for voice. Can you point me
> to anything?

With a two (or more) line phone this would be a function of the phone,
not the exclusion module.  The exclusion module would be wired ahead
of the phone to prevent interruption.


Tad Cook   Seattle, WA    tad@ssc.com

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
public service systems and networks including Compuserve and America
On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. 

Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:

                 * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu *

The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
Townson of Skokie, Illinois USA. You can reach us by postal mail, fax 
or phone at:
                      Post Office Box 4621
                     Skokie, IL USA   60076
                       Phone: 500-677-1616
                        Fax: 847-329-0572
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*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from the              *
* International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in Geneva, Switzerland    * 
* under the aegis of its Telecom Information Exchange Services (TIES)   * 
* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
* ing views of the ITU.                                                 *
*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
yourself who provide funding in amounts deemed appropriate. Your help
is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of twenty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #256
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Thu May 30 21:52:25 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id VAA29362; Thu, 30 May 1996 21:52:25 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 21:52:25 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199605310152.VAA29362@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #257

TELECOM Digest     Thu, 30 May 96 21:52:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 257

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    A Nice Bit of Historical Trivia For You (TELECOM Digest Editor)
    London (Ontario) Yellow Pages on CD-ROM (Nigel Allen)
    Re: MCI Cellular (Lynne Gregg)
    Ericsson 337 Banned in USA? (mwong@mdsi.bc.ca)
    European CATV/Telecom Info -- Sources Needed (K. Walter)
    Re: University of Arizona Student Guards Internet Domain Names (M. Deignan)
    Updated GSM List 05/30/96 (Jurgen Morhofer)
    Re: Telcos and ISPs in Canada: Setting the Record Straight (Jean Mezei)
    Taking Care of Health Matters (TELECOM Digest Editor)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 21:20:03 EDT
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Subject: A Nice Bit of Historical Trivia For You


I have here about three dozen very old telephone bills from the
New England Telephone and Telegraph Company in Boston, MA dated
in the period September, 1932 through December, 1936. In addition,
I have rent receipts for the same period of time.

Two men were in business together, or at least they shared an office
together at the time:

                   Jacob Fisher & Samuel Steinberg
                   Suite 718 - Providence Building
                   333 Washington Street
                   Boston, Massachusetts

Oddly, the phone number was not shown on any of the phone bills, which
appear to be for coin telephone service in their office. There is a
reference to an account number which is given as 'P 7622  LAF'. That
may have been some central office designation. 

The phone bills look like this:

Bell in a circle
Bell System logo
New England Telephone &
Telegraph Co.
American Telephone &
Telegraph Co.

            New England Telephone and Telegraph Company
            The address of our BUSINESS OFFICE is shown in
            the front part of your telephone directory.
            When paying in cash please present both bill
            and stub.

                                               September 20, 1932


Monthly charge not covered by coin deposits, one
   month ending date of bill ..............................$ 3.75
Toll Service and Telegrams (statement enclosed) ...........   .25
Deficit and other charges and credits (statement enclosed) .  .20
Directory Advertising one month ending date of bill .......  ----
Amount due from previous bill .............................  ----

                                    Total Due ............. $4.20

Sometimes there is a second page with an itemization of toll and
sometimes there is not. 

On the front of each of these over the four year period in question
there appears a round rubber stamp indicia with the date, the words
'Paid, Teller # __'  and the phrase 'Bell System - New England
Telephone and Telegraph Company.'

The envelope for each has the traditional circle with the bell and
Bell System logo in the middle of the circle. The first several give a
return address of 881 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston. The postage meter
indicia says it was mailed in Boston, two cents postage and 'one cent
additional postage paid'.

Beginning in late 1933, the return address on the envelope changes and
is given as 705 Mt. Auburn Street, Watertown, Massachusetts, with a
postage meter indicia showing Watertown and two cents postage.

Beginning in 1935 the envelopes show a return address of 'P.O. Box 2256'
in Boston, but they continue to have postal indicia from Watertown,
again with two cents postage. 

They are all in 'window envelopes' so the address on the bill itself
shows through the window, however in every case the flap which you
slice open is at the *bottom* of the envelope rather than at the top.


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

The other item with these phone bills are the corresponding rent
receipts for the same time period. Mr. Fisher and Mr. Steinberg
paid the grand sum of $62.50 per month rent for their office in
the Providence Building, and there is a $5 credit on many of the
bills showing the actual amount due was $57.50. Their landlord
was Geo. L. DeBlois & A.N. Maddison, Agents, at 11 Pemberton
Square, Boston 1, Massachusetts.

Each rent bill has a rubber stamp on the front showing paid and the
date, with the signature of the person who took their money.  These
rent bills are typed out on a very old fashioned sort of typewriter.
The phone bills appear to have been prepared on a comptometer machine.

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

I think the main interest some people might have in these items are
the postal indicias and the cashier's indicias as they appear on 
the envelopes and invoices, etc. They would probably be of some
interest to people who have followed the history of Nynex over the
years and/or possibly local history in Boston. 

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

Would you like one?  If you have not yet sent in the suggested
voluntary annual donation of twenty dollars as 'subscription' to
TELECOM Digest and would like to do so at this time, please 
include with it a *long* self-addressed stamped envelope and
request one.  If you have already given your subscription for this
year and would like one of these, just send the long self addressed
envelope.

If you want a specific month and year, indicate this and I will
include it if possible. The dates range from September, 1932 through
December, 1936 however not all are available. 

Write to:    TELECOM Digest
             PO Box 4621
             Skokie, IL   60076

My thanks to William Lee Roberts of the Arctos Group, Chestnut Hill, MA
for passing these along to me with the suggestion that Digest readers 
might like to check them out.

No favoritism shown; I'll just fill these orders as they come in from
the top of the pile. Not only will you get a nice bit of history, but
your money will help keep the Digest around for another year or so.

Thanks!


PAT 

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

Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 21:14:18 -0400
From: Nigel Allen <ndallen@io.org>
Subject: London (Ontario) Yellow Pages on CD-ROM
Organization: Internex Online (shell.io.org), Toronto, Ontario, Canada


Tele-Direct (Publications) Inc., the Yellow Pages subsidiary of Bell
Canada, has announced plans to publish the London (Ontario) Yellow
Pages on CD-ROM. Here is a press release from Tele-Direct, which I
found on the Canada NewsWire web site at http://www.newswire.ca/

I don't work for Bell Canada or Tele-Direct.
     
TELE-DIRECT (PUBLICATIONS) INC. - 
THE YELLOW PAGES(TM) DIRECTORY NOW AVAILABLE ON CD-ROM

All the information you need at just a click of the mouse 

MONTREAL, 30 May /CNW/ - Tele-Direct (Publications) Inc. announces the
launch of a new initiative that could revolutionize the way consumers
locate the products and services they seek. The Yellow Pages(TM)
directory, for decades Canada's most widely used and most
comprehensive listing of businesses and services, will now be
available on CD-ROM.

	Initially, the Yellow Pages directory on CD-ROM will be
available in London, Ontario. However, after the initial launch this
November, consumers in seventeen communities in Quebec and Ontario
will gradually have access to the Yellow Pages directory through this
new and easy-to-use medium.

	``The Yellow Pages directory will be made available on CD-ROM
to these communities by the year 2000,'' says Claude Phaneuf, Manager,
Product Development of Tele-Direct (Publications) Inc. ``Many
consumers will find this a very efficient and comprehensive way to
locate both national and local advertisers.''

CITY MAP HELPS LOCATE ADVERTISERS

	Pop in your Yellow Pages directory on CD-ROM and the
information you need is just a click of the mouse away. Businesses can
be located by name or category with helpful information such as
address and telephone number appearing right on the screen. In
addition, with just one more click of the mouse, a city map appears
showing you the way to the establishment of your choice. And for a
select number of advtisers, a final click of the mouse brings to the
screen more in-depth information in brochure format about the products
they sell.

	With the CD-ROM version of the Yellow Pages directory,
consumers can even create their own personal directory. Over time, as
they locate the establishments they want, they can slowly put together
a personal list of their favourite and most frequented businesses. In
addition, Tele-Direct will put the residential directory in their
communities on CD-ROM. Thus, their personal directory can include
businesses as well as names of friends and family.

	``We have put a lot of effort into the design of this software
to make it as user friendly as possible while providing all the
information people need,'' continues Phaneuf. ``Like the printed
version, in London, we will offer the Yellow Pages directory on CD-ROM
free of charge to consumers.  Everybody wins, consumers and
advertisers alike.''

A LOOK AHEAD

	Today, millions of Canadians turn to the Yellow Pages
directory as their first and most credible choice when seeking an
establishment that offers the product or service they need. By
introducing the Yellow Pages directory on CD-ROM, Tele-Direct hopes to
make access to this comprehensive directory even more widespread.

	``We are the definite leaders in this field, and with the
introduction of the Yellow Pages directory on CD-ROM in the months and
years to come, we will be offering national advertisers the
possibility of brand advertising linked to point of sales advertising,
thus reaching the people who are ready to buy.

	Tele-Direct (Publications) Inc. is one of the world's largest
publishers of directories. As a wholly-owned subsidiary of BCE, it
sells advertising, compiles, publishes and delivers the alphabetical
and Yellow Pages directories for communities in Ontario and Quebec
served by Bell Canada. In addition, it publishes specialized
neighbourhood directories within well-defined areas of larger cities,
and provides similar services for other telephone companies both
within Canada and internationally.

	For further information: Claude Phaneuf, Tele-Direct (Publications)
Inc., (514) 934-2603

forwarded to the TELECOM Digest by
Nigel Allen, Toronto, Ontario  ndallen@io.org  http://www.io.org/~ndallen/

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

From: Lynne Gregg <lynne.gregg@attws.com>
Subject: Re: MCI Cellular
Date: Thu, 30 May 96 15:47:00 PDT


From: macaw@ix.netcom.com (Macaw)

> In Boston there is Cellular One and Nynex now there are two other cell
> companies starting to put up their antennas. They are AT&T and Sprint.

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: When cellular phone service was being
> developed in the early 1980's -- it started as of 1983 I believe --
> probably no one could ever imagine there would be a time when more
> than two carriers would ever be in existence in a given community and
> in most cases just one. Thus the A/B arrangement, with no real provision
> for a 'C' or 'D' carrier, or whatever they might be called. Does anyone
> know of any plans to open the market to a third or fourth (a 'C' or 'D'
> or whatever you would call them) carrier?  I do not mean just as a
> reseller of A/B as happens now, I mean genuine infrastructure for
> a third or fourth cellular company in some markets?    PAT]

Actually, the new carriers in the area hold PCS licenses.  The major
technical difference in service is that they will operate on different
spectrum bands (than existing cellular carriers).

They are officially designated "PCS 'a' and 'b'" operators.


Regards,

Lynne

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

From: mwong@mdsi.bc.ca (mwong)
Subject: Ericsson 337 Banned in USA?
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 20:20:51 GMT
Organization: mdsi


Does anyone know if Ericsson 337 has been banned in US for too high
radiation?  Is it true or not?

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

From: K. Walter <gausa@access.digex.net>
Subject: European CATV/Telecom Info -- Sources Needed
Date: 30 May 1996 22:48:47 GMT
Organization: Global Access (USA), Inc.


I am looking for general materials on several European CATV/telecom
projects -- any suggestions on sources would be appreciated.

1.  BT = (OTIAN) Optical Telecom in the Access Network.

2.  Deutsche Telekom = (OPAL) Optical Access Line.

3.  France Telecom = (DORA) Deploiement de l'Optique dans le Reseau 
    d'Access

4.  Italian PTT = any CATV projects.

5.  Swiss PTT = any FITL projects.

6.  Telefonica de Espana = PLAN FOTON and any CATV projects.


Thanks in advance.

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

From: kd1hz@anomaly.ideamation.com (Michael P. Deignan)
Subject: Re: University of Arizona Student Guards His Internet Domain Names
Date: 29 May 1996 22:49:55 -0400
Organization: The Ace Tomato Company


In article <telecom16.249.3@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Tad Cook
<tad@ssc.com> wrote:

> While Grossman ended his pursuit for trophies when claims started to
> cost, others have continued to grab. David Graves, business manager
> for Internic, says 364,000 domain names have already been registered,
> and 10,000 are being processed weekly.

Let's run the numbers, shall we?

364,000 x $50/year = $18,200,000 per year in renewals.

10,000 x $100 = $1,000,00 per week in additional revenue.

Looks like running an InterNic is a very profitable decision. I guess
I know where the rationale for these fees came from.

Anyone know any venture-capital firms out there where I can get a
couple million to start my own Internic too?

> peta.com : Two groups are battling for ownership of this name --
> People For the Ethical Treatment of Animals and a small group called
> People Eating Tasty Animals.

Actually, I thought it was peta.org. Oh well.


MD

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

Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 02:27:29 +0200
From: Jurgen Morhofer <globaltel@pobox.com>
Subject: Updated GSM List 05/30/96


For the latest edition of this list look at my Web-Site:
http://www.cs.tu-berlin.de/~jutta/gsm/gsm-list.html
kindly supplied by Jutta Degener.

And if you're already on the Web, take a look at my commercial site:
http://www.pobox.com/~globaltel. I really would appreciate your
business!

(Changes in the list marked by "*")

Date 05-30-1996.

Country      Operator name          Network code   Tel to customer service
 ------      -------------          ------------   -----------------------
Andorra      STA-Mobiland           213 03         Int + 376 824 115
Argentina
Australia  * Optus                  505 02         Int + 61 2 342 6000
             Telecom/Telstra        505 01         Int + 61 18 01 8287
             Vodafone               505 03         Int + 61 2 415 7236
Austria    * Mobilkom Austria       232 01         Int + 43 1 79701
Bahrain      Batelco                426 01         Int + 973 885557
Belgium      Belgacom               206 01         Int + 32 2205 4000
             Mobistar
Brunei                              536 ??
Bulgaria     Citron                 284 01
Cameroon
Chile      *
China        Guangdong MCC          460 00
             Guangxi PTB            460 01
             Liaoning PPTA          460 ??
Croatia      HR Cronet              219 01
Cyprus       CYTA                   280 01         Int + 357 2 310588
Czech Rep.   Eurotel Praha          230 02
Denmark    * Sonofon                238 02         Int + 45 9936 7196
             Tele Danmark Mobil     238 01         Int + 45 8020 2020
Egypt   
Estonia      EMT                    248 01         Int + 372 6 397130
             Radiolinja Eesti       248 02         Int + 372 6 399966
Fiji         Vodafone               542 01         Int + 679 312000
Finland      Radiolinja             244 05         Int + 358 800 95050
           * Telecom                244 91         Int + 358 800 7000
France       France Telecom         208 01         Int + 33 1 44 62 14 81
             SFR                    208 10         Int + 33 1 44 16 20 16
Germany      D1, DeTeMobil          262 01         Int + 49 511 288 0171
             D2, Mannesmann         262 02         Int + 49 172 1212
Ghana      *
Gibraltar    GibTel                 266 01         Int + 350 58 102 000
G Britain  * Cellnet                234 10         Int + 44 753 504548
           * Vodafone               234 15         Int + 44 836 1191
           * Jersey Telecom         234 50         Int + 44 1534 882 512
             Guernsey Telecom       234 55
             Manx Telecom           234 58         Int + 44 1624 636613
Greece       Panafon                202 05         Int + 30 94 400 122
             STET                   202 10         Int + 30 93 333 333
Hong Kong    HK Hutchison           454 04
             SmarTone               454 06         Int + 852 2880 2688
             Telecom CSL            454 00         Int + 852 2803 8450
Hungary      Pannon GSM             216 01         Int + 36 1 270 4120
             Westel 900             216 30         Int + 36 30 303 100
Iceland    * Post & Simi            274 01         Int + 354 800 6330
India        PT SATELINDO
             Airtel                 404 10         Int + 98 10 012345
             Essar                  404 11         Int + 98 11 098110
             Maxtouch               404 20
             BPL Mobile             404 21
             Command                404 30
             Mobilenet              404 31
             Skycell                404 40
             RPG MAA                404 41
Indonesia    TELKOMSEL              510 10         Int=A0+ 62 778 455 455
             PT Satelit Palapa      510 01         Int + 62 21 533 1881
             Excelcom               510 11
Iraq                                418 ??
Iran         T.C.I.                                Int + 98 2 18706341
Ireland    * Eircell                272 01         Int + 353 42 38888
             Digifone
Italy      * Omnitel                222 10         Int + 39 349 2000 190
             Telecom Italia Mobile  222 01         Int + 39 339 9119
Ivory Coast*
Japan
Jordan                              416 ??
Kenya      *
Kuwait       MTC                    419 02         Int + 965 484 2000
Laos                                458 ??
Latvia     * LMT                    247 01         Int + 371 256 2191
Lebanon      Libancell              415 03
             Cellis                 415 01
Liechtenstein Natel-D               228 01
Lithuania    Omnitel                246 01
           * Mobilos Telkom         246 02         Int + 370 2 232929
Luxembourg   P&T LUXGSM             270 01         Int + 352 4088 7088
Lybia        Orbit
Macao        CTM                    455 01         Int + 853 8913912
Malawi                              650 ??
Malaysia     Celcom                 502 19
             Binariang              502 12
Malta        Advanced               278 ??
Marocco      O.N.P.T.               604 01         Int + 212 220 2828
Mauritius    Cellplus               617 01
Monaco       France Telecom         208 01         Int + 33 1 44 62 14 81
             SFR                    208 10         Int + 33 1 44 16 20 16
Mongolia   *
Mozambique *
Namibia      MTC                    649 01         Int + 264 81 121212
Netherlands  PTT Netherlands        204 08         Int + 31 6 0106
           * Libertel               204 04         Int + 31 6 54 500100
New Caledonia *
New Zealand  Bell South             530 01         Int + 64 9 357 5100
Nigeria
Norway       NetCom                 242 02         Int + 47 92 00 01 68
           * TeleNor Mobil          242 01         Int + 47 22 78 15 00
Oman                                422 ??
Pakistan     Mobilink               410 01
Philippines  Globe Telecom          515 02         Int + 63 2 813 7720
             Islacom                515 01         Int + 63 2 813 8618
Poland                              260 ??
Portugal     Telecel                268 01         Int + 351 931 1212
           * TMN                    268 06         Int + 351 1 791 4474
Qatar        Q-Net                  427 01         Int + 974 325 000
Rumania                             226 ??
Russia       Mobile Tele... Moscow  250 01         Int + 7 095 915-7734
             United Telecom Moscow  =20
             NW GSM, St. Petersburg 250 02         Int + 7 812 528 4747
SaudiArabia  Saudi Telecom=20
Seychelles   SEZ SEYCEL             633 01
Serbia    
Singapore    Singapore Telecom      525 01         Int + 65 738 0123
Slovenia  
South Africa*MTN                    655 10         Int + 27 11 445 6001
             Vodacom                655 01         Int + 27 82 111
Sri Lanka    MTN Networks Pvt Ltd   413 02
Spain      * Airtel                 214 01         Int + 34 07 123000
           * Telefonica Spain       214 07         Int + 34 09 100909
Sweden       Comviq                 240 07         Int + 46 586 686 10
             Europolitan            240 08         Int + 46 708 22 22 22
             Telia                  240 01         Int + 46 771 91 03 50
Switzerland  PTT Switzerland        228 01         Int + 41 46 05 64 64
Syria        SYR MOBILE             417 09
Taiwan     * LDTA                   466 92         Int + 886 2 321 1962=20
Tanzania 
Thailand     TH AIS GSM             520 01         Int + 66 2 299 6440
Tunisia    *
Turkey       Telsim                 286 02         Int + 90 212 288 7850
             Turkcell               286 01         Int + 90 800 211 0211
UAE          UAE ETISALAT-G1        424 01
           * UAE ETISALAT-G2        424 02         Int + 971 4004 101
Uganda       Celtel Cellular        641 01
Vietnam      MTSC                   452 01
Zaire      *
Zimbabwe                            648 ??

Many Thanks to Kimmo Ketolainen, Robert Lindh and Alex van Es for their
precious help.

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

From: Jean-Fran=?iso-8859-1?Q?=E7ois Mezei <jfmezei@istar.ca>?=
Subject: Re: Telcos and ISPs in Canada: Setting the Record Straight
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 19:04:21 GMT
Organization: Vaxination Informatique
Reply-To: jfmezei@istar.ca


Ian Angus wrote:

> Are Canada's telephone companies out to crush independent Internet
> Service Providers? Are they engaged in a campaign to take over the
> Internet and drive out all competitors?

No, but they may buy out some of these ISPs to gain market share.
This is what will happen in Australia with Telstra agumenting its
presence in the ISP scene by buying out smaller ISPs in regions where it
has no presence. In the end, you may end up with 2 large national
independant ISP, the telcos, the cable companies and a couple of small
ISPs who resist the tide of the big guys. In the case of Australia, this
is even more imminent since the cable industry has just started and they
are starting off with bi-directional cable plants whereas in North
America, cable companies are stuck with older uni-directional plants for
the most part.

> Telecom Canada. In March 1992, Telecom Canada reorganized, and changed
> its name to Stentor.

That was more than a name change. I beleive that with Stentor, telcos's
votes are weighted instead of being equal. This gives Bell a greater
control of the orgaisation from what I was told.

> THE NET

>>      "Bell Canada even tried to claim 'The Net' as its
>>      registered trademark. They prepared to sue Canadian
>>      ISPs who used 'The Net' in their advertising. But
>>      the trademark was challenged by small ISPs and Bell
>>      backed down. Instead, they called their service
>>      'Sympatico.'"

I beleive that Bell/Stentor (either directly or through their Mediatel
division/entity) wanted to designate their Envoy 100 and Inet services
on which are based their e-mail and EDI services as "THE NET" which, at
the time, were not even connected to the real NET (the internet). I know
that I saw some ads for some of their ENVOY and EDI services with the
use of "THE NET" and I thought it was silly because it was pretentious
for Bell/Stentor to think that their services were important enough to
be considered *THE* net. At that time, even Bell Canada was confused 
about who was actually providing these services. Invoices were partly by
Telecom Canada, partly by Stentor and partly by Bell Canada, and when
you called for support, it was a company called Mediatel that answered
the phone. (All of which were either the telco association (Telecom
Canada or Stentor) or subsidiaries of Bell Canada.

Since the "NET" is now an obvious reference to the Internet and since
Bell's services which were encompassed in "THE NET" had nothing to do
with the Internet (althought Envoy now has a connection to the
internet), it was only normal that Bell/Stentor stop using that
designation.

> Not so. Bell Canada filed its trademark claim in 1992, before the term
> "The Net" was widely used as a synonym for the Internet.

May have been unknown to the Bell folks and the general public, but back
in 1992, the internet was already being refered to as "the net" inside
the information systems industry. As a customer of ENVOY, by the time I
saw "The NET" in advertising, the Internet was already very public.
I have never seen "the NET" in invoices sent to me. The service is still
called ENVOY 100. I considered "THE NET" as yet more vapourware.

> And so far as I am aware, there was never any plan to use The Net as a
> name for Bell's Internet access service.

I agree, but that is because Bell, until last year, still thought that
the term "Information Super Highway" meant 500 TV channels and that the
general public would not be interested in having a computer at home and
never expected the Internet would grow out of its community. 


> So any ISP which was "sent scrambling" by Sympatico's rates was
> probably in pretty bad shape to begin with.

I beleive that small ISPs must still fear Bell/Stentor's very powerful
marketing/advertising locomotives even if Bell's rates are not the
best.  Bell can push its way into the market with a massive
advertising campaign that small ISPs could not match. If not, they
will end up buying their way into the market by buying the smaller
ISPs.

And ISPs are aware of this, this is why they are NOW advertising before
BELL gets its act together and launches its locomotive that will crush 
other advertising. The bigger the customer base an ISP now has, the more
chances of survival it has and/or the more attractive it will be to a
potential buy-out by one of the big guys.

> ** Most small and medium-sized ISPs in Bell Canada's
>    territory use low-priced Centrex telephone lines for
>    customer access. In November, Bell informed them that
>    this use was contrary to regulations, and that they
>    should be using higher priced Information System
>    Access Lines. (ISALs)

Interesting. When I called Bell in Montr=E9al for a quote for a similar
setup (for a private network, not internet) the solution given was
Centrex and no mention was made of ISALs).

> And how can we square this story of monopoly power and market
> dominance with the fact that the fearsome Sympatico service is still
> an also-ran in the fight for market leadership, with fewer customers
> than iSTN, HookUp, ID Internet Direct, CyberSurf, Internet Canada, and
> others?

If Bell does it right and provides state of the art access points and
does not underestimate the intelligence of its customers (in other
words, if Bell has learned from its Alex experience) and IF Bell puts 
its advertising power to work, it might becomes a very fiercesome force
in the ISP market in Canada.

Cogeco has already begun ISP services over cable in Quebec, and
Videotron will begin its equivalent service in a few weeks. If Bell
cannot keep up, its current dominance in the telecommunications
industry will be eroded as fast as the cable companies can convert
their network to bi-directional.  Bell's services such as Datapac and
Envoy just have not kept up and their rate structures still discourage
private use.

The large guys always seem to take longer to wake up to technological
advances in the public. IBM was an "also ran" when it introduced its PC,
well after APPLE and Commodore had their consumer products out.
Microsoft was late in its entry in the software industry compared to
companies/products such as Visicalc. But in the end, these guys used
their marketing force to win their way to marklet dominance rather
quickly.

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

From: TELECOM Digest Editor <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Subject: Taking Care of Health Matters
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 21:45:00 EDT


Just a note to let everyone know I have to go back to the doctor for
a bit more testing and treatment. It'll only be a day or two and I
should be back here Monday or Tuesday at latest in case you don't see
anything here for a few days and actually miss me!  :)  May I suggest
you hold off on sending in submissions to the Digest at least until
Monday, June 3 or Tuesday, June 4 since there is still plenty of 
backlogged stuff to get out when I am back at my post. 

Thanks,


PAT

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
public service systems and networks including Compuserve and America
On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. 

Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:

                 * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu *

The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
Townson of Skokie, Illinois USA. You can reach us by postal mail, fax 
or phone at:
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*************************************************************************
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* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
* ing views of the ITU.                                                 *
*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
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is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of twenty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #257
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Thu May 30 22:34:10 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id WAA03021; Thu, 30 May 1996 22:34:10 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 22:34:10 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199605310234.WAA03021@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #258

TELECOM Digest     Thu, 30 May 96 22:34:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 258

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Re: 800/888 and COCOTS (Van Heffner)
    Re: 800/888 and COCOTS (Dave Levenson)
    Re: Does Dialing LD Access Code Prevent IntraLATA *69 Function? (J Rhodes)
    Re: Hurting Public Utilities Hurts Public Service (Henry Baker)
    Re: Hurting Public Utilities Hurts Public Service (Dave Levenson)
    Re: Graybar Electric (Stan Schwartz)
    Re: Great Circle Mileage Equations (John Mayson)
    Re: Bell Atlantic Proposes 412 Overlay (Daniel Greenfield)
    Re: 10-Digit Dialing is Easy (Dave Close)
    Satellite Phone on Mt. Everest (A.E. Siegman)

I'll be away about three days with the doctor; look for more here
about Tuesday!  Please order a CD ROM of the Archives today!    PAT]
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 02:31:39 -0700
From: vantek@northcoast.com (VANTEK COMMUNICATIONS)
Subject: Re: 800/888 and COCOTS


> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I would not let something as silly as
> that stop me from visiting Texas, which is a wonderful place with some
> very fine people. The theory behind charging for calls to 800/888 from
> a COCOT is that the COCOT owner has no way to be compensated for the
> call otherwise, and it is felt he is entitled to compensation on all
> calls, the same as any telco. Like any other long distance call, part
> of the charge (usually collected from the recipient in the case of
> 'toll free' calls) goes back to the originating telco. In other words,
> the revenue from those calls is divided among the carriers involved
> the same as on regular long distance calls. On regular long distance
> calls, the COCOT operator has you put the money in the box, therefore
> he gets his portion after paying the telco whose line he is on. In 
> the case of 800/888, there is no money to put in the box, but he still
> wants his portion. A point could be made perhaps that telco should be
> required to pay commissions on long distance traffic handled by COCOTs
> which would take care of that problem, but that is not how it is done
> at this time. That is why the COCOT user has to pay.    PAT]

My big problem with this is that the fee effectively puts a $.25
surcharge on each of my calling card calls. Most LD carriers now have
800 access numbers to use their calling cards. Part of the convenience
of having a calling card is not having to carry around a bunch of
loose change. That's no longer possible in Texas. The only way to make
a "changeless" call from these phones will now be the LEC's prepaid
"smart cards". What a great way to promote the use of their own
(overpriced) cards ... place a $.25 surcharge on other company's
calling card calls! I guess that if you don't have a "smart card", you
will need to use their AOSlime to make a call (without change). This
puts LD (card) competitors (and consumers) at a real disadvantage.

Keep in mind that the LEC's (SW Bell and GTE) are already making money
on other company's calling card calls by charging access fees to the
carrier.  This $.25 fee just adds insult to injury for those wishing
to use a competitor's services. After all, it's not like you can "shop
around" for other payphones, in most locations. It was GTE and SW Bell
who pushed for these new fees, NOT so much the COCOT's (they have far
less phones there anyway). This is one case where the LEC payphone
operators are being even greedier than the COCOT's! The two above
LEC's threatened to pull many of their public payphones out of a huge
number of installations in Texas, unless this legislation was passed.
Part of the reason for passing the legislation was the fact that the
state felt that it would be very inconvenient (and perhaps even a
threat to public safety) to let the two companies remove their
payphones from many rural (many nonprofitable) locations throughout
the state. IOW, the state more or less had the thing shoved down their
throats.


Van Hefner - Editor
Discount Long Distance Digest
On The Web: http://www.webcom.com/longdist/

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

From: dave@westmark.com (Dave Levenson)
Subject: Re: 800/888 and COCOTS
Organization: Westmark, Inc.
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 01:22:18 GMT


Mike Seebeck (seebeck@lace.colorado.edu) writes:

> It is a poor solution to a payphone company wanting to collect revenue
> to require users of 800 calling cards to carry change with them in
> order to use their calling cards.  I travel often and use real money
> as little as possible (it is soooo messy).  I do not care to carry a
> role of quarters so I can use my calling card from airports.

I agree completely.  I believe that help is on the way. One tiny
article within the Telecommunications Reform Act of 1996 states that
payphone operators should be compensated for the use of their
equipment.  The FCC is required by the act to impose regulations to
effect this compensation.  The FCC is moving toward requiring the
carrier (who bills the called party for an 800 call) to share the
revenue in some way with the owner of the payphone from which the call
originated.  This is likely to happen around the end of 1996.

The state of Texas, in trying to accomplish the same thing before the
Act was passed, and unable to exert its influence over 800 service
providers outside of Texas, permitted payphone operators in the state
to collect a per-call `set-use fee' in coin.  When the public phone
compensation part of the Act takes effect, it is likely that Texas
will no-longer permit the per-call coin deposit on 800 and 888 calls.


Dave Levenson		Internet: dave@westmark.com
Westmark, Inc.		UUCP: uunet!westmark!dave
Stirling, NJ, USA	Voice: 908 647 0900  Fax: 908 647 6857

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

From: Jeffrey Rhodes <jeffrey.rhodes@worldnet.att.net>
Subject: Re: Does Dialing LD Access Code Prevent IntraLATA *69 Function?
Date: 30 May 1996 14:46:01 GMT
Organization: AT&T WorldNet Services


I'll venture a guess. The calling party number must be delivered for
the *69 call back CLASS feature to work. Some XXX carriers have been
given a waiver from FCC Docket 91-281 which requires long distance
carriers to pass the CPN when received. The FCC order became official
on December 1, 1995 but some long distance carriers' switches (not
AT&T) were unable to comply. The waiver is up on June 1, 1996.

Maybe the XXX carrier has finally got switch software to pass the CPN!
When you dial 10XXX for intra-LATA, the call goes out to a long
distance carrier and loops back to the LEC to complete the call within
the LATA. When *69 returns the call,the long distance carrier is not
involved. Another guess is that the carrier has upgraded to SS7
signaling to the LEC and previously used Feature Group D (FGD)
signaling which passes ANI, not CPN.

Incidentally, there is another CLASS feature to connect a call to a
busy line when the line becomes unbusy. Global Title Translation of
your received CPN allows the LEC to contact your switch to retry the
call when the called line is unbusy (your switch first calls you, you
answer and then the call is placed). I wonder if this will work when
you first dial 10XXX?

I think *67 before the 10XXX will prevent a callback by *69. Your
calling number is still delivered to the called switch, it won't be
available for display (a court order can obtain it, though, when the
called party dials *56 immediately after the call), but the LEC would
have to show the number dialed on the customer's invoice which would
defeat the privacy of *67.


Jeffrey Rhodes at jeffrey.rhodes@attws.com

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

From: hbaker@netcom.com (Henry Baker)
Subject: Re: Hurting Public Utilities Hurts Public Service
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 04:53:06 GMT


In article <telecom16.242.6@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, hancock4@cpcn.com
(Lisa) wrote:

>    This kind of attitude will hurt the consumer.  Despite massive
> protest when the nuke plant was built, today its power is very much
> needed in hot summers for air conditioning (and PCs, faxes, etc.)  Had
> that plant not been built, we'd have power shortages.  (Some regions
> face that on bad summer days.)  The company would not have built the
> plant, or not as big a plant if it felt the venture was too risky.  As
> a regulated monopoly, the power company had reduced risk.

>   Another benefit of regulation is lower rates.  Because a service
> territory is guaranteed, the government dictates a low rate of return.
> Nobody gets rich on utility stocks.  Further, the government dictates
> service standards.

>   I'm a small potatoes consumer.  Who's looking out for me?  The
> utility companies don't really want my $25/month account -- they're
> looking to widen their territories and grab big industrial users.  The
> so-called "consumer advocates" on PUCs care only about the very poor
> users, not the middle class.

Boy, have you been taken in by the well-oiled utility PR folks!

For an historical perspective, you might look at: 

Nye, David E.  "Electrifying America".  MIT Press, 1990, ISBN 0-262-64030-9.

Electrical power plants were originally built and paid for by
industrial users.  Then they noticed that they had all this expensive
capital equipment sitting idle _during the evening after the workers
went home and the plants were idle_, so they began offering electrical
power to consumers at _extremely attractive rates_ -- in some cases
_flat_ rates!  In other words, for X dollars per month, they would
hook you up and you could use as much electricity _as you could get
through your circuit breaker_.  So long as your subscription fee paid
for the capital costs of the wires/pipes/etc. and maintenance, the
power plant was way ahead of the game.

The city utility plants, on the other hand, were typically built for
street lighting, and therefore could not offer low rates to consumers
since they needed the electricity themselves at the same time.

Oh, by the way, many cities had three or more power companies, and
they began to compete with one another.

So you can now guess what havoc was then wreaked by 'regulation'.
Technical progress sloowweedd wwaayy dddooowwwnnn, because slow
depreciation made investments in new technology impossible, and cheap
rates were replaced by 'rational' (but much higher) rates.

Although no one was making 'obscene' profits, everyone was being
screwed by the lack of any technical progress in the industry.  So the
law of unintended consequences (the one law that politicians can't
understand) guaranteed that costs and prices would remain high because
no one had any incentive to lower them.

Obscene profits in a highly competitive industry have a tendency to be
relatively short-lived, unless the profiteer is extraordinarily
nimble, and is working as hard or harder than others to bring costs
down.  In this case, he is doing as much for you as he is for himself,
and you should thank him profusely for improving your productivity for
you, rather than begrudging him rewards for a job well done.

So you as a consumer have much more to gain from utility competition
than big industrial customers, who already have the option of building
their own power plants.


www/ftp directory:
ftp://ftp.netcom.com/pub/hb/hbaker/home.html

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

From: dave@westmark.com (Dave Levenson)
Subject: Re: Hurting Public Utilities Hurts Public Service
Organization: Westmark, Inc.
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 01:38:57 GMT


Lisa (hancock4@cpcn.com) writes:

>   When the phone company broke, what consumer expected higher prices
> for COCOT phones and long distance?

Long distance is far less expensive today than it was pre-competition.
Many COCOT phones charge less than utility-owned payphones (even
though the utility-owned payphones are subsidized by ratepayers).

While competition is not the answer to every problem, it does offer us
alternatives.  If we make informed decisions, we benefit.  What we
lose with competition is subsidies.  (If one group of customers
subsidizes another, a competitor will offer the customers who pay the
subsidy an opportunity to avoid paying it.)

If you have been paying these subsidies, you benefit.  If you have
been receiving them, perhaps you don't ... but ask yourself why you
deserved to be subsidized in the first place!


Dave Levenson		Internet: dave@westmark.com
Westmark, Inc.		UUCP: uunet!westmark!dave
Stirling, NJ, USA	Voice: 908 647 0900  Fax: 908 647 6857

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

Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 16:36:53 EDT
From: Stan Schwartz <usfunx2b@ibmmail.com>
Subject: Re: Graybar Electric


In Mark J. Cuccia's very informative article in TD #234 "WUTCO, WECO,
Graybar", there was some doubt as to the current existence of Graybar.
Fear not, as I stumbled upon a booth that they had set up at the ITEC
Expo in Charlotte, NC last week.  I asked the reps there if they were
the "same" Graybar, and sure enough they are.

I don't know how many offices they still have in the states, but a
packet of info that they mailed to me had the logo "Everything
Electrical - Graybar Electric Company - Since 1869" on the mailing
label. They still have catalogs (which are on their way), and their
address here is:

 Graybar Electric Company, Inc.
 1451 Bryant Street
 Charlotte, NC 28208
 (704) 375-9831  

Once I get the catalog(s), if there's a toll-free number and/or e-mail
address, I'll post it.


Stan (stan@vnet.net)                                                         

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

From: jmayson@p100dl.ess.harris.com (John Mayson)
Subject: Re: Great Circle Mileage Equations
Date: Thu, 30 May 96 12:30:18 EDT


I derived this formula to calculate great circle mileage equations.  I don't 
know if this is the best way to do it, but it works.

Define NORTH latitudes as POSITIVE,
       SOUTH latitudes as NEGATIVE.

Define EAST longitudes as POSITIVE,
       WEST longitudes as NEGATIVE.

Convert the coordinates of both points to Cartesian.  

x=RHO * sin(PHI) * cos(THETA)
y=RHO * sin(PHI) * sin(THETA)
z=RHO * cos(THETA)

However note that PHI is defined as being 0 degrees at the North Pole
and 180 and the South Pole.  It is necessary to let PHI=(90 - LON).
THETA simply equals LAT.  RHO is the radius of the earth.  Assume the
circumference is 25,000 miles.  Divide by 2*PI to get RHO.

So we now have these equations:

x=RHO * sin(90 - LON) * cos(LAT)
y=RHO * sin(90 - LON) * sin(LAT)
z=RHO * cos(LAT)

To find the linear distance between the two points use:

d = SQRT[ (x2-x1)^2 + (y2-y1)^2 + (z2-z1)^2 ]

This is the distance if you're a groundhog and care to burrow through the
earth.  However you can easily calculate the arc length from this.

2*RHO*arccos[d/(2*RHO)]

where arccos is in RADIANS!!

Also note you can factor RHO out of the equation for d.  I'll call this d'.
In that case your equation is simply:

2*RHO*arccos(d'/2)

Now here's my question for you.  How would I find the azimuth (direction) of 
one point on earth wrt to another?


John Mayson | Palm Bay, Florida | john.mayson@harris.com

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

Date: Thu, 30 May 96 13:03 EST
From: Daniel Greenfield <0007129704@mcimail.com>
Subject: Re: Bell Atlantic Proposes 412 Overlay


Continuing the discussion raised by John Cropper's submissions on Bell
Atlantic Proposes 412 Overlay in Vol 16, Issue 240 --

This may be of interest to your readers.

A coalition of telecommuncations service providers and Pittsburgh
region-based independent telephone companies issued the following in
reponse to the 412 area code exhaust issue.


Dan Greenfield   MCI
712-9704@mcimail.com


COALITION FORMS TO SUPPORT GEOGRAPHIC SPLIT FOR NEW AREA CODE IN PITTSBURGH

Pittsburgh, Pa., May 10,1996 - Five of Pennsylvania's largest
communications companies today announced they have formed a coalition
to support the geographic split as the most proconsumer and
procompetitive method of implementing new area codes for the
Pittsburgh area.  The coalition asserts that Bell Atlantic's plan,
which overlays the new code in the existing 412 area, is
anticompetitive and would force consumers and businesses to dial 10
digits for every call they place, , including local calls.

The "Pennsylvania Coalition for Area Code Relief," comprised of AT&T,
MCI, MFS Communications Co., Inc., Sprint and Teleport Communications
Group, supports a geographic area code split plan in which part of the
Pittsburgh region would keep the 412 area code and part would adopt a
"new" area code.

The new code is necessary because growth in the use of fax machines,
computer modems, cellular phones, pagers and the use of second (or
third) telephone lines in many households is rapidly depleting the
available pool of telephone numbers.
 As a result, the Pittsburgh region faces the prospect that phone number
reserves in the 412 area code will be exhausted next year.

The coalition supports the geographic split because it minimizes
customer confusion, minimizes inconvenience, maintains a community's
identity with a specific area code and helps promote the development
of telecommunications competition.  It also enables the majority of
residents to continue dialing seven digits for their local calls.

"If Bell Atlantic has its way, neighbors will have different area
codes, and, in cases where consumers add fax or additional telephone
lines, there would be two different area codes in the same house,"
said Joe Karas, AT&T president in Pennsylvania.  "In addition,
consumers would have to dial the full 10 digits for all their local
calls.  You shouldn't have to dial extra digits to place a local call
 -- or dial a different area code to call your teenager down for
dinner," he said.  "It's obvious that Bell Atlantic's approach is not
consumer friendly."

Chip Casteel, MCI regional executive of public policy, agrees.  "The
coalition is sending a wake-up call to Pittsburgh consumers -- Bell
Atlantic's proposal would confuse consumers and delay the benefits of
local telephone competition in Pennsylvania," he said.  "The
traditional geographic split has been used almost universally for
nearly 50 years to solve area code exhaust.  In fact, California,
Texas, Florida, Georgia, Missouri and Illinois recently favored a
split, determining it to be in line with the development of
competition and better for consumers."

The Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission is currently receiving
comments on this issue and will soon consider the best way to
implement the new Pittsburgh region area code.

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

From: dhclose@alumnae.caltech.edu (Dave Close)
Subject: Re: 10-Digit Dialing is Easy
Date: 30 May 1996 06:56:40 GMT
Organization: California Institute of Technology, Pasadena


cra@servtech.com (Curtis R. Anderson) writes:

> Well, in New York, all intra-NPA calls are dialed as seven digits.
> There were all sorts of complaints about having to do this. Folks
> would have prefered to dial "1+" 7 digits so they would understand
> that they were placing a toll call.

Calling a particular number may be a toll call if placed over one
network and not a toll call if placed over a different network. It may
be a toll call if placed from a phone with one class of service
(business, say) and not a toll call if placed from a phone with a
different class of service (residence, say, or coin). It may be a toll
call if placed from a line with measured service or "life-line"
service and not a toll call if placed from a line with unmeasured
service. A call which involves an additional charge may still not be a
toll call if the carrier chooses to name it a "message unit" call.  A
call placed with 10XXX access may be charged a toll when the same call
placed without the prefix would not be so charged, even if the default
carrier is the same as the 10XXX carrier.

The above are only some of the variables which exist today. In the
near future, we will have other variables to contend with, including
caller-pays PCS or cellular service. Those who dream of 1+ being
required to place a "toll" call are only dreaming. The technical
effort to evaluate all the variables in real-time would be uneconomic.
But the consumer backlash may have the desirable effect to inducing
carriers to offer more flat-rate service. Competition may push in the
same direction. Just as there are COCOTs today with flat-rate
nationwide calling (usually at 25c/min), I expect one of the cable
companies will offer nationwide unlimited calling for a fixed monthly
rate within three years. I only hope the rate will be attractive.


Dave Close, Compata, Costa Mesa CA	
dave@compata.com, +1 714 434 7359	
dhclose@alumni.caltech.edu		

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

From: siegman@ee.stanford.edu (A. E. Siegman)
Subject: Satellite Phone on Mt. Everest
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 14:43:00 -0700
Organization: Stanford University


   Surely one of the more bizarre and thought-provoking telecom
stories during the past month must have been the climber trapped a few
thousand feet below the summit of Everest by a suddenly emerging
storm, telephoning his seven-months pregnant wife from his emergency
snow cave via satellite phone to tell her he's OK and will soon be
rescued, despite having no tent, minimal supplies, unable to move
further because of frostbite in his legs, and with absolutely zero
hope of rescue.

   One thinks on the one hand of trapped polar explorers of the past,
leaving behind diaries with entries written as they and their comrades
slowly die of cold or starvation, with these diaries to be found in
some cases not until decades later.

   And on the other hand, despite the grim reality of the situation
one can't help having visions of dialogs like, "I have a collect call
for anyone from Annapurna; will you accept the charges?"; 

"Anna WHO..?".

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
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Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
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Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
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------------------------------

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #258
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Mon Jun  3 18:45:07 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id SAA01824; Mon, 3 Jun 1996 18:45:07 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Mon, 3 Jun 1996 18:45:07 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606032245.SAA01824@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #259

TELECOM Digest     Mon, 3 Jun 96 18:45:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 259

Inside This Issue:                          Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Arrogant Internet Providers (Tad Cook)
    Telecom and Disability Conference (Jim Tobias)
    Intelligent Networks For Mobile Users? (Eric Tholome)
    Excel Goes Head to Head With Sprint - Offers .09/min (Tom Zinn)
    Digital Communications Action Group (Monty Solomon)
    Help with Draconian Contract (Romesh C.D. Singh@spider)
    UNIX DTMF-Decoding "Voicemail" Software? (Jeremy Elson)
    "Historic Telephony" Webpage (Mark J. Cuccia)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Tad Cook <tad@ssc.com>
Subject: Arrogant Internet Providers
Date: Mon, 3 Jun 1996 18:17:49 GMT


Arrogant Internet providers tell customers to get lost
By Peter H. Lewis

{New York Times}

In Moscow, desperate people must sometimes wait years, or pay
exorbitant bribes, to get telephone service that is expensive and
unreliable. By those standards, Internet access in the United States
is pretty good. But recent events and trends in the on-line access
business have led some Internet customers to reassess their service
providers and begin shopping around for new homes in cyberspace.

Many people, perhaps most, are happy with their Internet service. Many
others are not. The complaints often arise from general overcrowding
on the Internet and the World Wide Web, but they also come from what
seems to be a new arrogance on the part of Internet access providers
who only a year or two ago were begging for customers.

For example, Netcom On-Line Communications Inc. of San Jose has
informed some of its customers that they are no longer wanted.
Sophisticated users are being shown the door.

"Frankly, it's not profitable to service your account anymore," a
technical support representative told me.

It seems the company regrets that it offered me a so-called Unix shell
account several years ago and now wishes me to cancel it and sign up
for the more profitable (to them) Netcruiser service.

To drive the point home, the Netcom technician informed me that the
company no longer accepts telephone calls from shell account customers
who need technical support. Rather, all questions have to be submitted
by electronic mail.

When I explained that my problem involved Netcom's locking my
electronic mail account, the technician was unmoved. "You'll have to
send us e-mail," he said.  So I did as I was told. A month later, I
got a response that had nothing to do with my shell account. The
average response time for this electronic support is measured in
weeks, which makes the 20-minute hold times for telephone support seem
like a fond memory.

Meanwhile, at the other end of the country and of the Internet service
spectrum, the Internet service Pipeline in New York City recently
announced that it was no longer interested in serving Internet
beginners. Internet newcomers require too much hand-holding and
technical assistance, it seems, making them more trouble than they are
worth.

According to William L. Schrader, chief executive of Psinet Inc., the
national Internet service company that bought Pipeline more than a
year ago, the company's new strategy is to let AT&T, America Online
Inc. and other larger companies recruit and train the beginners.

Then, once these on-line ragamuffins are properly schooled and
polished, Pipeline will be happy to have them back, at higher fees.
"We will build a billion-dollar business from AT&T's crumbs," Schrader
said, borrowing an image from the novel "Bonfire of the Vanities."

Mysterious swelling

And then there is the IDT Corp. of Hackensack, N.J., which is one of
the nation's fastest-growing Internet service companies. IDT, whose
advertisements are inescapable in some parts of the country, used to
offer "unlimited and "uncensored" Internet and World Wide Web access
for $15 a month.

That would be quite a bargain, many former customers say, except that
it was often impossible to get connected to the Internet through IDT
because of incessant busy signals, and that the software provided by
IDT did not allow Web access and that the expected $15 bill often
mysteriously swelled.

IDT officials say the critics are being unfair, and that any
misunderstandings about service and billing have been rectified.

Long-term commitment

Internet customers, whether novices or sophisticates, ought to keep
these unsettling situations in mind when shopping for a service
provider. It pays to do a lot of homework before choosing a provider,
because changing services, which means changing e-mail addresses,
business cards and the like, is far more annoying and expensive than
signing up in the first place.

As always, the best resource for anyone looking for a reliable
Internet connection is a friend who already has service. Beyond the
obvious questions about price, ask the friend: Are busy signals ever a
problem? Is telephone support readily available at convenient times?
Is the help desk helpful when there are problems?

One can ask the same questions of the provider, of course, but candid
answers are less likely.

No response

My search for a new provider has been unsettling. To get a list of
providers in my area code, I visited The List on the World Wide Web
(address: http:// www. thelist.com) and started calling. (For
beginners, the search will probably start with the Yellow Pages or
advertisements in newspapers and magazines.) If the office phones are
representative of the modem lines, I reasoned, my first calls would be
a gauge of future service.

Of the six local providers I dialed, not one answered the phone
directly. Some lines were constantly busy. Others were answered by
answering machines. Only one provider called back by the end of the
day.

My friends in Moscow write that the telephone service there is slowly
getting better. I am not sure I can say the same about Internet access
here.


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Well, I will tell you one *excellent*
source here in the Chicago area: RIPCO Communications. Their dialup
for information online is 312-665-0065. They charge me $35 for three
months of unlimited shell access. Bruce and his associate Dave Richards 
have always been prompt to respond to my concerns and wishes. There
is also a voice number which unfortunatly is answered a great deal of
the time by a machine at least during the day, but that may be because
the guys have to work elsewhere or have other places to be much of the
time which would be understandable if it is the case. I've been by
their site which is centrally located on the north side of Chicago at
Western and Belmont Avenues. They have a *large* number of dialups
(about a hundred) so I have never gotten a busy signal when dialing
in. I'd recommend them to Chicago/north suburban users.     PAT]

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

From: Jim Tobias <tobias@inclusive.com>
Subject: Telecom and Disability Conference
Date: Mon, 03 Jun 1996 14:05:11 -0400
Organization: Inclusive Technologies
Reply-To: tobias@inclusive.com


INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATIONS ARE ENTERING A NEW ERA...
 ... SO SHOULD YOU!

INFORAMPS 96
New Markets and Inclusive Communications

A National Conference on Designing and Using an Accessible
Information Infrastructure

July 11 & 12, 1996
Kellogg Conference Center
Gallaudet University, Washington, DC

*Get an edge on the future!*

Hear industry leaders describe how user-friendly universal design of
telecommunications technology gives them a competitive advantage.

*Do Business Inclusively!*

Learn how to increase your potential market size by opening up your
products and business practices to new users.

*Create better products and services for everyone!*

Designing information technology, products and services that can
be used by people with disabilities results in innovations that
help everyone!

*INFORAMPS 96*

Will celebrate the work and knowledge already gained regarding the
design of a user-friendly electronic environment; recognize pioneering
efforts within the industry; showcase exhibits of new developments and
breakthroughs; bring together professionals and consumers with common
interests; and add to the growing momentum toward universal design.

*Interactive Virtual Conference*

A parallel, virtual conference will be accessible from any home or
office computer for participants who are unable to come to the site at
Gallaudet University.  Join INFORAMPS 96 via audio conference,
download real-time transcripts and ask questions and give comments via
fax and E-mail.

PRELIMINARY CONFERENCE AGENDA

July 11, 1996

9:00 - 9:15    Welcoming Remarks
*I. King Jordan, President, Gallaudet University
*Deborah Kaplan, Issue Dynamics, Inc.

9:15 - 10:00   Keynote Address
*Vice President Al Gore (Invited)

10:00 - 10:30  Technology Demonstration
*John Gage, Chief Scientist, Sun Microsystems

10:30 - 12:00  Roundtable Discussion:
Creating a New Paradigm of Universal Design Within the Industry
*Moderator, Steven Miller, Author, Civilizing Cyberspace
*Esther Dyson, EDventure Holdings, Electronic Frontier Foundation
*Tom Wheeler, Cellular Telecommunication Industry Association

12:00 - 2:00   Luncheon and Exhibits

2:00 - 2:30    Technology Demonstrations and Remarks about the
Value of Universal Design to the Disability Community
*Moderator, George Covington

3:45 - 5:00    Roundtable Discussion:
Universal Design:  Markets or Mandates/What are the Incentives?
*Larry Roffee, Access Board
*Karen Krueger, Motion Picture Association of America

5:00 - 6:30    Evening Reception and tour of INFORAMPS 96
exhibits
*remarks from Larry Irving, Assistant Secretary, U.S. Department
Commerce, National Telecommunications Information Administration

July 12, 1996
9:30 - 5:00    CONFERENCE WORKSHOPS
CONFERENCE WORKSHOPS - July 12
Choose from four tracks focusing on specific case studies:

POLICY
*The Telecommunications Act of 1996
*PCS Summit Process - Solving Hearing Aid Incompatibility and
Interference Problems

TECHNICAL RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
*Accessible Information Kiosks
*Multimedia and World Wide Web Access
 
PUBLIC SECTOR
*Texas Electronic Textbook Accessibility
*State Purchasing Strategies:
Incorporating Accessibility into Contracts

BUSINESS PRACTICES
(For information industry representatives only)
*Market Research and Analysis:  Demographics, Research Tools
*Operational Issues:  Customer Service, Dealer/Supplier Relations

*CONFERENCE REGISTRATION*
(Lodging Deadline June 17)
Please return the following information to:
INFORAMPS 96
World Institute on Disability
510 16th Street, Suite 100
Oakland, CA  94612-1500
Name:
Organization/Affiliation:
Address:
City:
State:
ZIP:
Phone (voice):
(TTY):
FAX:
E-mail:

One Day Attendance fee (circle one):
   Non-Profit/Government     @  $75.00
   Foundations/Corporations  @ $150.00
             or
Two Day Attendance fee (circle one):
   Non-Profit/Government     @ $125.00
   Foundations/Corporations  @ $275.00
 (Make checks payable to the World Institute on Disability)

Please circle which workshop track you will attend on July 12:

Policy     Technical/R&D     Public Sector     Business*
*For information industry representatives only

Virtual Conference Registration  @ $75.00  (circle if desired)

Please indicate any accommodations you need to participate in the
conference (circle any which apply)
ASL interpreter
CART (Computer Assisted Real Time)
Sighted Guide
Assistive listening device
Other (specify)
In what format would you like to receive INFORAMPS 96 materials?
Regular print
Braille
Computer disk (specify)

LODGING:  Fully Accessible rooms are available at Kellogg
Conference Center on first come, first served basis at a cost of
$99/night (single).  Reserve by June 17 by calling (202) 651-
6002.  Reference INFORAMPS 96.

For those wishing to stay off campus, non-wheelchair accessible
rooms are available at the Bellevue Hotel, near Union Station,
(202) 638-0900.

CONFERENCE SPONSORS
*American Express Foundation
*AT&T Foundation
*Bellcore
*Citibank
*The Dole Foundation for Employment of People with Disabilities
*Florida Endowment Foundation for Vocational Rehabilitation
*NEC Foundation of America
*NYNEX
*The JM Foundation
*The David and Lucile Packard Foundation

CONFERENCE ORGANIZERS
*World Institute on Disability
*CPB/WGBH National Center for Accessible Media
*Trace Research & Development Center, University of Wisconsin
*Alliance for Public Technology
*Information and Technology Accessibility Advisory Group
*Inclusive Technologies

For further information on INFORAMPS 96 please contact Clay
Carter at the World Institute on Disability:
Phone (Voice or TTY) 510-763-4100
FAX  510-763-4109
E-mail:  clay@wid.org


Jim Tobias    Inclusive Technologies
tobias@inclusive.com
908.441.0831 v/tty   908.441.0832 fax

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

From: tholome@francenet.fr (Eric Tholome)
Subject: Intelligent Networks For Mobile Users?
Date: Mon, 03 Jun 1996 22:58:27 +0200


Hi all,

I am currently doing some research on the subject of Intelligent Networks
applied to mobile networks.

More specifically, I am looking for data concerning either existing IN
services (what type of service, how much it costs, how popular it is, etc.)
or projected use in the mobile environment.

If you are aware of any report on the subject (ideally a study by an
independent consulting company) or know of existing services, I would
appreciate if you could let me know, preferably by email, and I will
summarize if other people show some interest.


Thanks in advance,

Eric Tholome                  private account
23, avenue du Centre          tholome@francenet.fr
78180 Montigny le Bretonneux  phone: +33 1 30 48 06 47
                    France    fax: same number, call first!

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

Date: Mon, 03 Jun 96 16:50:43 EST
From: Tom Zinn <zinnt@ncr.disa.mil>
Subject: Excel Goes Head to Head With Sprint - Offers .09/min


Excel Telecommunications, Inc (ECI - NYSE) has announced that as of
June 1st it will offer .09 cents per minute on calls to anyone in the
lower 48 and Hawaii. The rate is offered from 7 pm to 7 am and
weekends. Existing Excel customers can get the service by calling
1-800-4EXCEL-9. For more information about Excel discount Long
Distance and Pager Service contact Tom Zinn at ExcelTZ@aol.com
     
     
Tom Zinn

703-352-5290

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

Date: Mon, 3 Jun 1996 04:36:32 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Digital Communications Action Group 
Reply-To: monty@roscom.com


Forwarded to the Digest FYI:

 Date: Fri, 31 May 1996 12:52:50 -0400 (EDT)
 From: James Love <love@tap.org>
 Subject: Digital Communications Action Group 

There is an interest in forming a focused advocacy group, perhaps
named the Digital Communications Action Group (DCAG), which would
participate in state PUC proceedings and FCC proceedings, focusing on
three issues:

1.   Pricing of BRI ISDN service.  (Seeking lower rates in markets where 
     the LEC does not face competition).

2.   Rules for interconnection and unbundling, focusing on rules that 
     will make it easier for new entrants to lease the local loop to 
     provide new digital services, such as ISDN, ASDL, HDSL, etc...

3.   Reform of long distance network access fee structure, with a special 
     effort to prevent the incumbent local exchange carriers (LECs) from
     imposing per minute fees or other usage charges on Internet Service 
     Providers.

The membership of the DCAG would include technology firms (ISPs,
software and computer hardware manufactures), content providers
(newspapers, database companies), non-profits (consumer, library and
education groups) and others.

Right now I need to know the names of firms or groups that would be
interested in participating.  I'm not too concerned about funding, at
this point, but mostly about who may be willing to allow their company
or organization to be publicly identified with advocacy on these
issues.

On this score, its worth noting that several large fortune 500 firms
have been lobbied against active participation on these issues by LECs
(certainly by PacBell, Bell Atlantic and US West, for example).


I would like to hear from persons who might be interested in this effort.


Please contact me directly:

James Love / love@tap.org / P.O. Box 19367, Washington, DC 20036
Voice: 202/387-8030; Fax 202/234-5176
Center for Study of Responsive Law
   Consumer Project on Technology; http://www.essential.org/cpt
   Taxpayer Assets Project; http://www.tap.org

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

From: Romesh.C.D.Singh@spider.rmplc.co.uk
Subject: Help With Draconian Contract
Date: 3 Jun 1996 22:09:15 GMT
Organization: TRD Inc.
Reply-To: rsingh@rmplc.co.uk


I am looking for some help in the interpretation of a Licence
agreement signed by the previous Government of a less developed
country and a Public Company for the sale of that country's telephone
network. I am interested in providing voice /data communications,
Internet and payphone services throughout the country. How can I
provide these services without getting into legal battles with the new
owners. Is there some different interpretation of the proposed services
so that it doesnt breach the agreement? What about providing these
services for members of a cooperative society, or company providing
services to private customers?  Your help will be greatly appreciated.


Thank you,  

Romesh

LICENCE AGREEMENT

The Government covenants and undertakes as follows-

LICENCES-The Government will grant subject to the provisions of this
agreement,to XXX Company licences under the Post and Telegraph Act of
the laws of YY Country,or any legislation enacted to replace it,to
carry on,operations to provide the following services:

 (a) Public telephones,radio telephones (except private radio
telephones systems which do not interconnect with XX Company network)
and paystation telephone services,national and international voice and
data transmission;

 (b) Sale of advertising in any directories of telephone subscribers;

 (c) Switched or non switched private line service supported by facilities 
constructed over public rights of way;

 (d) Terminal and customer premises equipment;

 (e) Telefax,telex and telegraph services and telefax network services, 
excluding the following operations:

    (i) sales of telefax or teleprinter machines;
   (ii) maintenance of telefax or teleprinter equipment; and
  (iii) operation of any facility for sending and receiving of telefax-
        copies or teleprinter messages, and
 
 (f) cellular radio telephones service.

TERMS OF LICENCES - The licence granted to XXXCompany in respect of
services referred to in sub paragraphs(a),(b) and (c) of SectionXX
will be exclusive licence for a period of twenty years and shall be
renewable at the option of XXX Company for a further period of twenty
years. During that period of the exclusive licence, no other company, nor
government, shall provide any services to which the licence relates. The
licence granted to XXX Company with respect to the services referred
to in sub-paragraphs (d) and (e) of Section .. shall be exclusive for
a period of ten years,and shall be renewable at the options of XXX
Company on a non exclusive basis.  

Cellular Radio Telephone Licence - The Government shall Grant to XXX
Company a non exclusive licence to provide cellular radio telephone
services anywhere within the country The licence shall be for a period
of twenty years and shall be renewable at the option of XXX Company
for a further period of twenty years.

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

From: jelson@condor.cs.jhu.edu (Jeremy Elson)
Subject: UNIX DTMF-Decoding "Voicemail" Software?
Date: 3 Jun 1996 15:08:07 -0400
Organization: The Johns Hopkins University CS Department


Hi,

I am interested in setting up an interactive telephone service which
will allow customers to get information on my company and, more
importantly, check on the status of their orders by dialing their
account number on a touch-tone phone.  This will be similar to the
system that credit-card companies have for checking on your account.
In other words, I want to be able to do something like this:

"Hello, Welcome to Acme Widgets.  Press 1 for general information.
Press 2 to check on the status of an existing order.  Press 3 to.."

<2> "Please dial your 5-digit account number now."  <1-4-2-4-2>
"Please wait while we check on the status of your order..."  <computer
checks a database> "Your order was shipped on February Twenty Three."

Now, my major constraint is that I have relatively little money to
spend on this system (say, $500 or so).  I've found a number of
consultants who would be more than happy to sell me a system to do
this but they are far out of my price range.

I currently have a UNIX system which will have a database (updated in
realtime) with the status of all orders.  This voicemail should be
able to run side-by-side in the same system.

So, I have two questions.  First, what kind of hardware do I need to
put in my UNIX box (a PC running Linux) to get this to work?

And, second, what I'd like to find is if there are any public domain
(freeware, GPL, or whatever) software packages that will let me do
this, or even software libraries that will let me write my own
software to do this under UNIX.

Am I going to be able to do this "on the cheap" or do I have to spend
big bucks to get this to work?

Thanks in advance for any help you can provide.


Jeremy Elson :: jelson@jhu.edu :: N3UUO :: http://www.cs.jhu.edu/~jelson

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

Date: Mon, 03 Jun 1996 15:38:41 -0700
From: Mark J. Cuccia <mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu>
Subject: "Historic Telephony" Webpage


Pat:

I found an *EXCELLENT* webpage regarding historical aspects of
telephony, http://www.cybercomm.net/~chuck/phones.html produced by
Chuck Eby (chuck@cybercomm.net).

There are links to the Antique Telephone Collector's Association, the
Museum of Independent Telephony, various telecom websites which have
historical pages, various associations and individuals which have
websites which have telecom history, etc.

Chuck also has a growing list of 'sub' directory pages which have
photos of old WECO/NECO equipment and a description of these old
phones. There are also links to webpages of other collectors and
dealers in antique telephones.

This (IMO) is probably the BEST *webpage* which tries to collect and
consolidate telecom history, as a webpage. Of course, Pat has the best
*newsgroup* and *ftp archive site* regarding all aspects of telephony,
present and future, as well as historical!


MARK J. CUCCIA   PHONE/WRITE/WIRE:     HOME:  (USA)    Tel: CHestnut 1-2497
WORK: mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu |4710 Wright Road| (+1-504-241-2497)
Tel:UNiversity 5-5954(+1-504-865-5954)|New Orleans 28  |fwds on no-answr to
Fax:UNiversity 5-5917(+1-504-865-5917)|Louisiana(70128)|cellular/voicemail

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
public service systems and networks including Compuserve and America
On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. 

Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:

                 * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu *

The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
Townson of Skokie, Illinois USA. You can reach us by postal mail, fax 
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*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from the              *
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* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
* ing views of the ITU.                                                 *
*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
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All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #259
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Mon Jun  3 20:47:57 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id UAA11850; Mon, 3 Jun 1996 20:47:57 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Mon, 3 Jun 1996 20:47:57 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606040047.UAA11850@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #260

TELECOM Digest     Mon, 3 Jun 96 19:04:06 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 260

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    More on Trinidad's 868 NPA (Mark J. Cuccia)
    Northern Telecom "Services" Menu (Paul Cook)
    Northern Electric - as Was (Steve Hayes)
    Nevada Attorney General Investigates Excel (Tad Cook)
    What Does A/B Carrier Mean? (Alexander Cerna)
    BellSouth Ordered to Provide Wholesale Margin (Clifford D. McGlamry)
    Telco Leveling Laws Can't Crumble Central Office (Jorene Downs)
    Positions Available: Cambridge, MA (Bruce A. Pennypacker)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Mon, 03 Jun 1996 12:57:12 -0700
From: Mark J. Cuccia <mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu>
Subject: More on Trinidad's 868 NPA


Well, for some weeks now, Bellcore NANPA *has* publically/officially
identified (via its webpage, http://www.bellcore.com/NANP/newarea.html) 
that Trinidad and Tobago is to have 868 as its new NPA code, to split
from 809, as every NANP Caribbean location is eventually to have its
own NPA code (area code).

However, the dates, test numbers, trouble contact numbers were
'to-be-determined'.

Update as of 31 May 1996, Bellcore has now mentioned 264 for Anguilla
on its webpage. And they have announced the dates, test numbers and
trouble contact numbers for 868 Trinidad.

Trinidad begins using 868 (or 809 as permissive dialing) on 1 June
1997, one year from now.  Last date of 809 as permissive is 31 May
1998 (new 868 *MUST* be used after that date) -- TWO years from now.

The test number for 868 Trinidad and Tobago will be 868-809-8378.
                                                         (TEST)

Trouble contact numbers for Trinidad and Tobago are to be:

809-625-3202 (Tel)    809-627-0859 (Fax)

And here is my latest recompilation of the NANP Caribbean:

     NANP Caribbean recompilation (as of Saturday 1 June 1996)
                                                                   N
                                            Begin       Begin      O
          New                               PERMISSIVE  MANDATORY  T
          NPA Location                      Dialing     Dialing    E
                                                                   S
    (BHA) 242 Bahamas ..................... 01 OCT 96   31 MAR 97
     ---  246 Barbados .................... 01 JUL 96   15 JAN 97
    (ANG) 264 Anguilla .................... DATES-TO-BE-ANNOUNCED  a
    (ANT) 268 Antigua & Barbuda ........... 01 APR 96   31 MAR 97
    (BVI) 284 British Virgin Islands ...... DATES-TO-BE-ANNOUNCED  a
     ---  340 US Virgin Islands ........... DATES-TO-BE-ANNOUNCED  b
     ---  345 Cayman Islands .............. DATES-TO-BE-ANNOUNCED  b
     ---  441 Bermuda ..................... 01 OCT 95   30 SEP 96
    (GRE) 473 Grenada & Carricou .......... DATES-TO-BE-ANNOUNCED  a,d
(946 reversed) 649 Turks & Caicos Islands . DATES-TO-BE-ANNOUNCED  b,c
    (MNI) 664 Montserrat Island ........... 01 JUL 96   01 JUN 97
    (SLU) 758 St.Lucia .................... 01 JUL 96   01 JAN 97
    (ROS) 767 Dominica .................... DATES-TO-BE-ANNOUNCED  b,c
(SVG/SVI) 784 St.Vincent & the Grenadines . DATES-TO-BE-ANNOUNCED  b,d
(PUR/PTR) 787 Puerto Rico ................. 01 MAR 96   31 JAN 97
    (TNT) 868 Trinidad & Tobago ........... 01 JUN 97   31 MAY 98
     ---  869 St.Kitts & Nevis ............ DATES-TO-BE-ANNOUNCED  a
     ---  876 Jamaica ..................... DATES-TO-BE-ANNOUNCED  b

          809 should remain The Dominican Republic
(NOTE: The Dominican Republic is *NOT* the same as "Dominica")

ADDITIONAL NOTES:

a) "Officially" announced by Bellcore, via IL or on its Webpage,
    but effective dates are still TBA:

  264 Anguilla
  284 British Virgin Islands
  473 Grenada & Carricou
  869 St.Kitts & Nevis

b)  These codes are noted by Bellcore as "reserved" for the Caribbean,
    but they have not yet "officially" announced *which specific*
    island locations they are for. However, I have been able to determine
    the specific locations after telephone and email inquiries directly
    from the various Caribbean local telcos:

  340 US Virgin Islands
  345 Cayman Islands
  649 Turks & Caicos Islands
  767 Dominica
  784 St.Vincent & the Grenadines
  876 Jamaica

c) 649 (946 reversed) Turks & Caicos Islands, since for *years*, 809-946
      was the *ONLY* 809-NNX code for Turks & Caicos);
   767 = ROS Dominica-- ROS probably because 'Roseau' is the capital city

d) The Grenadines is a series of several *VERY* small islands between
   St.Vincent and Grenada. While still quite small, the larger islands of
   the Grenadines from North to South are:
       Bequia, Mustique, Palm Island, Union Island, Carricou

   Geographically, politically and telephonically:
     Carricou is associated with Grenada (473)
     Bequia-Mustique-Palm-Union are all associated with St.Vincent (784)

NEW Caribbean NPA's, *alphabetically by location*:

Anguilla ............................................. 264
Antigua & Barbuda .................................... 268
Bahamas .............................................. 242
Barbados ............................................. 246
Barbuda ........................... (see Antigua & Barbuda)
Bequia - GRENADINES ..... (see St.Vincent & the Grenadines)
Bermuda .............................................. 441
British Virgin Islands ............................... 284
Caicos Islands .................... (see Turks & Caicos Is)
Carricou ......................... (see Grenada & Carricou)
Cayman Islands ....................................... 345
Dominica ............................................. 767
Dominican Republic ................................... 809
Grenada & Carricou ................................... 473
Grenadines .............. (see St.Vincent & the Grenadines)
Jamaica .............................................. 876
Montserrat Island .................................... 664
Mustique - GRENADINES ... (see St.Vincent & the Grenadines)
Nevis .............................. (see St.Kitts & Nevis)
Palm Island - GRENADINES  (see St.Vincent & the Grenadines)
Puerto Rico .......................................... 787
St.Kitts & Nevis ..................................... 869
St.Lucia ............................................. 758
St.Vincent & the Grenadines .......................... 784
Tobago ............................ (see Trinidad & Tobago)
Trinidad & Tobago .................................... 868
Turks & Caicos Islands ............................... 649
Union Island - GRENADINES (see St.Vincent & the Grenadines)
US Virgin Islands .................................... 340
Virgin Islands:
    British .................. (see British Virgin Islands)
    U.S. .......................... (see US Virgin Islands)


MARK J. CUCCIA   PHONE/WRITE/WIRE:     HOME:  (USA)    Tel: CHestnut 1-2497
WORK: mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu |4710 Wright Road| (+1-504-241-2497)
Tel:UNiversity 5-5954(+1-504-865-5954)|New Orleans 28  |fwds on no-answr to
Fax:UNiversity 5-5917(+1-504-865-5917)|Louisiana(70128)|cellular/voicemail

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

Date: Mon, 3 Jun 96 17:39 EST
From: Proctor & Associates <0003991080@mcimail.com>
Subject: Northern Telecom "Services" Menu


I've been playing around with a slick little Northern Telecom
PowerTouch 350 phone.  It has all kinds of neat features, such as the
ability to move Caller ID info into your dialing database.
 
One feature I don't quite fathom is connected with something called
"Services."  Under Services, the manual says:
 
   "The large display on your telephone offers you the
   advantages of full screen services, much like an
   automatic banking machine.  You can subscribe to
   enhanced telephone company features and services
   such as home banking, catalog shopping, movie
   libraries, and restaurant guides.  You can also
   subscribe to telephone network services such as
   network voice mail."
 
The manual then gives instructions for getting the phone to download a
list of subscriber services from the telco.
 
There is no information on how the data is transferred, protocols, or
anything.
 
Has anyone heard of this?  Is "Services" a feature only available on
lines served by Northern Telecom DMS central offices?  What signal
does the telephone send out when you punch the Services button?
 
 
Paul Cook                       3991080@mcimail.com
Proctor & Associates                    Redmond, WA

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

Date: 03 Jun 96 01:15:04 EDT
From: Steve Hayes <100112.606@CompuServe.COM>
Subject: Northern Electric - as Was


In "Stentor, Bell Canada, Independents - Some History", Mark J. Cuccia
wrote:

> In years past, Northern Electric also had a licensing arrangement with
> Western Electric. For a while, WECO owned as much as 44% of NECO. As a
> collector of nostalgic mid-20th Century telephones, I know that NECO
> equipment was *virtually identical* to that of WECO. Both used the
> same model numbers for telephones and parts. Even NECO's old three-slot 
> payphones looked *just like* WECO's. 

This reminded me of when I worked for Northern Electric back in the
mid 70's. The licensing agreements with Western Electric had ended not
long before and co-workers used to reminisce about the old days.
Apparently, the engineering department consisted mainly of people with
red and yellow pencils. Their jobs had involved going through
documents, crossing out the word "Western" with the yellow pencil and
writing "Northern" in in red, before sending them to drafting. The
other task was adding a "Q" to every part number. If things had been
computerized in those days, find and replace could have done the whole
job!

The speculation always was that Western Electric had expected Northern
to roll over and die when the agreements ended. Instead, as we could
see at the time(and even more so since) they unleashed a pretty
fearsome competitor.


Steve Hayes, Swansea, UK

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

From: Tad Cook <tad@ssc.com>
Subject: Nevada Attorney General Investigates Excel
Date: Mon, 03 Jun 1996 00:05:46 PDT


Nevada Attorney General's Office Investigates Long-Distance Company
By MICHELLE DeARMOND

Associated Press Writer

LAS VEGAS (AP) -- A long-distance marketer that employs Las Vegans is
being studied by the attorney general's office, although officials are
quick to note the investigation is common and does not imply any
wrongdoing.

Shares in Excel Communications, a Dallas-based company, have yielded
hyperfast growth and controversy in the past. The multi-level
marketing network buys long-distance minutes from Frontier
Communications in Rochester, N.Y., and resells them through direct
marketing representatives across the country.

Margaret Stanish, senior deputy attorney general of Nevada's
telemarketing and consumer fraud unit, confirmed Thursday her office
is looking at the business, but denied reports that Excel may be a
pyramid scheme.

"This office commonly reviews the practices of businesses that come to
our attention," Stanish said. "Our office is here to protect both the
marketplace and the consumer."

Stanish refused to say what prompted the study, but said investigations 
come about through a variety of ways.

"We work with the consumer affairs division. Sometimes we get
information from law enforcement agencies. ... Sometimes I'm watching
T.V. and see an advertisement that catches my attention," she said.

Excel recruits people to sell the long-distance time as well as
recruit other sellers, a tactic known as multi-level marketing that is
also used by companies like Mary Kay Cosmetics or Amway.

Stanish said it requires complex economic analysis to determine if a
multi-level marketer is an illegal pyramid scheme, and she was not
prepared to say whether "Excel is good or bad."

Amway was found by the courts to not be a pyramid scheme.

"Something like Amway is an acceptable practice ... because there are
internal safeguards to prevent the building of a pyramid," she said.

Excel has raised eyebrows on Wall Street, where analysts have
questioned the way Excel defers expenses, which makes earnings look
better than they are. The company last year reported a profit of $44.5
million, but it deferred expenses of $85 million in the first two
months of this year.

The representatives earn money from the sale of long-distance service
plus bonuses for the performance of the people they recruit.

The company also has acknowledged that claims by some of its
representatives have prompted consumer complaints to attorneys general
in some states.

An Excel employee was charged in a Federal Trade Commission
investigation earlier this year for allegedly making unsubstantiated
claims about earnings for work-at-home businesses. Robert Serviss of
Stamford, Conn., was accused of offering no proof that consumers would
earn up to $4,000 or more each month, as they were told.


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I think when all is said and done, the
facts will emerge that Excel is *NOT* illegal in any way, shape or 
form. I had someone write me the other day to complain that I was very
prejudiced against multi-level marketing; and the truth is I do not
really care for that business practice, however it is legal as long
as it does not become a 'pyramid scheme', and in Amway's case at 
least, it has been ruled legal. I feel pretty sure that Excel is
following the law closely. One thing I do feel merits a close look
is Excel's new pricing of nine cents per minute at night, putting
them in direct and very close competition with Sprint. If you have
a high volume of traffic at night, it may well be that at this time
Excel is the best bargain around.  PAT]

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

From: cerna@ntep0403.ntep.tmg.nec.co.jp
Reply-To: Alexander Cerna <cerna@ntep.tmg.nec.co.jp>
Subject: What Does A/B Carrier Mean?
Date: Mon, 03 Jun 96 09:34:33 +0900


> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: There is just one A/B in each area. 
> What MCI is doing is reselling either A or B, depending on whatever
> was the best deal they could cut for themselves with one of the two.

I'm sorry if I'm totally ignorant, but what does it mean to be an A or
B carrier?  And why can there be only one in each area?  Thank you
very much in advance.


Regards,

Alexander Cerna         cerna@ntep.tmg.nec.co.jp
NEC Tech Phils, Inc     VOX: +63 (32)  340-0451
PEZA, Lapulapu 6015     FAX: +63 (32)  340-0457
Philippines             VOX: +63 (915) 207-1167


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: We have to go back to the early 1980's
when cellular service was first getting underway. The rulings of the
Federal Communications Commission provided that in each market there
should be two carriers, mainly so that the local telco -- who it was
assumed would get into cellular ASAP -- would not have a monopoly
position. The ruling was that the traditional telephone company of 
record in the community would be granted one of the two cellular
radio licenses if they wanted it -- of course, they all did -- and
the second license would be granted to a competitor.  The competitor
would receive the 'A' license and the landline telco would receive
the 'B' license. The assumption was further made that the various
'B' carriers (or existing telephone companies) would probably band
together and work in each other's best interest through roaming
agreements, etc. The new competition in each community (the 'A'
license holders) were likewise expected to 'stick together' and
help each other compete against the telcos who held the 'B' licenses.

Well, what actually happened is a bit different. It turned out the
only people really in a position with the technical knowledge and
financial ability to start a cellular company in competition to the
local telco were other telephone companies. So it came down to the
local telephone company having the 'B' license as planned, but a
phone company in some other distant community operating under some
other name holding the 'A' license. For example, here in the Chicago
area we have Ameritech (the 'traditional' telephone company of record)
holding the 'B' license while Southwestern Bell, d/b/a/ Cellular One
has the 'A' license. In St. Louis the exact opposite is the case
where Southwestern Bell is the 'telco of record' and they operate the
'B' side as Southwestern Bell Mobility and Ameritech is the 'A' carrier
there under some other name. Throughout the USA that is largely the 
case: telcos run the cellular service; the 'out of town' telco intrud-
ing on the scene as the 'competitor' operates under a different name
as the 'A' carrier.

The 'A' carriers for many years generally used the trade name 'Cellular
One' for brand identity purposes. That is changing now somewhat. They
all stick together, theoretically at least to provide 'competition' to
the 'B' or traditional telco side.

I am reminded of the divestiture of Standard Oil a hundred years ago.
Each of the 'Standard Oil Companies' created as a result of divestiture
had to go into competition with each other; but even today they still
respect each other's territories. The old Standard Oil of Indiana 
still does business as Standard Oil here in the midwest, but when they
do business on the east or west coast they are known as Amoco. Standard
Oil of New Jersey comes over to this part of the country and does
business as Exxon. Standard Oil of California goes over to the east
coast and I forget what name they use there, but it is not Standard
Oil. Well, ditto the telcos in the cellular business. In their home
towns they use their name; when they move into a competitor's territory
as the 'A' carrier they use some other name. 

Is that all clear as mud?  <g> To add to the confusion, now there are
lots of cellular resellers around which is something the regulators
never considered at all back in 1983. According to Lynn Gregg, some
of the newcomers with their own infrastructure won't be A or B ...
they will be on their own radio frequencies with a totally different
thing altogether.    PAT]

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

Date: 03 Jun 96 11:00:48 EDT
From: Clifford D. McGlamry <102073.1425@CompuServe.COM>
Subject: BellSouth Ordered to Provide Wholesale Margin


It was announced last week that the Georgia Public Service commission
has ordered BellSouth to give discounts to AT&T and all potential
competitors who want to use the BellSouth lines as part of their own
local service offerings.  This order has reportedly left both AT&T and
BellSouth unhappy.  BellSouth had proposed discounts of 11% for
residential and 9.5% for business users.  The commission ordered in a
unanimous 5-0 decision margins of 20.3% and 17.3% respectively.  AT&T
had previously indicated that they needed 35 to 40% margins to
operate.

BellSouth has taken its usual tact of whining and complaining about
the order and indicated that it intends to possibly ignore the order
or sue.  This should not surprise industry observers who have watched
BellSouth's profits rise to the highest levels of the industry.
BellSouth has historically resisted any attempts to force it to leave
its monopoly position in the marketplace.  As usual, BellSouth is
indicating the residential customers will suffer increased rates due
to the loss of business customer subsidies.  In Atlanta, BellSouth
charges approximately $16 per month for flat rate residential users
and $55 per month for flat rate business customers.

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

From: jcdowns@strategic-vision.com (Jorene Downs)
Subject: Telco Leveling Laws Can't Crumble Central Office
Date: Mon, 3 Jun 1996 18:11:52 GMT
Organization: Strategic Vision
Reply-To: jcdowns@strategic-vision.com


C-bw@clari.net (The Insight Research) wrote:

    LIVINGSTON, N.J.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 30, 1996--The telephone
company central office, the center of telecom deregulation efforts,
remains local telephone services' unique asset despite attempts at
legislative leveling, says a new report from Insight Research.  Even
after the FCC announces its new rules for hooking into local phone
networks, removing the artificial distinction between local and
long-distance phone services, the CO will continue as the preeminent
center of all telecommunications traffic.  Moreover, a technology
overhaul now under way ensures its longevity.

    According to "Telecommunications in the 21st Century: Change and
the Central Office," the unassailable value of the CO lies in its
function -- as an access line concentration point.  The overriding
design consideration behind the CO was to physically locate it near
the geographic center of a cluster of subscribers.  With only modest
changes in population demographics over the last twenty years, the
number and locations of COs has changed little, so it remains the
tangible point of contact to nearly all telecom users.

    "Right now we've got a new law on the books that is going to try
to level the playing field for competing local and long-distance
carriers," explains Insight's president Robert Rosenberg.  "And it may
well work from the pricing point of view, but the central office
remains a unique asset that can't be duplicated overnight by AT&T,
MCI, or Sprint."  Indeed, with the size of investment they represent,
COs won't be duplicated at all; in the densest urban areas, they
concentrate as many as 300,000 access lines under one roof and across
multiple switches.  Even in small towns, COs serve business areas
where density is 5,000 access lines per square mile.  To get to their
customers, the long-distance providers all have to pass through those
offices.  Their pass-through rights are now legislated.

    As part of the technology overhaul, the switching function  
traditionally taking place within the walls of the central office is 
being pushed closer to the end user, in the form of small, remote 
switches and digital loop carrier systems that increase the carrying 
capacity of subscriber lines.  The net effect of this trend 
paradoxically increases the importance of the CO's concentration 
function, since increasingly larger circuit groups terminate there. 

    Further projections and analyses are published in
"Telecommunications in the 21st Century: Change and the Central
Office," now available from Insight Research for $3,495.  Insight
Research, based in Livingston, NJ, is a leading provider of
telecommunications market research and analysis.  Insight can be
reached via the World Wide Web at  http://www.wcom.com/Insight/insight.html.  

For more information on this study, please contact:

    Tara D. Mahon, The Insight Research Corporation, 
    354 Eisenhower Parkway, Livingston, N.J. 07039-1023, 
    phone: (201) 605-1400, fax: (201) 605-1440, 
    Internet: tara@insight-corp.com. 

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

From: Bruce A. Pennypacker <brucep@stylus.com>
Subject: Positions Available: Cambridge, MA
Date: 3 Jun 1996 13:34:15 GMT
Organization: Stylus Products Group, Artisoft Inc.


The Stylus Product Group of Artisoft, Inc. is the industry leader in
Windows based computer telephony software.  Their flagship products
Visual Voice and Visual Fax have won numerous awards, most recently
including PC Magazine Editors' Choice for 1996.

Our Cambridge, MA office is located in Kendall Square, the heart of
Cambridge's high-tech startups, close to the Charles River and the
Cambridge Brewery.  Stylus maintains a fast paced, casual work
environment. Employees are empowered to do whatever they feel is
necessary to get the job done.

Please send resume to: 
Stylus Product Group, Artisoft, Inc.
Attn: Human Resources
201 Broadway
Cambridge, MA 02139

or e-mail them directly to brucep@stylus.com as a Word document or
plain text file.

                  ================================

Available positions as of May 30, 1996:

Q.A. Software Engineer: (5 openings)

Responsibilities include developing and implementing test/integration
plans for our telephony product line, designing and maintaining
diagnostic tools and installation procedures as well as coordinating
product release cycles and beta tests. Successful candidates should
have a working knowledge of Visual Basic (or similar language) and
strong organizational skills. Windows experience required. Windows NT,
OLE Controls are pluses.


Product Manager: (1 opening)

Position requires strong Visual Basic applications development skills,
strong project management skills, and experience in telephony and fax
applications development is preferred.


Software Engineers: (2 openings)

This position requires a strong background with Windows Visual C++,
development and one or more of the following: WIN32, MFC, MAPI, OLE,
TCP/IP, Winsock, Netbios, GUI design/implementation.


Visual Basic Developer: (1 opening)

Will architect and implement new additions to our telephony product
line.  Applications include telephony/ network communications
development and GUI design. Requires expertise with VB4.0, and solid
experience with OOD, WIN32 and databases. C++ a plus.


Sales Engineer: (4 openings)

Responsible for speaking to prospects about the technical aspects of
our products and their application requirements, much of which is done
by telephone. Position calls for 1-2 yrs. of previous sales experience
and a background in software application development is preferred.


Technical Support: (1 opening)

Responsible for providing detailed telephone support for customers.
Requires expertise with Visual Basic and Windows 95.  Experience with
WIN32, hardware installation, telephony and fax applications all a
plus.  Requires 1-2 years of previous technical support experience.


Jr. Marketing Representative: (1 opening)

Strong technical background. Excellent oral and written communication
and strong presentation skills. Ability to learn quickly in a fast
paced environment. 2-4 years previous experience. BSCS or related
discipline.


Bruce Pennypacker   |  Stylus Products Group  |  Phone: +1 617 621 9545
Software Engineer   |     Artisoft, Inc.      |  Fax:   +1 617 621 7862
Resident TAPI guru  |      201 Broadway       |  http://www.stylus.com
brucep@stylus.com   |   Cambridge, MA 02139   |  sales: sales@stylus.com

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

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End of TELECOM Digest V16 #260
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Mon Jun  3 21:25:47 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id VAA15610; Mon, 3 Jun 1996 21:25:47 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Mon, 3 Jun 1996 21:25:47 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606040125.VAA15610@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #261

TELECOM Digest     Mon, 3 Jun 96 21:26:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 261

Inside This Issue:                          Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    CPT on FCC Interconnection Proceeding (James Love/TAP via Monty Solomon)
    Digital Cellular in North America Question (jfmezei@istar.ca)
    Problems with Raj Telecom (srb@t10.lanl.gov)
    What Really Happens: Get Rich Quick on the Net! (Tad Cook)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Mon, 3 Jun 1996 04:35:48 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: CPT on FCC Interconnection Proceeding
Reply-To: monty@roscom.com


Forwarded to the Digest, FYI:

  Date: Fri, 31 May 1996 13:10:03 -0400 (EDT)
  From: James Love <love@tap.org>
  Subject: CPT on FCC Interconnection Proceeding

-----------------------------------------------------------------
TAP-INFO - An Internet newsletter available from listproc@tap.org
-----------------------------------------------------------------
INFORMATION POLICY NOTE
May 31, 1996  -  FCC Interconnection Proceeding

There were the CPT reply comments in the FCC "Interconnection"
proceeding.  We wrote these in support of the Information Technology
Industry Council (ITI) comments on Interconnection and Unbundling of
the local loop.  We focus on the need to set rules which allow
competitors to use the copper wire "local loop" for ISDN, ADSL, HDSL
and other higher speed digital technologies.  The incumbent local
exchange carriers (companies like Bell Atlantic, NYNEX, US West,
etc.), who own the local loop, want to limit the network unbundling to
"Plain Old Telephone Service" (POTS).  The Interconnection and
unbundling proceeding is one of the most important of the more than 80
FCC rulemaking that are now underway to implement the new
telecommunications act.  Here are the comments.  Jamie (love@tap.org,
202/387-8030)


                            Before the
                FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
                      Washington, DC  20554



                                      )
In the Matter of Implementation of    )
the Local Competition Provisions in   )
the Telecommunications Act of 1996    ) CC Docket No. 96-98
Act of 1996                           )

May 30, 1996

                         REPLY COMMENTS OF 
                  CONSUMER PROJECT ON TECHNOLOGY
                ON INTERCONNECTION AND UNBUNDLING


       A.  Introduction

1.	The Consumer Project on Technology offers reply comments on
the Commission's Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPR) on the above
captioned proceeding addressing the interconnection and unbundling
provisions of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 ("1996 Act").  Our
comments are supportive of those filed earlier in this docket by the
Information Technology Industry Council (ITI).  ITI urged the
Commission to take steps to facilitate deployment of bandwidth
services by providing national uniform parameters that encourage new
competition for services such as ISDN, ADSL or HDSL.  We agree with
ITI that there is significant unmet demand for the provision of high
bandwidth services for the residential market, and that national
uniform parameters for interconnection, collocation and pricing are
important.

2.	The Consumer Project on Technology is a non-profit
organization which was started by Ralph Nader to promote the consumer
interest in matters concerning the development of new technologies,
including information technologies.  For additional information about
CPT see our Web page at http://www.essential.org/cpt.


        B. Unmet Demand for High Bandwidth Services for 
           Residential Market.

3.	According to the ITI pleadings, more than one third of all
U.S. homes have one or more personal computers, and most new computers
sold today are equipped with analog modems.  Analog modems are a very
inefficient device for network connections.  Not only are analog
modems relatively slow when compared to off-the-shelf digital
technology (28.8 Kbps for analog modems versus 128 Kbps for BRI ISDN),
but the analog connections are less reliable, and suffer from a much
more time consuming launch and connect (and disconnect) times than
ISDN or other digital technologies.  High quality audio, usable video
conferencing, and even browsing on graphic intensive Internet Web
pages requires faster network connections that can be delivered over
Plain Old Telephone Service (POTS).  End-to-end digital lines can also
support JAVA and other new methods of pushing network intelligence out
to a decentralized base of users.

4.	The most likely new technologies for delivering higher
bandwidth connections to the home market are cable modems or a variety
of digital services delivered over the copper wire infrastructure.
Early optimism about deployment of cable modems has given way to more
realistic mid-term pessimism.  Less than 10 percent of cable systems
currently support any type of interactive communications.  Even under
optimistic scenarios for deployment, it is very unlikely that a
majority of homes would be passed by cable systems that can offer
cable modem technology within a period of five to seven years.

5.	The only ubiquitous high speed digital network connection for
the residential market today is BRI ISDN, but the incumbent local
exchange carriers (iLECs) are reluctant to deploy the technology, or
price it reasonably.  Companies like Bell South, Bell Atlantic, US
West, NYNEX and SBC are pricing residential ISDN service between five
and twenty times the cost of POTS (in packages likely to satisfy most
residential ISDN users), too high for all but a handful of residential
consumers.  The premiums charged for ISDN service are far in excess of
the company's long run incremental costs (LRIC) for upgrading POTS to
ISDN.

6.	For example, in a recent Commission proceeding, U.S.  West
estimated that the monthly non-traffic sensitive cost of its BRI ISDN
lines was only $1.18 per month more than the cost of its POTS lines.
(U.S. West, "Comments: in the Matter of End User Common Line Charges,"
FCC CC Docket No. 95-72, June 29, 1995, Appendix A.).  However, US
West tariffs for BRI lines are several multiples of its POTS charges.
For example, in Utah a residential ISDN users would pay from $39 to
$149 per month for BRI ISDN (plus a $6 SLC), with $74 per month the
most likely tariff (based upon the US West pre- paid usage options and
the $6 SLC).  As a result, very few Utah consumers have BRI ISDN
service.  Indeed, US West reported that as of March 1996, it had only
installed 53 BRI ISDN lines.


7.  In some states, residential ISDN tariffs are even higher.  We have
heard from a consumer in Delaware (Bell Atantic) who was billed more
than $1,000 for a month of local calls for BRI service, and a consumer
in Massachusetts (NYNEX) received a bill for more than $700 for local
calls.  These higher tariffs have hurt ISDN deployment.  Earlier this
year Bell Atlantic said it had less than 300 residential consumers for
BRI ISDN service in Maryland, a state with a huge interest in modern
telecommunications.  PacBell recently sought large increases in its
residential ISDN tariff, and eliminated commissions on residential
ISDN BRI connections to its sales force.

8.  ISDN tariffs are highly varied from state to state, and
residential consumers are completely dependent upon pricing strategies
of local iLECs and state regulators.  For example, the Northern
Arkansas Telephone Company (NATCO) charges only $17.90 per month, flat
rate, for residential ISDN service. The Roseville Telephone Company,
the 23rd largest telephone company in the US, which serves
California's southern Placer County and northern Sacramento County,
sells residential ISDN at $29.50 for unlimited usage.  Four of the
five Midwest states served by Ameritech (Illinois, Ohio, Michigan, and
Wisconsin) have flat rate residential ISDN for $28 to $35 per month.
But in Indiana, Ameritech charges residential consumers $100 to $1,829
for ISDN service.  BellSouth charges less than $30, flat rate, for
ISDN in Tennessee (a state where a key regulator was an ISDN user),
and $57 to $75 per month elsewhere.  Bell Atlantic's unlimited usage
option for residential users runs from $249 to $1,200 per month,
depending upon the state.  In the US West service area, the unlimited
usage options are all over the map: $40 in New Mexico, $63 in
Washington State, $149 in Utah (the proposed tariff), and $2,309.64 in
Oregon (a state without a flat rate option).

9.  When the iLEC charges ISDN usage fees, prices are also highly
arbitrary, providing striking evidence of monopoly power.  For
example, Bell Atlantic (BA) basic proposed usage charge for
residential ISDN is $1.20 to $2.40 per hour, for a 2B ISDN connection.
However, under its new "call pack" options, which is only available in
some states, BA charges $.75 to $.30 per hour for ISDN (2B) usage. In
recent rate cases for ISDN Centrex, BA said that its usage costs for
ISDN voice service (the same technology as is used for data) were less
than $1 per month.  In Delaware, the PSC staff said that the
residential ISDN tariff should include a $1.60 per month flat rate
option, which is a little more than a nickel per day for 2B service.
Consumers (and implicitly, the value added content providers) who pay
hefty usage fees are being ripped off.

10.  US West usage rates are also highly varied.  Last fall, US West
tried to get $12 per hour for a local ISDN call in Utah.  The current
standard US West usage charge is $3.60 per hour (for 2B).  In the
newly proposed (but not yet implemented) Utah tariffs, some usage
packages are priced at $.90 to $.22 per hour for 2B service.  Cost
studies in the Utah proceeding show that even the $.22 per hour
charges are far above cost.  These high usage charges are efforts by
the iLECs to "tax" value added services provided by unaffiliated
companies.  With iLEC entry into value added services, this will lead
to anticompetitive business practices, since the iLECs can offer value
added services at lower rates, since the usage charges at only
transfer payments within the company.

11.  In a competitive market consumers would not see such huge
differences in residential ISDN tariffs.  It is essential to adopt
interconnect and unbundling rules which allow new entrants to use the
local loop to provide ISDN and other newer digital services.

	
       C.  Explanations for iLEC's failure to deploy ISDN

12.    There are a number of theories as to why iLECs 
don't want to market ISDN as a mass market residential 
service.  Here are some of the most popular:

       i)  iLECs want to sell second POTS lines.  (A BRI ISDN 
           service provides the functionality of two POTS 
           lines, including separate telephone numbers).  For 
           example, in Utah the best usage option for BRI ISDN 
           service is priced approximately $10 above the cost 
           of two business POTS line.  

      ii)  iLECs hope to offer high speed Internet 
           services, bundled with ISDN or ADSL services, and 
           they do not want to provide a low cost alternative 
           over a common carrier platform. 

     iii)  iLECs are concerned about cross-elasticities 
           between BRI ISDN and other business services (such 
           as US West's expensive commitment to frame relay ), 
           or to expensive residential mulitmedia networks 
           (most of which are still on the drawing boards).  


      iv)  iLECs are concerned about high quality Internet 
           telephony delivered over ISDN or other digital home 
           connections.

       v)  In Utah, Scott Rafferty raised the general issue of 
           centralization of network intelligence, and the fact 
           that high quality end to end digital network 
           connections allow this intelligence to be 
           decentralized, much of it into the highly 
           competitive market for customer premise equipment.  
           This issue is analogous to the PBX/Centrex issue.   

Of course, incompetence is also possible.

       D.  New Digital Technologies.

13.  BRI ISDN is a digital technology that can be delivered today to
the residential market.  Newer technologies that may be available in 5
to 7 years in some communities include ADSL or HDSL.  There is
considerable interest in ADSL as a platform for Internet connections.
While ADSL is more costly to deploy than ISDN, it may offer higher
bandwidth connections over the existing copper wire infrastructure.
However, ADSL and other xDSL (the family of DSL services) services
require special equipment and connections to information service
providers.  It is essential that iLEC competitors are able to receive
services on a non-discriminatory basis, or the iLECs will monopolize
services that are delivered over xDSL services.  The rules for
interconnection and unbundling should focus on how competition can
develop for xDSL services.

14.    ITI asked the Commission to adopt rules which 
require carriers to:

       i)  unbundle local loops,
      ii)  condition (when necessary) local loops to carry 
           digital signals,
     iii)  lease "dry copper" pair at reasonable prices (no 
           greater than for POTS),
      iv)  remove load coils at reasonable costs,
       v)  cooperate in testing of xDSL services, and 
      vi)  otherwise make it possible and feasible to promote 
           entry into advanced transport services delivered  
           to the home.  

These suggestions are very important.  The FCC should not set rules
with POTS only in mind.

        E. Collocation is Required and Needed for More than Basic 

           Transmission Equipment.

15.  The Commission should reject the iLEC's efforts to limit the
types of equipment that may be collocated on their premises.
Collation obligations of iLECs under the 1996 Act are not simply
limited to "basic transmission equipment."  Indeed, the Congress added
language during its Conference committee which has expanded
collocation obligations beyond those originally adopted in the
Commission's Expanded Interconnection proceeding.  

While the versions of the bill which passed both the Senate and the
House only required collocation consistent with it's proceeding on
interconnection [See, for example, H.R. Report No. 104-204, 104th
Congress, 1st Session, pt.  1, at 73 (1995), which mentions the need
to clarify the Commission's authority due to court challenges to the
Commission's rules], the Conference Committee expanded the iLEC's
duties, to require them to provide for "physical collocation of
equipment necessary to interconnection or access to unbundled network
elements at the premises of the local exchange carrier."  By adding
the additional phrase, "or access to unbundled network elements,"
Congress expanded the scope of collocation.  The collocation equipment
should not be restricted to traditional telephony.  It should include
equipment that may be needed for ISDN, ADSL, HDSL and other new
technologies.  

This is also required by Section 706(a), which states that the
Commission should "encourage the deployment on a reasonable and timely
basis of advanced telecommunications capability to all Americans.by
utilizing.methods that remove barriers to infrastructure investment."
As noted earlier, it is not appropriate to adopt rules for collocation
which apply to POTS only service.


        G.  The Commission Should Avoid Usage Based Fees for 
            Unbundled Services.

16.  One of the principal sins of the iLECs has been repeated efforts
to impose usage based fees for fixed cost services.  These usage based
fees are largely designed as mechanisms for price discrimination,
based upon expected differences in willingness to pay.  This is
possible because of the monopoly power of the iLECs.  Any new
unbundling requirements that are based upon usage charges for fixed
cost services will further institutionalize a highly inefficient and
socially undesirable pricing systems for the fixed cost aspects of the
network.

        H.   Unbundling Can Provide Important Yardstick 
             Measurements.

17.  Unbundling is important, even if it isn't widely employed,
because it will provide an important yardstick of true economic costs
for the deployment of new services.  Thus, for example, if new digital
technologies are provided at much lower costs in some markets where
collocation and unbundling occur, this will help regulators in other
markets determine reasonable prices for new advanced network services,
even when economic barriers to entry as so great that monopoly power
remains.  Indeed, we expect that competition for local residential
services will be very limited over the next decade, and this yardstick
benefit will be very important for those consumers who do not benefit
directly from competition.


May 30, 1996

Sincerely,

/s/

James Love,  Director
Consumer Project on Technology
P.O. Box 19367
Washington, DC 20036
http://www.essential.org/cpt
202/387-8030; fax 202/234-5176

INFORMATION POLICY NOTES is a free Internet newsletter sponsored
by the Taxpayer Assets Project (TAP) and the Consumer Project on
Technology (CPT).  Both groups are projects of the Center for
Study of Responsive Law, which is run by Ralph Nader.  The
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TAP and CPT both have Internet Web pages.

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TAP and CPT can both be reached off the net at P.O. Box 19367,
Washington, DC  20036, Voice:  202/387-8030; Fax: 202/234-5176

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

From: jfmezei@istar.ca
Subject: Digital Cellular in North America Question
Date: Mon, 03 Jun 1996 03:09:37 +0000
Organization: Vaxination Informatique
Reply-To: jfmezei@istar.ca


In a recent trip to Australia, I met a lot of overseas travelers who
had brought their GSM phone and were using it in Australia. Being from
Canada, I could not do that if I had had a digital telephone.

In Europe, manufacturers of personal organisers such as PSION have
already developped SMS applications for GSM phones such as NOKIA etc.

In North America, it *seems* that the push for digital cellular phones
is not very strong. (At least Cantel no longer pushes digital phones).

Are digital telephone more popular in GSM countries compared to those
few who resisted GMS to go with the USA standard ?

Are applications such as SMS available for North American cellullar 
systems? Or do they lag behind? (I assume that the USA dig system does 
have the same functionality as SMS?)

Is there any chance that GSM would eventually be supported in North 
America by some operators (operating both GSM and the USA system).

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

Date: Mon, 3 Jun 96 16:29:10 MDT
From: srb@t10.Lanl.GOV (srb)
Subject: Problems With Raj Telecom


 Article: 43107 of soc.culture.indian.telugu
 From: gt5686b@prism.gatech.edu (Sujatha Ramprakash Krishnaswamy)
 Newsgroups: soc.culture.indian.telugu,alt.consumers.experiences
 Subject: Raj Telekom reported to Better Business Bureau
 Date: 24 May 1996 08:00:22 -0400

Last week I had posted to numerous newsgroups about how Raj Telekom
(Transasian Communications) ripped us off $100. Listening to the
advice given by my friends, I have reported the company to the Better
Business Bureau. I did this online. BBB's URL is http://www.bbb.org.
If you were unable to get a refund or had problems with Raj Telekom,
please do report this to the BBB. Maybe they can settle the dispute.

I have also faxed the posting(given below) to Raj Telekom for whatever
its worth.

Following is the article which I posted, in case you did not see it 
before.

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

I just want to share my bitter experience with RAJ TELEKOM, a.k.a.
Transasian Communications. I urge you to please read the whole message
and pass it on to your friends and family ... so that no one goes
through the ordeal again!!!  Trust me, no one deserves to!

Like several others hunting for cheap telephone rates to India, I made
the mistake of choosing Raj Telekom. The huge ads in {India Abroad}
prompted me to choose them over the numerous others in the same
business.

To cut a long story short, this is the synopsis of the fiasco -

* Paid $100 by check around April 10. Was informed that we would  be 
contacted by the concerned person about the authorization code.

* Waited for two weeks. Called to find out myself -- took over an hour
to get through their numerous telephone numbers -- was asked to call
between 6-9 pm.

* Religiously tried every day, until I got the number a week later. 

* The authorization code did not work. So I couldn't use it to call
India.  Since then (3rd week of April), have been wasting an hour each
evening calling them about my problem.  No solution in sight yet!

* Their most heartwarming messages :
 - "Call back at 8 p.m."
 - "Mr. RAJ is not in the office. He is the only one who can give
    authorization codes. Call at 9.30 p.m."
 - "Call during the day and speak to the supervisor Mona Kotish".
 - "There is no supervisor. Mona Kotish is not the supervisor"
 - "Just hold". (Never mind that you are promptly disconnected)
 - "Mr. Raj is on an emergency"
 - "Send a fax about your complaint"
 ... and many more, that I have even lost count!

* Spoken to practically every customer service (???????) reps - Natasha,
Kajol, Michelle, Sheetal ...

* Since Mr. RAJ seems to be a terribly busy man, always on an
emergency, sent him a fax about my problems. I knew even while sending
the fax that it is not going to improve the situation. But it is my
$100 and I have worked for it!

* Operators have no authority except saying "hello" and
listening/putting on hold your complaint. I cannot imagine how Mr. Raj
can answer each phone to give the authorization codes, when he is
never there! However, the operators keep asking everyone to keep
calling - almost as if all of us have nothing better in life to take
up our time!

* I am sure the operators have never seen Mr. Raj and how he looks.
They might not recognize him if he walks into the office! Is he a
fictional character?  To me, the whole situation resembles a
money lender desperately trying to get his 50-year old loan back from
an insolvent borrower!

WHAT DO I WANT FROM THIS?

* NOBODY SHOULD REPEAT MY MISTAKE.
* PASS ON THIS MESSAGE TO EVERYONE YOU KNOW. 
* READ SIMILAR VIEWS ON THIS SUBJECT 
   - VISIT MAHESH'S WEB PAGE (http://www.jagunet.com/~mahesh)
* I WANT RAJ (IF HE IS NOT A FICTIONAL CHARACTER) TO PERSONALLY APOLOGIZE
TO ME FOR THE GREAT INCONVENIENCE & WASTE OF TIME AND MONEY.

Any suggestions to get the money back greatly appreciated.


Sujatha    (gt5686b@prism.gatech.edu)

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

From: Tad Cook <tad@ssc.com>
Subject: How it Really Works: Get Rich Quick on the Net!
Date: Mon, 3 Jun 1996 18:24:21 PDT


I've seen and heard their ads, and wondered if they were teaching
people how to spam the net.  Here is an article that reveals what goes
on at one of those "get rich on the net" seminars


Tad Cook   tad@ssc.com

Utah's Profit Education Systems Markets Internet 'Storefront' Home Pages
By George Hesselberg, {The Wisconsin State Journal}

Knight-Ridder/Tribune Business News

Jun. 1--A $125-a-month electronic storefront in the mall along the
superhighway, and a $3,000 plan to build it, that's what those "road
to riches" advertisements and seminars at a local hotel were all about
Friday.

Profit Education Systems, of Provo, Utah, which set up three workshops
 -- including one this morning (June 1) -- at the Sheraton Madison
Hotel on John Nolen Drive, is actually selling "home pages," which
they call storefronts, on the Internet.

A university telecommunications expert and training competitor,
however, pooh-poohed the operation as a "typical get-rich-quick plan."

A home page is a space on a vast computer network. A person or
business fills in the information, and computer travelers on the world
of Internet can visit those pages, of which there are hundreds of
thousands.

The newspaper advertisements, with teasers to "Learn the Secrets," and
"Want a Second Paycheck (Thousands of Dollars/Month) Without Getting a
Second Job?"  invited Madison area residents to the hotel for a $15
workshop. The fee was waived if a person called ahead of time.

The presentation was actually a pitch to buy in to a later two-day
workshop in Milwaukee costing $2,995.

Madison is the last stop in a tour of Wisconsin cities to sign up
people interested in attending an "Internet Marketing Workshop" in
Milwaukee at a cost of $2,995 (including hotel), said Dahlen Downing,
a workshop presenter.

He estimated about 60 people attended the Madison warmup.

The Milwaukee workshop will teach attendees how to create a home page
and will set up a storefront in the "Galaxy Mall," a "mall" on the
Internet that includes the home pages created at the workshop.

Barry Orton, a UW-Madison telecommunications professor, attended the
first workshop Friday. He said the attendees were asked if they wanted
to get rich on the "information superhighway." The workshop operators
then showed examples of businesses selling products on the Internet
through home pages, and the final pitch was to attend the workshop at
the Marriott in Milwaukee June 21 and 22.

There were "scholarships" available to that seminar for $1,500 if
payment was made at once, cutting the cost in half. Literature
distributed at the first workshop in Madison placed the value of this
training session at $16,000.

Downing, of Profit Education Systems, said the traveling seminars
attract people who already have home pages and people who are starting
from scratch.

"We give you the storefronts and the programming know-how to be able
to promote your storefronts," he said.

Those storefronts, however, are in the Galaxy Mall, which charges $450
every three months for maintenance, according to information on the
mall's home page.  (http://www.galaxymall.com) The workshop
literature, however, said the maintenance cost is $125 per month.

Downing said someone who pays for the training gets four storefronts
and additional listings in the mall's classified ads, which can be
resold. (The literature notes, however, that the maintenance fee is
$375 every three months per storefront.)

For comparison, Orton said the University Extension operates home page
training sessions costing from $100 to $250 per day. He added that
commercial on-line computer services, such as American On Line and
CompuServe, provide free basic home page training and a home page for
as little as $20 a month.

"I don't see that these people were offering anything that is near
worth the amount of money they are charging for their workshop," said
Orton.

Downing said his workshop is different because "a lot of others will
give you a home page for an inexpensive fee, but that doesn't do you
much good if you have no good product or way to promote it out there,"
he said.

Orton urged consumers to look carefully at the literature provided by
the training company and to check the Galaxy Mall address on the
Internet to see if their business is compatible.

"I didn't see anything that was illegal here," Orton said, "but what
initially bothered me was the overuse of the words 'information
superhighway.'  Generally if anyone is selling anything to you with
these words, you should run the other way."


ON THE INTERNET:

Visit the Wisconsin State Journal on the World Wide Web. Point your browser to 
http://www.infi.net/madison/news/wsj.shtml

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
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Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
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The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
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Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
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------------------------------

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #261
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Mon Jun  3 22:01:02 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id WAA19546; Mon, 3 Jun 1996 22:01:02 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Mon, 3 Jun 1996 22:01:02 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606040201.WAA19546@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #262

TELECOM Digest     Mon, 3 Jun 96 22:01:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 262

Inside This Issue:                          Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    User Needs Help Creating Newsgroup (Patrick A. Townson)
    FCC To Re-auction 18 Defaulted PCS Licenses (Jorene Downs)
    Re: University of Arizona Student Guards Domain Names (Christopher Ambler)
    Re: 415 NPA Relief Options (Linc Madison)
    Re: Cellular Caller ID (Eric A. Carr)
    Re: Cellular Caller ID (Hank Karl)
    Re: Hurting Public Utilities Hurts Public Service (Dr. Robert Jacobson)
    Re: Internet Spam From AOL (E. Devinney)
    Re: Internet Spam From AOL (Robert McMillin)
    Re: Internet Spam From AOL (Jeff Carroll)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Mon, 3 Jun 1996 21:34:49 EDT
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Subject: User Needs Help Creating Newsgroup


I am in a conversation with a fellow who wants very much to create a
new newsgroup called 'alt.fan.uma-thurman'. I have no idea who
uma-thurman is or what the group would be about. He is looking for
news admins who might be willing to carry the group and help him get
it started. He says he has read various documents sent to him about
creating a alt newsgroup and still is having problems doing it the
right way.

Would any news admins be willing to assist this fellow?

I'll pass along his name and the letter he sent me to any of you who
respond favorably.

Thanks for your help.


PAT

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

From: jcdowns@strategic-vision.com (Jorene Downs)
Subject: FCC To Re-auction 18 Defaulted PCS Licenses
Date: Mon, 03 Jun 1996 02:40:32 GMT
Organization: Strategic Vision
Reply-To: jcdowns@strategic-vision.com


In clari.tw.telecom, newsbytes@clari.net (NB / WAS) wrote:

WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1996 MAY 31 (NB) -- Looking for one more
chance to get into the personal communications services (PCS)
business? The Federal Communications Commission's (FCC) Wireless
Telecommunications Bureau will re-auction 18 broadband PCS
entrepreneurs' block licenses which defaulted on their required down
payments.

The required down payments were not received from the winning bidders
by the May 15 deadline, FCC spokesperson Kara Palamaras told
Newsbytes, "and have been deemed to be in default by the Bureau."

The Commission's rules provide that if a winning bidder fails to remit
the required down payment, the FCC may either re-auction the license
or offer it to other highest bidders, Palamaras said.  "In this
situation, it has been decided that a re-auction would rapidly and
efficiently assign the licenses," Palamaras told Newsbytes.

On May 15, BDPCS Inc., a unit of QuestCom Inc., Portola Valley,
California, and National Telecom PCS Inc., Stamford, Connecticut,
failed to make the required down payment on the licenses for which
they were the high bidders in the recently completed Entrepreneurs'
Block auction.

BDPCS failed to make the required down payment on 17 licenses and
National Telecom failed to make its down payment on one license.

In an order adopted May 17, Palamaras said, the Bureau denied a waiver
request by BDPCS seeking additional time to tender its five percent
down payment and declared the company in default.

The Bureau yesterday denied BDPCS' petition for reconsideration of the
May 17 order, as well as National Telecom's request for a waiver of
the bid withdrawal payment, Palamaras said.

The licenses will be re-auctioned in a simultaneous multiple round  
auction tentatively scheduled to begin on July 3, 1996. 

Palamaras said that FCC Form 175 applications for participation in
this auction and upfront payments are due June 14.

The Bureau will announce further details regarding filing dates and  
requirements, bidding procedures and other information for the C 
Block re-auction in a public notice to be released June 3, Palamaras 
said. 

Markets for which licenses are to be re-auctioned include: Minneapolis
and St. Cloud, Minnesota; Denver, Colorado Springs and Fort Collins,
Colorado; Seattle, Olympia, Bremerton and Bellingham and Longview,
Washington; Phoenix and Tucson, Arizona; Portland, Salem and Eugene,
Oregon; Albuquerque and Santa Fe, New Mexico; and American Samoa.

For further information, contact Louis Sigalos or Jason Guesman,  
Auctions Division, FCC, tel 202-418-0660. 

(Bill Pietrucha/19960531/Press Contact: Kara Palamaras, Federal  
Communications Commission, tel 202-418-0600) 

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

From: chris@kosh.punk.net (Christopher Ambler)
Subject: Re: University of Arizona Student Guards His Internet Domain Names
Date: 3 Jun 1996 06:14:06 GMT
Organization: Punknet Secret Headquarters and Day Care Centre


kd1hz@anomaly.ideamation.com (Michael P. Deignan) says:

> Let's run the numbers, shall we?
> 364,000 x $50/year = $18,200,000 per year in renewals.
> 10,000 x $100 = $1,000,00 per week in additional revenue.

> Looks like running an InterNic is a very profitable decision. I guess
> I know where the rationale for these fees came from.

Now, let's talk service. I run a web service company, and we register
on the average of three or four domains a week. Recently, the Internic
sent us a bill for these domains, lumped into one bill, with one fee
due. I called them and politely told them that these domains were for
seperate clients, and for $100 a pop, I'd like seperate bills to
submit.

Their answer? "Tough. We can't change it."

When they told me to use seperate billing addresses, I remarked that
initially I did, but each time they "automatically" changed the
address associated with my NIC handle. New domain, new address change.

They then sent a 15-day notice on three of the domains. The notice was
mailed on the 8th, and arrived on or around (within two days of) the
19th. Even if I decided to pay, there wasn't enough time to get a
check in the mail.

Their billing department refuses to do anything about it. 

Promises of a call-back from a supervisor on FIVE occassions have gone
unfufilled.

Requests to not change the address on my NIC handle when I submit separate
billing addresses have been refused.

Is this a way to run a business? If there were competition, I would go
elsewhere. Obviously, I don't have that option.

If I had half-a-million sitting around, I'd start my own Internic
service. dot-corp or dot-bus anyone?


chris@punk.net             
http://www.punk.net/~chris 
http://www.rhps.org        

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

From: Telecom@Eureka.vip.best.com (Linc Madison)
Subject: Re: 415 NPA Relief Options
Date: Mon, 3 Jun 1996 00:45:12 -0700
Organization: Best Internet Communications


In article <telecom16.254.2@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Tad Cook
<tad@ssc.com> wrote:

> Currently, the options under consideration for the 415 area code are:
> + Geographic Split -- Option 1.  [edited for verbosity]

> In this option, San Francisco and the northern portion of San Mateo County
> including Brisbane, South San Francisco, the eastern portion of Daly City,
> the northern half of Millbrae and most of San Bruno (including SFO Airport)
> would stay in the 415 area code. The remaining 415 area including Marin
> County, the rest of San Mateo County, northern Santa Clara Co. and a small
> [tiny] portion of Santa Cruz County would receive a new area code.
> This would create a non-contiguous area code, with Marin County and most
> of San Mateo County in the new area code, but separated by San Francisco
> which would stay in the 415 area code. 

A couple things here: the part about "the eastern portion of Daly
City" is thoroughly bogus, because the only exchange boundary in Daly
City is the line between the northern portion (in San Francisco 3 rate
center) and the southern portion (in South San Francisco/San Bruno
rate center).  The SF3 exchange area extends from one side of the
peninsula to the other.  Also, the geographic discontinuity of the new
area code is quite severe.

> + Geographic Split -- Option 2.

> This option is identical to Option 1, with the exception that Marin
> County would also stay in the 415 area code.

> While fewer customers would change to the new area code in this
> option, the reconstituted 415 area code would run out of telephone
> numbers again in less than four years.

Why not have San Francisco and Marin keep 415 and move San Mateo
County, *including* the airport, into the new area code?  (Of course,
415 would still include some of San Mateo County, because of exchange
boundaries.)  Either that or do a three-way split, with Marin County
getting its own area code.  With a little bit of careful planning, we
could have just done a realignment of the 415/707 line, moving Marin
into 707, but there are a number of duplicated prefixes, mostly in San
Rafael.  707 has only about 200 prefixes, so this clearly could have
been avoided.  Marin County has about 50 prefixes, while the South
S.F./San Bruno exchange has about half that many.


Linc Madison  *  San Francisco, Calif. *  Telecom@Eureka.vip.best.com

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

From: C10973@email.mot.com (Eric A. Carr)
Subject: Re: Cellular Caller ID
Date: Mon, 3 Jun 1996 10:11:15 -0800
Organization: Motorola SmartNet Trunked Systems


In article <telecom16.253.7@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, gabriele@rand.org (Mark
Gabriele) wrote:

> This raises a problem that is particularly irritating in some
> circumstances with which I am familiar.  I post it only to ask if this
> type of situation is being given proper consideration.

> I can fully understand people setting "anonymous caller rejection" on
> their home phone lines.  However, there are times when it is problematic. 
> For example:

> A person calls a physician's office (after hours) with a medical
> emergency.  The person's call results in the physician being paged to call
> the patient.

> The physician calls the patient from their phone (home or cellular),
> with blocking set ON.  The physician's call is rejected because the
> patient has the "anonymous call rejection" set ON.  Ooops.  Now, in
> order to perform their ethical duty, the physician has to send caller
> ID to the patient in order for the patient to receive the call.  Now,
> the patient can jot down the physician's home or cellular phone number
> and call at their convenience (such as the next time little Johnny is
> throwing up at 3:00 am, or when Sally suffers a mental health crisis
> because her beaux dumped her).

> This is not a desirable circumstance for the physician.

> What I would propose is that CID should be capable of sending a
> *different* number registered to the same person (or a corporate
> number, with the permission of the corporation or on a business line).
> This provides protection for people who for legitimate professional
> reasons may wish to retain their personal privacy.  Unfortunately, I
> have not heard of any such capability in any jurisdiction with which I
> am familiar.

Mark makes some good points (IMHO) regarding anonymous call rejection.
It seems to me it is sort of false advertising to call this service
"caller ID" -- it is more accurate to call it "ANI-for-subscribers",
but I guess it doesn't sound as good ;-)

I personally choose not to answer calls marked as "ANONYMOUS" from
experience of being harassed previously by someone using per call
blocking; this is on top of the fact that whoever is calling doesn't
want me to know ahead of time for some reason.  This does have
drawbacks, though.  In Chicago, calls originated by a cellular
subscriber on the "A" band (Cellular One) show up as "ANONYMOUS" on an
ANI display box.  Calls marked as such cause a LED to flash in cadence
with the ring cycle on my ANI box, so if I see this while the phone is
ringing I will not answer the call.  I do have friends and some family
members who have service on Cellular One and I have missed calls from
them on occasion because of this.  Calls originated by someone on the
"B" band (Ameritech) show up as "UNAVAILABLE", which I'm more likely
to answer*.

* sidenote - a double edged sword.  Telanoyance marketing droids are
notorious for having their calls show up as "UNAVAILABLE" on an ANI
display box.  It is more the norm that I come home with three to six
calls on my ANI display marked as "UNAVAILABLE" with no message left
on the answering machine.  More often than not, calls I answer marked
as "UNAVAILBLE" start out with "Hello, this is XYZ Useless Widgets and
associates, may I speak to Mr. or Mrs. ... <click>".

Here's a novel idea; basic ANI display service (number only) from
Ameritech is something like $6.  To get the number _and_ name is an
extra $2.50, which implies that ANI information passed to your display
unit can be somewhat selective.  Why not implement ANI service that
just shows the name?  Currently before dialing, *67 blocks everything.
Make it so some combination of *XX blocks only your number.  That way
just your name shows up on ANI boxes that are so equipped while
number-only displays show "NO INFORMATION SENT" as it is when no data
is transmitted between ring cycles.


Eric Carr    c10973@email.mot.com

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

From: hankkarl@ix.netcom.com (Hank Karl)
Subject: Re: Cellular Caller ID
Date: Mon, 3 Jun 1996 15:49:13 GMT
Organization: Telenetworks
Reply-To: hk@tn.com


On Thu, 30 May 96 18:30:30 EDT, in comp.dcom.telecom Tony Harminc
wrote:

> You can have any number that is installed at the same premises and
> billed to the same subscriber set up as your call display number.  I
> have even seen an 800 number used this way.

How about a 900 number? :-)

Hank Karl

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

From: Dr. Robert Jacobson <bob@worldesign.com>
Subject: Re: Hurting Public Utilities Hurts Public Service
Date: Mon, 3 Jun 1996 01:01:32 -0700
Organization: Worldesign Inc. Seattle-Information Design [www.worldesign.com]


Dave Levenson wrote:

> Lisa (hancock4@cpcn.com) writes:

>>   When the phone company broke, what consumer expected higher prices
>> for COCOT phones and long distance?

> Long distance is far less expensive today than it was pre-competition.
> Many COCOT phones charge less than utility-owned payphones (even
> though the utility-owned payphones are subsidized by ratepayers).

It's also true that most long distance calls by far are made by
corporations and agencies of government.  The cost savings, which
surely have been magnificent, have disproportionately favored those
already in privileged positions.  The cost for residential customers
and small businesses has been higher prices for the mostly local calls
these customers make.  The redistribution of wealth from individuals
and small businesses to large corporations and agencies has been truly
staggering, in the tens of billions of dollars since Divestiture.

I doubt that a day of searching will produce a COCOT phone with 
lower costs than regulated telco-provided public phones.  Of course,
there are fewer and fewer of the latter available, now that service
provision of this type is no longer a condition of holding a franchise.

> While competition is not the answer to every problem, it does offer us
> alternatives.  If we make informed decisions, we benefit.  What we
> lose with competition is subsidies.  (If one group of customers
> subsidizes another, a competitor will offer the customers who pay the
> subsidy an opportunity to avoid paying it.)

Yeah.  Law of the jungle.  Works every time.  If you're an individual
or small business customer, your choices are few and far between.  I
don't see alternative local carriers rushing to sign up households or
small businesses.  Do you?

> If you have been paying these subsidies, you benefit.  If you have
> been receiving them, perhaps you don't ... but ask yourself why you
> deserved to be subsidized in the first place!

Bogus argument.  Subsidies are never deserved, they result from
political power.  Fairness is a chimera.  Corporate income taxes are
well below what they "fairly" might be.  Do you renounce these
subsidies?  Well, what are you going to do about it?  Or rather, _try_
to do about it: not a chance will you succeed.  Small telecom
customers are much easier marks, and so they pay.  Without choice.


Bob

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

From: edevinney@aol.com (EDevinney)
Subject: Re: Internet Spam From AOL
Date: 3 Jun 1996 11:58:19 -0400
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Reply-To: edevinney@aol.com (EDevinney)


Check the headers -- as often as not the spam I've seen directed at
mailing lists is from an ISP different from AOL, but with worked-over
headers ...

Cheers, 

Ed Devinney
edevinney@aol.com(w),Devinney_E@mediasoft.net(h)

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

From: rlm@netcom.com (Robert McMillin)
Subject: Re: Internet Spam From AOL
Organization: Charlie Don't CERF
Date: Mon, 3 Jun 1996 07:54:06 GMT


On 30 May 1996 15:57:26 PDT, Joe A. Machado <jmach@ionet.net> said:

> I have received over 35 mail messages from folks at AOL during the
> past few days. The mailing list is similar but the senders vary. Many
> of the messages contain words of frustration from other recipients and
> the content expressed variest.  Responding to the messages with REMOVE
> or some statement to be taken off the mailing list at times causes
> repetition of the mailings, or the request being ignored. And many of
> the messages are the same but mailed several times -- three to five
> times at once!

[deletia]

It's an easy thing to write off Usenet's decline to simple numbers of
idiots.  AOL was the worst thing to happen to the Net, so the wags
told us.  Not really so: what was bad was unleashing them on the Net
with second-rate software and no guidance.  The fact that AOL can
*still* get away without killfiles and decent quoting on their
newsreader is pretty astonishing.  Every popular Unix-based newsreader
(aside from trivial hacks) has these features, but as a percentage of
the newsreaders out there, they're a small and declining number.
Likewise, procmail, Stephen R. van den Berg's wonderful hack to
bozofilter incoming e-mail, is available only to Unix users.  (Maybe
the folks at Qualcomm making Eudora, or Microsoft making Exchange,
will read this and do something and/or correct me.)

What I'm getting at is the tools necessary to cope with the Net's
monstrous volume are now pretty rare.  This is one reason we're
hearing so many calls for net.censorship of one species or another:
people can no longer filter out the Bob Allisats of the world.  On the
Net, everyone can hear you scream, and the 7/Eleven's don't stock
earplugs.

But even when you CAN do something about it, sometimes it's just not
enough.  Perhaps the best recent example of this problem is the
Scientology-driven spam on alt.religion.scientology.  The Curse, er,
Church has decided that, if they can't destroy Usenet and everyone
associated with it, their Ministry of Truth will spew happyspeak until
the Enemy gets terminally bored.  They couldn't have been more obvious
if they'd rented a broom to skywrite "Surrender, Dorothy".

What to do?  Federal policing of the Net won't stop people from
behaving boorishly.  What we *do* need is better filtering.  How
that's going to be achieved remains to be seen, but I do know I smell
a business opportunity.



Robert L. McMillin  | rlm@helen.surfcty.com | Netcom: rlm@netcom.com

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

From: Jeff Carroll <xfrosch@indy.net>
Subject: Re: Internet Spam From AOL
Date: Mon, 3 Jun 1996 11:59:26 -0500
Organization: bigendian
Reply-To: xfrosch@indy.net


Joe A. Machado wrote:

> With Universal Email a looming possibility is the public not to be
> protected from unwanted mail? Will the cost of junk mail not be a
> factor in the Universal Email debate? Should society tolerate Email
> entrepeneurship? Is there a benefit by not legislating E-Mail?

Get real. The USPS delivers junk mail, the telco delivers junk calls,
and AOL delivers spam.
 
In fact AOL spams customers pretty hard themselves ... except that they
don't fool around with email, using an even more insidious interface
to do it.

If you haven't read William Gibson's _Neuromancer_, I suggest that you
go find a copy and take a look. Three years ago I thought this book
was malinformed nonsense; now I see that Gibson's ideas (or the ones
he picked up and recycled) are serving as a paradigm guiding
technology development. Not only is the net not going to be regulated
(or regulatable), it's not necessarily even going to be civilized. The
Exons and the Coatses who think that they can protect the electorate
from those devastating little blips of electricity are either going to
have to insulate themselves ever farther from reality, or stage a coup
d'etat and cut the cables.

The net, like the market, is a stateless entity, and the greatest
irony of the twentieth century will no doubt be that such an entity
was created by the United States Department of Defense. Governmental
attempts at control merely drive the offending activity underground,
and the only sure way to control the net, in a very close analogy with
"markets" in centrally planned economies, is to destroy it.

In fact, the fundamental issue was rather conclusively dealt with by
most jurisdictions when caller ID became available. The force of law,
more often than not, acts on the behalf of the spammers rather than in
the interest of individual liberty. Many (if not most) states, in
making up CID blocking schemes, legislated enactments of the principle
that you do NOT have the unrestricted right to refuse delivery of
unwanted messages.

There ARE laws against wire fraud and mail fraud. That is the
practical limit of your recourse under the law (but I'm not a lawyer,
so if you REALLY care about this issue, go hire one).

As far as the content of your email; there are sophisticated tools for
de-spamming newsfeeds. The techniques are general and could easily be
applied to the email protocols - but don't hold your breath waiting
for AOL to do it for you.


jkc

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
public service systems and networks including Compuserve and America
On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. 

Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:

                 * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu *

The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
Townson of Skokie, Illinois USA. You can reach us by postal mail, fax 
or phone at:
                      Post Office Box 4621
                     Skokie, IL USA   60076
                       Phone: 500-677-1616
                        Fax: 847-329-0572
  ** Article submission address: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu

Our archives are located at mirror.lcs.mit.edu and are available by using
anonymous ftp. The archives can also be accessed using our email
information service. For a copy of a helpful file explaining how to
use the information service, just ask.

*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from the              *
* International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in Geneva, Switzerland    * 
* under the aegis of its Telecom Information Exchange Services (TIES)   * 
* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
* ing views of the ITU.                                                 *
*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
yourself who provide funding in amounts deemed appropriate. Your help
is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of twenty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #262
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Mon Jun  3 23:28:01 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id XAA28273; Mon, 3 Jun 1996 23:28:01 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Mon, 3 Jun 1996 23:28:01 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606040328.XAA28273@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #263

TELECOM Digest     Mon, 3 Jun 96 23:28:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 263

Inside This Issue:                          Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Re: MCI Cellular (Mike Fox)
    Re: MCI Cellular (Russell E. Sorber)
    Re: MCI Cellular (Jay R. Ashworth)
    Re: Fight Turns Nasty: Ameritech/AT&T Take Off Gloves (Jeffrey Rhodes)
    Re: Fight Turns Nasty: Ameritech/AT&T Take Off Gloves (Wendy Rensik)
    Re: Interesting New Spam Twist (Jay R. Ashworth)
    Re: Around and Around With Jeff Boy (North Coast Communications)
    Re: Around and Around With Jeff Boy (Frank Pizer)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Mike Fox <mjfox@raleigh.ibm.com>
Date: 3 Jun 96 15:59:50 GMT
Subject: Re: MCI Cellular


> In Boston there is Cellular One and Nynex now there are two other cell
> companies starting to put up their antennas. They are AT&T and Sprint.

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: When cellular phone service was being
> developed in the early 1980's -- it started as of 1983 I believe --
> probably no one could ever imagine there would be a time when more
> than two carriers would ever be in existence in a given community and
> in most cases just one. Thus the A/B arrangement, with no real provision
> for a 'C' or 'D' carrier, or whatever they might be called. Does anyone
> know of any plans to open the market to a third or fourth (a 'C' or 'D'
> or whatever you would call them) carrier?  I do not mean just as a
> reseller of A/B as happens now, I mean genuine infrastructure for
> a third or fourth cellular company in some markets?    PAT]

I don't think they are really bringing in two new *cellular* carriers.
I think they are setting up two *PCS* services.  The fact that he
called it "Sprint" instead of "360 Degree Communications" confirms
that IMO, as Sprint spun off their cellular business into 360 Degree
so they can concentrate on PCS.


Later,

Mike

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

Date: Mon, 3 Jun 1996 16:47:45 -0500
From: Russell E. Sorber <sorbrrse@cig.mot.com>
Subject: Re: MCI Cellular
Organization: Motorola Inc., Cellular Infrastructure Group


In article <telecom16.255.8@massis.lcs.mit.edu> Pat writes:

> Does anyone know of any plans to open the market to a third or
> fourth (a 'C' or 'D' or whatever you would call them) carrier?  I do
> not mean just as a reseller of A/B as happens now, I mean genuine
> infrastructure for a third or fourth cellular company in some markets?

Pat, 

Yes.  New infrastructure is being installed by the PCS operators in
many US cellular markets.  The FCC auctioned off these PCS frequencies
several months ago.  In the Chicago area, PCS Primeco (An Airtouch,
USWest New Vector, NYNEX, BellAtlantic Mobile consortium) and AT&T
Wireless are the two additional providers but they are not in
commercial service yet.

Somewhere on the WWW I've seen a page which lists which operators won
the rights to which city.  Every major US city will be getting at
least two new wireless operators.


Russ Sorber
Software Contractor  -    Opinions are mine, Not Motorolas!
Motorola, Cellular Division
Arlington Hts., IL	(847) 632-4047

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

From: jra@scfn.thpl.lib.fl.us (Jay R. Ashworth)
Subject: Re: MCI Cellular
Date: 3 Jun 1996 18:26:00 GMT
Organization: University of South Florida


Macaw (macaw@ix.netcom.com) wrote:

> In <telecom16.248.8@massis.lcs.mit.edu> schuster@panix.com (Michael
> Schuster) writes: 
>> I just received a soliciation to join MCI's cellular service and receive
>> a Nokia 100 phone for free (golly!!!).

> In Boston there is Cellular One and Nynex now there are two other cell
> companies starting to put up their antennas. They are AT&T and Sprint.
> Cellular One is Southwestern Bell. I myself don't know how this will
> be done also. If anyone knows please let me know. The reason I know
> about the other two cellular companies is because Cellular One is
> renting from me. They have a cell site on my building and Sprint
> contacted me about setting up one of there cell sites on my building
> also.

AT&T Wireless bought McCaw Communications, the operator of Cellular
One.

I'd suspect Sprint might possibly have gotten into some deal with
Nynex; that, or what _they_ want is a site for a PCS cell, instead.

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: When cellular phone service was being
> developed in the early 1980's -- it started as of 1983 I believe --
> probably no one could ever imagine there would be a time when more
> than two carriers would ever be in existence in a given community and
> in most cases just one. Thus the A/B arrangement, with no real provision
> for a 'C' or 'D' carrier, or whatever they might be called. Does anyone
> know of any plans to open the market to a third or fourth (a 'C' or 'D'
> or whatever you would call them) carrier?  I do not mean just as a
> reseller of A/B as happens now, I mean genuine infrastructure for
> a third or fourth cellular company in some markets?    PAT]

 From my understanding of the cellular protocols, it's not technically
feasible, Pat.  The A and B carriers (competitive and wireline) are
using two actually different sets of frequencies for their calls.  The
band only has room, as currently bandplanned, for those two chunks, and
certainly that's all the phones know how to do.

No, I suspect that any further company expansion in the wireless voice
market will be strictly PCS based stuff.


Cheers,

Jay R. Ashworth                               jra@scfn.thpl.lib.fl.us
Member of the Technical Staff            Junk Mail Will Be Billed For.
The Suncoast Freenet  "The world will remain dangerously unstable
Tampa Bay, Florida     as long as it is populated."  --me   +1 813 790 7592

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

From: Jeffrey Rhodes <jeffrey.rhodes@worldnet.att.net>
Subject: Re: Fight Turns Nasty: Ameritech/AT&T Take Off Gloves
Date: 3 Jun 1996 19:12:30 GMT
Organization: AT&T WorldNet Services


I don't speak for AT&T on this subject but I certainly understand why
AT&T characterizes the Ameritech legal action as outrageous. I
disagree with the poster that consumers are caught in the middle.

ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (TELECOM Digest Editor) wrote:

>o   Ameritech claims that as of Friday AT&T will bar its card holders
>    from making local calls within Ameritech's calling area.

Really? When the Illinois consumer with both an AT&T calling card and
an Ameritech calling card dials 102880 + ten digits for a call that
completes in Illinois, AT&T won't let that call be billed to an AT&T
calling card? I would guess that AT&T won't let an AT&T calling card
be used for 0+seven or 0+ten digit intra-Ameritech calls because
AT&T's network will not be used for this call.

>o   AT&T has offered Ameritech customers three months of free local
>    toll calls -- local calls of 15 miles or more -- if they switch to
>    AT&T before June 30.

Were only Ameritech calling card consumers targeted? I would think
AT&T would target all Ameritech consumers. There are any number of
ways to obtain Ameritech consumer billing addresses without using LIDB
database information or information obtained from LIDB database
real-time access.

For instance, AT&T Worldnet Directory Search has a very impressive
engine that can focus on a state, a region or the entire country, to
obtain mailing addresses and telephone numbers.

>o   AT&T has filed new local toll call rates with the Illinois Commerce
>    Commission to be extremely competitive. 

My local AT&T TV advertising is concentrating on 9 cents a minute plus
quantity discounts for monthly bills over $25 dollars. Then Sprint has
the dime lady and MCI has an X-generation Valley Person to put in
writing MCI discounts compared to non-discounted AT&T plans. The long
distance pricing wars have begun and this will only benefit consumers.

> The developments Wednesday are the latest in what has become a very
> nasty fight in the 'telephone war' between Ameritech and AT&T that
> started out more than a year ago when Ameritech launched its 'Customers
> First' plan, its strategy to enter the long distance market. 

> In the latest skirmish over calling cards, Ameritech had accused AT&T
> of abusing an agreement that allows each company to handle traffic
> using the calling card of the other company. Under the agreement,
> neither company was allowed to use any customer data for the purpose
> of soliciting customers to switch companies.

> Ameritech Chairman Richard Notebaert said his company discovered AT&T
> was illegally targeting Ameritech customers when some 'names on the
> list' started getting mailings sent by AT&T. He said there was no way
> 'those names' would have gotten anything like that in the mail had not
> AT&T been abusing their access to the Ameritech data base.

"Those names" are not available by other reverse white pages
databases?  Richard Notebaert has to know that Ameritech would gain
more from raiding the LIDB database than AT&T.

> As matters now stand, effective Friday, May 31, AT&T calling cards
> will not be accepted by Ameritech and Ameritech calling cards will not
> be accepted by AT&T.  

Ameritech consumers aren't able to use their MCI or Sprint calling 
cards when using AT&T's toll network, either. Is that any surprise?
I'm pretty sure that AT&T toll operators are required to give the 
access codes for calling card verifcation failures and probably vice
versa for other long distance toll operators.

> It is unclear at this point what results will occur if a person with
> an Ameritech card uses a payphone which was defaulted to AT&T to make
> a long distance call.

I would think not. This may imply that Ameritech payphones may require
the non-Ameritech calling card consumer to dial 10XXX0+ or 101XXXX0+
to reach any other long distance carriers' LIDB calling card billing
verification services.

> Isn't this a shameful state of affairs when customers have to get
> caught up in the middle of the fight?  

Customer dialing habits may need to change but the entire telephone
system is changing to allow LECs like Ameritech become long distance
providers and long distance providers like AT&T become local line
service providers like Ameritech. This will provide more competition
for both services, though I have to notice how the LECs are currently
more inclined to merge than to compete in each other's territory.


Jeffrey Rhodes at jeffrey.rhodes@worldnet.att.net

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

From: Wendy Rensik <Paresnik@execpc.com>
Subject: Re: Fight Turns Nasty: Ameritech/AT&T Take Off Gloves
Date: Mon, 03 Jun 1996 17:33:36 -0700
Organization: Exec-PC BBS - Milwaukee, WI


You're right about the fact that the heat has been turned up between
AT&T and Ameritech. However, AT&T is the company that is disadvan-
taging its own customers in the process. The AT&T calling card has had
one unique advantage over the other ld cards for years -- it provided 0+
calling over all the RBOC networks. Not anymore.

> o   Ameritech claims that as of Friday AT&T will bar its card holders
>     from making local calls within Ameritech's calling area.

This is true, and Ameritech is not the only RBOC. AT&T already
cancelled the Mutual Card Holding Agreement (MCHA) with Nynex on April
30 and will cancel all MCHA's with RBOC's as the contracts expire.
Interestingly, AT&T has refused to publicly admit to taking this
action. In fact, in Nynex territory, they sent deliberately misleading
information to their customers which implied that Nynex was
responsible for blocking AT&T card holder calls.

> As matters now stand, effective Friday, May 31, AT&T calling cards
> will not be accepted by Ameritech and Ameritech calling cards will not
> be accepted by AT&T.

Not quite true. Ameritech calling cards will still work on AT&T's
network. With an Ameritech card, you can dial 0+ and get through
whether it's local or long distance. With an AT&T card, you have to
dial 1800CallATT or 10288 when placing a local call.

> It is unclear at this point what results will occur if a person with
> an Ameritech card uses a payphone which was defaulted to AT&T to make
> a long distance call.

The call will go through! (So which card would you rather have in your 
pocket??)

> Isn't this a shameful state of affairs when customers have to get
> caught up in the middle of the fight?

What's shameful is that AT&T is cancelling the MCHA's with the RBOC's
(and refuses to come clean about it with the press or their own
customers.) The reason is simple ... they want to divert calling
revenue from the Bell networks to the AT&T network. And they're doing
it on the backs of their own customers.


Wendy Resnik

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

From: jra@scfn.thpl.lib.fl.us (Jay R. Ashworth)
Subject: Re: Interesting New Spam Twist
Date: 3 Jun 1996 06:03:59 GMT
Organization: University of South Florida


Ron Mackey (rem@dsiinc.com) wrote:

> Okay, this guy thinks it's okay to spam 10,000 newgroups with his
> garbage, but doesn't want to be bothered with junk calls himself.
> What I really would like to know is the legality of threatening to 
> bill for an 800 call.  Does this guy really have any legal recourse 
> to stop offending junk calls to his 800 number or are we all free 
> to spam his 800-number the same way he's been spamming us?

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: It probably is not legal and he may be
> able to do it somehow if he has a contract with some sleazy telco
> billing agency. I'd say handle calls to 800-555-8655 with the same
> discretion as calls to Slaton: see to it whatever ANI they pick up
> is essentially worthless. Everyone passes several payphones in a day's
> time or knows of some trusty looparound.  PAT]

Actually, as I noted in an earlier posting, it _is_ illegal, although
I'd have to dig out the rulemaking that says so.  It's been cited here
in the past month, I think ...

Worse, though, the 800 number is likely bogus anyway. 

The 800-555 exchange, to the best of my knowledge, belongs to Bellcore
themselves, and I don't think they've let it out to anyone.

As opposed to 900-555, which is another matter, entirely.


Cheers,

Jay R. Ashworth   jra@scfn.thpl.lib.fl.us
Member of the Technical Staff 
The Suncoast Freenet  Tampa Bay, Florida 
+1 813 790 7592

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

Date: Mon, 3 Jun 96 22:36:00 EDT
From: North Coast Communications <0005082894@mcimail.com>
Subject: Re: Around and Around With Jeff Boy


FYI:

According to the Automated RespOrg Lookup Service that I have access
to, 800.351.8085, uses LCI International. So I guess they would be the
"beneficiary" of the net community's worthy goal. Wonder what the "per
minute" rate is on this number?

I am also curious why Mr. Jeff picked such a strange name for his
operation (Eunuchs?). Perhaps it is self-descriptive in his case?

So many pay phones, so little time! ;+)


Kristen 


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Remember, spam will cease when spam is
unprofitable. It is only profitable when customers can reach the spammer.
You (a generic you, meaning the net community) essentially wasted all
the email addresses those birds were using; note how they now want a
phone call. The quandry is if it were a regular phone number not many
people would call, yet if it is an 800 number then everyone calls. <g>

Pass the word: a goal for the community during June and subsequent
months is to generate about a hundred thousand dollars per month in
billings to our favorite spammers. Do not call it harassment, because
it is not. You want to learn more about the product; you want to call
and let them know you decided not to order it; you want to call and
let them know to quit sending you mail, etc. Just because it is more
convenient for you to call from a payphone at the corner store does
not make it harassment either. If it is harassment you are into, then
I cannot help you because harassment is illegal. 

A hundred thousand dollars sounds like a lot of money, and it is if 
you have to pay the phone bill <grin> but if there are even the same number
of netizens interested in the cause and each makes three or four calls
to a spammer then between us all we can make short work of it.  I feel
there should be a 'spammer of the month' who receives the community's
blessings that month. For example, this time around make it Jeff Boy,
then next month maybe the hair thinner people, etc.  Now you know if
Jeff gets hit with a huge bill like that from LCI he is probably not
going to be able to pay; sure as I am sitting here LCI will cut him
and place him with an agency or else take it legal right away. If he
goes with another carrier, the community will find out soon enough.
After all, he has to spam the net with his new number doesn't he if
he wants to promote whatever he has to sell that time.

Remember, a hundred thousand dollars. Let's do this like Pledge Week
on National Public Radio. You can 'phone in' your pledges; we can have
a big graph where we show the progress being made toward reaching the
goal, etc. :) If you send me mail with the subject line 'My Pledge
to Jeff' I won't run those messages but I will summarize the totals
each day or two. Do not exagerate; make it realistic. And I repeat:
no harassment! Don't be like that guy in Georgia who personally ran
up the 800 bill on Jerry Falwell a quarter-million dollars over two
months by having his modem redial over and over all day and all night.
Just make a few calls to ask a few questions or make a few comments.
Spam will quit when there no further place for the spammers to go to
get customer responses.   Pass the word.    PAT]

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

From: bidscan@mail.saix.net
Date: Mon, 03 Jun 1996 09:49:51 -0700
Subject: Re: Around and Around With Jeff Boy


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Frank wrote me last week but his
original message went astray; it is repeated below. In the
repeat transmission to me, he added a few new comments.   PAT]

I haven't received anything further, so possibly mail to
postmaster@interramp.com helped. I've also taken a look at
interramp.com, and they look like a respectable enough setup, so
perhaps they're victims of this "lightning bolt" crap themselves.


Cheers,

Frank R Pizer   bidscan@mail.saix.net

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

 Subject: Caller-ID/ISP abuse, plus unwanted, unsolicited sleaze e-mail
 Date: Fri, 24 May 1996 00:09:24 -0700 
 From: bidscan@mail.saix.net


Pat, I'm none too sure if you are the right one to turn to, but with
the undertones of caller-id and ISP abuse, I feel that even if you
can't help with my problem, you would at least be able to sound some
sort of warning in the right places.

After the "Are you a displaced AT&T etc" message of yesterday, of
which I sent you a copy, and having sent back a polite "Kindly remove
from your mailing list" reply to it, (which, btw, bounced as
undeliverable, bounce message attached below), I have now today
received something even LESS wanted, from the same source. (also
attached below).

I have as a first resort, mailed to postmaster@interramp.com, asking
for help, but for all I know, that is the sender of the sleaze.

Is there anything you or your readers can suggest to halt what looks
like becoming a stream of unwanted, unsolicited, crud.

The sad part of it all is that they probably don't realise that I'm
not in the USA, and am unable to reply via their 0800 number which
they insist on as the only means of making contact, thereby making the
whole thing pointless in the first place ....


Cheers,

Frank R Pizer
Bidscan@mail.saix.net


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: From now on, forget the postmasters and
system admins. Don't bother them any longer with mail on spammers. Now
that the spammers have invited phone calls let's deal with it that way.
See my earlier message in this issue. Let's give the postmasters and
admins some relief on this for a change.

I also got mail from someone who pointed out that cellular phones are
unlikely as presently configured to produce any worthwhile ANI to the
spammers. That is a good point, and I would say as long as you don't
have to spend in total more than a dollar or so to do your part for
the community this month, go ahead and use your cellular phone for it.
If you are not sure of the results in your case, then best stick with
the payphone. Remember, no harassment! Just interested customers who
want more information, or to comment on the situation. And if Jeff Boy
presents any of you with his 'net harasser recognition award' be sure to
let us all know.    PAT]

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
public service systems and networks including Compuserve and America
On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. 

Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:

                 * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu *

The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
Townson of Skokie, Illinois USA. You can reach us by postal mail, fax 
or phone at:
                      Post Office Box 4621
                     Skokie, IL USA   60076
                       Phone: 500-677-1616
                        Fax: 847-329-0572
  ** Article submission address: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu

Our archives are located at mirror.lcs.mit.edu and are available by using
anonymous ftp. The archives can also be accessed using our email
information service. For a copy of a helpful file explaining how to
use the information service, just ask.

*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from the              *
* International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in Geneva, Switzerland    * 
* under the aegis of its Telecom Information Exchange Services (TIES)   * 
* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
* ing views of the ITU.                                                 *
*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
yourself who provide funding in amounts deemed appropriate. Your help
is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of twenty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #263
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Tue Jun  4 11:50:11 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id LAA14302; Tue, 4 Jun 1996 11:50:11 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 11:50:11 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606041550.LAA14302@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #264

TELECOM Digest     Tue, 4 Jun 96 11:50:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 264

Inside This Issue:                          Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Help Needed Building Step-by-Step Switches (Mike G. Zaiontz)
    What the Government Pays For Long Distance (Roy A. McCrory)
    Bouygues New Phone Network in France (Jean-Bernard Condat)
    FTC Warns of Internet Scams (Tad Cook)
    Play Modem and PC Speakers Thru Sound Card: Possible? (domo@xs4all.nl)
    Re: More CID Frolics! (Vance Shipley)
    Re: More CID Frolics - One Problem Solved! (Stan Schwartz)
    Re: Nevada Attorney General Investigates Excel (Van Hefner)
    Re: Northern Telecom "Services" Menu (Tim Jenkins)
    Re: Digital Cellular in North America Question (Guy St-Pierre)
    Photos from Telephone Pioneer Museum (Bob Baxter)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Mike G. Zaiontz <mgzaiont@nol.mobil.com>
Subject: Help Needed Building Step-by-Step Switches
Date: Tue, 04 Jun 1996 08:04:31 -0500
Organization: MEPTEC - Mobil Oil Corporation


In reading the TELECOM Digest, I've noticed an interest in older
telephone systems. I am not a telecom professional, but a collector of
old telephone equipment. Someone in this group may be able to assist
me. I am attempting to assemble a very small step-by-step switch. This
switch has four linefinders, first selectors, final selectors and
connectors. Most of what I need I have been able to locate, but need
help in locating some shelves, trunk switches and other parts. This
switch will tie into my WE-555 and WE-557 cord switchboards and 1A2
key system (37 extensions). Any info or comments would be appreciated.
You can e-mail me directly at mgzaiont@nol.mobil.com or call 504-566-6090.


Thanks in advance,

Mike

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

From: Roy A. McCrory <mccrory@erebus.fc.dna.mil>
Subject: What the Government Pays For Long Distance
Date: 4 Jun 1996 13:41:22 GMT
Organization: Los Alamos National Laboratory


Article entitled "Sprint to cut its rates (FTS 2000)" in the 27 May
issue of <A HREF="http://www.fcw.com/">FEDERAL Computer Week</A>, Vol
10, Number 12.  Apparently the government is conducting some kind of
Chinese auction between ATT and Sprint on its FTS 2000 internal long
distance network. Article reports that "Sprint will drop its rates
from 8 cents per minute to 5.9...." "... the agreement almost
completely eliminates the price difference between ATT and Sprint."


Roy

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

Date: Tue, 04 Jun 1996 14:37:59 +0100
From: Jean-Bernard Condat <jeanbc@informix.com>
Subject: Bouygues New Phone Network in France


   Paris (France), Juny 4th, 1996--All over the streets of the French
capitale, you can look at some pictures on the walls giving
information on the new telecommunications network born May 30th:
Bouygues Telecom's one. For 240 FF (including taxes),you can freely
phone in Paris and in a 30-km circle near the capitale. After, you
must paid 2 FF in business time and 1 FF in home time. Four terminal
DCS 1800 are now available between 550 to 990 FF. If you leave Paris
you can forward your calls by the command to a no-portable phone
number! The phone number of Bouygues' products are 8-digit numbers
beginning by 02 (normally 09 for SFR and 07 for Itineris).

   Bouygues Telecom has awarded Nortel a two-year contract extension
estimated at $US50 million for expansion of its national personal
communications network (PCN).  This increases the total value of
Bouygues Telecom's PCN radio infrastructure supply agreement with
Nortel (announced in December 1994) to over $US100 million.  Nortel
will supply, install and commission several hundred DCS 1800 base
transceiver stations, based on the Global System for Mobile
Communications (GSM) standard, for the new coverage in the d'Azur and
Lyon regions, and for expansion of existing coverage in the Ile de
France area. Service is scheduled to begin in these areas at the start
of 1997.

   "We are very pleased to see our relationship with Bouygues Telecom
developing," said Pascal Debon, vice president and general manager,
GSM Wireless Networks, Nortel.  "This new contract underlines the
performance of the GSM technology developed by our teams. Equally,
while we have won many GSM contracts in other parts of the world, this
contract proves our ability to compete and win in Europe."

   According to Yves Francois, director of information technology at
Bouygues Telecom, "we chose Digital because of their complete
understanding of our business needs, and their superior telecomm-
unications technology and solutions capability to manage a vast and
complex radiotelephone network from a single point."  Jean-Claude
Sainctavit, Digital's worldwide vice president for the telecomm-
unications industry, said that "Digital's industry-leading Alpha
technology, along with our clustering, solutions and support
capabilities will provide Bouygues Telecom with a lower cost of
operations and an almost immediate network problem solution capability
with scalable advanced technology."

   He added that "our partnership with co-contractor SEMA Group, the
use of our TeMip (Telecommunications Management Information Platform)
platform, and the experience gained from managing similar telecom
projects worldwide, most recently, for example, in Germany and
Malaysia, were the final determining factors in our selection by
Bouygues Telecom."

   Bouygues Telecom is a company controlled by Bouygues (a major
multi-trade group).  Bouygues Telecom brings together the principal
operators of DCS 1800 networks in Europe, Cable & Wireless (United
Kingdom), Veba (Germany), and US West (United States), along with the
Jean-Claude Decaux Group, Banque Nationale de Paris, and Compagnie
Financiere de Parisbas. Bouygues officials noted that the technical
performance, high-capacity and attractive price of this new generation
of easy-to-use mobile phones will meet the expectations of a wide
public. Bouygues Telecom plans to gain a significant share of a market
estimated at more than 10 million customers over the next 10 years.
The company will base its development on the quality of its customer
service.

   The arrival of Bouygues Telecom as the third licensed mobile
operator in France is expected to further stimulate the development of
mobile phones, and help France catch up with the other main European
countries in this field. Personal telephony is a major line of
development for Bouygues already present in the telecommunications
sector since 1987 (3RP Public Access Mobile Radio, ERMES paging
network).


Jean-bernard Condat, Senior Consultant, Smart Card Business Unit
  | Informix, La Grande Arche, 92044 La Defense Cedex, France
  | Phone: +33 1 46963770, fax: +33 1 46963765, portable: +33 07238628
  | Private: +33 1 41238807, e-mail: jeanbc@informix.com

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

From: Tad Cook <tad@ssc.com>
Subject: FTC Warns of Internet Scams
Date: Mon, 3 Jun 1996 23:57:23 PDT


FTC warns of Internet scams
Reuters

WASHINGTON -- Hordes of scam artists -- already skilled at ripping off
consumers through telephone fraud -- may soon stalk new victims over
the Internet, the Federal Trade Commission warned Monday.

The worldwide computer network offers crooks advantages such as
anonymity and cheap startup costs, making it tougher for law
enforcement officials to track down con artists in cyberspace, the FTC
said.

"Fraudulent marketers will continue to use the telephone, but they
soon may gravitate to the Internet in large numbers," the agency said
in a report titled "Consumer Protection Policy in the New High-Tech,
Global Marketplace."

In general, the report added, new technologies involving telephones,
television and computers will give consumers access to unlimited
amounts of information and other benefits. But they also offer fertile
ground for old-fashioned scams.

"There is no sign that low-tech scams will go away and strong evidence
that `next-tech' scams will increase and be more difficult to detect
and track across international borders," the report said.

"Law enforcement agencies must work harder, smarter and in concert to
maximize the impact of their limited resources."

The report is part of a two-volume study the FTC issued after hearings
last year into how growing global competition and new technologies
affect businesses and consumers.

The FTC said it is reviewing its regulations "to assure that they are
well-suited to the new global marketplace." The agency is prepared to
change outdated rules.

The report said the multimedia portion of the Internet known as the
World Wide Web offers crooks cheap opportunities to rip off consumers.

"Indeed, for $30 a month or less and the cost of a computer and modem,
scam artists can be in business on the World Wide Web, taking orders
from anywhere in the world," it said.

Just last week, the FTC said it halted an illegal pyramid scheme on
the Internet that bilked thousands of investors out of more than than
$6 million.


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I am beginning to think that about
ninety percent of the commercial stuff on the World Wide Web is just
fraud. I may be overestimating the percentage a little. I thought a
good companion piece to this message is a posting I found in
misc.rural telling how YOU can make **big $$** working at home posting
messages on the net. It seems a very ominous sign of things to come.
Read on and see what you think.

  Subject: Rural Folks Needed to Work as Newsgroup Posters
  Date: 4 Jun 96 12:03:32 -0700
  From: webhost@msn.com (D.J Hamilton)
  Organization: The Microsoft Network (msn.com)
  Newsgroups: misc.rural

          Newgroup Marketing Representatives Needed Worldwide.
          Come Joing our team of Newsgroup marketers who are
          earning an average of $5000 per month.

Job Number:       5000
Job Category:     Marketing

Company Name:     Net Marketing & Multimedia
Address1:         1602 Alton Road Suite 442
City/State/Zip:   Miami Beach
County:           Florida
Country:          USA
Contact Name:     Darryl Hamilton
Contact Title:    Recruiting Coordinator
Phone:            305-460-2257
Fax:              352-378-9939
E-mail:           webhost@msn.com   Always better to contact via e-mail
Status:           Part-Time / Full-Time

Salary/Benefits:  Initially, Compensation will only include
                  commission, and after a 120 day evaluation
                  period, employee will receive a weekly salary
                  in adjunct to commissions.  The salary
                  will equal $1200/month + commissions.
                  Commission and salary payments will be
                  made in the form of a check or direct bank deposit
                  for employees living outsite of the United States.
                  Other payment arrangements can be made if the
                  listed above are not satisfactory.

Location1:         Worldwide

Description:       Join Net Marketing & Multimedia, one of the nation's 
                   largest Web marketing Firms.  Our  marketing
                   representatives are trained to handle a full
                   range of products and services and deal in
                   both the individual as well as business markets.

Job Duties:        Individual will post messages throughout certain
                   newsgroups, and on the world wide web, indicating 
                   the availability and location of a new product.
                   on the web.  Simply put, you will point users to
                   the location of web pages that display a product.  
                   You will receive a commision for every product that
                   is sold as a result of your efforts.


Send E-mail if interested in positions ...

Posted by: Net Publications:  http://nminc.com/jobs
                                 mediaworld@msn.com

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

[Me again: Well, at least they did not spam. I cannot see any evidence
where they posted this in six hundred different newsgroups all at the
same time. Still, I don't like this. It seems like these outside
commercial organizations are detirmined to take over the Usenet
newsgoups doesn't it?  My solution here is I generally am going to
stop posting messages from people saying 'look at my web page' unless
it has something specific to do with telecom. I may not hold to that
rule absolutely. I get quite a few 'look at my web page' messages each
day. You don't really want to see all those do you?  PAT]

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

From: domo@xs4all.nl (domo)
Subject: Play Modem and PC Speakers Thru Sound Card: Possible?
Date: Mon, 03 Jun 1996 22:23:00 GMT
Organization: XS4ALL, networking for the masses
Reply-To: domo@xs4all.nl


Does anyone know if and how I can re-route the sounds of my modem
speaker and system speaker through my soundcard to my speakers? Is
there a software solution is it a hardware thing?  I did find a
program that can send the sound of normal telephone conversations to
my modem speaker:

 (folis20, at ftp://ftp.omen.com.au/pub/files_3/comms/folis20.arj) 

but the sound is horrible and this is only part of what I would like
to have.

Actually this is a limited version of a question that seems to be more
complicated than I thought (I get no answers). If you can answer that
one I would really be grateful.

Here is my original question:

Here's a question that looks simple in my non-technical mind. I want
to do handsfree telephoning from the desk where I have my computer. I
could buy a handsfree telephone, but it seems to me I already have the
equipment.  I have a computer with a 14k4 modem, an AWE32 soundcard, a
microphone and speakers. I don't know if my modem has voice capabilities; 
probably not.

As I see it a telephone is nothing more than a serial device with a
microphone, a speaker, a bell and some buttons that make beeps. All
this can be done with a soundcard, with the modem just as a way to
plug in the telephone connector.

Is there more to it than this? What (shareware) software do I need?

I have seen this question posted elsewhere but haven't seen answers
other than "I know you can but I don't know how".

Please reply by email also.


Thanks, 

Max   domo@xs4all.nl

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

From: vances@xenitec.xenitec.on.ca (Vance Shipley)
Subject: Re: More CID Frolics!
Organization: Telco Consulting
Date: Mon, 3 Jun 1996 16:30:13 GMT


In article <telecom16.229.13@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Stan Schwartz
<usfunx2b@ibmmail.com> wrote:

> For the last few weeks, I've been puzzled by a number that had been
> appearing on my all of my CID devices (I'm up to 5 in the house).  It
> wasn't any valid NPA or NNX and the name showed up as "--------------".
> Last night, it clicked.  The number displayed is the first ten digits
> of an account number that I have with a bank in the northeast.  This
> doesn't seem like mere coincidence to me.  What piece of software is
> able to manipulate CID, and does the FCC know about this?  This has
> the potential of rendering CID data useless.

Over the years I have insisted on referring to ANI when appropriate
and CLID when that term applied instead.  Many people like to call the
CLID information they receive ANI but it is not.  ANI cannot be
misrepresented by a customer, at least through any means I am aware
of.

CLID however is often controlled by the customer explicitly.  The case
of a University would be an example.  A typical university might have
several directly dialable numbers or even a whole NXX range.  For
example let's say UofX, a small university, has (XXX)555-1000 through
1999.  Calling any of the numbers 555-1000 through 555-1999 will
result in the call being sent to the UofX PBX (over a few ISDN Primary
Rate trunks) which will in turn ring the appropriate extension.  The
callee at the UofX will have the callers number and name if available
displayed on her telephone.  The CO sent the information to the PBX.

Now consider the case where a caller from the UofX places an outside
call.  If the callee is to have an accurate call display information
set it will have to come from the PBX at the UofX.  The CO could
display only the main listed directory number of the UofX (555-1000)
and the name of the university but that would not be very usefull when
the caller is directly reachable and ISDN connected as well.

When placing the call the UofX PBX will send to the CO the originating
number to be used for the call as well as the name to be displayed if
that service is available.  In this way the most usefull service is
provided.  When a callee receives a call from the UofX extension phone
the display will show the DID number and current name of the caller.

The local CO should have filters in place which will ensure that the
Uof;X PBX only sends valid CLIDs on outgoing calls.  It should only
allow the range of numbers assigned to the UofX (555-1000 to 555-1999).

In reality most CO equipment is incapable of doing this filtering.  In
most cases the PBX could have sent any string of digits that was ten
digits in length (some restrictions will apply).

The name information is of course very dynamic, extensions can be
reassigned at any time and the names of employees or students will
change often.  The originating name information can be anything.

In article <telecom16.250.3@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Stan Schwartz
<stan@vnet.net> wrote:

> Last week, we heard about the calls I'm receiving where my CID displays
> show the first 10 digits of my account number with a regional bank.

> Today, I received another "interesting" call.  There was no message on
> the machine, but all of my CID devices have the name "WASHINGTON" (for
> the state, I assume), and a number 206-959-0525.  This number is not
> only not dialable, but 959 does not exist in either the 206, 360, or 509
> NPA's.

> Can anyone help me with TODAY'S mystery???

The trend toward computer controlled telephony has produced a wealth
of products to enable organizations to take advantage of ISDN in their
unique applications.  An organization may create their own "PBX" today
and may do as they wish with the CLID and name information.


Vance Shipley            +1 519 579 5816 (tel)
Telco Consulting         +1 519 579 5136 (fax)
vances@telco.on.ca      http://www.telco.on.ca

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

From: Stan Schwartz <stan@vnet.net>
Subject: Re: More CID Frolics - One Problem Solved!
Date: Mon, 3 Jun 1996 17:13:13 -0400


First, I'd like to thank everyone for their quick response on my
Caller ID predicament.  The responses I received led me to call AT&T,
USWest, and GTE Northwest and they all pointed fingers (which ever one
they chose) at each other.  The answer I received from USWest and GTE
was, "Maybe it's a cellular number and we don't have those in our
database."  I couldn't convince them that even cellular numbers are
assigned to a central office SOMEWHERE and would be in a searchable
database.

The mystery was partially solved when the caller finally left a
message on my voice mail. I cross-checked the timestamp on that and my
CID box(es) and Viola!  The call originated from somewhere in the Bill
Gates empire.  NOW I have to wonder if this has a connection with my
other CID mystery.  Does Microsoft have the same CID-masking software
that the bank had?  Is this a Microsoft product?  WinFake '95?

BTW, the USWest rep told me that the 959 exchange is in general use in
some of their other territories (Colorado, for example).


Stan

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

Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 07:08:06 -0700
From: vantek@northcoast.com (VANTEK COMMUNICATIONS)
Subject: Re: Nevada Attorney General Investigates Excel


> Nevada Attorney General's Office Investigates Long-Distance Company
> By MICHELLE DeARMOND

> An Excel employee was charged in a Federal Trade Commission
> investigation earlier this year for allegedly making unsubstantiated
> claims about earnings for work-at-home businesses. Robert Serviss of
> Stamford, Conn., was accused of offering no proof that consumers would
> earn up to $4,000 or more each.

I am constanly amazed at how some reporters will publish "facts"
without even attempting to validate them whatsoever. This Robert
Serviss character has/had absolutely NOTHING to to with Excel
Communications (NYSE: ECI) of Dallas, TX. He ran a completely
different company, which just happened to call itself by the same
name. He did not sell long distance. He sold some type of "Get Rich
Quick" manual by mail-order that had nothing to do with long distance.
Before I wrote an article on the subject, I actually bothered to
pick-up the phone and ask the FTC about the case. It took me all of
five minutes.  I have no connection whatsoever to Excel, but I really
hate to see their name dragged through the mud (further) by such
incompetent journalism as that practiced by the above writer. I find
it a bit ironic that there is apparently a higher degree of
professionalsm and journalistic competence on internet mailing lists
than there is at the Associated Press.


Van Hefner - Editor     Discount Long Distance Digest
On The Web: http://www.webcom.com/longdist/ 


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I would like to think there is a bit
more journalistic competence on many on the mailing lists. I got
notes also from a couple of Excel people who complained about the
way Excel got attached to the article in question. I personally do
not like the sort of sales approach Excel uses but like yourself I
see no reason to besmirch their character even further when there
is little or no truth to something which appears in the papers. So
thanks very much for your response, Van.     PAT]

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

Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 12:41:17 +0000 
From: tim jenkins <tjj@nortel.ca>
Subject: Re: Northern Telecom "Services" Menu 
Organization: Bell-Northern Research 


In article <telecom16.260.2@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Proctor & Associates
<0003991080@mcimail.com> wrote:

> I've been playing around with a slick little Northern Telecom
> PowerTouch 350 phone.  It has all kinds of neat features, such as the
> ability to move Caller ID info into your dialing database.

> One feature I don't quite fathom is connected with something called
> "Services."  Under Services, the manual says:

>   "The large display on your telephone offers you the
>   advantages of full screen services, much like an
>   automatic banking machine.  You can subscribe to
>   enhanced telephone company features and services
>   such as home banking, catalog shopping, movie
>   libraries, and restaurant guides.  You can also
>   subscribe to telephone network services such as
>   network voice mail."

> The manual then gives instructions for getting the phone to download a
> list of subscriber services from the telco.

> There is no information on how the data is transferred, protocols, or
> anything.

> Has anyone heard of this?  Is "Services" a feature only available on
> lines served by Northern Telecom DMS central offices?  What signal
> does the telephone send out when you punch the Services button?

This is ADSI, which stands for Analog Display Services Interface. It's
an open standard currently defined by Bellcore specs, if my memory
serves me correctly. Nortel was heavily involved in the definition of
the specifications.

Basically, it operates this way:

Somewhere on the network (and it could be the CO) there exists an ADSI
server. This server sends information to your phone either as voice,
but preferably as data in the form of modem signalling. Your phone can
tell which is being sent, so the modem data goes to your screen and
the voice to your handset/speaker/etc.  The display can include menus,
so selection of menus (for example) can be done by softkeys. The
softkey pressed is sent back to the server by your phone using DTMF.

Bank of Boston did a trial using ADSI some time ago. I don't know if
they're still using it. There were numerous other trials as well.
Other applications include advanced services from the CO such as
directed call waiting, etc. etc.

And no, it doesn't need to have anything to do with Nortel COs.


Tim Jenkins   tjj@nortel.ca 

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

From: Guy St-Pierre <lmcgust@LMC.Ericsson.SE>
Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 07:33:30 -0400
Subject: Re:Digital Cellular in North America Question


About digital phones in North America, jfmezei@istar.ca wrote:

> In North America, it *seems* that the push for digital cellular phones
> is not very strong. (At least Cantel no longer pushes digital phones).

> Are digital telephone more popular in GSM countries compared to those
> few who resisted GMS to go with the USA standard ?

It is true that the GSM has slightly better voice quality than the
D-AMPS digital in North America. But improvements in D-AMPS digital
are coming up soon. The performance of digital has a lot do with cell
planning and network performance. BTW, GSM is digital only (control
and voice channels).

> Are applications such as SMS available for North American cellullar 
> systems? Or do they lag behind? (I assume that the USA dig system does 
> have the same functionality as SMS?)

The North American market will start promotion of SMS (short message
services) in a very near future. Same goes for Canada. Note that you
will need a DCC phone (digital control channel, IS-136 standard) to
use this feature.


Regards,

Guy St-Pierre
Montreal

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

Date: Mon, 3 Jun 1996 22:58:53 EDT
From: Bob Baxter <bobbles@panix.com>
Subject: Photos From Telephone Pioneer Museum


In April, 1996 I visited the Telephone Pioneer Museum, located in
Commack, Long Island, New York.  A one hour guided tour was given.  In
the course of the tour, I took a dozen pictures of the equipment and
exhibits.  The pictures have been put up for viewing.  The URL is:

http://www.panix.com/~bobbles/telpio.htm

If visitors can ID the pieces of equipment shown, I will update the
picture descriptions.


Regards,

Bob Baxter   (bobbles@panix.com)

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
public service systems and networks including Compuserve and America
On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. 

Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:

                 * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu *

The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
Townson of Skokie, Illinois USA. You can reach us by postal mail, fax 
or phone at:
                      Post Office Box 4621
                     Skokie, IL USA   60076
                       Phone: 500-677-1616
                        Fax: 847-329-0572
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*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from the              *
* International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in Geneva, Switzerland    * 
* under the aegis of its Telecom Information Exchange Services (TIES)   * 
* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
* ing views of the ITU.                                                 *
*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
yourself who provide funding in amounts deemed appropriate. Your help
is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of twenty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #264
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Tue Jun  4 14:42:16 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id OAA02322; Tue, 4 Jun 1996 14:42:16 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 14:42:16 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606041842.OAA02322@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #265

TELECOM Digest     Tue, 4 Jun 96 14:42:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 265

Inside This Issue:                          Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Supreme Court Backs Long Distance Companies (TELECOM Digest Editor)
    Third Wireless Carrier in a Market (Greg Monti)
    Pac Bell *69 (Return Call) (Zev Rubenstein)
    Name-Only Caller-ID (was Re: Cellular Caller ID (Mike Fox)
    Re: European CATV/Telecom Info -- Sources Needed (Robert Bononno)
    Re: European CATV/Telecom Info -- Sources Needed (Stefano Cazzani)
    Re: European CATV/Telecom Info -- Sources Needed (David Larsen)
    Re: Cellular Caller ID (Jeff Carroll)
    Re: Cellular Caller ID (Ronell Elkayam)
    Re: Caller-ID Delay in California (JSeder@syntel.com)
    Re: Caller-ID Delay in California (mwcoen@hooked.net)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 13:51:50 EDT
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Subject: Supreme Court Backs Long Distance Companies


On Monday the Supreme Court let stand an order requiring local telcos
to repay millions of dollars in what the court termed 'excessive
earnings' to long distance carriers that buy access to local lines.

Without comment, the court turned down the local telcos' argument that
they were wrongly ordered to pay damages because there was no finding
that any specific rates were unreasonable.

The telcos' appeal said a Federal Communications Commission order
would require 49 local phone companies to pay more than $83 million
plus interest to long-distance carriers. 

Chicago-based Ameritech said it could not be detirmined at this time
how much each specific company would owe in the process, however the
impact on Ameritech itself would be 'minimal'.

The long distance companies -- including AT&T, MCI and Sprint --
sought damages on a claim that the local companies exceeded their
maximum rate of return on investment set by the FCC. 

The challenge involved rates charged for long-distance access to local
lines between 1985 and 1990.

In 1990, the FCC adopted a new ratemaking method for the largest local
companies which serve 90 percent of all phone subscribers in the USA.
The government now sets maximum rates for those companies, but it
allows smaller companies to set their own rates as long as they stay
under a maximum rate of return.

The FCC ruled for the long-distance companies. The US Court of Appeals
for the District of Columbia agreed, ordering the local telcos to
refund the excess earnings. 

In the appeal resolved by the Supreme Court on Monday, the local
telcos argued that they should not be forced to pay damages without a
specific finding that their rates were too high and that the long
distance carriers suffered injury as a result. 

The appeal also contended that the local companies should not be
penalized retroactively because they could not predict whether their
rates would lead to earnings above the maximum rate of return.

Justice Department lawyers and attornies for the long-distance
companies said in response that the FCC reasonably could decide that
rates yielding excessive earnings are unlawful.


PAT

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

Date: Mon, 3 Jun 1996 22:37:31 -0400
From: cc004056@interramp.com (Greg Monti)
Subject: Third Wireless Carrier in a Market


Patrick Townson wrote:

> [Regarding number of cellular carriers in a market]: Thus the A/B
> arrangement, with no real provision
> for a 'C' or 'D' carrier, or whatever they might be called. Does anyone
> know of any plans to open the market to a third or fourth (a 'C' or 'D'
> or whatever you would call them) carrier?  I do not mean just as a
> reseller of A/B as happens now, I mean genuine infrastructure for
> a third or fourth cellular company in some markets?    PAT

Yes, there are now other wireless carriers popping up, although they
don't go under the name "cellular" and don't use the same frequency
band nor the same analog protocols.  In Washington-Baltimore, a
Personal Communications Service carrier called Sprint Spectrum has
been in commercial service since December, 1995.  They don't (yet)
provide the same level of service breadth and roaming as the A and B
cellular carriers do, but they are a viable wireless service with
their own switches and their own antennas and base stations.  In
effect, they are the 'C' carrier in Washington-Baltimore.

Sprint Spectrum is substantially owned by American Personal
Communications, which is substantially held by the Washington Post
Company.  They are one of the PCS carriers who performed market and
technical research on the viability of PCS.  They (and two other
companies) were given 'pioneer's preference' PCS licenses before the
PCS spectrum auctions heated up.


Greg Monti   Jersey City, New Jersey, USA   gmonti@interramp.com

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

Date: Tue, 04 Jun 1996 14:33:49 -0500
From: zev@wireless.attmail.com (zev)
Subject: Pac Bell *69 (Return Call)


I recently discovered that Pac Bell charges for CLASS services that do
not complete calls. For example (my case), they charge for *69 (return
call) even if the service can't complete the call due to the returned
number being cellular or out of area. Just the use of the service was
enough to be charged. It's not just for no call completion due to
Busy/Ring no Answer, but even if you get a recording saying that the
service won't work to the number attempted (which happens on cell/out
of area) there is a charge.

I find this state of affairs hard to swallow. The rep and supervisor
at P*B both said that if you "activate" the service, you are charged.
The fact that you get a recording indicates that "the service works".
I countered that by that logic, if I make any call and I get a busy
signal I should be charged, since the fact that I get a busy signal
means "the service works". In addition, the service guide in the white
pages gives no indication that the user will be charged just for
activating the feature, even if no calls are completed due to the lack
of support for certain calls. When I lived in NY, call return usage
was charged ONLY if a call completed.

Finally, I did not use call return at all this past month, so I
presume the charges were just delayed-billing for attempts in prior
months. The bill has no call detail (no date, time or calling number),
just a line with the total number of attempts. I didn't even press the
issue, since I knew what the answer would be. When asked for call
detail, the rep said that they can't provide call detail if the call
was local - since it's on the same switch - and for calls where it
could not complete (cell/out of area) the switch has no number. Again,
I didn't press the issue: if the FBI wanted the local number, I'm sure
P*B has a way to get it.

The P*B supervisor took off the charges after our debate. She also
offered to block call return on that line, which I accepted.

Does anyone know what other LECs do regarding these services? Are
there others that charge for attempts that are not possible? I plan to
write to the California PUC about this - anyone have a useful name to
write to?


Zev Rubenstein   zev@attmail.com
Independent Telecommunications Consultant

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

From: Mike Fox <mjfox@raleigh.ibm.com>
Date: 4 Jun 96 16:29:40 GMT 
Subject: Name-Only Caller ID (was Re: Cellular Caller ID


> Sorry if this has been suggested already, but how about "Name only
> Caller-ID?"  Afterall, don't you want to know *who* is calling more
> than you want to know *what phone number* they are calling from?

I haven't seen it discussed in TELECOM Digest, but it has come up
on alt.dcom.telecom.  I think this concept is an interesting litmus
test for people's REAL views on caller-id.

After all, name-only caller-id should satisfy all the people who say
that caller-id is their god-given right to know who is calling them
before they pick up, and it should also satisfy all the people who say
that it is their god-given right to keep their actual phone numbers a
secret.  IMO, this is the solution that could solve the caller-id
dilemma.  Except it doesn't ...

Because many of the caller-id advocates are using "I want to know
who's calling me" as a smoke screen when they really want to collect
phone numbers.  These are the ones who say that name-only caller-id is
completely unacceptable, only the number will do or the name-and-number 
will do (when I pressed them on alt.dcom.telecom on why they
absolutely HAD to get a number, they always disappeared from the
debate rather than answer).

Many of the caller-id haters are using the "I want to keep my phone number 
away from databases, etc" as a smoke screen when they really want to be 
able to call anonymously to solicit or annoy or whatever.  These people 
would HATE it if "ANNOYING MKTG CORP" or "MCI LD MKTG" could 
appear on your box when the phone rings at dinnertime.  These are 
the ones who completely reject any kind of caller-id, including name-only.

Some interesting arguments against name-only caller-id came up, but 
they all looked like excuses not to accept it to me.  

The most common excuse was that the technology and programming is not
available for it. To that I say BS.  I remember when caller id was
first coming out a few years ago, the phone companies claimed that the
technology and programming was not available for per-call or per-line
blocking.  But once these capabilities became requirements for the
phone companies to be able to offer and make money from this service,
they magically appeared.  I contend the same is true for name-only.
Hell, name-only is even easier to do.  Just implement name-and-number
caller-id, and if the caller has name-only, have the originating
switch send blanks or dashes or zeroes in place of the number.

The next most common excuse was "what happens if roomates share a
phone line or if someone uses a line that belongs to someone else."
Basically, the name doesn't definitively identify the caller.  But
that is no different from the situation with today's number-only or
name-and-number caller id, and could be rectified by allowing the
subscriber to customize the string that gets sent (could say
SMITH/JONES, or JOE OR MARK for example).  Or, I bet if this service
were offered, phone companies would offer a version that's like
"reverse ringmaster": have several strings saved at the phone company
database, press a *xx combination to decide which one gets sent.
There's just as much room for creativity here as there is for
creativity in finding excuses to not accept the name-only idea.

Until I heard of name-only caller id, I thought that caller id was a
bad thing.  I have per-line blocking at home (and have never had
anyone use "block the blocker" on me either, so there :).  But if
name-only were available, I would enthusiastically embrace it, and I
think many others who want to exploit this cool technology but don't
want to give out their numbers would too.  I bet if name-only were
available, a LOT of people who currently block caller id or plan to
would opt for name-only.  I know I would.

I just wish this had been thought of earlier.  Or maybe it has been
and never caught on because those selling caller-id know that its real
economic value is in the business of number collecting.


Later,

Mike

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

From: bononno@acf2.nyu.edu (Robert Bononno)
Subject: Re: European CATV/Telecom Info -- Sources Needed
Date: Mon, 3 Jun 1996 23:50:09 -0400
Organization: New York University


In article <telecom16.257.5@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, K. Walter
<gausa@access.digex.net> wrote:

> I am looking for general materials on several European CATV/telecom
> projects -- any suggestions on sources would be appreciated.

> 1.  BT = (OTIAN) Optical Telecom in the Access Network.

> 2.  Deutsche Telekom = (OPAL) Optical Access Line.

> 3.  France Telecom = (DORA) Deploiement de l'Optique dans le Reseau 
>     d'Access

France Telecom has an office for North America in New York City.
They're at 1270 Avenue of the Americas. They should have some
information about fiber-optic deployment.
    

Robert Bononno  ++++ bononno@acf2.nyu.edu ++++ Techline

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

Date: 04 Jun 96 12:56:27 EDT
From: Stefano Cazzani <100010.3371@CompuServe.COM>
Subject: Re: European CATV/Telecom Info -- Sources Needed


> I am looking for general materials on several European CATV/telecom
> projects -- any suggestions on sources would be appreciated.

You can very often find information about the many European CATV
projects on Communications International, a monthly magazine published
by Emap Computing and widely circulated free of charge to qualified
professionals everywhere except in the USA.


Stefano Cazzani
Communications International's Italy correspondent

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

Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 14:38:35 -0400
From: larsendg@mcgraw-hill.com (David Larsen)
Subject: Re: European CATV/Telecom Info -- Sources Needed


Comprehensive coverage of European CATV/telecom market and technology
issues can be found in Convergence Strategies & Technologies, a
service from Datapro Information Services Group based in Delran, NJ.
Datapro can be contacted on 1 800 328 2776 toll free or 609 764 0100.
A useful contact there is Tim McElgunn.

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

From: Jeff Carroll <xfrosch@indy.net>
Subject: Re: Cellular Caller ID
Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 13:31:00 -0500
Organization: bigendian
Reply-To: xfrosch@indy.net


Chris Hudel wrote:

> Sorry if this has been suggested already, but how about "Name only
> Caller-ID?"  Afterall, don't you want to know *who* is calling more
> than you want to know *what phone number* they are calling from?

There's no way to authenticate that until we barcode your forehead and 
install a SIR port.


jkc

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

From: relkay01@fiu.edu (Ronell Elkayam)
Subject: Re: Cellular Caller ID
Date: 3 Jun 1996 19:37:44 GMT
Organization: Florida International University


On Thu, 30 May 1996 09:59:01 -0700, Mark Gabriele
(email: gabriele@rand.org) posted:

[Talking about when a physician has to call back a patient at home
while being forced to give his home number (due to Anonymous Call
Rejection.]

> Unfortunately,   I have  not  heard  of  any such  capability in any
> jurisdiction with which I am familiar.

You've heard wrong. ;)

There are plenty of ways anyone could protect their identity calling
FROM HOME while preserving privacy.  For one, get a second line.  Use
it for outgoing calls only, or use it for incoming calls only.  Cost
 -- $12-$20/mo (depending on whether you'll make outgoing calls).

Or alternatively, you could do something funky like order RingMaster
(AKA Distinctive Ringing) and Call Forwarding Main Number.  Cost --
$7/mo combined.

What good does that do?  Well, when you call anyone, the number
that'll show up on their CID display will be the main number.  When
they try to call back that number -- oops, they're being forwarded to
an answering service/the office number/whatever.  The only way to make
your phone ring is to call the unlisted RingMaster number.

Or you could use a calling card to place that call ... Or push 0 and
talk to the operator ... Or set-up a three-way hop-off device to
complete the call from the office line ...

Certainly you don't expect the solution to be free. Or else, what's
the point in having Anonymous Call Rejection when it can be bypassed
at any time.  A telemarketer wouldn't want to spend much money to
reach you, a crank caller wouldn't either.  In an emergency situation,
you're still always available.


Ron   Miami, FL

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

From: JSeder@syntel.com
Subject: Re: Caller-ID Delay in California
Date: 03 Jun 1996 23:58:29 GMT
Organization: BRAINSTORM Networks
Reply-To: JSeder@syntel.com


In <telecom16.255.3@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Dr. Robert Jacobson
<bob@worldesign.com> writes:

> I worked to help pass California's Caller ID law, which instructs the
> PUC on the implementation of Caller ID.  

Shame on you.

> First, the service was devised to collect information on callers to
> businesses...  The idea was that
> a business could cue its internal records on incoming phone call num-
> bers, to serve you, the caller, faster and better -- but also, by
> using the phone number as a surrogate ID number, companies could trade
> data about their customers and build big dossiers.  Better than with
> your Social Security number, as the HMOs do.

Well, so what?  They do this anyway.  Do you hesitate to use an 800
number because the company you're calling will add some information
(like what you are ordering, your address, your credit card number) to
your dossier?  No one has ever tried to eliminate per-call blocking,
which isn't even an option on 800 calls, and which could be used for
this purpose if you are really worried about these "dossiers".
Frankly, I find these dossiers make my life more convenient -- I don't
have to keep spelling my name or providing my address.

> That's why whenever line blocking was proposed or made law in some
> states, the telcos moaned, "but that will take the economic value out
> of the service."

Since everyone I have talked to plans to opt for per-line blocking (as
the PUC has demanded that Pac Bell practically require), I don't
expect to get much for the $6.50/month I will pay for Caller ID.

> Second, as the many posts here continue to testify, there are a
> hundred ways around Caller ID, from using new phone numbers or public
> telephone booths to simply fooling the underlying SS7 switching
> service.

Right.  But Caller ID could effectively put an end to harrassing
telephone calls and other abuses.

I firmly believe that the right to know who is ringing a bell in your
house is more important than the "right" to ring that bell
anonymously.  That is, I believe recipients of telephone calls have
rights which dominate any historical "right" to make anonymous
telephone calls.

> The woman who championed the Caller ID law... was
> worried, as a single mother, that a molester or other heinous
> character might record _her_ phone number during a call and track it
> back to her house, to savage her or her child.  It was a reasonable
> fear.

Well, if she's afraid that the number she's calling belongs to a
"molester or other heinous character", she can use per-line blocking
or go to a pay phone.  Everyone agrees that halfway-houses,
physicians, and other special cases should get per-line blocking.
This not a good argument that Caller ID is bad.

You possibly live in Massachusetts, which took a more practical
approach to Caller ID.  Tell me, have there been complaints about how
Caller ID cost people their anonymity?  Did it make Big Brother a
reality in the Bay State?

What Caller ID does is make a caller think twice before making
harrassing, unkind, childish, or prank calls.  It lets someone decide
whether to respond to an insistent bell in their home.  It corrects a
historical accident that twisted the rights and responsibilities of
telephone users.  It is important and it should not be delayed or
weakened.


JDS

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

From: mwcoen@hooked.net
Subject: Re: Caller-ID Delay in California
Date: Tue, 04 Jun 1996 04:03:48 GMT
Organization: Hooked Online Services


Dr. Robert Jacobson <bob@worldesign.com> wrote:

>> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I find it just incredible that you seem
>> to have so many people in California on this kick. What is with all
>> these people who seem to feel they have this right to hide themselves
>> when they make calls no matter whose time they waste or whatever 
>> foolish calls they originate?  I'll be glad to see 'blocked number 
>> blocking' (where recipients have the right to block calls from persons 
>> who hide their phone numbers) become universal. I am going to encourage 
>> everyone to sign up for it.   PAT]

> My friend Pat sees the world from an entirely too egocentric position.

> I worked to help pass California's Caller ID law, which instructs the
> PUC on the implementation of Caller ID.  There are good reasons for
> being cynical about Caller ID, whatever its limited merits as a way of
> screening one's home calls.

> First, the service was devised to collect information on callers to
> businesses.  This was stated explicitly several times by telephone
> company advocates when the service was introduced.  The idea was that
> a business could cue its internal records on incoming phone call num-
> bers, to serve you, the caller, faster and better -- but also, by
> using the phone number as a surrogate ID number, companies could trade
> data about their customers and build big dossiers.  Better than with
> your Social Security number, as the HMOs do.

> That's why whenever line blocking was proposed or made law in some
> states, the telcos moaned, "but that will take the economic value out
> of the service."

> Second, as the many posts here continue to testify, there are a
> hundred ways around Caller ID, from using new phone numbers or public
> telephone booths to simply fooling the underlying SS7 switching
> service.

Thank you Bob.  Californians are known for our leading edge reputation
when it comes to legislation and ballot issues.

I wrote to the CA PUC years ago asking for caller ID (CID) in the very
form it now appears.  That is, line blocking with per call enabling.
I wrote that I believe the telco's are solely in this to deliver the
residential customer to the business customer.

We have not heard a word about costs yet.  About $5-8/month for the
*service*.  At that price, most residents can't afford it or won't be
willing to spend that much each month to see who is calling them.
However, businesses can afford that.

I would like the option to block all blocked calls.

In a subsequent letter to the CA PUC I asked that CID be offered as
part of basic phone service.  Someday it will.


Mike     mwcoen@hooked.net

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
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     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
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All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
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should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #265
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Tue Jun  4 15:27:06 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id PAA07265; Tue, 4 Jun 1996 15:27:06 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 15:27:06 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606041927.PAA07265@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #266

TELECOM Digest     Tue, 4 Jun 96 15:27:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 266

Inside This Issue:                          Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Re: MCI Cellular (Lynne Gregg)
    Re: What Does A/B Carrier Mean? (Lynne Gregg)
    Re: What Does A/B Carrier Mean? (Robert McMillin)
    Re: Cellular Caller ID (Mike Fox)
    Re: Cellular Caller ID (Lynne Gregg)
    Re: Cellular Caller ID (Jay R. Ashworth)
    Re: Digital Cellular in North America Question (Lynne Gregg)
    Ninety Day Right of Recission on Term Contracts? (Mark S. Halperin)
    Telecom Positions Open (Harris Kern)
    Now Who Needs Whom? (was Re: Fight Turns Nasty (William J. Halverson)
    Re: Graybar Electric (Dave Levenson)
    Re: Graybar Electric (John Agosta)
    Re: Hurting Public Utilities Hurts Public Service (Henry Baker)
    Re: Hurting Public Utilities Hurts Public Service (Ira Sutton)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Lynne Gregg <lynne.gregg@attws.com>
Subject: Re: MCI Cellular
Date: Tue, 04 Jun 96 11:11:00 PDT


> From my understanding of the cellular protocols, it's not technically
> feasible, Pat.  The A and B carriers (competitive and wireline) are
> using two actually different sets of frequencies for their calls.

This is not correct.  A and B cellular carriers in the U.S. all
operate at 850 mhz radio frequency.  The new PCS entrants will operate
at 1900 and others.

Mike Fox <mjfox@raleigh.ibm.com> wrote:

> I don't think they are really bringing in two new *cellular* carriers.
> I think they are setting up two *PCS* services.  The fact that he
> called it "Sprint" instead of "360 Degree Communications" confirms
> that IMO, as Sprint spun off their cellular business into 360 Degree
> so they can concentrate on PCS.

Technically speaking, there is *no* difference between PCS and
cellular systems in the U.S. aside from those systems operating on
different radio frequencies.


Regards,

Lynne

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

From: Lynne Gregg <lynne.gregg@attws.com>
Subject: Re: What Does A/B Carrier Mean?
Date: Tue, 04 Jun 96 10:44:00 PDT


In response to the original post from Alexander Cerna
<cerna@ntep.tmg.nec.co.jp>, TELECOM Digest Editor noted:

> According to Lynn Gregg, some of the newcomers with their own
> infrastructure won't be A or B ...  they will be on their own radio
> frequencies with a totally different thing altogether.  PAT]

Just to clarify, the new entrants offering wireless services are now
referred to as "PCS a,b, and c" carriers (with probably more to
follow, i.e., d, e...).

They will operate on different radio frequencies than the embedded
cellular carriers.  All are using existing cellular technologies
(TDMA, CDMA, or GSM) tuned to 1900 mhz frequencies.


Regards,

Lynne

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

Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 07:50:32 -0700
From: rlm@netcom.com (Robert McMillin)
Subject: Re: What Does A/B Carrier Mean?


On 02 Jun 1996 17:34:33 PDT, PAT said:

> I am reminded of the divestiture of Standard Oil a hundred years ago.
> Each of the 'Standard Oil Companies' created as a result of divestiture
> had to go into competition with each other; but even today they still
> respect each other's territories. The old Standard Oil of Indiana 
> still does business as Standard Oil here in the midwest, but when they
> do business on the east or west coast they are known as Amoco. Standard
> Oil of New Jersey comes over to this part of the country and does
> business as Exxon. Standard Oil of California goes over to the east
> coast and I forget what name they use there, but it is not Standard
> Oil. 

It's no longer Standard Oil of California, but Chevron, after their
familiar (to Californians, at least) gas station logo.

Robert L. McMillin  | rlm@helen.surfcty.com | Netcom: rlm@netcom.com


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I've noticed around here they are also
getting away from what for years had been the 'Standard Oil Division
of Amoco Oil' and are going with Amoco everywhere. But many years ago
when the west coast bunch was known as Chevron around here (although
we never did have many of them) it was d/b/a/ Standard Oil there in
California. The trouble was, none of the 'Standard Oil' companies were
allowed to use that name once they got outside their own immediate
territory, thus the use of Chevron, Amoco, Exxon, Sohio, Boron, etc.  PAT]

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

From: Mike Fox <mjfox@raleigh.ibm.com>
Date: 3 Jun 96 11:13:19 GMT 
Subject: Re: Cellular Caller ID


In <telecom16.256.6@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Lynne Gregg
<lynne.gregg@attws.com> writes:

> The FCC Order on Calling Number Services is very clear on this:

> If the caller blocks his number, NAME cannot be presented -- even
> alone (with no accompanying number).  The Order also states that
> auto-callback *69 cannot be used either, if the caller blocks his
> number.

Hmmm, that's interesting.  Here in Bell South territory, I have had
calls I've made returned with *69, and I have blocking.  It was to my
brother's phone.  He said that normally when he does *69, a recording
gives him the number and then calls it.  In the case of my number, the
recording states that it cannot give him the number, then calls it.
So he calls me and doesn't know who he's calling until I answer.

That's too bad about the FCC order prohibiting name-only caller id.
I wonder why they did that. 


Later,

Mike

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

From: Lynne Gregg <lynne.gregg@attws.com>
Subject: Re: Cellular Caller ID
Date: Tue, 04 Jun 96 11:05:00 PDT


C10973@email.mot.com (Eric A. Carr) wrote:

> In Chicago, calls originated by a cellular subscriber on the "A" band
> (Cellular One) show up as "ANONYMOUS" on an ANI display box.
> Calls marked as such cause a LED to flash in cadence
> with the ring cycle on my ANI box, so if I see this while the
> phone is ringing I will not answer the call.

There's an easy fix for your situation.  Tell your cellular caller(s)
to either ask the carrier to remove Per Line Blocking from their
account or they may use *82 on a per call basis (prepended to the
dialed number) when calling you or others who will need to see the
number.  According to the FCC, all carriers including cellular
operators must support *67 and *82 for per call blocking options.

Though it may seem a nit to some, Caller ID (calling party number) and
ANI *are* not one in the same.  The ANI reference here is technically
incorrect.

> Calls originated by someone on the "B" band (Ameritech) show up as
> "UNAVAILABLE", which I'm more likely to answer*.

This indicates that the carriers outbound trunks are still old MF and
not yet upgraded to ISUP.  As conversion occurs, this will change and
you will either see the cellular callers number or "ANONYMOUS" if they
block their number.

> Why not implement ANI service that just shows the name?

Because the FCC is very specific: if the caller blocks his number,
NAME may not be shown either.


Regards,

Lynne

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

From: jra@scfn.thpl.lib.fl.us (Jay R. Ashworth)
Subject: Re: Cellular Caller ID
Date: 4 Jun 1996 14:20:28 GMT
Organization: University of South Florida


Chris Hudel (hudel@hppad.waterloo.hp.com) wrote:

> Sorry if this has been suggested already, but how about "Name only
> Caller-ID?"  Afterall, don't you want to know *who* is calling more
> than you want to know *what phone number* they are calling from?

Someone will get their button pushed on this one ... might as well be
me.

When are people going to learn that "Calling Name ID" is crap?

For example, I've had roommates in the past, who've taken advantage of
the fact that I maintain a spare DN on my voice line, courtesy of GTE's
SmartRing distinctive ringing service.  Even had it listed separately
for one long time roomie.

So, if he calls someone, _my_ name should show up?

The _real_ problem is when people come to depend on technology, the
operation of which they're being lied to about.


Cheers,

Jay R. Ashworth      jra@scfn.thpl.lib.fl.us
Member of the Technical Staff 
The Suncoast Freenet  
Tampa Bay, Florida   +1 813 790 7592

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

From: Lynne Gregg <lynne.gregg@attws.com>
Subject: Re: Digital Cellular in North America Question
Date: Tue, 04 Jun 96 10:56:00 PDT


jfmezei@istar.ca wrote:

> In North America, it *seems* that the push for digital cellular phones
> is not very strong. (At least Cantel no longer pushes digital phones).

The reason that digital phones are "pushed" in Europe and other
countries is that those systems were developed from the outset to be
GSM.  This differs from the cellular scene in the U.S., where mature
cellular networks are analog networks.  Most major cellular carriers
(including Cantel in Canada) have built digital into the infrastruc-
ture and are encouraging customers to choose digital phones.  Though
digital phones in the U.S.  are generally more expensive than analog,
the price differential is decreasing.  Digital phones offer a raft of
new features that can't be found on analog (Caller ID, Message Waiting
Indicator, Short Messaging).

> Are applications such as SMS available for North American cellular
> systems? Or do they lag behind? (I assume that the USA dig system does
> have the same functionality as SMS?)

Yes.  SMS services are beginning to be offered by several cellular
operators including AT&T Wireless.

> Is there any chance that GSM would eventually be supported in North
> America by some operators (operating both GSM and the USA system).

GSM systems are going into commercial operation in the U.S. by a
number of PCS operators (as are other digital technologies).

Although AT&T Wireless' U.S. network is not GSM, we do offer a
seamless roaming service that allows our customers to roam on GSM
networks in 37 countries.  The service is called CellCard.


Regards,

Lynne

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

Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 14:13:45 -0400
From: msh@world.std.com (Mark S. Halperin)
Subject: Ninety Day Right of Recission on Term Contracts?


Industry lore (and it may only be just that) in the sales end of long
distance states that a long distance customer can rescind a new term
contract within the first 90 days.  I have seen such a provision in
many major carrier contracts and have always assumed that it was there
because it was required by federal or state regulation.  I have
approached a number of people in the industry who say that the right
is unequivocal but no one can cite any authority to that effect.  Does
anyone know the background on this lore?


Mark Halperin    TELECOM PARTNERS
92 Church Street, Winchester, MA 01890
Tel: 1-617-721-9720 Fax: 1-617-721-6749
"Fulfilling your communications needs with exemplary customer service"

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

Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 14:31:03 -0400
From: Harris Kern <hkern@winstar.com>
Subject: Telecom Positions Open


WinStar Communications, Inc. leads the industry in the provision of
wireless local telecommunications access services to users throughout
the United States.  With its array of local access services,
competitive local exchange service, and comprehensive long distance
services, WinStar is poised to put reliable, cost-effective
communications within reach.  WinStar occupies a unique position in
the telecommunications industry.  As Congress continues to knock down
barriers between local and long distance telecommunications markets,
WinStar is already aggressively staking a claim in both arenas.

We have coupled our exclusive 38 GHz licenses with the latest
technological advances in millimeter wave radio technology to provide
high speed, high bandwidth local digital telecommunications services.
With license authority in 41 of the 45 largest metropolitan areas in
the United States, WinStar covers more than 100 cities with
populations greater than 100,000 people.

We currently have opening for Switch Operations Managers in the
following cities:

New York          Los Angeles
San Diego         Chicago
Boston            San Francisco

The Switch Operations Manager will manage the installation and
operation of the WinStar telephone switch(s) in each city.

They will oversee the performance of the Service Coordinators.
(Service Coordinators provide technical support to sales during order
taking, coordinate new service installation, and provide first line
trouble resolution for in service customers.)

Provide escalation point for technical issues concerning service, both pre
and post installation.

Notes: Ideal candidate should have first or second level experience as
a switch foreperson for AT&T, NYNEX, etc., preferably in turning up a
#5 ESS.  Candidate should also have technical expertise in provisioning 
beyond the switch; i.e., access, CPE, all major brands of PBX and Key
Equipment, digital and analog transmission and interface equipment.

Please send resume to:

Harris B. Kern
Director, Switch Operations
WinStar Telecommunications, Inc.
7799 Leesburg Pike
Falls Church, VA. 22043

or e-mail direct to hkern@winstar.com

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

From: William J. Halverson <wjhalv1@PacBell.COM>
Subject: Now Who Needs Whom? (was Re: Fight Turns Nasty)
Date: Tue, 04 Jun 1996 11:34:21 -0700
Organization: Pacific Bell's Healthcare Market Group


It's interesting to contemplate the effects of the following two
scenarios on people living in Ameritech's service territory:

Scenario 1:  All of Ameritech's employees go home tonight and turn off
power to their switches.

Scenario 2:  All of AT&T's employees go home tonight and turn off power 
to their switches.

Results?

Pretty obvious to me.  In Scenario 1, 95% of the phone users will not
have service until somebody turns the power back on.  In Scenario 2,
5% of the phone users [only those businesses with direct facility
links to AT&T] are off line until the power comes back on.

Moral of the story:  The phone users in Ameritech territory need 
Ameritech much more than they need AT&T ...

AT&T and Ameritech both know this.  

So I wonder what the _real_ reason behind this fight are ...


Bill Halverson                                  Pacific Bell   
PH 415 542 6564  wjhalv1@pacbell.com        FAX 415 542 4744 
PGP Key at  http://www-swiss.ai.mit.edu/~bal/pks-toplev.html

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

From: dave@westmark.com (Dave Levenson)
Subject: Re: Graybar Electric
Organization: Westmark, Inc.
Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 03:06:02 GMT


Stan Schwartz (usfunx2b@ibmmail.com) writes:

> In Mark J. Cuccia's very informative article in TD #234 "WUTCO, WECO,
> Graybar", there was some doubt as to the current existence of Graybar.

>> I don't know how many offices they still have in the states, but a

Here in New Jersey, you'll find local Graybar sales offices in
Hackensack (a block North of US Route 46) and in North Brunswick on
Livingston Avenue, a (few blocks north of US Route 1).  We regularly
call Graybar when we buy telephone cable, non-dial telephone sets, and
a few other somewhat hard-to-locate telecom supplies.

Why would we want non-dial telephone sets?  (Everybody wants to
know ... they're often more expensive than sets which include dials, as
the Graybar rep keeps telling me.)  We offer them as extension phones
on our COCOT lines.  The phones with dials built-in are often
incapable of having the dial removed, either physically or
electrically.


Dave Levenson		Internet: dave@westmark.com
Westmark, Inc.		UUCP: uunet!westmark!dave
Stirling, NJ, USA	Voice: 908 647 0900  Fax: 908 647 6857


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: There are many uses for telephone sets
without dials. For example, many are used as 'ring-down' or leased
line phones to specific businesses. If you go in a few places here in
Skokie such as the hospital lobby or the lobby of the Northshore Hilton
Hotel you will find phones like this: when the receiver is lifted they
connect immediatly with the American Taxi Company. About twenty years
ago when I was operating my telephone recorded information service, in
addition to being able to dial direct into it, a few business places
had a phone without a dial connected direct to my service. When someone
lifted the receiver, the phone connected immediatly to the bank of
answering machines on my end of the line.   PAT]

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

From: jagosta@interaccess.com (John Agosta)
Subject: Re: Graybar Electric
Date: 4 Jun 1996 16:30:54 GMT
Organization: Agosta and Associates


In article <telecom16.258.6@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Stan Schwartz
<usfunx2b@ibmmail.com> says:

> In Mark J. Cuccia's very informative article in TD #234 "WUTCO, WECO,
> Graybar", there was some doubt as to the current existence of Graybar.

There is a Graybar franchise in Bloomingdale, Illinois. I go there
often to buy widgets, do-dads, and thingamajigs ...

847 893 3600 is the phone number.


ja

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

From: hbaker@netcom.com (Henry Baker)
Subject: Re: Hurting Public Utilities Hurts Public Service
Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 16:26:18 GMT


In article <telecom16.256.8@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, xfrosch@indy.net wrote:

> It used to be the case that construction of telecommunications networks
> was such a huge cost that society could only afford to bear it once. 
> With the proliferation of cable TV, mobile phones, and (especially) 
> digital wireless systems, this is clearly no longer so.

I disagree with your premise that telecom networks cost so much that
society could only afford to bear it once.  I don't think that this
was _ever_ true, except in the minds of certain politicians.

In the early days of electrification, there were many competing companies.
In the early days of telephony, there were many competing companies.

Rather than encourage cooperation on standards, governments bought
into specious arguments that you didn't want to have two sets of
telephone poles, electric poles etc., and therefore a regulated
monopoly would be optimum.  The telcos and electric companies loved
this argument, since they no longer had to compete.

The reason this argument is specious is because it is based on the
premise of _no technical progress_.  And, of course, the argument is
self-fullfilling, because with a monopoly there won't be any technical
progress.

Suppose I have two competitors providing service to the same customers
in the same city, and suppose that they have to 'duplicate' the
infrastructure.  Even in the worst case, the total cost is only double
that of the lowest cost single provider.  But now consider the
monopoly, and factor in the featherbedding of the monopoly service
unions, the backdoor payments by the monopoly to the politicians
(legal here in L.A.), the bloated tax payments on 'phantom profits'
generated by unrealistic depreciation schedules, the continued use of
completely obsolete 50-100 year old technology, and your 'infrastructure
cost' balloons to at least 10X that of the lowest cost system.

Thus, two _highly efficient_ competitors utilizing the best available
technology may have a slight overlap in infrastructure, but this
additional 'cost' is what we pay for continued innovation and
competition to assure the lowest overall prices.  It is therefore a
screaming bargain.  In biology, this 'duplication' is called 'diversity'.

What of 'universal service'?  The problem with 'universal service' is
the endemic problem of bureaucracies that 'the minimum becomes the
maximum'.  Although laws and regulations are always written requiring
'minimum' standards, have you noticed that no one ever provides more
than this 'minimum'?  This is because all incentive to compete in this
particular dimension is removed once the minimum standards have been
set.

Technical progress requires that a percentage of the customers be
'early adopters' to pay for and test out new equipment and services.
But the moment someone tries to innovate, one hears idiotic statements
from politicians about the technology 'haves' and 'have nots'.  Since
it makes no sense to foist untested ideas on 100% of the public at the
same time (something that policitians love to do), there must always
be some differences between customers in the technology they can
afford.  Furthermore, since customers have different needs and
budgets, these differences allow customers to choose what makes the
most sense to them.  But politicians can't stand for their
constituents to think for themselves, and continually offer up
Procrustean beds for us to sleep in.

[snip]

> What government regulation really insures is that your technology will 
> lag the state of the art by years if not decades.

You betcha.

[snip]

> Prices ARE being kept artificially high and technology IS being
> restrained by government regulation. People have an amazing array of
> communications choices today, and, as long as antitrust legislation is
> properly enforced, the consumer has little if anything to fear from
> telecom deregulation save the mild stress of adapting to new
> technology.

And the 'stress' of adapting to vastly lower prices.  :-)


www/ftp directory:
ftp://ftp.netcom.com/pub/hb/hbaker/home.html

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

From: irasut@ro.com (Ira Sutton)
Subject: Re: Hurting Public Utilities Hurts Public Service
Date: Tue, 04 Jun 1996 15:46:22 GMT
Organization: RENAISSANCE INTERNET SERVICES


Jeff Carroll <xfrosch@indy.net> wrote:

> Lisa wrote:

>> Another benefit of regulation is lower rates.  Because a service
>> territory is guaranteed, the government dictates a low rate of return.
>> Nobody gets rich on utility stocks.  Further, the government dictates
>> service standards.

> This is a canard. Neither high standards of service nor low rates are
> guaranteed by utility regulation. The only conceivable explanation of
> why 2B+D ISDN is still $98/month in Indiana (as it was last time I 
> checked) is the intransigence of the public utility commission and a 
> cozy relationship with the telecom utilities.

> What government regulation really insures is that your technology will 
> lag the state of the art by years if not decades.

> Prices ARE being kept artificially high and technology IS being
> restrained by government regulation. People have an amazing array of
> communications choices today, and, as long as antitrust legislation is
> properly enforced, the consumer has little if anything to fear from
> telecom deregulation save the mild stress of adapting to new
> technology.

Another case in point on how government is in bed with the regulated
is here in Alabama.  Rates for ISDN Bell South service have been
"regulated" at $65 per month, In TN, Bell South is regulated at about
$18 for the same ISDN service.  How do the AL regulators justify the
difference?  In AL they run for office and are the lackies of the
utility companies.  Apparantly, we can't get someone elected that will
look out for the people.  But Lisa I know it is comfortable to think
that the government is fair and is looking out for you and I.  You
must be very young, have your head in the sand, or be one on the
inside trying to convince us that everything is all right.  


Regards,

Ira >jkc

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
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Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
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                 * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu *

The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
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* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
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*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
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is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of twenty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #266
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Tue Jun  4 16:51:17 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id QAA15886; Tue, 4 Jun 1996 16:51:17 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 16:51:17 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606042051.QAA15886@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #267

TELECOM Digest     Tue, 4 Jun 96 16:50:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 267

Inside This Issue:                          Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Followup on Sprint Fridays Free (Craig Richey)
    Help Needed With Diamond Tel Cellular Phone Problem (Ronny H. Angkasa)
    Re: Telco Voice Mail Signaling (Guy St-Pierre)
    Re: Fight Turns Nasty: Ameritech/AT&T Take Off Gloves (Steven Lichter)
    Newsgroup alt.lang.intensional (R. Jagannathan)
    Re: Will Sprint Comply on June 1? (Paul L. Schmidt)
    Re: How Long Ago Was This Made? (Jay R. Ashworth)
    Home Phone Switch Needed (Willie Peloquin)
    Nokia 232 Questions (Bill Breckinridge)
    Re: Arrogant Internet Provider (Reverend Tweek)
    AT&T 9300 - Spread Spectrum "Technology"? (Doug Zipser)
    Overstock of Product - Disposal (Guy Lessard)
    Re: AT&T Movie Placement (Larry Appleman)
    Re: Line Monitor/Protocol Analyzer (John Skenesky)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Tue, 4 Jun 96 14:14 EST
From: Craig Richey <0005221992@mcimail.com>
Subject: Followup on Sprint Fridays Free


Hello,

I'm just wondering how you finally settled your Fridays Free issue
with Sprint.  My wife and I have a small Import/Export business that
was on the program before the change.  My in-laws also work with us
and were on the program but they had to sign a contract first (I guess
the sales rep heard the Indian voice and knew what was coming).

When Sprint changed the rules I put in several calls to Mr Loyed's
office (someone forwarded your mail message to me) but got no
response.  I also called the Sprint Custumer Service and told them I
didn't intend to pay any charges until this was settled.

Since India is the bulk of our calling my in-laws dropped Sprint.
Sprint is now billing $200 for a contract break.  I haven't dropped
the service but have done all my calling on our other line (MCI).  I
am now being billed for the $50/mo service charge even though there is
no usage.  The whole thing is getting ridiculous.  What do you suggest?


Thanks in advance,

Craig Richey
(703) 415-6314
(703) 802-3020 fax
5221992@mcimail.com


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: It has been awhile since anything about
this was dicussed here, so perhaps others who were victimized by this
scam of Sprint have some comments to add. I have heard from a couple
other people that Sprint is continuing to bill the service charge each
month while ignoring any/all requests for explanations or an opportunity
to speak with Robin Loyed, etc. I personally would not waste any more
time speaking to their customer service representatives. Even if they
are paying for the call via their 800 number it would still be a waste
of your time which also has to be worth something. 

My suggestion at this point is take your last one or two bills from
Sprint, clearly indicate on the face of the bill 'Payment is Refused;
Refer to Robin Loyed for explanation.' Include a short note stating your
belief that Sprint deliberatly engaged in a fraudulent act by entering
into a contract with you which they knew at the time they had no
intention of upholding.  State that you require *in writing* an
explanation from Robin Loyed along with a telephone number where he
can be reached. Inform them that future billings will be regarded as
continuing the fraud and that they are to make no further contact with
you except as specified.  Send this to them by registered/certified
mail. Save the green card receipt you get in return. Wait for further
response from them. Does anyone else have anything to add?  PAT]

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

From: rhast4+@pitt.edu (Ronny H Angkasa)
Subject: Help Needed With Diamond Tel Cellular Phone Problem
Date: 4 Jun 1996 05:44:40 GMT
Organization: University of Pittsburgh


I have a Diamond Tel celullar phone, model DT 22X. I dropped it last
month, and it has not been working since then. I brought it to AT&T
Wireless near my place but they couldn't fix it after trying for a few
minutes. They told me that it would cost too much to fix it; even if I
tried to send it to Mitsubishi it would too much for labor etc. The
phone itself I think cost about $200. The warranty has expired.

If anyone have any suggestions how this phone can be put back to work,
please let me know; I will appreciate it very, very much.


Thanks,

Ronny Angkasa
email address : rhast4@pitt.edu
		http://www.pitt.edu/~rhast4/index.html

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

From: Guy St-Pierre <lmcgust@LMC.Ericsson.SE>
Date: Tue, 04 Jun 1996 06:26:46 -0400
Subject: Re: Telco Voice Mail Signaling


Paul Chehowski (paulc@sulis.com) wrote:

> Does anyone know how telco voice mail systems manage to signal a
> subscriber's phone when they have voice mail waiting? The signaling
> seems to be done without taking the phone off hook, and it seems to be
> done on a regular basis to the phone (if you disconnected the phone
> and plug it back in the light on the phone will come back eventually).

> Could someone point me to a reference on this type of signaling?

The type of signalling used by the Voice Mail manufacturer we are most
familiar with (OCTEL) is R1 signalling (MF).  They also support X.25,
and SS7 through ISUP trunks. A typical scenario would go like this for
an ERICSSON mobile switch-OCTEL combination, but can apply to most
CLASS-5 exchanges:

A message is deposited in the user's voice mail. The OCTEL machine
then calls back the switch with a procedure call using MF codes,
something like "7700 + subscriber number, meaning ALL MESSAGES
RETRIEVED" or "7701 + subscriber number, meaning NEW MESSAGE
DEPOSITED"... The switch analyses those digits through data
translations and updates the subscriber record accordingly. Next time
the mobile phone registers, the switch would then call the mobile, all
of this, of course, assuming the subscriber has the Message Waiting
Indicator feature active. The Switch will keep calling you every time
you power on your phone until you clear your messages.

The example above was with R1 (MF) signalling, but trunks using SS7
signalling as well as X.25 links can also be used. I guess you could
contact OCTEL Corp. for more details.


Regards,

Guy St-Pierre

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

From: slichte@cello.gina.calstate.edu (Steven Lichter)
Subject: Re: Fight Turns Nasty: Ameritech/AT&T Take Off Gloves
Date: 4 Jun 1996 04:15:12 -0700
Organization: GINA and CORE+ Services of The California State University


ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (TELECOM Digest Editor) writes:

> Forget about minor marketing skirmishes. Now Ameritech and AT&T are
> engaged in full battle -- and customers of both companies are left in
> the middle, especially those with a calling card issued by either
> company.

> o   Ameritech claims that as of Friday AT&T will bar its card holders
>     from making local calls within Ameritech's calling area.

Last week AT&T notified GTE that it was cancelling the agreement to
use the AT&T cards on GTE's network. It was stated that GTE's cards
would still work on AT&T's Network. This seems to be happening all
over the country, but does not effect Alaska or Hawaii. It seems like
AT&T does not really care about its customers in local areas and is
planning to offer local service and customers be damned and confused.


SysOp Apple Elite II and OggNet Hub (909)359-5338 2400/14.4 24 hours,
Home of GBBS/LLUCE Support for the Apple II and Macintoch computers.
slichte@cello.gina.calstate.edu

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

Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 17:53:29 GMT
From: R. Jagannathan <jagan@csl.sri.com>
Organization: Computer Science Laboratory, SRI International
Subject: Newsgroup alt.lang.intensional
Reply-To: R. Jagannathan <jagan@csl.sri.com>


alt.lang.intensional is a newly formed newsgroup for discussions on
intensional programming and related areas. If your news reader is
unable to find such a group, contact your news sysadmin to create one
per the control message (cmsg) sent all over the internet to do so.

For the uninitiated, intensional programming means programming in a
language or systembased on intensional (eg modal or temporal) logic
and indexical (possible worlds) semantics. These languages/systems are
usually implemented using eduction: tagged, demand-driven data flow -
the tags represent indices/possible worlds.

For further details on intensional programming, 
visit http://lucy.uvic.ca 

Here is the charter for alt.lang.intensional:

Newsgroup devoted to discussion of the following:

(1) Intensional languages such as Lucid, GLU, Chronolog, 
    and visualJava. 

(2) Theory including intensional logic, dataflow, 
    verification, non-determinism, extended Kahn principle,
    higher-order logic, termination.

(3) Software including version control, visual programming, 
    parallel programming, and Web programming.

(4) Applications in areas such as image processing, real time
    computing, signal processing, graphics and animation,
    databases and hardware design.

Look forward to your participation in this newsgroup.


Regards,

R Jagannathan, SRI, Menlo Park, California USA

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

Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 11:42:07 -0500
From: Paul L. Schmidt <paul@k9ps-1.ampr.org>
Subject: Re: Will Sprint Comply on June 1?


In article <telecom16.247.17@massis.lcs.mit.edu> Magee@cris.com wrote:

> I was wondering if Sprint will really comply this time to the FCC's
> requirement to pass caller ID data along with LD calls? 

Caller-ID started working sometime early last week (must have been May
27 or 28) on my Sprint residential 800 number.  Looks like they may
have made it.

And yes, there IS someone who reads this newsgroup who has Sprint and
hasn't had any problems; I am a low-volume long distance user (about
ten bucks a month for my LD bill, most of which has been the stupid
per-call card fees and high per-minute credit-card rates) for short
calls home generally around 8 PM. I just switched to Sprint Sense and
residential 800 service because -- in my case -- it works out to my
benefit: slightly less cost but a lot easier dialing and the
shoulder-surfing risk is virtually gone.

YMMV.


Paul Schmidt <PSchmidt@Viaduct.Custom.Net> Bloomfield, IN USA
Amateur Radio K9PS      Public PGP key available @ MIT server 
ARRL Life Member        fingerprint:  24 9F D3 BD AE E3 50 72
QCWA Life Member 26711                23 AB A0 64 BB 9E 2B 8D

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

From: jra@scfn.thpl.lib.fl.us (Jay R. Ashworth)
Subject: Re: How Long Ago Was This Made?
Date: 4 Jun 1996 06:00:01 GMT
Organization: University of South Florida


Dale Miller (domiller@ualr.edu) wrote:

> While moving recently, I came across a very low-tech item I had all
> but forgotten about.  It's a yardstick.  This particular one is
> emblazoned with "Beard's Furniture Co. - Little Rock, Ark. - Phone No.
> 7484".  I know some SWBT folks read this group regularly, and I was
> wondering if anyone might be able to shed some light on the age of
> this item.  Since I'm sure Little Rock wasn't in the forefront of
> telephone installation, I can't imagine that they had four-digit numbers
> for very long before moving to named exchanges.

Old numbers are fun, aren't they?

I have a customer who makes great hay in their marketing materials of
an ad they placed in an early-1900's cookbook which lists them has
having "Phone No. 1" in St Petersburg, Florida.  Wonder when the first
automatic switch actually went in, and what it was ...


Cheers,

Jay R. Ashworth      jra@scfn.thpl.lib.fl.us
Member of the Technical Staff  
The Suncoast Freenet  Tampa Bay, Florida    +1 813 790 7592

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

From: n8mdy@falcon.ic.net (n8mdy)
Subject: Home Phone Switch Needed
Date: 4 Jun 1996 17:01:38 GMT
Organization: ICNet ... Your Link to the Internet ... 313-998-0090


Hello,

    I have a problem with telephone lines, long distance and abusive
children. We recently received a $280 phone bill, all local long
distance calls. My teenage son thinks it ok to talk to the next
exchange for hours at a time. Well, I cut off long distance service on
the family telephone; I have a separate line in my office for my own
use.

    Is there a phone switch, which would cost $500 or less, available?
I would like to assign access codes, call accounting and possibly an
intercom or paging system.


Thanks,

Willie Peloquin     wpeloqui@medar.com
Software Engineer   Medar, Inc.

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

From: WBRECK@aol.com
Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 15:07:11 -0400
Subject: Nokia 232 Questions


Greetings to Editor Townson and all TD'ers!

I have just purchased a new Nokia 232 cellular phone, and after a
couple passes through the manual I still have a couple questions maybe
someone out there can help with:

1)  does this phone have a theft lock feature, where it is automatically
locked at power up, and a code has to be entered before it can be used?

2)  how does the "Call Barring" function (menu 14) work?  I have selected
"Allow National" (bars international calls), but the manual says something
about the international prefix has to be programmed by the dealer in order
for this to work?

3) the manual is rather vague on the "Keyguard" function (menu 16).
My phone seems to always say "Keyguard Active" when I go into this
menu, yet I can dial no problem!  Can anyone explain how this works
and what it's supposed to do?

4) I seem to have the one-touch emergency dialing with the 9 key setup
and working OK (I keyed in 911 and the word emergency and saved to
location 9...), even though the manual says it has to be programmed by
the dealer???

Any other insights, hints, secrets, etc. into the efficient working
and/or programming of this phone would be welcome!


Best Regards,

Bill Breckinridge     wbreck@aol.com   Plano, TX  USA

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

Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 12:17:00 -0700
From: Reverend Tweek <tweek@moraga.ness.com>
Subject: Re: Arrogant Internet Providers
Sender: tweek@moraga.ness.com (Reverend Tweek)
Organization: Our Lady of Perpetual Freedom
Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 19:16:34 GMT


In article <telecom16.259.1@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Tad Cook
<tad@ssc.com> relays:

> Arrogant Internet providers tell customers to get lost
> By Peter H. Lewis

> {New York Times}

Ahhh, Yes ... been talking about this article ALL LAST WEEK over on
netcom.general. Seems that Mr. Lewis is not being completely
truthful.

> For example, Netcom On-Line Communications Inc. of San Jose has
> informed some of its customers that they are no longer wanted.
> Sophisticated users are being shown the door.

 From what I understand, Mr. Lewis had a PNC account.  PNC was
Netcom's offering prior to Netcruiser, and hasn't been offered for
almost two years.  PNC accounts were (are) a PPP account.  Netcruiser
is a PPP/Cslip account.  Existing PNC accounts were grandfathered in
when Netcruiser came out, but no new PNC accounts were offered.

> "Frankly, it's not profitable to service your account anymore," a
> technical support representative told me.

> It seems the company regrets that it offered me a so-called Unix shell
> account several years ago and now wishes me to cancel it and sign up
> for the more profitable (to them) Netcruiser service.

Uh, Right ... Netcom STILL offers Shell accounts.  I have a shell
account, and Netcom still offers shell accounts to this day.  Lets
look at the last few days of No-New-Users at Netcom (from a Shell
User's stats):

i Dallman Ross      3  New Shell-User Report for 06/04/96
     There were no new users.
     No accounts were removed.
 
g Dallman Ross      3  New Shell-User Report for 06/03/96
     Say "Yo!" to These 3 New Users:
        electra oracle q
 
     Say "Adieu" to These 3 Users:
        eataylor phfff sharaf
 
f Dallman Ross      3  New Shell-User Report for 06/02/96
     Say "Yo!" to These 29 New Users:
        a6 aldous archvile bmchenry dscomama eberman eknight
        geordan granite hilliker hmaster jchodoro jcoates jmstrang
        kbanjara koslow lleong mark52 mtramm mwanzi nikim ratnaker
        rbtn resist schui testing vilearch vodopis wannis
 
     No accounts were removed.
 

> To drive the point home, the Netcom technician informed me that the
> company no longer accepts telephone calls from shell account customers
> who need technical support. Rather, all questions have to be submitted
> by electronic mail.

 From the Very Begining, Netcom NEVER offered telephone support for
PNC accounts, and if Mr. Lewis looks at the original materials from
when he signed up for his PNC account, he would see that he is in
error.  Netcom DID give an accompanying Shell account to PNC users so
that they could connect and send e-mail to the PNC support desk when
they were having problems with their PNC account.

So was Mr. Lewis having a problem with his Shell account, or with his
PNC account?  Must be his PNC account, as Mr. Lewis mentions that he
was "locked out" of his mail.  Mr Lewis "writes" about computers, and
one would think that he would have the knowledge to check $HOME/.mailbox/
incoming (Yep, in his HOME directory) and be able to say "My mailbox
is chown to root and I can't access it on the shell system".  Of
course, if he was using the POP3 access for his PNC account, he might
not know what the problem is ...


Reverend Tweek
A Netcom User


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Thanks very much for setting the record
straight on this. Honestly, I had never heard any complaints about Netcom
before this and the newspaper article was a bit of a surprise.  PAT]

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

From: Doug Zipser <zipp1@ix.netcom.com>
Subject: AT&T 9300 - Spread Spectrum "Technology"?
Date: Tue, 04 Jun 1996 07:41:24 -0700
Organization: Netcom


The 9300 900MHz cordless phone is advertised as having spread spectrum
technology. It also has "100 channels"; the two features seem to be
contradictory because, as I understand it, spread sprectum operation
connotes frequency hopping, within a band, to get around interference.
I would really appreciate an explanation from someone who knows. The
9300, for what it's worth, is very pleasant to use. It's light,
exceptionally clear, and has plenty of volume.

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

From: Enter.your.e-mail.address.here@mercury.cc.uottawa.ca
Subject: Overstock of Product - Disposal
Date: 4 Jun 1996 17:28:42 GMT
Organization: University of Ottawa


The University of Ottawa currently has the following items 
available for sale.

BIX 1A4 - G   Green stickers for BIX (5 per sheet) QTY 120 sheets
BIX 1A4 - S   Grey  stickers for BIX (5 per sheet) QTY 300 sheets
BIX 1A4 - W   White stickers for BIX (5 per sheet) QTY 180 sheets

QNE4PAIF4G    Grey faceplates flush mount          QTY 500
		packaged in original boxes

QCBIX 1A      punch down blocks                    QTY  50

QMBIX31B      (NTLQMBIX31B) Bix mounts 50 prs
	      with cover		           QTY  30


Items are available on a first come first served basis.  Offers will
be accepted for all or part of the items.  Shipping + Customs and
brokerage fees if applicable would belong to the successful bidder.


Guy Lessard
Network Administrator Telecom
(613) 562-5800 x 1425   fax: (613) 562-5998	  

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

From: larry@world.std.com (Larry Appleman)
Subject: Re: AT&T Movie Placement
Organization: The World Public Access UNIX, Brookline, MA
Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 19:43:27 GMT


In article <telecom16.253.4@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, CallBrand
<callbrand@aol.com> wrote:

> Anyone know how much AT&T paid for placement in the movie, "The Truth
> About Cats & Dogs"?

I don't know how much they paid, but I was amused to hear the AT&T ad
when I saw the movie at a free advance screening sponsored by MCI!


Larry Appleman   31 Murray Hill Rd., Cambridge, Mass. 02140


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: What was the general reaction of the
audience or the MCI people present at the screening?     PAT]

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

From: johns@rentelco.com (John Skenesky)
Subject: Re: Line Monitor/Protocol Analyzer
Date: 3 Jun 1996 20:42:33 GMT
Organization: McGrath RenTelco Communications & Fiberoptic Test Eqpt Rentals


In article <telecom16.250.9@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, stevek@binc.net says:

> Does anyone use or know of a line monitor/protocol analyzer that
> can handle async speeds up to 115.2 kbps??

> We are implementing a BBS-based product and need the capability to 
> monitor the traffic.

I have an HP J2301A protocol analyzer on the shelf that will work up
to 256kBs. It includes RS232, RS449 and V.35 interfaces, it also has a
T1 interface in it that will work at T1 Line speeds.

This unit is available for rent. 

If your interested give me a call or E-mail 


John Skenesky         <johns@rentelco.com>       www.rentelco.com
         Communications & Fiberoptic Test Equipment Rentals
         
McGrath RenTelco                  800-233-5807
1901 N. Glenville Dr. #401A       214-234-2422
Richardson, TX 75081          fax 214-680-0070

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
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Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
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Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
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All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
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should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #267
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Wed Jun  5 13:25:41 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id NAA10789; Wed, 5 Jun 1996 13:25:41 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Wed, 5 Jun 1996 13:25:41 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606051725.NAA10789@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #268

TELECOM Digest     Wed, 5 Jun 96 13:25:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 268

Inside This Issue:                          Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Re: Followup on Sprint Fridays Free (Poll Dubh)
    Re: AT&T 9300 - Spread Spectrum "Technology"? (Dave Gellerman)
    BRI Butt Set - Cheap ? (John Schmerold)
    CID Number and/or Name (Mark J. Cuccia)
    Old Phone Bills (Jim Jacobs)
    Sprint and CallerID (Richard Jefferson)
    Re: More CID Frolics! (David Hough)
    Test Your Telecom Knowledge (David Crowe)
    Re: Internet Domain Names (Robert Shaw)
    Re: Northern Telecom "Services" Menu (Christoph F. Strnadl)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: singular@oort.ap.sissa.it (Poll Dubh)
Subject: Re: Followup on Sprint Fridays Free
Date: 5 Jun 1996 14:49:41 GMT
Organization: ICTP-Trieste-Italy


> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: It has been awhile since anything about
> this was dicussed here, so perhaps others who were victimized by this
> scam of Sprint have some comments to add. I have heard from a couple
> other people that Sprint is continuing to bill the service charge each
> month while ignoring any/all requests for explanations or an opportunity
> to speak with Robin Loyed, etc. I personally would not waste any more
> time speaking to their customer service representatives. Even if they
> are paying for the call via their 800 number it would still be a waste
> of your time which also has to be worth something. 

PAT: one thing about all the informal advice/personal opinions you have
expressed about this affair in your Digest is the insistence on the _person_
of Robin Loyed. In dealing with a business like Sprint, it is not the
person but the office that counts. What I believe I would have done if
I had been on Sprint's program is:

 -- call customer service _and ask for the mailing address to which
billing complaints and queries should be sent_; nothing more.

 -- write (certified mail) asking for confirmation of the change in
terms and conditions, and pointing out that I consider the service
(and my liability for payment) suspended until an official answer is
received, and terminated in the event the changes are confirmed. The
name of Mr. Loyed could be mentioned in connection with the infamous
telegram, but the letter would be addressed to Sprint as a
corporation.

The trouble with trying to resolve disputes like these over the phone
is that, as one often reads on credit card statements in the US, "you
may phone us but doing so will not preserve your rights [in the event
of a billing dispute]".

> My suggestion at this point is take your last one or two bills from
> Sprint, clearly indicate on the face of the bill 'Payment is Refused;
> Refer to Robin Loyed for explanation.' Include a short note stating your
> belief that Sprint deliberatly engaged in a fraudulent act by entering
> into a contract with you which they knew at the time they had no
> intention of upholding.  State that you require *in writing* an
> explanation from Robin Loyed along with a telephone number where he
> can be reached. Inform them that future billings will be regarded as
> continuing the fraud and that they are to make no further contact with
> you except as specified.  Send this to them by registered/certified
> mail. Save the green card receipt you get in return. Wait for further
> response from them. Does anyone else have anything to add?  PAT]

Anger does not help. The letter should point out that you engaged in
the service contract under certain terms, and that since Sprint
changed the terms (it doesn't matter what their original intentions
were) without your consent the contract has been voided (by them, not
by you). That being the case, their billings are in error and you
request that Sprint correct the error as soon as possible and send you
a written explanation.  Keep photocopies of any letter you send, or
have your attorney write in your name. Do save the green card receipt
as PAT suggested. Do not request Mr. Loyed's phone number: the dispute
can be resolved without it.  Besides, it's best to keep everything in
writing; telephone contacts on the side would only muddle the issue
and allow them to claim that you agreed to something different over
the phone.

Let's face it: Sprint made a mistake in launching this promotion, and
they are trying to back out of it. Eventually they'll accept that it's
best for them to drop the charges on your bill and put the whole thing
behind them.  It may also be best for you to let them do that without
fuss. Do refuse payment, but stay cool.

Oh, and do pay the part of the bill that is not under dispute. Your
only excuses for not doing that would be that the math is too
complicated for you to work out, or that essential information is
missing; if that is the case, say so in your letter.


Sergio Gelato
(not a lawyer, no connection with Sprint, no US phone number)

P.S. There must be a time limit for them to reply to you. (Something
like 30 days for the initial response? Better check. Any failure to
reply in time could be quite useful to you.) 


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Excellent points. I like your ideas
better than my own on this yesterday. I recommend people follow your
advice.   PAT]

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

From: dave_gellerman@newbridge.com (Dave Gellerman)
Subject: Re: AT&T 9300 - Spread Spectrum "Technology"?
Date: Wed, 05 Jun 1996 10:59:26 -0500
Organization: Newbridge Networks


In article <telecom16.267.11@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Doug Zipser
<zipp1@ix.netcom.com> wrote:

> The 9300 900MHz cordless phone is advertised as having spread spectrum
> technology. It also has "100 channels"; the two features seem to be
> contradictory because, as I understand it, spread sprectum operation
> connotes frequency hopping, within a band, to get around interference.
> I would really appreciate an explanation from someone who knows. The
> 9300, for what it's worth, is very pleasant to use. It's light,
> exceptionally clear, and has plenty of volume.

Well in a direct sequence spread spectrum, a "chirp" ( psuedo-random
bit stream) is used in the modulation process to scatter the signal
over a very wide spectrum -- however, very fast frequency hopping
systems also qualify as spread spectrum.  In either case, you could
call the chirp characteristics a "channel" (as the receiver must be
using the same sequence to demod your signal) or you might call the
hopping pattern a channel.


DRG

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

Date: Wed, 05 Jun 96 09:39:51 
From: John Schmerold <JMSCHMER@katy.com>
Subject: BRI Butt Set - Cheap ?


Anyone know a source for BRI Butt set?


John Schmerold     Katy Computer Systems, Inc.
86 Meramec Valley Plaza Drive            St. Louis, Missouri 63088
Internet Address:       john@katy.com
Telephone Number:       314/215-4070
Facsimile Number:       314/861-2222

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

Date: Wed, 05 Jun 1996 10:33:25 -0700
From: Mark J. Cuccia <mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu>
Subject: CID Number and/or Name


Regarding whether "name only" CID would be better than "number only"
CID, the method used to display the name is determined by a LIDB (Line
Information Data Base) lookup *based on the number* which is
transmitted.

The original standards were developed to transmit (via SS7) the number
of the calling party (or trunk line) and to display (or not display,
based on the use of *67/11-67 flagging by the called party or per-line
default) that number.

When they bagan to develop the "Name" with Caller-ID, the standards
are *not* that the "Name" is transmitted from the originating switch.
Only the number transmits. The receiving end switch then does a LIDB
lookup based on that number (via SS-7) to get the "Name". If the
number is not found, the receiving end switch will display either
dashes, the city/state, province name, or some other indication that
the name is unavailable, while still displaying the number.

Recently, I received a call from a number I frequently get calls from.
It also happened that the number was in *my own central office
switch*, 504-24X. But I received "NEW ORLEANS, LA" in the name part of
the CID box, when I usually get the calling party number "account"
name. It could have been that the database lookup was slow, and the
actual call was 'more important' than waiting for database (LIDB)
lookup.

And it has been reported here that *not* all LIDB's are yet
interlinked for CID-Name when the call is between two different LEC's.
That's why we are still getting city/state, or state (province)
spelled out on long distance calls while still getting the full
ten-digit number.

As for blocking or allowing far-end display of name but not number or
number but not name, instead of 'only' blocking both or allowing both,
I think that in Canada they have that option. If I'm not mistaken,
there are distinct Bellcore assigned *-XX (11-XX) codes to block
*just* number but allow the name, or vise-versa, as well as
block/allow both, regardless of the default status of your line
regarding display on the far end. I don't know off-hand what each code
is, other than *-67 (11-67) and *-82 (11-82), for blocking both and
displaying both (respectively), regardless of the 'default' status of
the calling line. Of course, this all depends on whether the long
distance carrier or interoffice SS-7 trunks (or the originating switch
itself) can even transmit the number, rather than doing an
"out-of-area".

BTW, as CID (number only at the time) was being introduced locally in
individual areas, there were some areas where *-67 (11-67) 'toggled'
the status of your line. You would have to know *in advance* that the
line was 'default display' or 'default private' before deciding
whether or not to use *-67 (11-67). Some locations used *-67 (11-67)
to 'privatize' the number and *-67 (11-68) to 'display' the number,
regardless of the default status. Then Bellcore changed the 'master'
list of 'display' from *-68 (11-68) to *-82 (11-82) a few years ago.


MARK J. CUCCIA   PHONE/WRITE/WIRE:     HOME:  (USA)    Tel: CHestnut 1-2497
WORK: mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu |4710 Wright Road| (+1-504-241-2497)
Tel:UNiversity 5-5954(+1-504-865-5954)|New Orleans 28  |fwds on no-answr to
Fax:UNiversity 5-5917(+1-504-865-5917)|Louisiana(70128)|cellular/voicemail

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

Date: Tue, 04 Jun 1996 20:48:48 -0400
From: Jim Jacobs <jjacobs@worldfax.com>
Subject: Old Phone Bills


On Thu, 30 May 1996, Pat Townson wrote:

> I have here about three dozen very old telephone bills from the
> New England Telephone and Telegraph Company in Boston, MA dated
> in the period September, 1932 through December, 1936. In addition,
> I have rent receipts for the same period of time.

> Two men were in business together, or at least they shared an office
> together at the time:

>                   Jacob Fisher & Samuel Steinberg
>                   Suite 718 - Providence Building
>                   333 Washington Street
>                   Boston, Massachusetts

> Oddly, the phone number was not shown on any of the phone bills, which
> appear to be for coin telephone service in their office. There is a
> reference to an account number which is given as 'P 7622  LAF'. That
> may have been some central office designation. 

The building at 333 Washington St. was primarily occupied by
"wholesale jewelers" who, more often then not, sold to retail
customers referred to them by friends, relatives, or other customers.
The building (which I believe is still standing) is located in
downtown Boston, a few steps away from what was the major department
store area.

The LAFayette telephone exchange served the area. It would be
reasonable to conclude that the P stood for Pay Phone or Pay Station,
LAF for Lafayette, and that 7622 were the remaining digits in the
number.

> Beginning in late 1933, the return address on the envelope changes and
> is given as 705 Mt. Auburn Street, Watertown, Massachusetts, with a
> postage meter indicia showing Watertown and two cents postage.

There used to be a huge Western Electric manufacturing facility on Mt.
Auburn St.  Is it possible that New England telephone shared space
with Western Electric?


JIM JACOBS              e-mail           jjacobs@worldfax.com
Tampa, Florida, USA     Voice Mail       +1 813 330 2500


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Thanks for your followup. I know nothing 
at all, or very little about Boston, so I am glad someone who does
know the area was able to contribute to this. What about the address
of 881 Commonwealth Avenue, which is the return address on the envelopes
during 1932 and much of 1933?

Anyway, for readers who wish to send the annual voluntary subscription
donation (suggested amount is twenty dollars), if you want one of these
old phone bills include a long, self-addressed stamped envelope with
your request to me at PO Box 4621, Skokie, IL  60077.    PAT]
 
------------------------------

Date: Wed, 5 Jun 1996 10:46:00 -0400 
From: richard jefferson <rjeffers@nortel.ca>
Subject: Sprint and CallerID 


Well, it doesn't seem like Sprint is 100% there to me.  I called my
parents last night (04 June) and I still came up 'Unknown Number.'
Anyone want to start a pool?

Me-

   Located:  Morrisville, NC (border of RTP) 
   LEC       BellSouth
   IEC:      Sprint

Them- 

   Located:  Beaufort, NC (on the coast)
   LEC:      Sprint Carolina Telephone (formarlly CT&T), might matter
   IEC:      AT&T, probably doesn't matter

Oh well ...


Richard Jefferson, Dept. 3S15  | (919) 991-8095 | Home: (919) 319-6994 
Emergency Services Development |  ESN: 294-8095 |        mercury@vnet.net 

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

From: David Hough <dave@sectel.com>
Subject: Re: More CID Frolics!
Date: Wed, 05 Jun 96 10:04:50  GMT


In article <telecom16.264.6@massis.lcs.mit.edu> vances@xenitec.xenitec.
on.ca (Vance Shipley) writes:

> Now consider the case where a caller from the UofX places an outside
> call.  If the callee is to have an accurate call display information
> set it will have to come from the PBX at the UofX.  The CO could
> display only the main listed directory number of the UofX (555-1000)
> and the name of the university but that would not be very usefull when
> the caller is directly reachable and ISDN connected as well.

> When placing the call the UofX PBX will send to the CO the originating
> number to be used for the call as well as the name to be displayed if
> that service is available.  In this way the most usefull service is
> provided.  When a callee receives a call from the UofX extension phone
> the display will show the DID number and current name of the caller.

In my experience of the UK telecom environment, there are few PBX
systems which manage to correctly present valid information to the CO.
The CO switch does its best to convert this information to something
helpful, so it is possible to get something like '01285648550X2556',
which is where the base number is 648550 and the extension concerned
is 2556. In fact, for the example concerned, what you will see is
'01285648X556', because the PBX on that number does its job properly
and passes useful information. The 'X' is the telco's way of telling
the callee that they don't guarantee the accuracy of any digits after
the 'X'. I don't know if the 'X' appears for analogue CLI because all
my tests have been done using ISDN.

There is a reasonable degree of filtering at the CO -- if you send an
incorrect number of digits (the example given assumes three digits) then
the base+extension format is what usually results. If you send the
correct number of digits but they are outside your allocated range,
what appears at the far end is the base of your allocated range.

This is further confused when trying to make use of the '1471'
feature, which tells you the number of the last caller (unless CLI was
withheld).  When I originally did some tests, 1471 returned the base
number. I commented on this in uk.telecom and the feature mysteriously
started working correctly (big brother *does* read Usenet :) ),
identifying the number required to call the originating phone.
However, I think it is on an exchange-by-exchange basis, because a
test originating at another exchange once again produced the base
number. You don't get the 'X' indication with this service either.

Lines which use Q.931 signalling instead of DASS2 signalling behave
slightly differently again: for the example above I think you would
see '01285648X' if the correct digits were not supplied, whereas DASS2
would produce '01285648550'. I haven't yet seen a call which I know
came from a Q.931-based system with anything after the 'X', so either
the protocol can't handle it or most PBX systems don't provide the
digits.


Dave   djh@sectel.com
Tel +44 1285 655 766
Fax +44 1285 655 595

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

From: David Crowe <crowed@cadvision.com>
Subject: Test Your Telecom Knowledge
Date: Tue, 04 Jun 1996 16:02:10 +0000
Organization: Cellular Networking Perspectives Ltd.
Reply-To: crowed@cadvision.com


The monthly "Cellular Networking Perspectives" quiz has been updated.
Test your telecom knowledge, and possibly win a prize!

http://www.cnp-wireless.com/quiz.html


David Crowe
Editor, Cellular Networking Perspectives
71574.3157@compuserve.com

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

Date: Wed, 05 Jun 1996 09:22:10 +0100
From: shaw <ROBERT.SHAW@ITU.CH>
Subject: Re: Internet Domain Names


chris@punk.net wrote

> If I had half-a-million sitting around, I'd start my own Internic
> service. dot-corp or dot-bus anyone?

Please think very seriously about the implications.

What you've mentioned is basically what's in an Internet draft 
proposed by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) at:

ftp://ds.internic.net/internet-drafts/draft-postel-iana-itld-admin-00.txt

Personally I think the proposal is a very bad idea. It is a historical
accident that the US (unlike every other country in the world) does
not use ISO country codes (e.g., .fr, .uk) to manage their top level
domain (TLD) registrations. Although there is a .US TLD (see RFC
1480), it is not widely used since "domain name envy" makes everyone
want to be in .com, .net or .org (currently with around ~350,000
registrations).

Since the relationship between trademarks and domain names is now very
well established (there are hundreds of resultant disputes), creation
of new non-ISO country code TLDs will only magnify what is basically a
US mess (who account for about 93% of .com registrations) into a
global one. This is because trademark law is fundamentally national
law (there is no such thing as a widely recognized international
trademark).  By registering a domain name in an international TLD not
associated with a country code like .com, you immediately put yourself
in the position of having to defend your domain name against any
national trademark.

I'm sure there is some company, somewhere in the world, who has a
federal trademark for the name "punk" (your domain name). According to
current policy at NSI, who does registration for your TLD .net, they
only have to produce this trademark to take this domain name away from
you.

If new "international" TLDs like .corp or .bus are created, it isn't
going to solve the problem. It's clear that IBM or even much smaller
companies (even from other countries) who think you are infringing
their trademark are going to come down on you (e.g., there is no way
that IBM will let you have IBM.CORP or IBM.BUS).

This problem is going to take a lot more thought and debate.


Cheers,

Robert Shaw                               shaw@itu.ch
International Telecommunication Union     http://www.itu.ch
Information Services Department
Switzerland

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

From: cstrnadl@austria.cp.philips.com (Christoph F. Strnadl)
Subject: Re: Northern Telecom "Services" Menu
Date: Wed, 05 Jun 96 11:16:53 GMT
Organization: Philips C&P


In article <telecom16.260.2@massis.lcs.mit.edu>,  Proctor & Associates
<0003991080@mcimail.com> wrote:

> I've been playing around with a slick little Northern Telecom
> PowerTouch 350 phone.  It has all kinds of neat features, such as the
> ability to move Caller ID info into your dialing database.

> One feature I don't quite fathom is connected with something called
> "Services."  Under Services, the manual says:

> [some lines deleted, cfs]

> The manual then gives instructions for getting the phone to download a
> list of subscriber services from the telco.

> [deletia, cfs]

> Has anyone heard of this?  Is "Services" a feature only available on
> lines served by Northern Telecom DMS central offices?  What signal
> does the telephone send out when you punch the Services button?

The "Services" Nortel speaks about are interactive information
retrieval and transaction services based upon the Bellcore ADSI
(Analog Display Services) Standard. The ADSI protocol, by providing
bi-directional data communications over analog, voice-grade facilities
between CPE and a local server, allows customers to access information
and call management features via their CPE. Examples of such services
are:

  * home banking
	- equiring your account balance
	- initiating transactions
  * directory services
  * home shopping
  * information retrieval services
     	- airline arrival/departures
  * travel enquiry & reservation services

The ADSI server handles the screen phones on the customer side via the
ADSI protocol and the various different content providers (viz. banks,
travel agencies) and their proprietary protocols (X.25,...) on the
other side.

The ADSI protocol uses:

   * binary FSK signaling (Bell 202) from the server to the CPE (1200 
     baud, though)
   * DTMF signaling from the CPE to the network/server.

Its main features are:

   * virtual screen size up to 33 lines x 40 characters
   * 6 softkeys supported
   * allows concurrent (well, virtually ;-) transmission of data *and* voice
     from the server to the CPE
   * device independence (as long as CPE complies to ADSI standard)

ADSI has been defined in 1993 in a set of Bellcore Technical Reports
and Special Reports, the most important of which are:

  * TR-NWT-001273 Generic Requirements for an SPCS to Customer Premises
                  Equipment Data Interface for Analog Display Services
  * SR-INS-002461 Customer Premises Equipment Compatibility Considerations
	          for the Analog Display Services Interface,

both of which can be ordered directly from Bellcore (www.bellcore.com). 
A complete set of all standards pertaining to ADSI and the connected
enhanced telephony services (Caller-Id, Caller-Name- Delivery, CID on
Call Waiting, Call Waiting Deluxe) are available as the Family
Requirments FR-12 from Bellcore.

BTW, the Nortel PowerTouch 350 is not the only ADSI capable (a
so-called Type 3 CPE in Bellcore speak) device available: You may want
to have a look at the Philips ScreenPhone P100 and the Alcatel A2xxx
screen phones as well, amongst others.

Please feel free to continue this thread, if interested!


Christoph F. Strnadl                   | "What's a cynic?"
Technical Manager/ScreenPhone Services | "A man who knows the price of
ORIGIN Information Technology / Austria|  everything and  the value of
Tel +43 1 60101/1752 Fax +43 1 6023568 |  nothing."          (O.Wilde)
cstrnadl@austria.cp.philips.com        | #include <std.disclaimer>

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

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #268
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Wed Jun  5 14:12:09 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id OAA15350; Wed, 5 Jun 1996 14:12:09 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Wed, 5 Jun 1996 14:12:09 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606051812.OAA15350@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #269

TELECOM Digest     Wed, 5 Jun 96 14:12:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 269

Inside This Issue:                          Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Calling Cards: AT&T vs. the LEC's (Mark J. Cuccia)
    Re: Fight Turns Nasty: Ameritech/AT&T Take Off Gloves (Thomas Peters)
    Re: Digital Cellular in North America Question (Jean-Francois Mezei)
    Re: Digital Cellular in North America Question (Pat Cronin)
    Re: MCI Cellular (Jay R. Ashworth)
    Re: MCI Cellular (Henry Mensch)
    Re: MCI Cellular (Dave Levenson)
    Re: MCI Cellular (Bill Walker)
    AC 210 May be Split Into Four (Brian Purcell)
    Re: Nokia 232 Questions (Michael D. Sullivan)
    Re: Nokia 232 Questions (Osman Rich)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Wed, 05 Jun 1996 09:50:29 -0700
From: Mark J. Cuccia <mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu>
Subject: Calling Cards: AT&T vs. the LEC's


Regarding the current feud between AT&T and the LEC's in the matter of
calling card use, sometime aroung 1990, AT&T and the LEC's began using
their own methods for assigning calling card numbers. Prior to that
period, they shared the old Bell System's CCIS#6 interconnected
billing validation database. After 1990, the LEC's began to start
their own LIDB's, while AT&T maintained their own database system, and
SS#7 began to be used for message signaling.

Line-number-based cards became the "domain" of the LEC's, along with
the original special and non-line-number based RAO-based calling
cards. AT&T (and other participating carriers) began to use fourteen-
digit cards of a CIID Bellcore format.

Participating carriers which had operating and business arrangements
would accept each others' issued cards, but bill them at their own
rates. In AT&T's case of accepting LEC line-number-based cards, they
were to be billed at basic AT&T rates, even if that customer had a
calling-card discount plan. If you had a card discount plan with AT&T
and wanted their discounted rates, you would have to use *their*
issued card number of a CIID format, the cards beginning with AT&T's
Bellcore-assigned CIID's NXX-0XX or NXX-1XX.

A few years ago, AT&T began to come out with their "True-Choice"
*proprietary* card number scheme. This is a "less-than-fourteen" digit
card number. The 'base' part of the card can be anywhere from seven to
nine digits followed by a four digit PIN number. The card *cannot*
begin with the digits '0' or '1', as entering an initial '0' at the
"bong" tone cuts through right away to the Operator, while an intial
'1' at the "bong" tone is the first of a two (or future three) digit
1X(X) automated "special billing" service request code (i.e. 11 for
Collect, 12 for Third Party, 13 for Person, 15 for "room-mate" billing
accounts, 16 for Spanish prompts, 17 for French prompts, and 19 seems
to be reserved for 19X future three-digit expansion). These card
numbers *can* be used to place intra-LATA calls, but *only* using
AT&T's OSPS system, accessed by 800-CALL-ATT, 800-321-0ATT or
10-288/101-0288-0+ten-digits. These "True Choice" card numbers are
AT&T propreitary, and are *not* available in the LEC TOPS/OSPS
systems.

LEC assigned line-number-based and RAO-based fourteen-digit card
numbers are stored in a network of SS#7 connected LIDB's. The LEC's
must allow any participating carrier (with business arrangements)
non-discriminatory access to their databases. For the time being, LEC
cards will probably continue to be accepted by AT&T for both intra and
inter LATA calls (as long as you reach AT&T's system with their
10-288/101-0288-0+ code where necessafy, or 800-CALL-ATT type
numbers), and LEC cards will continue to be accepted by *other*
carriers (such as MCI, Sprint, etc) on their networks, as well as
AOSlime companies from private payphones and "hospitality" industry
PBX systems.

Many "other" common carriers (MCI, Sprint, etc), while holding
Bellcore assigned CIID codes of the form NXX-0XX/1XX for 'interoperable' 
fourteen digit card numbers, have also been issuing their *own*
proprietary cards for over a decade. Some of these cards are fourteen
digit card numbers, based on the ten-digit POTS line number of the
customer's account "contact" number. If you live at a relative's home
where *they* pay the telephone bill in *their* name, you could get an
MCI 'proprietary' card number actually based on your relative's
telephone number, rather than an 'arbitrary' looking CIID-type card.
Even the PIN number could begin with a '0' or '1' although Bellcore
standards say that PINs on "standardized" card numbers should *never*
begin with '0' or '1'. Of course, these are carrier issued proprietary
cards. Sometimes, the fourteen digit carrier issued proprietary
non-CIID card could be the carrier's assigned number beginning with
'0' or '1'. This makes matters even more confusing if you attempt to
use that card to place cards on another carrier or network!

I don't know how things will evolve in the future when there is a
developed competition in the LATA or even *local* areas. Presently in
Louisiana, I use either BellSouth or AT&T for intra-LATA toll calls,
as BellSouth has recently lowered their rates for intra-LATA toll. I
have discount package plans with both my LEC *and* AT&T. For *local*
area calls which I want to bill to my calling card (such as when at a
private payphone which charges by the minute for local coin), I *try*
to access BellSouth's TOPS since the BellSouth rate for a *local* call
billed to a calling card placed via their TOPS is *ONE* dollar *FLAT*
(untimed). Yes, its more than 25-cents, but it is better than feeding
quarters into the COCOT on a single local call. The long distance
carriers (even AT&T) charge by the minute even for a local call billed
to a card or account number through *their* network or operator
system.

There is yet *another* standard for card numbers. It is the
International standard which is administered by the ITU-T (formerly
CCITT). This is the "89" card format. A card number in the interna-
tional format can be twenty digits long and maybe even longer.  It
begins "89" followed by the country code, followed by an "IIN" (Issuer
Identifier Number) of two or three digits. IIN's for carriers and
networks in the NANP (Country Code +1) are all three digits long.
Some carriers have two unique ITU-T assigned IIN's, used for different
types of cards they issue. The remainder of the fourteen digits follow
the IIN for NANP issued card numbers. Sometimes, there is an
additional 'check' digit in a full international format card number.
*In theory*, the "89" format would make *all* types of telephone
billing cards issued by various carriers (worldwide), for calls routed
over various networks, much more interoperable, *as long as* all
companies involved arrange network operation and business
arrangements.


MARK J. CUCCIA   PHONE/WRITE/WIRE:     HOME:  (USA)    Tel: CHestnut 1-2497
WORK: mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu |4710 Wright Road| (+1-504-241-2497)
Tel:UNiversity 5-5954(+1-504-865-5954)|New Orleans 28  |fwds on no-answr to
Fax:UNiversity 5-5917(+1-504-865-5917)|Louisiana(70128)|cellular/voicemail

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

From: tpeters@hns.com (Thomas Peters)
Subject: Re: Fight Turns Nasty: Ameritech/AT&T Take Off Gloves
Date: 5 Jun 1996 16:57:33 GMT
Organization: Hughes Network Systems Inc.


>> Ameritech Chairman Richard Notebaert said his company discovered AT&T
>> was illegally targeting Ameritech customers when some 'names on the
>> list' started getting mailings sent by AT&T. He said there was no way
>> 'those names' would have gotten anything like that in the mail had not
>> AT&T been abusing their access to the Ameritech data base.

> "Those names" are not available by other reverse white pages databases?

Not necessarily. Map makers like to add imaginary cul-de-sacs to their
products to make it easy to prove that a competing product has copied
them. Databases are often seeded in a similar fashion. Ameritech may
have such customers in their database with home addresses of company
employees.

I don't have any idea if AT&T is guilty. But if they are, don't assume
that Ameritech can't prove it.


Tom Peters


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: This is the way I heard it also, that
Ameritech has their data base 'salted' or 'seeded' here and there with
imaginary people and circumstances/calling patterns which exist only
to catch others who should not be getting into places they do not
belong. It is a simple enough technique. I even have a couple 'names'
like that in the telecom mailing list. You want to rip the list off
and you think you are smart by deliberatly excluding my name from any
mailings so I won't find out what you did? I'll find out soon enough
anyway. Almost all lists -- especially the big, huge commercial ones
like {Reader's Digest} or Sears or Publisher's Clearing House do the
same thing, to trace where things are going and who is doing what.
There is no reason telcos would not employ that technique. Ameritech
even keeps a few phony names in the telephone directory for the same
reasons: you want to copy their work, go ahead and try it.   PAT]

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

From: Jean-Francois Mezei <jfmezei@istar.ca>
Subject: Re: Digital Cellular in North America Question
Date: Tue, 04 Jun 1996 18:31:17 +0000
Organization: Vaxination Informatique
Reply-To: jfmezei@istar.ca


Lynne Gregg wrote:

> Although AT&T Wireless' U.S. network is not GSM, we do offer a
> seamless roaming service that allows our customers to roam on GSM
> networks in 37 countries.  The service is called CellCard.

How do North American digital telephones operate when in GSM areas?
Are there hybrid telephones that do both protocols or do these 37
countries also support the north american standard as a side bar to
their GSM backbone?

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

Date: Wed, 5 Jun 96 09:34:04 BST
From: eeipcn@eei.ericsson.se (Pat Cronin)
Subject: Re: Digital Cellular in North America Question


jfmezei@istar.ca wrote:

> Is there any chance that GSM would eventually be supported in North 
> America by some operators (operating both GSM and the USA system).
 
In Europe, digital cellular systems that support both the GSM 900 and
DCS 1800 band ranges are being rolled out. Multiband (GSM 900 and DCS
1800) phones are becoming available. Basically these systems support
handover/handoff between GSM and DCS 1800 cells in the same system.

In North America, in addition to the AMPS/D-AMPS standard, a GSM
derivative, PCS 1900 is in use. The following would be possible where
the PCS 1900 standard is planned to be used. I know of California and
Washington, DC.

It would be easy today to build a system that is largely PCS 1900
cells, with some GSM cells to support roamers, say for major events. I
would think that the designed systems could handle this senario today,
if '900 bandwidth' is available in conjunction with '1900 bandwidth'.
 
It would be technically feasible to make a system that supported
multiband operation (GSM 900 and PCS 1800) in exactly the same way
that the systems in Europe do. The limiting factors would be
availability of bandwidth, the economics of providing GSM 900 cells in
a largely PCS 1900 market, the design and availability of muliband
(GSM and PCS 1900) phones, and some small switch and base station
redesign, perhaps.

So, with a GSM based system, it is technically feasible to support the
North American and European based standards in the same system.  But
perhaps, the business case is not so strong?

Also there may be other solutions, using interworking register nodes,
that allow a, say, PCS roamer access to a GSM system, but having
temporary use of a GSM phone in that market.

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

From: jra@scfn.thpl.lib.fl.us (Jay R. Ashworth)
Subject: Re: MCI Cellular
Date: 5 Jun 1996 00:36:00 GMT
Organization: University of South Florida


Lynne Gregg (lynne.gregg@attws.com) wrote:

>> From my understanding of the cellular protocols, it's not technically
>> feasible, Pat.  The A and B carriers (competitive and wireline) are
>> using two actually different sets of frequencies for their calls.

> This is not correct.  A and B cellular carriers in the U.S. all
> operate at 850 mhz radio frequency.  The new PCS entrants will operate
> at 1900 and others.

Hmmmm ... You're a McCaw person, right?

Before calling you misinformed, I checked a couple references.  They
all list the Telco (or wireline carrier) and the RCC (Radio Common
Carrier, or non-wireline carrier, i.e. you guys) as occupying
_separate channels_ in the band to route their traffic over.

This is, I believe, subsumed in the phrasing "different sets of
frequencies".

> Mike Fox <mjfox@raleigh.ibm.com> wrote:

>> I don't think they are really bringing in two new *cellular* carriers.
>> I think they are setting up two *PCS* services.  The fact that he
>> called it "Sprint" instead of "360 Degree Communications" confirms
>> that IMO, as Sprint spun off their cellular business into 360 Degree
>> so they can concentrate on PCS.

> Technically speaking, there is *no* difference between PCS and
> cellular systems in the U.S. aside from those systems operating on
> different radio frequencies.

Actually, there is.  PCS systems will be using, (and I believe it's
already been decided, but I don't remember which way) the CDMA
protocol designed by Qualcomm (IS-84?), which is also going into
service with some cellular carriers to provide "digital service", or a
protocol very silimar to, if not identical to the GSM (Groupe System
Mobile, I believe is the French spelling) protocol used for all
cellular service in Europe.

Since most currently operating cellular telephony systems use either
AMPS analog or TDMA digital, I think that saying that there's "no"
difference, especially with emphasis ...

and _especially_ since you post from a site that would tend to cause
people to attribute more than casual weight to your remarks, is a bit
rash.


Cheers,

-- jr 'check your facts, next time, please'
Jay R. Ashworth    jra@scfn.thpl.lib.fl.us
Member of the Technical Staff (Off Duty)
The Suncoast Freenet  
Tampa Bay, Florida     +1 813 790 7592

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

Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 22:13:53 PDT
From: henry mensch <henry@q.com>
Subject: MCI Cellular


Well, I called their number to inquire (the deal they seemed to offer
which implied no long distance charges on long distance calls seemed
too good to be true), and they do offer service in San Francisco.
They offer a package with a Nokia 100 phone (you can't opt out of
their phone). Their rates looked just like everyone else's rates, but
with not so many features.

The agent on the phone only knew about one plan, and couldn't provide 
details on any other rate plans.


henry mensch / po box 14592; sf, ca  94114-0592 / <henry@q.com> 
                     http://www.q.com/henry/

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

From: dave@westmark.com (Dave Levenson)
Subject: Re: MCI Cellular
Organization: Westmark, Inc.
Date: Wed, 5 Jun 1996 12:38:53 GMT


Lynne Gregg (lynne.gregg@attws.com) writes:

>> From my understanding of the cellular protocols, it's not technically
>> feasible, Pat.  The A and B carriers (competitive and wireline) are
>> using two actually different sets of frequencies for their calls.

> This is not correct.  A and B cellular carriers in the U.S. all
> operate at 850 mhz radio frequency.  The new PCS entrants will operate
> at 1900 and others.

Both statements are correct; the A and B carriers are both at 850 MHz,
and they use different frequencies.  The A and B carriers each use
half of the bandwidth allocated to cellular service in the 800 MHz
band.  That is, of the 860 channels, 430 belong to the A carrier and
430 belong to the B carrier.  Each phone is configured to scan one or
the other group of channels first when looking for a paging/access
channel.


Dave Levenson		Internet: dave@westmark.com
Westmark, Inc.		UUCP: uunet!westmark!dave
Stirling, NJ, USA	Voice: 908 647 0900  Fax: 908 647 6857
[The Man in the Mooney]

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

From: wwalker@qualcomm.com (Bill Walker)
Subject: Re: MCI Cellular
Date: Wed, 05 Jun 1996 14:39:22 -0700
Organization: QUALCOMM, Inc.


In article <telecom16.266.1@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Lynne Gregg
<lynne.gregg@attws.com> wrote:

> Technically speaking, there is *no* difference between PCS and
> cellular systems in the U.S. aside from those systems operating on
> different radio frequencies.

No, technically speaking, there are major differences between current
and future U.S. cellular and PCS systems (analog vs. digital,
GSM/DAMPS/CDMA protocols, etc.).

But I'll agree that from the customer's point of view, with the
services initially being offered, any differences are very minor.
They both look like wireless telephone service to the customer.


Bill Walker, QUALCOMM, Inc., San Diego, CA USA
WWalker@qualcomm.com

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

From: bpurcell@centuryinter.net (Brian Purcell)
Subject: AC 210 May be Split Into Four
Date: Tue, 04 Jun 96 23:21:53 GMT
Organization: Wide-Lite


We may soon see the first (as far as I know) area code split that will
result in multiple new codes carved out of a single exisiting area in
an effort to give longer life to the newly assigned codes.

Soutwestern Bell recently announced that AC 210 (San Antonio region),
which was just created in 1992, will soon be split into as many as
_four_ codes.  SWB originally proposed two schemes for dividing 210
into just one new area- both variations on splitting metro San Antonio
away from the existing 210.  One plan was rejected outright because it
put non-contiguous areas into the same AC.  With the remaining plan,
SWB estimated that metro SA would need another AC by the year 2002.
So the PUC had SWB come up with three new options to provide longer
life for the new codes.  These plans are currently being reviewed:

 - Give metro SA one code and divide the remaining area into two codes.

 - Give metro SA two codes in an overlay and give the remaining area another 
   code.

 - Give metro SA two codes in a "doughnut" and split the remaining area in 
   half with two codes as well (total of four codes including original 210).

Having observed how the PUC handled the recent Houston/Dallas AC case,
I doubt they will go for the overlay.  And, the PUC has indicated that
they want new codes to last longer to minimize disruptions to the
residents and businesses, so they will probably opt for the 4-from-1
scheme to provide a plethora of numbers (for a little while, anyway.)

SWBell estimates 210 will be in jeopardy by the 2Q 1997, so I expect
this change to be decided by the 3Q of 96 and implemented with a short
permissive period early in 1997.


Brian Purcell  bpurcell@centuryinter.net

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

From: mds@access.digex.net
Subject: Re: Nokia 232 Questions
Date: 5 Jun 1996 02:37:47 GMT
Organization: Wilkinson, Barker, Knauer & Quinn
Reply-To: mds@access.digex.net (Michael D. Sullivan)


In <telecom16.267.9@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, WBRECK@aol.com writes:

> I have just purchased a new Nokia 232 cellular phone ...

> 3) the manual is rather vague on the "Keyguard" function (menu 16).
> My phone seems to always say "Keyguard Active" when I go into this
> menu, yet I can dial no problem!  Can anyone explain how this works
> and what it's supposed to do?

Keyguard prevents your phone from being accidentally dialed (e.g.,
phone is in briefcase or purse and bangs into stuff). It locks out
the number pad entirely, except for the [Menu][Star] combo that
unlocks it.  Press anything else and it displays "Press Menu", and
then after you do so, "Press *".  Turn it on with [Menu][Star] or
scrolling the menu to "Keyguard," press [Sto], and getting the
"Keyguard active" message.

> 4) I seem to have the one-touch emergency dialing with the 9 key setup
> and working OK (I keyed in 911 and the word emergency and saved to
> location 9...), even though the manual says it has to be programmed by
> the dealer???

The one-touch emergency dialing uses a hidden, unnumbered memory
location that must be programmed in via the setup mode the dealer uses
to set your MIN (phone number) and options.  It doesn't use location
9.  Instead, if you simply press the "9" key and hold it down for 2
seconds or so, the contents of the hidden memory location are dialed,
and "Send" is sent automatically.  In the US, the dealer's instruction
sheet directs the installer to set the hidden code to "911".


Michael D. Sullivan, Bethesda, MD (USA)     email: mds@access.digex.net
   Also online as avogadro@well.com and 71460.1134@compuserve.com

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

From: Osman Rich <osman@ntcsal01da.ntc.nokia.com>
Date: Wed, 05 Jun 96 08:59:00 PDT
Subject: Re: Nokia 232 Questions


> 1)  does this phone have a theft lock feature, where it is automatically
> locked at power up, and a code has to be entered before it can be used?

I believe so,, there should be a menu selection for this

> 2)  how does the "Call Barring" function (menu 14) work?  I have selected
> "Allow National" (bars international calls), but the manual says something
> about the international prefix has to be programmed by the dealer in order
> for this to work?

Yes, the "+" sign when you dial is the international access code.
Your service provider needs to have programmed the international
access code (011 in most cases) for this to work.

> 3) the manual is rather vague on the "Keyguard" function (menu 16).
> My phone seems to always say "Keyguard Active" when I go into this
> menu, yet I can dial no problem!  Can anyone explain how this works
> and what it's supposed to do?

Try pressing "Menu" and "*" in sequence.  This locks the keyboard.
The menu entry enables and disables the feature (so "Menu" and "*" in
sequence work)

> 4) I seem to have the one-touch emergency dialling with the 9 key set-up
> and working OK (I keyed in 911 and the word emergency and saved to
> location 9...), even though the manual says it has to be programmed by
> the dealer???

There are several entries for emergency numbers.  If they are programmed 
by the dealer correctly, any can be dialed with Keyguard enabled *or*
the phone locked.  "9" "SEND" will also call the first emergency
number in the stored list even if keyguard is enabled. (I think.)


Rich Osman (speaking for myself, not my employer)

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
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------------------------------

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #269
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Thu Jun  6 13:03:08 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id NAA22956; Thu, 6 Jun 1996 13:03:08 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Thu, 6 Jun 1996 13:03:08 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606061703.NAA22956@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #270

TELECOM Digest     Thu, 6 Jun 96 13:03:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 270

Inside This Issue:                          Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    800-555 (was Re: New Spam Twist) (Mark J. Cuccia)
    Cellular Caller ID Deadline? (Michael Israeli)
    Canadian ISDN and Inmarsat B (Chris Paulse)
    Distinctive Ring Support in Voice Mail (Miles B. Whitener)
    Re: Caller-ID Delay in California (Kevin R. Ray)
    Fax-On-Demand / Fax Back Help (Kevin Pan)
    Local Exchange Information (cannet.com@cannet.cannet.com)
    Re: Great Circle Mileage Equations (John Fricks)
    Bearing (was Re: Great Circle Mileage Equations) (Mark E. Kaminsky)
    Re: AT&T 9300 Spread Spectrum 'Technology' (Ralph Sprang)
    Voice Over Data? (Jim Murphy)
    Video Over 100Mbps Ethernet (Switched) (Anthony S. Chang)
    Wanted: Information on CID via CW (iceberg@indy.net)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Wed, 05 Jun 1996 09:50:28 -0700
From: Mark J. Cuccia <mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu>
Subject: 800-555 (was Re: New Spam Twist)


In TELECOM Digest v.16 #263, jra@scfn.thpl.lib.fl.us (Jay R. Ashworth)
wrote:

> Worse, though, the 800 number is likely bogus anyway.

> The 800-555 exchange, to the best of my knowledge, belongs to Bellcore
> themselves, and I don't think they've let it out to anyone.

That was true prior to November 1994. At the time of divestiture,
existing 800 services was turned over to AT&T in association with the
Bell and independent LEC's. However, it was intended for toll-free
inward WATS to also be offered by competitive Long Distance carriers.

Around 1982, AT&T (The Bell System) began their own CCIS and database
function for geographic portability of 800 numbers. Prior to 1982,
800-NNX codes had specific geographic termination or service function.
All sixty-four 800-NN2 codes had been assigned (and 're-used') on a
state-to-state basis for intra-state toll-free inward WATS. 800-555
was used for directory assistance and other special telco-provided
services, (in both the US and Canada),such as the now discontinued
"Bell Answer Line" at 800-555-5000, AT&T (WECO now Lucent) equipment
customer service at 800-555-8111, etc. 800-855 was (and is) used for
services for the "hearing impaired" via TDD/TTY terminals. Some 136
additional 800-NNX codes had been assigned to inter-state toll free
services, assigned to specific terminating locations (NPA regions) in
the US and Canada. When CCIS#6 (a predecessor to CCS7/SS7) and AT&T's
nationwide database was introduced by 1982, the rigidity of
assignments of these 800-NNX codes no longer applied, except, in
Canada, although there were cross-border arrangements made between
AT&T and the Telecom-Canada (now Stentor) telcos.

However at that time, AT&T did *not* increase the number of possible
800-NNX (or 800-NXX) codes to include all possible 640 (or 792)
theoretical codes. Shortly after divestiture, when other carriers
wanted to provide toll-free 800 services, they wanted access to AT&T's
800 database. The courts turned them down, and recommended
determination of carrier by 800-NXX code, as there were just under 600
possible NXX codes not being used at that time. Bell Communications
Research's Numbering and Dialing Plan Group (now Bellcore's NANPA)
developed assignment guidelines for assigning 800-NXX codes to
specific applying carriers. AT&T (and Canada) would be "grandfathered"
in with their existing 800-NNX codes (except 800-555 and 800-855). The
800-N11 codes would not be available so as not to cause customer
confusion with three-digit N11 local service codes. The sixteen
800-N02 and N12 codes would be reserved for intrastate "RCC" paging
and wireless services. 800-555 and 800-855 would not be assigned to
any particular carrier. Bellcore would assign the last four digit line
numbers within these two codes, but existing users would be
"grandfathered" in. In Canada, the Telecom-Canada (now Stentor)
companies have continued to provide the routing for 800-555 and
800-855 numbers within Canada, while AT&T continued to provide routing
for 800-555 and 800-855 within the US.

The ultimate plan for 800 was intended to be "full" portability, using
LEC provided number databases using SS-7 signaling. That was
accomplished in the US in early 1993. Canada joined into the North
American 800-number portability database system in early 1994. There
are still a few Caribbean islands which have *dedicated* 800-NXX codes
for their use, and these 800-NXX's are not available for use in the US
or Canada, and are not included in the portability pool of NXX's.
However, 800-555 and 800-855 continued to be routed by AT&T or
Stentor, as before. In November 1994, AT&T (and Stentor), Bellcore and
the 800 Database administrator put 800-555 into the "general"
portability pool. Again, existing 800-555-xxxx numbers continued to be
"grandfathered" in, using AT&T (or Stentor) as the carrier for
routing. 800-855 is still used for TTY/TDD services. I don't know if
there is carrier portability in that NXX yet or if AT&T (and Stentor)
still do all of the carrier routing.

Last year, the 800 Database administrator began to allow use of the
N11 codes as valid 800-NXX codes, *except* for 800-911 so as not to
cause customer dialing errors resulting in a call to a local 911
Emergency Center. And now we have 888-NXX codes, with Special Area
Codes 877, 866, 855, 844, 833 and 822 reserved for future use for
toll-free services.

> As opposed to 900-555, which is another matter, entirely.

The 900-NXX's are still not "portable". Neither are the 500-NXX's nor
the Canadian 600-NXX's. The NXX's are still assigned by Bellcore NANPA
(or the numbering administrator with the Canadian Government's
Industry Canada in the case of 600) to *specific* carriers or
functions. 900-555 had been an AT&T (Bell System) code in use since
the 1970's, and it remained with AT&T (and Telecom Canada, now
Stentor) after divestiture.

On another but related matter, people have asked if local ten-digit
dialing becomes mandatory in any particular area if there could be
NPA-0XX or NPA-1XX central office codes. Similarly, since 500, 600,
700, 800 (and 888) and 900 numbers *must* be dialed as a full-ten
digit number if there could be N00-0XX and N00-1XX codes. For
"geographic POTS" area codes, there are 0XX and 1XX codes used 'after'
the NPA code used for internal network routings and test functions, as
well as LEC/AT&T operator codes used to reach other operators.

Also, special or non-line-number based calling cards use the RAO
(Revenue Accounting Office) code if they are issued by the LEC, or
CIID (Card Issuer IDentifier) codes if they are issued by an
interexchange carrier (if that carrier follows Bellcore/Stentor
standards for such). For card purposes, an RAO/CIID begins NXX-0XX or
NXX-1XX. The RAO is *not* the area code of the location, but the use
of 0XX and 1XX after the NXX RAO/CIID is used so as not to cause a
"code conflict" with actual NXX Area Codes. At the "bong" tone, you
enter a fourteen digit card number whether it is an LEC assigned
line-number based card or a LEC or Long Distance Company assigned
RAO/CIID card number. Use of actual telephone numbers of the form
NPA-0XX or NPA-1XX would cause a "code conflict" when issuing or
entering calling cards, unless another numbering standard were to be
adopted.

As for "special" area codes of the form N00 (500, 600, 700, 800/888
and 900 are the only ones in use as of now), there are no
RAO/CIID-based cards beginning with 600, 700, 800/88X or 900. There
*are* RAO/CIID assignments beginning with 400 and 500. As of last
year, there weren't any RAO/CIID's beginning with 200 or 300, but
those might have become assigned since then.  In theory, there *could*
be numbers of the form 800-0XX-xxxx or 800-1XX-xxxx, and the same
*could* apply to 900 numbers. This has been brought up before at
INC/ICCF meetings, but the general opinion is that *every* switch
(local, toll, PBX, etc) used in North America (and possibly other
parts of the world) would have to be reprogrammed to handle such
codes. Some switching systems might be unable to handle such codes *at
all*. There would only be a maximum of two-hundred codes available,
while using 888-NXX made virtually eight-hundred possible NXX codes
available.  And there would be customer confusion resulting to
misdialed calls (i.e.  not dialing the N00 before the seven-digit
portion) to the Operator or 0+, thus either tying up the equipment in
a partial dial, tying up the time of the Operator, or maybe even
reaching a toll number! But there might come a time in the future when
N00-0XX and N00-1XX codes will be used, and if the internal network
routing codes and RAO/CIID cards are re-numbered or another standard
is adopted, we also might at some point see NPA-0XX-xxxx and
NPA-1XX-xxxx "POTS" numbers.


MARK J. CUCCIA   PHONE/WRITE/WIRE:     HOME:  (USA)    Tel: CHestnut 1-2497
WORK: mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu |4710 Wright Road| (+1-504-241-2497)
Tel:UNiversity 5-5954(+1-504-865-5954)|New Orleans 28  |fwds on no-answr to
Fax:UNiversity 5-5917(+1-504-865-5917)|Louisiana(70128)|cellular/voicemail

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

From: izzy@izzy.com (Michael Israeli)
Subject: Cellular Caller ID Deadline?
Date: 5 Jun 1996 17:30:48 GMT
Organization: Izzy Internet Services


Did cellular phone companies have to comply with the June 1 deadline
in providing caller ID information on all outgoing calls?  Both
carriers in the Philadelphia, PA area (Bell Atlantic NYNEX mobile and
Comcast Cellular) do not deliver caller ID.


Michael

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

From: Chris Paulse <paulse@pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu>
Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 09:01:56 -0400
Subject: Canadian ISDN and Inmarsat B
Organization: Ohio State University Physics Dept.


I'm told that Stentor is blocking all ISDN calls from within Canada
that are headed to Inmarsat B landstations.  Can anyone elaborate on
this problem, and perhaps give some indication of when this fiasco
will be resolved?

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

From: Miles B. Whitener <mbw@i-theta.com>
Subject: Distinctive Ring Support in Voice Mail
Date: Wed, 05 Jun 1996 20:04:39 -0500
Organization: I-Theta Corporation


I am looking for a PC voice mail system that supports the Distinctive
Ring feature.  This would allow automatic routing to different
mailboxes depending upon the number dialed.  (Distinctive Ring gives a
single line up to three numbers -- incoming calls calls are
distinguished by the ringing pattern -- normal, short-long-short, etc.)

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

From: kevin@eagle.ais.net (Kevin R. Ray)
Subject: Re: Caller-ID Delay in California
Date: 05 Jun 1996 16:06:46 GMT
Organization: Bob Ray & Associates, Inc.
Reply-To: kevin@bobray.kray.com


Lauren Weinstein (lauren@vortex.com) wrote:

> Greetings.  At the request of Pacific Bell, the California PUC has
> granted a one month delay in the implementation of CNID in California,
> from June 1 to July 1.  The reason?  The local telcos have been
> swamped with requests by subscribers for "complete" (per line) CNID
> blocking, and have fallen behind in processing the backlog of phoned
> and written-in requests.  The test numbers established for subscribers
> to determine if blocking is set properly on their lines have also been
> yielding "all circuits busy" intercepts for long periods in many areas
> around the state.  It should be fascinating to see what the stats end
> up looking like.

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I find it just incredible that you seem
> to have so many people in California on this kick. What is with all 
> these people who seem to feel they have this right to hide themselves
> when they make calls no matter whose time they waste or whatever fool-
> ish calls they originate?  I'll be glad to see 'blocked number blocking'
> (where recipients have the right to block calls from persons who hide
> their phone numbers) become universal. I am going to encourage everyone
> to sign up for it.   PAT]

My solution (in IL) has been simple. I have a CID box which "blocks"
blocked calls. This has caused a <minor> problem in that Cellular One
automatically makes your cell name/number "Anonymous". Anyone calling
me from a cell-one cell phone is blocked. You can call Cellular One
and have them transmit the CID down the wire (I did).

As for making calls. I got a multi-ring number which I consider to be
my home/voice number. So when I make a call the base line number is
transmitted which doesn't do anyone (aka telemarketers) any good.
Calling me back at that number will give you a computer modem, maybe a
fax machine, an accounce only answering machine (with a intercept
message recorded :-), etc (depends on my mood). Two rings (which I
ignore) and then never a person. Two rings to get THEIR CID info ... :-)

I've been doing it this way for years and can't remember the last time
I was interrupted (like from dinner) with someone trying to sell me
something. It just doesn't happen. BTW, multi-ring numbers are by
default unlisted/unpublished (ie: which otherwise would cost more $$$).

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

From: kevinp@pacific.net.sg (Kevin)
Subject: Fax-On-Demand / Fax Back Help
Date: Wed, 05 Jun 1996 22:49:26 +0800
Organization: Kevin Pan


Hello!

We are looking urgently for a software (or hardware/software
combination) to turn a non-PowerPC Mac into a Fax-On-Demand / Fax Back
machine.

I would also appreciate if anyone could point to some information.

Many thanks in advance!


Regards,

Kevin Pan

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

From: cannet.com@cannet.cannet.com
Subject: Local Exchange Information Wanted
Date: 5 Jun 1996 13:42:53 GMT
Organization: APK - Internet Provider for Ohio.
Reply-To: cannet.com@cannet.cannet.com


In which publication is it identified which Local exchanges an call
other local exchanges?  This seems like some very simple information
that is very hard to get. I am always pointed to the front of the
phone books.  Does there exist a entire list of local calling areas by
Area-code exchange?  Does the FCC require the Local telephone to
identify this information?  How does one get it?


Thanks in advance,

Dave T.


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I do not think there is any single
consolidated source for this information, although I could be wrong.
I think because the list of such would be so long and tedious and
cross-referenced, you need to ask each telco, meaning basically check
each telephone directory to see what the 'local arrangements' are.  PAT]

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

Date: Wed, 05 Jun 1996 22:00:47 +0000 
From: John_Fricks@nt.com
Subject: Re: Great Circle Mileage Equations 
Organization: Nortel 


In article <telecom16.258.7@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, jmayson@p100dl.ess.
harris.com (John Mayson) wrote:

> I derived this formula to calculate great circle mileage equations.
> I don't know if this is the best way to do it, but it works. 
> Now here's my question for you.  How would I find the azimuth
> (direction) of one point on earth wrt to another?

Here's the method I use for both great circle distance and azimuth.
Formula are written for Excel spreadsheet, in which trigonometric
functions require angles expressed in radians rather than degrees:

Great Circle Calculations

Objective: Distance and azimuth between major cities

Enter coordinates of origin: (Raleigh, North Carolina)
   ORGLAT  35.7833
   ORGLON  78.6500
Enter coordinates of destination: (Nairobi, Kenya)
   DESLAT  -1.2833
   DESLO  -36.8167
Is origin closest to  the pole?
   NSF           1  =IF(ABS(ORGLAT)<ABS(DESLAT),0,1)
Point B is the one closer to the pole (Raleigh)
   BLAT    35.7833  =IF(NSF=1,ORGLAT,DESLAT)
   BLON    78.6500  =IF(NSF=1,ORGLON,DESLON)
Point A is the one closer to equator (Nairobi)
   ALAT    -1.2833  =IF(NSF=1,DESLAT,ORGLAT)
   ALON   -36.8167  =IF(NSF=1,DESLON,ORGLON)
Use this constant:
   RAD     57.2958  =360/(2*pi())
Now calculate some spherical angles, in radians:
   LONDIF   1.0076  =((BLON-ALON)/2)/RAD
   LATDIF   0.3235  =((BLAT-ALAT)/2)/RAD
   LATSUM   0.3011  =((BLAT+ALAT)/2)/RAD
Next, some spherical trigonometry:
   YXDIF    0.21    =ATAN((1/TAN(LONDIF))*SIN(LATDIF)/COS(LATSUM))
   YXSUM    1.1109  =ATAN((1/TAN(LONDIF))*COS(LATDIF)/SIN(LATSUM))
   Y        1.3180  =YXSUM+YXDIF
   X        0.9037  =YXSUM-YXDIF
   Z        0.9705  =ATAN(TAN(LATDIF)*SIN((Y+X)/2)/SIN((Y-X)/2))
Calculate distance and azimuth from origin: (Raleigh)
   KM      12357.9  =111.12*(2*Z*RAD)
   MI       7679.2  =69.05*(2*Z*RAD)
   AZ1        75.5  =IF(NSF=1,Y*RAD,-X*RAD)
   AZO        75.5  =IF(AZ1_<0,360+AZ1_,AZ1_)

Nairobi is 12357.9 Km from Raleigh. From Raleigh, depart along 
azimuth 75.5 degrees.


John Fricks
Email: John_Fricks@nt.com
Nortel Inc.

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

From: SiemensRolm.com!Mark.E.Kaminsky@pmail.com (Mark E. Kaminsky)
Subject: Bearing (was: Re: Great Circle Mileage Equations)
Date: 6 Jun 1996 05:44:55 GMT
Organization: Siemens Rolm Communications, Inc.
Reply-To: SiemensRolm.com!Mark.E.Kaminsky@pmail.com


Given: initial point at (LAT0, LON0) end point at (LAT, LON) latitudes
are taken as 0 at the equator, positive in the northern hemisphere,
negative in the southern hemisphere.  longitudes are taken as 0 at the
Prime Meridian, positive in the eastern hemisphere, negative in the
western hemisphere.  At the poles, the cosine of the latitude is zero,
so the longitude is irrelevant, as it should be.  Radius of the
(spherical) earth RHO

Then the ground range G is given by:
        G = RHO * PHI

where
        PHI = arccos ((sin (LAT) * sin (LAT0)) +
                          (cos (LAT) * cos (LAT0) * cos (LON - LON0)))

and PHI and the arc cosine are taken in radians.

The bearing (angle whose vertex is at the initial point, with one side
pointing north along the meridian towards the north pole, and the
other side on the great circle through the end point, taken as
positive if the end point is east of north) is given by:

 (                 cos (LAT) * sin (LON - LON0)        )
PSI = arctan (-----------------------------------------)
             (                     2                   )
( sin (LAT - LAT0) + (2 * cos (LAT) * sin (LAT0) * sin  ((LON - LON0)/2)) )
(                                                                         )

There is a simpler formula using PHI, which you obtained in finding
the ground range:

	             ( cos (LAT) * sin (LON - LON0) )
	PSI = arcsin (------------------------------)
	             (          sin (PHI)           )

but arc sines are not as nice, computationally, as arc tangents.

I hope this helps.


Mark

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

From: RSPRANG@cnmw.com
Date: Wed, 05 Jun 96 08:46:09 EST
Subject: Re: AT&T 9300 - Spread Spectrum 'Technology' 


On June 4, 1996, Doug Zipser <zipp1@ix.netcom.com> wrote:
          
> The [AT&T] 9300 900MHz cordless phone is advertised as having spread
> spectrum technology. It also has "100 channels"; the two features seem
> to be contradictory because, as I understand it, spread sprectrum
> operation connotes frequency hopping, within a band, to get around
> interference.
          
While frequency hopping is one type of spread spectrum, the more
commonly used form of spread spectrum is direct sequence. I believe
that DS is used by the AT&T phone.
          
In direct sequence SS, the signal is pseudorandomly spread into a
wider bandwidth.  The center frequency of the spreading is generally
regarded as the 'channel frequency'.
          

Ralph Sprang

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

Date: Thu, 06 Jun 1996 02:34:09 -0600
From: Jim Murphy <phoneguy@corenet.net>
Subject: Voice Over Data?


A company I have done some work for has asked me to look into using 
their T1 and 56K circuits to send voice along with the data.

We would like to basically be able to go off hook in City A and get
dial tone from City B.  Since we already have the connection via the
T1 or 56K, could we somehow connect dial tone lines from City A and B
to some kind of multiplexer at each end and be able to access that
dial tone from either end?

Thanks for your help!


Jim

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

Date: Thu, 06 Jun 1996 08:30:31 PDT
From: Anthony S. Chang <achang@world.nad.northrop.com>
Subject: Video Over 100Mbps Ethernet (Switched)


Does anyone have info on how full motion video fares on 100Mbps
(shared and switched) ethernet LANs?  We are using Cisco Catalyst 5000
switches and want to know if the capabilities are there and what the
quality of service would be.  Thanks.


      Anthony Chang        
     Northrop Grumman      
      310-331-4119         
  achang@world.northgrum.com

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

From: iceberg@indy.net (IceBerg)
Subject: Wanted: Information on CID via CW
Date: 05 Jun 1996 21:57:53 GMT
Organization: IndyNet - Indys Internet Gateway (info@indy.net)


I am trying to find technical information on how the new Caller ID
with Call Waiting service operates.  It is available here in
Indianapolis on our local carrier Ameritech.  Any information you can
help me with would be appreciated.

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
public service systems and networks including Compuserve and America
On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. 

Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:

                 * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu *

The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
Townson of Skokie, Illinois USA. You can reach us by postal mail, fax 
or phone at:
                      Post Office Box 4621
                     Skokie, IL USA   60076
                       Phone: 500-677-1616
                        Fax: 847-329-0572
  ** Article submission address: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu

Our archives are located at mirror.lcs.mit.edu and are available by using
anonymous ftp. The archives can also be accessed using our email
information service. For a copy of a helpful file explaining how to
use the information service, just ask.

*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from the              *
* International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in Geneva, Switzerland    * 
* under the aegis of its Telecom Information Exchange Services (TIES)   * 
* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
* ing views of the ITU.                                                 *
*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
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per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #270
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Thu Jun  6 15:02:34 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id PAA04546; Thu, 6 Jun 1996 15:02:34 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Thu, 6 Jun 1996 15:02:34 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606061902.PAA04546@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #271

TELECOM Digest     Thu, 6 Jun 96 15:02:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 271

Inside This Issue:                          Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Determining the Public Interest in Telecommunications? (Ronda Hauben)
    New International Freephone Standard (Robert Shaw)
    Toronto, Montreal Slated to Get New Area Codes (Dave Leibold)
    AT&T Wireless Tells Cell Roamers: Don't Call Police on #95 (P. Robinson)
    Reel World Product Placement (Tad Cook)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: ronda@panix.com (Ronda Hauben)
Subject: Determining the Public Interest in Telecommunications?
Date: 6 Jun 1996 12:33:32 -0400
Organization: PANIX Public Access Internet and UNIX, NYC


The following conference about the public interest in telecommuni-
cations is planned for June 10 by the Benton Foundation and the NTIA -
Interesting that it is happening.

However, it seems to leave out any discussion of the history and
development of the Net and of the battle for access to the Net and to
telecommunications. Thus it seems to perpetuate the myth that the new
U.S. telecommunications law is founded on, i.e. that you can ignore
past experience and build a telecommunications infrastructure on the
ideology that the so called "market" of big corporate entities will
solve the problems.

The conference is being called to explore the question: how is the
public interest interest faring in the new telecommunications
environment?

Yet where is the voice of the public in the conference?  Unless there
is some way such organizations as the NTIA and the Benton Foundation
open up their activities to more input from the public, especially the
online public, it doesn't seem there is any way their actions will be
any more helpful to the public and the public interest than the pro
corporate Telecommunications Act that was just passed by the U.S.
Congress.

This kind of conference suggests why there needs to be research into
and discussion of the vision for the future of the Net and the
telecommunicaitons infrastructure that will serve the public rather
than the one that the large corporate entities are promoting.

The current issue of the Amateur Computerist begins to suggest that
there is a very different vision of those who want the net and the
telecommunications infrastructure to serve the public than those who
are out to gain the biggest possible profits for the big corporate
interests.


Ronda    ronda@panix.com
ae547@yfn.ysu.edu

    ================= Begin forwarded message =================

    From: benton@benton.org (Benton Foundation)
    Subject: Up for Grabs Conference
    Date: Wed, 05 Jun

    
    Benton Foundation and NTIA convene more than 200 community networkers,
    educators, library leaders, policymakers, government officials, industry
    representatives, scholars, funders, and advocates in Washington, D.C. 
    on June 10, 1996 to explore the question: how is the public interest 
    faring in the new telecommunications environment?
    
    A RealAudio live internet feed will allow people outside the beltway to 
    plug in and hear what's going on. To access the feed, visit
    http://www.benton.org/upforgrabs.
    
    For information call 202-778-1460.
    
    AGENDA
    
    
    Up for Grabs: Communications Practice & Policy in the Public Interest
    
    Co-sponsored by
    BENTON FOUNDATION
    NATIONAL TELECOMMUNICATIONS AND INFORMATION ADMINISTRATION (NTIA)
    Gallaudet University, Kellogg Conference Center, Washington, D.C.
    
    Monday, June 10
    
    9:00am          Welcoming Remarks -- Ballroom
                    Speakers:
    
                    Denise Cavanaugh, Principal, Cavanaugh,Hagan & 
                    Pierson, Inc.
    
                    Larry Irving, Assistant Secretary for Communications and
                    Information, Department of Commerce
    
                    Henry Rivera, Ginsberg, Feldman, and Bress, Chartered
    
    9:20am          Roundtable--Ballroom
                    "Mapping the Post-Telecommunications Act  Environment"
    
                    Moderator: Andrew Blau, Benton Foundation
                    Speakers:
                    Al Hammond, Director, New York Law School, Communications 
                    Media Center
                    Ed Markey, US House of Representatives
                    Bob Rowe, Commissioner, Montana Public Service Commission
    
    
    A vigorous, moderated conversation will paint the "big picture" of the
    post-Telecommunications Act landscape, and explore the critical skills and
    strategic relationships needed to strengthen the public interest. The
    outcome of this conversation will identify obstacles and opportunities and
    frame the issues to be addressed in the breakout sessions.
    
    10:30am Guided Breakout Sessions
    
    Challenged by the panel to respond to their descriptions of opportunities
    and barriers, participants from all sectors will be guided by group 
    leaders to analyze more deeply their local experience and to take 
    ownership of their own knowledge and practice.  Outcomes will be 
    distilled over lunch to inform the strategic agenda-setting activities 
    of the afternoon.
    
    
    Group Leaders:
    Karen Buller, National Indian Telecommunications Institute
    Ellis Jacobs, Legal Aid Society of Dayton
    Ceasar McDowell, Civil Rights Project Incorporated
    Alan Melchior, Heller School, Brandeis University
    Steven E.  Miller, Massachusetts NetDay '96
    Maxine Rockoff, United Neighborhood Houses of New York, Inc.
    Eleanor Jo Rodger, Urban Libraries Council
    Alan Shaw, Music/LUV
    Toni Stone, Community Technology Centers Network (CTCNet)
    Armando Valdez--LatinoNet
    
    
    12:45pm Keynote--Auditorium
    Introductions:
    Charles Benton, Chairman of the Board, Benton Foundation
    I. King Jordan, President of Gallaudet University
                    Speaker: Robert Kerrey--US Senate
    
    
    1:15pm  Afternoon Panel
                    "Fulfilling the communication needs of communities in 
                    the new marketplace"
    Introduction:  Mark Lloyd, Attorney, Dow, Lohnes & Albertson
    Moderator:  Dorothy Ridings, President, Council on Foundations
    Speakers:
    James Burger, Senior Director, Worldwide Government Affairs, Apple
    Computer,    Inc.
    Ed Ferran, Program Coordinator, National Community Building Network
    Thomas Kalil, Senior Director, National Economic Council
    Robert McChesney, Associate Professor in the School of Journalism and Mass
    Communication, University of Wisconsin-Madison.
    LaVarr Webb, Deputy for Policy, Governor Leavitt, Utah
    
    Representatives from the administration, corporations, and the
    foundation/NGO community will look at the adequacy of the new marketplace
    for meeting the needs of communities.
    
    2:45pm  Creating an Action Agenda
    
    Facilitator:  Denise Cavanaugh
    Morning breakout discussions will be distilled and reported out
    simultaneously.  In a strategically moderated meeting of the whole, the
    group leaders and others will be called upon to explain, compare, defend,
    and promote the positions and plans developed in the morning breakouts.  
    In small groups and as a whole, participants will develop an action 
    agenda for individual and collective activity after the conference.
    
    5:00pm  Summing Up -- Ballroom
    Reactions from representatives of the public and private sectors, as well
    as closing comments by the NTIA and the Benton Foundation.
    
    Moderator:  Charles Benton, Benton Foundation
    
    Speakers:
    Julius Genachowski, Counsel to the Chairman, Federal Communications 
    Commission
    Major Kiddick, Chief of Staff, Governor Glendenning's Office, Maryland
    Charlotte Kahn, Director, Boston Persistent Poverty Project, Boston 
    Foundation
    
    
                             -----------
Amateur Computerist   available free via email   ae547@yfn.ysu.edu
Vol. 7 No. 1 "Netizens and Online Access"   Winter/Spring 1995/6
"Will Access to the Net Be a Privilege or a Right?" Access for All FAQ
History of Cleveland Freenet    An Online Prototype for Policy Decisons

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

Date: Thu, 06 Jun 1996 09:43:00 +0100
From: shaw <ROBERT.SHAW@ITU.CH>
Subject: New International Freephone Standard


Hi Pat,

Thought your readers might be interested in the following ITU press release on
the New International Freephone Standard.

Regards,

Robert Shaw                               shaw@itu.ch
International Telecommunication Union     http://www.itu.ch
Information Services Department

4 June 1996

ITU approves new standard for international freephone 

The International Telecommunication Union has recently approved a new
standard which will allow users to make 'freephone' calls
internationally. The new ITU-T Recommendation, number E.169, will
allow International Freephone Service customers to be allocated a
unique Universal International Freephone Number (UIFN) which will
remain the same throughout the world, regardless of country or
telecommunications carrier.

'Freephone' is a service which permits the cost of a telephone call to
be charged to the called party, rather than the calling party.
Pioneered in the United States in 1966, the freephone service now
carries around 100 million calls per day in that country alone. US
companies currently hold around 90 per cent of the world's nine
million freephone numbers.

Freephone has proved particularly popular with business subscribers,
who are often willing to bear the cost of a telephone call in order to
promote their services or to encourage customers to order their
products by phone. Recent estimates by AT&T indicated some US$100
billion is currently traded over the freephone service every year.
Until now, however, companies have been restricted by only being able
to use their freephone number in one country.  Those organizations
wishing to offer services or products to customers on an international
basis have had no choice but to register a separate number in each
country, which has proved unwieldy and often inefficient.

The ITU's new standard for international freephone will greatly
free-up companies' ability to operate across international markets,
and will benefit consumers by allowing them to obtain information or
to 'shop around' for goods and services at no personal expense. It is
hoped the new standard might also stimulate the market for freephone
services in Europe and Asia-Pacific, regions that until now have been
slow to take up the service.

The potential market for the new international freephone service is
expected to be considerable.  The 'globalization' of markets via new
technologies such as the Internet means that many companies are now
able to offer their products and services to users in different
countries, and will benefit from being able to advertise a single
'toll-free' number to potential customers all over the world.  Calls
to the new global number can also be routed to different destinations,
allowing companies to direct their incoming calls to the most
appropriate location for efficient handling.

While perhaps not as glamorous as 'sexy' new technologies such as
multimedia or video-on-demand, freephone services are nevertheless
expected to represent a more important source of revenue in the
foreseeable future.

In developing the new Universal International Freephone Numbering
system, the ITU followed four principal objectives:

* Portability of the UIFN, allowing companies to retain their global
number if they change carriers;

* A flexible structure (a UIFN is composed of a three digit country
code for global service application, 800, and an 8-digit Global
Subscriber Number [GSN], resulting in an eleven-digit fixed format)
which allows companies to choose the digits they wish and embed
existing freephone numbers into the available number space [see fn 1];

* A format which allows for efficient routing of calls between service
providers;

* An impartial system of allocation and handling of numbers, via an
international registrar. 

Following the approval of the standard, the June session of the ITU
Council is expected to ratify the mandate for the ITU Telecommunication 
Standardization Bureau to act as the registrar of the new system, and
to undertake the task of allocating and maintaining a central global
registry of international freephone numbers. The organization has
already begun work on the establishment of the new UIFN database and
will allocate numbers on a first-come, first-served basis, with a fee
to be charged to offset the cost of maintaining the system.

Progress towards the commencement of registration of UIFNs is now
well-advanced, and it has recently been decided to extend the
acceptance of applications by 60 days instead of the 30 days mentioned
in the Recommendation, in order to allow ample time to process the
large number of applications which are anticipated.

The schedule for applications is as follows:

3 September 1996: advertising notification
3 December 1996: collection of applications
1 February 1997: amend all invalid applications
4 February 1997: onwards: conflict resolution and assigning UIFNs

 From 1 February onwards applications will be treated on a first come,
first served basis, but number reservations will not be made until all
conflict resolutions are complete.

For those interested, more information concerning application forms,
payment of registration fee, contact number of the Registrar,
application procedures and so on will be provided via ITU Circular.
Preliminary information will be available from July 1996 on the World
Wide Web at http://www.itu.ch, under the heading Telecommunication
Standardization Bureau.

[fn 1] An international freephone service caller must dial an
international prefix prior to the UIFN. For example, a caller dialling
from Switzerland would dial: 00 (international prefix), 800
(international country code for freephone), then the eight-digit
Global Subsriber Number.


FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT 
Telecommunication Standardization Bureau
Mr Zoltan John Tar
Fax: +41 22 730 5853
Internet: tar@itu.ch

Mr Ah-ho Mafat
Fax: +41 22 730 5853
Internet: mafat@itu.ch	

Press and Public Information 
Tel: +41 22 730 6039
Fax: +41 22 730 5939
Internet: pressinfo@itu.ch

More information about the ITU is available on the World Wide Web at
http://www.itu.ch

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

Date: Thu, 6 Jun 1996 00:39:32 EDT
From: Dave Leibold <dleibold@else.net>
Subject: Toronto, Montreal Slated to Get New Area Codes


 From the Angus Telemanagement Update this week (off the website
http://www.angustel.ca/) there was news that Montreal area code 514
could be split by the end of 1998, and another Toronto area code added
around 2000 (to the 416 area presumably ... or maybe 905 is also
involved?). This news is probably not too official at present.

One or both of these could be overlays, something that would be
decided by Bell Canada. An overlay seems likely if the new code is for
NPA 416 since Metro Toronto has been treated as a single exchange area
for local calling and rating purposes for many years. However, there
could be a geographic division available, such as the City of Toronto
proper keeping 416 while the outer Metro areas (North York, Scarborough,
Etobicoke, etc.) get the new (to be announced) code, or it could be a
New York style assignment where the new area code is for cellular,
pagers and other services.

A geographic division of the Montreal-area 514 NPA might be handy,
such as the Montreal island keeping 514, with the rest switching to the
new area. Geographic splitting would be easier to do in 514 than in 416. 
Or maybe an overlay will happen in 514 after all ... only Bell Canada 
knows for sure.

The new NPA for Montreal was something of a surprise to hear,
considering that various predictions (reports on the COCUS, various
Digest reports on NPA-NXX lists, Rifton NPA split info) have generally
not considered 514 to be at capacity for the near term. There is also
the lack of population growth and muted business activity in the
region, mainly due to the continuing Quebec separatist scare. However,
Montreal has the second-largest Canadian metropolitan area and no
doubt has its share of cellular, fax and modem activity.

Other than plans for a separate NWT/Yukon NPA, and the previously-
announced 604/250 split in British Columbia, the only other split
situation to watch for in the near term seems to be Alberta.  Even
with the NWT and Yukon out of 403, there are plenty of NXX assignments
in there.


David Leibold -+- dleibold@else.net ++ aa070@freenet.toronto.on.ca ::

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

Date: Wed, 05 Jun 1996 20:06:52 EDT
From: Paul Robinson <paul@TDR.COM>
Organization: Tansin A. Darcos & Company/TDR, Inc. Silver Spring, MD USA
Subject: AT&T Wireless Tells Cellular Roamers: Don't call NJ Police on #95


On traveling Interstate 95 between the Washington DC area and the New
York City - Jersey City - Newark Airport area I discovered some
interesting things during the past four trips I've had to make there:

- All gasoline sold in New Jersey is both mandatory Full Service, it
is at least 15 to 40c per gallon cheaper than any gas, even self
service, in New York City, Delaware or Washington, DC.

- In Washington, DC, Maryland, Virginia, and Delaware, if you see a
vehicle that has had a problem, you may call #77 as a free call to
report it.

- I'm traveling using a car which has a (B-System) cellular phone with
Cellular One and a 703 number (Northern Virginia).  I have been able
to report cars I've seen abandoned or disabled on freeways everywhere
from Fredericksburg, VA to the south all the way to Newark, Delaware,
(to the north) by dialing #77.

- If you go into New Jersey, the signs tell you to dial #95 to report
such things to the state police.

- The state radio system (1610 AM) reports such calls are toll and
airtime free from MOST major cellular services.

- Along part of the New Jersey Turnpike - near exit 10, for example -
calls *do go through* using #95.

- When attempting to use the service past the airport at Newark, New
Jersey, (exit 14A/B/C, Jersey City and the Holland Tunnel) to report a
car abandoned on the road, dialing #95 produces an error message
similar to the following:

  This is AT&T Wireless Services.  The number you have dialed is not
  valid.  If you are calling a number outside of your own area code,
  you must first dial "1" plus the area code and the number.


What surprises me is that I both placed and received calls while in
several states, on an automatic basis without having to register the
phone or perform any special operations, yet apparently AT&T is unable
or unwilling to allow people roaming to connect to the state police.

I didn't use 911 to make this type of report because it wasn't that
serious.  But it does say something about the - what is a good term
here - lack of professionalism or lack of forethought in not making
the service operate correctly.

Obviously, Cellular Carriers are not "giving away" these special code
sequences; they charge for them as well as collecting the airtime
charge from the customer, the same way MCI charges me a monthly fee
and a per-minute charge for every call that is received on my
company's 800 number.

Why exactly is AT&T having a problem providing the same service that
all the other carriers "from DC to DE" have no trouble doing?

Maybe they want to keep the "foreigners" (roamers from foreign
systems) from calling just like they do in poorer neighborhoods in
large cities trying to use their calling cards in areas where high
fraud problems occur?  :)

 
Paul Robinson
General Manager
Tansin A. Darcos & Company/TDR, Inc.

Among Other things, we sell and service ideas.  Call 1-800-TDARCOS from 
anywhere in North America if you are interested in buying an idea to solve 
one of your problems.

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

From: Tad Cook <tad@ssc.com>
Subject: Reel World Product Placement
Date: Wed, 5 Jun 1996 15:14:23 PDT


This may seem off-topic, except that there was a recent thread about
product placement in movies, and questions about how that happens.


THE REEL WORLD Product Placement: Consumerism Reaches New Heights in
Movies By JOHN HORN

AP Entertainment Writer

LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Here's the swing -- and the pitch.

You have to look closely, but Kevin Costner packs a Taylor Made Burner
Bubble driver in his "Tin Cup" golf bag. Tom Cruise surfs the net on
an Apple PowerBook 5300 in "Mission: Impossible." Pierce Brosnan's
"Goldeneye" James Bond has traded up to a BMW Z3 Roadster. And
"Demolition Man's" Sylvester Stallone dines at a Taco Bell.

Or is it a Pizza Hut?

Consumer products have never played a more prominent co-starring role
in the movies, and the marketing doesn't stop on screen. In a multi-
million dollar effort to cash in on hit films, companies of all
stripes are laying out huge sums to become promotional partners with
Hollywood blockbusters -- even when their product doesn't appear in
the movie.

For the manufacturers, the advantages are twofold. For minimal cost, a
product can share the screen with Bruce Willis or Julia Roberts. And
with the right advertising campaign, something as dull as a hamburger
can enjoy a fortune of brand-name publicity. Reese's Pieces got a huge
boost from "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial," and "Toy Story" sparked an
avalanche of once-defunct Slinky Dog sales.

In the last several months, McDonald's, PepsiCo, Apple and BMW all
have shelled out millions to become promotional partners with
Hollywood's top filmmakers.  McDonald's pact with Disney doesn't mean
Big Macs will start appearing in animated musicals, but McDonald's
will be Disney's primary promotional partner for 10 years.

"More and more marketers are trying to do movie promotions," says Dean
Ayers, president of the Entertainment Resources and Marketing
Association. "Today's films are a major force in creating icons and
showing what's hip and trendy.  They drive people into the stores."

For the studios and filmmakers, the placement and promotion deals are
a sure-fire daily double. Products lend a movie real-world
authenticity, and can help defray costly prop and wardrobe budgets.
More important is the free advertising: BMW and Apple spent $15
million apiece advertising "Goldeneye" and "Mission Impossible."
Taylor Made will run "Tin Cup" ads in seven golf magazines -- and
Warner Bros. won't spend a dime.

Just like studio executives, marketing experts struggle to pick which
film will -- or will not -- be a hit. And even with a filmmaker's
promise, a product placement can backfire.

Black & Decker paid to have a drill featured in one of the "Die Hard"
movies, but the power tool landed on the cutting room floor. Coca-Cola
successfully asked Oliver Stone to cut a Coke commercial from the
ultraviolent "Natural Born Killers." Orkin lent its pest-control name
to "Pacific Heights," but was aghast (and later sued) when the movie
depicted an Orkin technician as a hopeless dolt.

Many films do not lend themselves to product placement and promotional
tie-ins.  Jack Daniels, for instance, would have been crazy to sign on
with the alcoholic drama "Leaving Las Vegas." The babes-and-burgers
chain Hooters turned down a chance to cross-promote the even lower-rent 
"Showgirls."

Some people have criticized Apple's appearance in "Mission:
Impossible."  Although Cruise's character spends much of the film
typing on a computer keyboard, it's not always clear he's working on
an Apple. The fancy BMW also didn't get much screen time in
"Goldeneye" -- Bond clearly still favors an Aston Martin.

Some product plugs are almost unnoticeable.

"They can be both obvious and subliminal at the same time," says
Michael Schau, the executive editor of the Entertainment Marketing
Letter, a trade publication. "You could be seeing a lot more Chrysler
than you imagine."

Such is the case with Taylor Made golf clubs.

As part of the "Tin Cup" plot, Roy McAvoy (Costner) doesn't have
access to fancy sponsors and top-of-the-line equipment: he's a
backroad hustler. Costner personally golfs with Taylor Made metal
woods, so the film's prop department took sandpaper to such a club,
gave it a wood-grain paint job, and passed it off as a steel-shafted
persimmon driver.

Don Johnson, who stars opposite Costner as a PGA pro, doesn't have to
disguise his brand. His clubs -- and golf bag -- all say Taylor Made.
Johnson's golf hat, thanks to another product placement deal, is from
Nissan.

Cast and crew members say the real benefit of product placement is
free loot.

Taylor Made has given away valuable golf equipment to two dozen Warner
Bros.  executives, and Nike is loved throughout Hollywood for
showering everyone down to the bagel boy with free shoes and sporting
goods. The only reason Travolta and Christian Slater wear Adidas
boxing shoes in "Broken Arrow" is because one of the producers wanted
Adidas freebies for his personal shoe collection.

Movie makers are showing increasing flexibility to work products into
films.

As originally filmed, a key scene in "Flipper" had Elijah Wood's
character kick a Coca-Cola can into the water. The brainy dolphin
flicks the can back on the dock, and a filmic friendship is formed.

Shortly before the film was released, Pizza Hut joined with Universal
Pictures to promote the movie. One problem: Pizza Hut is owned by
Pepsi, which also owns Taco Bell and KFC. So the filmmakers reshot the
aquatic bonding scene, this time with a Pepsi can.

Pepsi also figures in one of the stranger product placement scenes in
recent years.

In the 1993 futuristic thriller "Demolition Man," Sandra Bullock
informs Stallone that only Taco Bell has survived the franchise wars
of the 20th century -- it's literally the only restaurant left. It was
a great plug -- with a catch.

Taco Bell has 4,600 outlets in the United States but only a handful
overseas.  Sister restaurant Pizza Hut, on the other hand, has 3,300
international locations.

For the film's international release, special effects experts
digitally removed the Taco Bell logo from the film, added a new
restaurant and rerecorded Bullock's dialogue. Now, when the movie is
shown overseas, Taco Bell has failed, just like all the other chains.

There's only Pizza Hut.

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
public service systems and networks including Compuserve and America
On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. 

Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:

                 * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu *

The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
Townson of Skokie, Illinois USA. You can reach us by postal mail, fax 
or phone at:
                      Post Office Box 4621
                     Skokie, IL USA   60076
                       Phone: 500-677-1616
                        Fax: 847-329-0572
  ** Article submission address: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu

Our archives are located at mirror.lcs.mit.edu and are available by using
anonymous ftp. The archives can also be accessed using our email
information service. For a copy of a helpful file explaining how to
use the information service, just ask.

*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from the              *
* International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in Geneva, Switzerland    * 
* under the aegis of its Telecom Information Exchange Services (TIES)   * 
* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
* ing views of the ITU.                                                 *
*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
yourself who provide funding in amounts deemed appropriate. Your help
is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of twenty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #271
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Thu Jun  6 15:54:27 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id PAA10184; Thu, 6 Jun 1996 15:54:27 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Thu, 6 Jun 1996 15:54:27 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606061954.PAA10184@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #272

TELECOM Digest     Thu, 6 Jun 96 15:54:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 272

Inside This Issue:                          Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Telecom Archives CD-ROM Ordering Details (TELECOM Digest Editor)
    Research Proposal Toward Vision of Future of the Net (Ronda Hauben)
    WebPhone 2.0 beta (Jorene Downs)
    Sprint Fridays Were Free (Dan Ryan)
    Re: Followup on Sprint Fridays Free (Tom Horsley)
    Problems With US Robotics Service (Cathryn Gries)
    Summary Report on ISLIP 96 (Dr. Edward Ashcroft)
    TRADE Project - 3D Telemedical Environment Over Global ATM (M. Macedonia)
    Re: AC 210 May be Split Into Four (John Cropper)
    Invented Dial Tone? (Fred R. Goldstein)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Subject: Telecom Archives CD-ROM Ordering Details
Date: Thu, 06 Jun 1996 18:42:16 -0700
From: TELECOM Digest Editor <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>


People have been asking how to order the Telecom Archives CDROM by
mail order. Not everyone has been able to find it in a store as of
yet. If you can find it in a store, you will save on the shipping
charges, however it might simply be easier for you to order it
direct from the publisher, so details are given below.

The Telecom Archives is a fifteen year collection of the stuff which
has appeared in TELECOM Digest since 1981 along with a few hundred
other files of telecom related material. There are a lot of technical
files, historical files, etc. Everything that was there through the
end of 1995 is included. The cost is $39.95.

Please buy a copy, as the royalties will help me a lot. Also, if sales
are good, there will be an update with the 1996 material on it at
some future point. 

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

From: rh120@merhaba.cc.columbia.edu (Ronda Hauben)
Subject: Research Proposal toward Vision of Future of the Net
Date: 6 Jun 1996 15:18:55 GMT
Organization: Columbia University


Recently in post on the Netizens Association Mailing List, 
Kerry pointed out the following grant that the nsf has available.

>From The Scout Report - May 10, 1996
 http://rs.internic.net/scout/report/current/#1

   NSF Recognition Awards for the Integration of Research and Education: 
   A new National Science Foundation program represents one aspect of the
   Foundation's commitment to the core strategy of integrating research
   and education, as described in the strategic plan, "NSF in a Changing
   World." The program will make awards that recognize up to ten
   research-intensive universities that have shown leadership,
   innovation, and achievement in their efforts to integrate research and
   education (specifically college freshmen through Ph.D.) throughout
   their organizations. Preliminary applications are required and must be
   received by July 5, 1996. Full information on the Recognition Awards
   can be found on the NSF Recognition Awards Web page. 
   http://www.nsf.gov/od/osti/raire/recintro.htm

Recently I went to a program describing some of the research work a
neighboring university was beginning. When I commented that there
seemed to be a need for work regarding communication and networking,
the person holding the program asked me to write up a proposal. I
wrote up the following proposal and it seems that it is the kind of
proposal that the NSF grant might make possible.

I welcome comments and suggestions about it. I haven't gotten any
response from the person asking me to send him a proposal, but I spent
time working on the proposal so it should be circulated anyway and it
should help encourage the creation and development of worthwhile
research work.

                   From Time Sharing to the Internet
            What Is the Future the Net Makes Possible? 
       A Proposal towards a Pilot for a Research Institute 
 
 
      Significant computer communications developments have occurred
in our time. We have seen the creation of interactive computing and
time sharing, the development of the ARPANET, Usenet and then the
Internet. (See "Netizens: An Anthology on the History and Impact of
Usenet and the Internet" The URL is http://www.columbia.edu/~hauben/netbook).  

What is the desirable future that these communications developments
make possible?
 
     This is a proposal to set up a pilot research project to examine
how the Internet and Usenet can have a beneficial impact on the
society. The pilot project would consist of:
 
1) A monthly lecture series about the history and impact of the 
Net with each lecture and discussion based on the topics in 
"Netizens: On the History and Impact of Usenet and Internet."
These would be held both online and in a university setting.
 
2) A seminar for those in the university community interested in 
exploring the communication developments that the Net makes 
possible.
 
3) A 3 year research project supporting a few researchers full 
time and multiple student part time researchers to contribute 
to the work.

     A) At least one researcher to study the Net and its development
as the paradigm for the future. The first year's research project
could be something like a study of the posts on early Usenet toward a
monograph at the end of the year's study. This could be followed by a
two year project interviewing pioneers of Usenet and the Internet
towards a book of interviews and also towards a conference about the
Future of the Net.

     B) At least one researcher would study the effect the Net is
having on society. These studies will provide some of the basis for
the conference on the Future of the Net.

     C) Student researchers working on self chosen topics to
contribute to the work.  Students would be invited to submit research
proposals.

     D) In the third year, there will be a conference with some of the
networking pioneers on the topic of "Developing a Vision for the
Future of the Net". The conference will build on a similar conference
held in 1961 at MIT about the Future of the Computer. At that
conference there was discussion of the impact the computer would have
on the University, Libraries, Management, Politics, etc. The
conference will be held in the Fall of 1998 and a book of the
proceedings will be published in Spring of 1999 in time for welcoming
in the new millennium in the year 2000.  Students will be encouraged
to participate as presenters and discussants.

     E) There will be an effort to develop an online research
institute to help researchers collaborate towards the 1998 conference,
and to collaborate with others doing similar research around the
world.
 
4) Monthly dinner meetings for researchers who are studying the new
communications technologies with papers exploring their impact.
 
5) There will be a need for office space, for administrative support
when needed, and for a computer with sufficient memory that can be set
up as a virtual research center on the Internet to help support the
work. There will be an effort to gather the research available online
about the Net and make it available at the virtual research center.
Accounts will be issued for researchers so they can collaborate in
real time and discuss their respective work on line, etc.
 
6) There will be planning and preparation for a conference on the
Future of the Net which will look at how the Net can impact the
University, the Community, Government, the Press, Libraries, and the
Net itself. There will be work done to prepare for the conference by
supporting online discussion lists, or newsgroups, etc.  on these
issues.
 
7) Funding for a University library to begin archiving online research
resources like Usenet archives.
 
8) The pilot for the Institute will be available as a resource to
those in the University community interested in exploring the
communications advance that this new technology makes possible.

Comments and suggestions towards this proposal welcome.


Please send to 
rh120@columbia.edu
ronda@panix.com
 
		Netizens: On the History and Impact
                     of Usenet and the Internet
              http://www.columbia.edu/~hauben/netbook/

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

Date: Thu, 6 Jun 1996 11:50:17 PDT
From: Jorene Downs <jcdowns@strategic-vision.com>
Subject: WebPhone 2.0 beta


I did a brief follow-up on the recent article announcing the release of the
WebPhone 2.0 beta, and received this response:

  From: 	ross schindler[SMTP:ross@netspeak.com]
  Sent: 	Thursday, June 6, 1996 12:50
  To:	 	'jcdowns@strategic-vision.com'
  Subject: 	RE: WebPhone 2.0

> Thank you for your interest in the WebPhone 2.0 beta 1.  Currently
> the beta version of the WebPhone does contain a text area called the
> Noteboard.  You can do multi-line conference calling.  You do not need
> to have a static IP address to use the WebPhone.  You dial by e-mail
> address.  Please visit our web page at www.netspeak.com to see the
> WebPhone and it features.

This Internet phone release looks as if it might be mature enough to
be considered as more than a "isn't this fun!" add-on for the PC.
There is still the issue of no standards (the different Net phone
applications are currently unable to interconnect), limitations
(technology is available to connect with traditional phone service,
but it is not commonly available), and the potential for Net capacity
problems.

Regardless, the option of multi-line conferencing (they indicate 4
lines available, so I *assume* that is the limit) just moved Internet
Telephony into a new arena. Many businesses would find a 4-line
conference call very adequate for their daily needs, and certainly
cheaper than a toll call.  There is good opportunity for internal
office (Intranet) usage as well, particularly with the voice messaging
capabilities. The nominal investment in software, full duplex sound,
and a speaker and mike / headphone / handset / earpiece would quickly
pay for itself.


Jorene

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

Date: Thu, 6 Jun 1996 03:03:17 PDT
From: Dan Ryan <danryan@econ.ucsb.edu>
Subject: Sprint Fridays Were Free


Maybe we might all get a little more satisfaction from Sprint if we
didn't react to every action of theirs by summoning lawyers, and maybe
made a few calls to their friendly customer service people instead.

Like many others here, I was billed the $50 minimum on Sprint Fridays
last week, despite having long since left their program. I called
customer service, and within two minutes it had been dealt with and
the appropriate credit applied to the bill. All done efficiently and
courteously.

Shouldn't we remember that everyone who subscribed to Sprint Fridays
Free got two months of free calls? Much as we would have liked to have
gotten ten more months, we all knew too that it was intended as a
business promotion, even if the Sprint sales people told us otherwise.
Otherwise, why was it an offering of Sprint Business Sense? Like found
money, there was no offence committed by the recipient, but neither
were we entitled to it by right.

Sprint has lost a packet on this, and the conclusively demonstrated
incompetence has kiboshed any imminent promotions of those
responsible.  So why don't we lighten up on them. After all, on the
same bill where I was overcharged by Sprint, there was also a
substantial overcharge by my present carrier. Sprint has no monopoly
in mistreating customers ...


Dan Ryan


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Very good point. Maybe we should lay
off them a little, but I still believe it is important that no one pay
any bills issued by Sprint as part of this fiasco, and I believe it
is important to document in writing what takes place in the event that
Sprint continues trying to pursue collection.   PAT]

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

From: tom@news.hcsc.com (Tom Horsley)
Subject: Re: Followup on Sprint Fridays Free
Date: 05 Jun 1996 20:39:36 GMT
Organization: Harris Computer Systems Corporation
Reply-To: Tom.Horsley@news.hcsc.com


> Does anyone else have anything to add?

Sure. Make copies of everything, along with an explaination of the
circumstances and send it off to your congresscritter. After all, its
an election year, and they might sense an opportunity to look good by
holding hearings and dragging Robin Loyed up before the committee.
Heck, you might even see what he looks like on C-SPAN.


Tom.Horsley@mail.hcsc.com  or  Tom.Horsley@worldnet.att.net
Work: Harris Computers, 2101 W. Cypress Creek Rd. Ft. Lauderdale FL  33309
The 2 most important political web sites: http://www.vote-smart.org (Project
Vote Smart), and http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/TomHorsley (Me!)


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Oh, really now, I don't think writing
to Congress about this is worth the effort. I would not bother those
people with this issue. Anyway, in order to get Robin Loyed there,
they would have to find him first, and I am still not convinced there
is such a person; it might be just a phone name used by Sprint to tip
them off in advance as to the nature of the latest cranky customer on
the line and what they intend to complain about.   PAT]

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

From: Cathryn Gries <cgries@rlj-consulting.com>
Subject: Problems With US Robotics Service
Date: Wed, 05 Jun 1996 16:41:38 -0500
Organization: RLj Consulting, Ltd.


I wanted to share a bad experience I recently had with US Robotics 
service.

About two months ago (April 2 to be exact), I placed a replacement
parts order for a PCMCIA modem cable. I was told the order would be
filled within two weeks. I gave an American Express credit card number
for billing.

After about a month, I called and was told that the parts had been 
backordered and had just come in. I should again expect a shipment 
in two weeks.

On 5/24, I called back and found out that my order was still open. 
The service rep said she would escalate it and ensure that it got 
filled. My phone number was on the order.

After never hearing back her, I called again yesterday and was 
informed that they do not take American Express - I needed to 
provide a Visa/Mastercard number.

I have now been without a modem for over two months. Not to mention
all the time I've wasted on hold waiting for various service reps. Get
your act together. Or is this a ploy to wear down my patience so that
I will buy another modem?

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

Date: Wed, 5 Jun 1996 14:44:19 -0700
From: Dr. Edward Ashcroft <ashcroft@enws26.EAS.ASU.EDU>
Subject: Summary Report on ISLIP 96
Reply-To: Dr. Edward Ashcroft <ashcroft@enws26.EAS.ASU.EDU>



ISLIP 96 Successful!

The Ninth ISLIP, the International Symposium on Languages for
Intensional Programming, was held at Arizona State University on May
13 through May 15th.  The meeting was successful, even though it
started with a record temperature of 109 degrees, Fahrenheit!

One of the events at ISLIP 96 was the first ever preannounced, formal
presentations of Visual Java, demonstrated by its inventor and
implementor, our own Tony Faustini.  (Visual Java is based on Operator
Nets, the graphical form of Lucid.)

If anyone wants a copy of the proceedings, copies are available from
me for $10.  As was done for ISLIP 95, expanded and improved versions
of the papers will be made into a book: Intensional Programming II, by
World Scientific.

Bad news: Bill Wadge will NOT be spending his Sabbatical at Grenoble
next year, and so the next ISLIP will not be there.  Bill WILL be at
Victoria, and he has agreed to host ISLIP 97 at Victoria.  (Since we
now have a large contingent from Australia, I perhaps need to
emphasize that that is Victoria, BC.)


Ed Ashcroft

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

From: Michael Macedonia <mrm@brainiac.com>
Subject: TRADE Project -- 3D Telemedical Environment Over Global ATM
Date: Wed, 05 Jun 1996 22:04:41 -0400
Organization: brainiac Services


        CRCG Demonstrates 3D Telemedical Environment over Global ATM

The Fraunhofer Center for Research in Computer Graphics (CRCG),
Providence, RI successfully demonstrated today for the first time the
use of global ATM (asynchronous transfer mode) networks for
distributed 3D telemedicine.

CRCG conducted the trial use of TeleInViVo with the Fraunhofer
Institute for Computer Graphics (IGD) in Darmstadt, Germany via the
May intercontinental ATM network sponsored by Global One, Teleglobe
Canada, German Telekom and its subsidiary, DeTeBerkom. The network is
being used by the partners to investigate high-bandwidth distributed
multimedia applications for use over global ATM links.

TeleInViVo is a joint project between IGD and CRCG. Medical
visualization is heading towards telepresence, virtual and enhanced
reality systems featuring a high level of interactivity, distributed
and collaborative work, physically-based modeling and realism. The
goal of the TeleInViVo project is to facilitate diagnosis, medical
training, surgery, therapy planning and treatment by means of a
powerful, multi-functional, real-time visualization system in a
distributed environment.

TeleInViVo will provide state-of-the-art visualization tools for the
medical profession that effectively decrease medical costs while
improving overall quality and throughput.

Since TeleInViVo displays any type of 3D scalar data, it can also be
applied to a wide range of applications in areas as diverse as
forensics, geology, and mechanics (i.e. structural analysis). Data,
such as 3D Ultrasound, MRI, CT, etc., can be analyzed and presented.

CRCG is located near Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island. The
mission of the Center is to be a leading group in 3D graphics
applications and services over high-speed global networks.

CRCG thanks our sponsors, especially Hewlett-Packard, and the leaders
of the May group, Global One, Teleglobe Canada, and German Telekom.


Michael R. Macedonia, Ph.D.  	| URL:   http://www.crcg.edu
Vice President			| EMAIL: mmacedon@crcg.edu	
Fraunhofer CRCG 		|				
167 Angell Street 		| PH :   (+1) 401 453-6363	
Providence, RI 02906		| FAX:   (+1) 401 453-0444	

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

From: psyber@usa.pipeline.com (John Cropper)
Subject: Re: AC 210 May be Split Into Four
Date: 6 Jun 1996 02:38:36 GMT
Organization: Pipeline USA


On Jun 04, 1996 23.21.53 in article <AC 210 May be Split Into Four>,
bpurcell@centuryinter.net (Brian Purcell) wrote: 
 
> We may soon see the first (as far as I know) area code split that will 
> result in multiple new codes carved out of a single exisiting area in 
> an effort to give longer life to the newly assigned codes. 
 
If and only if the split is simulataneously implemented. 708 was
carved into three sections, but the splits occurred over a seven month
period.  Washington's 206 _should_ have done the same, and still may
see a three-way split come early 1997, since it is getting close to
exhausting once again.
 
> Soutwestern Bell recently announced that AC 210 (San Antonio region), 
> which was just created in 1992, will soon be split into as many as 
> _four_ codes. 
 
Excuse me, but this is the same company still fighting those idiotic
Texas state regulators, who still haven't handed down a decision on
713/281 (713 is already 97.2% exhausted), as well as 214/972 (214 is
96.6% exhausted).  If they expected a logical conclusion, they
should've submitted a plan in mid-95 for review. 817 is facing
exhaustion shortly as well, do you honestly believe that we'll get
something easy out of that?  :-)
 
> SWB originally proposed two schemes for dividing 210 
> into just one new area- both variations on splitting metro San Antonio 
> away from the existing 210.  One plan was rejected outright because it 
> put non-contiguous areas into the same AC.  With the remaining plan, 
> SWB estimated that metro SA would need another AC by the year 2002. 
> So the PUC had SWB come up with three new options to provide longer 
> life for the new codes.  These plans are currently being reviewed: 

> - Give metro SA one code and divide the remaining area into two codes. 

> - Give metro SA two codes in an overlay and give the remaining area
> another code. 

> - Give metro SA two codes in a "doughnut" and split the remaining area in 
> half with two codes as well (total of four codes including original 210). 

> Having observed how the PUC handled the recent Houston/Dallas AC case, 
> I doubt they will go for the overlay.  And, the PUC has indicated that 
> they want new codes to last longer to minimize disruptions to the 
> residents and businesses, so they will probably opt for the 4-from-1 
> scheme to provide a plethora of numbers (for a little while, anyway.) 
 
Great, so SA doesn't exhaust until 2004, and all the snakes and cacti
in the outlying codes are good for another six years beyond that?  :-)
 
> SWBell estimates 210 will be in jeopardy by the 2Q 1997, so I expect 
> this change to be decided by the 3Q of 96 and implemented with a short 
> permissive period early in 1997. 
 
We shall see, since SWB is also recommending a third code for the
713/281 Houston fiasco ...
 

John Cropper, President     NiS Telecom Division 
POB 277, Pennington, NJ  USA  08534-0277 
voice: (800) 247-8675       fax:    (609) 637-9430 
psyber@usa.pipeline.com

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

Date: Wed, 05 Jun 1996 17:21:27 -0400
From: Fred R. Goldstein <fgoldstein@bbn.com>
Subject: Invented Dial Tone?


Those ubiqutious new ads from Lucent are cute.  One big theme is
"Invented Dial Tone".  Wow.  Makes the point, no?

But what did Lucent (then known as Western Electric) invent, and when?
We Digest readers all know that Almon Strowger invented the dial in
the 1890s, that Automatic Electric was the pioneering manufacturer of
dial equipment, and that AT&T/WECo. didn't even begin to deploy dial
until the 1920s!

The implication, if Lucent isn't lying, is that the early AE steppers
didn't have dial tone.  The Line Finders worked silently.  Dial tone
was thus invented later, by WECo., as a way to handle congestion in
the switches.  Early dials said "Wait for dial tone" and indeed you
often had to.  Was dial tone originally part of the (WECo invention)
panel exchange?  Or did they add it to the (Strowger-designed)
stepper?

Or are they taking *great* liberties with the whole thing?  I suppose
they have *some* rights to AE's glory, because AT&T acquired half(?)
ownership of Automatic Electric a few years ago when GTE threw in the
towel on trying to compete head-on.  The resultant venture, AG
Communications (?), is presumably moving from AT&T to Lucent's domain.
It still supports the GTD-5 switches (yes, they do have working ISDN
PRI now) and other legacy AE hardware.  Is this the part of Lucent
upon whom the dialtone claims are based?

(Side digression: In the Soviet Union, "dial tone" had a different
meaning.  Anybody out there know the Russian word for it?  I think it
referred to the top "nomenklatura" -- party wheels so important that
even their phones worked, and their imporance was ranked by the
shortness of their phone numbers.  In this sense, Lenin or Stalin
could have claimed to have "invented dial tone"!)


Fred R. Goldstein      fgoldstein@bbn.com  
BBN Corp.              Cambridge MA  USA    +1 617 873 3850


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: One of these days I will devote an
issue of the Digest to the topic, "Who Invented Fred Goldstein?" <g>.
Thanks, Fred, for a great conclusion to this issue of the Digest.  PAT]

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
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On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
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Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
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*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
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All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
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should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #272
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Thu Jun  6 17:35:02 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id RAA19247; Thu, 6 Jun 1996 17:35:02 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Thu, 6 Jun 1996 17:35:02 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606062135.RAA19247@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #273

TELECOM Digest     Thu, 6 Jun 96 17:34:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 273

Inside This Issue:                          Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    AT&T Attacks GTE (Tad Cook)
    513/937 Split Revised (John Cropper)
    VPN/Opportunity/Announcement (Bill McMullin)
    Local Call Costs in Various Countries? (David Baker)
    TRADE Project -- Intercontinental ATM Link (Michael Macedonia)
    Vodafone Employees Organizing Announcment (David Lyons)
    Computer Telephony Equipment For Sale (mhubert@host.igs.net)
    Re: Caller-ID Delay in California (Ross Oliver)
    Re: AT&T Movie Placement (Judith Oppenheimer)
    Re: Cellular Caller ID (Jay R. Ashworth)
    Re: Telco Voice Mail Signaling (Dave Coles)
    Re: Internet Domain Names (Rishab Aiyer Ghosh)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Tad Cook <tad@ssc.com>
Subject: AT&T Attacks GTE
Date: Thu, 6 Jun 1996 12:13:06 PDT


AT&T Uses Florida Businesses in Attack Ads against GTE Local Service
By Robert Trigaux, St. Petersburg Times, Fla.

Knight-Ridder/Tribune Business News

TAMPA, Fla.--Jun. 4--Catch AT&T Corp.'s local ads these days and you'd
think GTE Corp. can't even tie its own shoes.

On area radio and television and in newspapers, AT&T claims GTE is:

-- Twice as likely to have a failure of its long-distance network as AT&T.

-- Three times as likely to lose one of its toll-free 800 calls.

-- Three times as likely to fail to connect a phone call when first dialed.

The Tampa Bay campaign against GTE's reliability is AT&T's first
marketing attack anywhere against a local phone company since laws
changed this year, allowing long-distance and local phone companies to
invade each other's turf.

GTE, a longtime provider of local-phone service to the Tampa Bay area,
in April began offering long-distance service to anyone in Florida.

Meanwhile, AT&T -- the country's largest long-distance carrier --
plans to offer local phone service in all 50 states. It has teamed up
with Time Warner Communications in the Tampa Bay area to provide local
phone service to businesses by this fall and to consumers by 1997.

AT&T's ad campaign should help soften up the Tampa Bay market when
AT&T is expected to start offering local-phone service at a discount
to lure newcomers.

The AT&T ads bashing GTE make the political sparring in Dole and
Clinton advertising seem tame. AT&T, which says its own Bell Lab
researchers came up with the negative data on GTE, has also introduced
its campaign to the Seattle and Dallas markets.

"We feel our ads clarify the facts and educate the public," AT&T
spokeswoman Julie Spechler said. "It's all part of the changing
telecommunications landscape."

If AT&T is an old hand at picking on long-distance competitors like
MCI and Sprint, GTE is the rookie.

GTE, primarily a monopoly provider of local phone service in more than
20 states, has had little opportunity -- or need -- to wage marketing
or price wars for customers. Now no turf is sacred, as new players
scrap for customers across the full range of telephone services.

In fact, many companies might be expected to retaliate against AT&T's
negative ads. But GTE says it's taking the high road.

"We're not surprised by the AT&T ads, but we feel that to win in the
competitive marketplace, we need to communicate the benefits GTE can
bring to its customers," GTE product marketer Leah Bailey said.

"From our research, negativity -- just like in a presidential campaign
 -- is not a positive thing," said Bailey, who has fought consumer
goods marketing wars while at Procter & Gamble.

GTE will continue to run its current "Help!" ad campaign, featuring
the old Beatles tune, to position GTE as a company that can sort out
the confusing telecommunications revolution for consumers.

Bailey did counterpunch at one AT&T allegation, though. GTE's
long-distance service -- which is supplied by WorldCom, the country's
fourth-largest long-distance provider -- has a reliability rate of
99.997 percent, she said.

AT&T's strategy is to push into local-phone service around the
country.

In the Illinois market, where local service was controlled by
Ameritech Corp., a Baby Bell, AT&T says it will offer new customers
three months of free, unlimited "local-toll" calling in the Illinois
region. Local-toll calls are those calls that originate and end in the
same local area code but still carry a fee.

And in Connecticut, where competitors are nipping at AT&T's
long-distance share, the company may offer customers a flat rate of five
cents per minute on all calls -- long distance, local or toll service.
That would amount to less than half the current discounted rates.

"In competitive markets you can only be aggressive, giving the
customers value, or you will lose," says Joseph Nacchio, AT&T's
president of consumer services.

Such moves indicate that the first big battleground in the new era of
phone competition will be in local-toll calls. Ultimately, the richest
terrain to capture will be long distance, a $70-billion market, and
regular local service, a $100-billion business.

Holding on to customers is crucial as the telecom rivalry heats up and
AT&T and other carriers move toward offering a bundle of local,
long-distance, wireless and video services.

In the Tampa Bay market, AT&T already has severed an old alliance with
GTE and now separately bills AT&T long-distance customers in the area.
Last week, AT&T canceled its nationwide agreement with GTE that
allowed the AT&T calling card to be used for local toll calls on GTE's
network.

For local impact, AT&T's ads use real Tampa Bay businesses. Among
them: Crab Cooler Seafood, a Tampa fish market, says "Holy Mackerel"
and Tampa's Ye Olde Clock Repair adds "I'm Ticked" in ads when the
businesses learn they would save more with AT&T long-distance.

Says AT&T's Spechler: "To get the customer's attention, you've got to
be hard hitting."

 -- Information from the {Wall Street Journal} was used in this story.


ON THE INTERNET:

Visit sptimes.com, the World Wide Web site of the St. Petersburg (Fla.) Times. 
Point your browser to http://www.sptimes.com

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

From: psyber@usa.pipeline.com (John Cropper)
Subject: 513/937 Split Revised
Date: 6 Jun 1996 21:15:41 GMT
Organization: Pipeline USA


 From Cincinatti Bell Telephone (www.cinbelltel.com): 
 
May 16, 1996: Telephone Industry Responds to Customer Input, Revises
Area Code Plan for Butler and Clermont Counties
 
A telecommunications industry committee said today that a proposed 513
area code split for customers living in Southwestern Ohio is being
revised to better reflect the needs of residents living in areas of
Butler and Clermont Counties.
 
The team's original plan had called for a geographic split to be made
along the Cincinnati Local Access Transport Area (LATA) line.  That
proposal, which was announced in March, would have divided the number
of access lines using the 513 area code almost equally north and south
of the line, as well as maintaining seven-digit dialing for local
calls for the vast majority of customers.
 
The revised plan calls for customers living in Middletown, Trenton and
Monroe in Butler County, and Felicity in Clermont County, to retain
their 513 area code.  Customers living in the areas north and east of
the new area code boundary lines will use the new area code 937.  The
new area code is necessary because 513 area code numbers will be
exhausted sometime during the first quarter of 1998.
 
"The team made every effort to balance the needs of our customers with
the national area code relief guidelines established by the
telecommunications industry," said Roger Werth, Senior Network
Architecture Planner, Cincinnati Bell Telephone.  Werth is chairman of
the industry team that has been studying the need for 513 area code
relief.
 
Government, community and educational officials in both counties had
told the industry team that two area codes would create an air of
division with county communities.  New research also showed that
business and residential customers wanted to retain the 513 area code
even if it meant 10-digit dialing to the Dayton area.  Calls from the
affected areas to Dayton still remain local calls under the revised
plan.
 
By keeping most of Butler County and all of Clermont County in the 513
area code, the revised plan does accelerate the need for another 513
area code split.  Under the old plan another split was projected for
May 2006 -- that date now moves up to February 2005 with 90,000
additional telephone numbers remaining in the 513 area code.
 
The revised plan still calls for a nine-month "permissive dialing
period" that will begin on Sept. 28, 1996.  The permissive dialing
period will allow individuals to make calls to residential and
business customers living in the affected areas using either the 513
or new 937 area code.
 
Mandatory dialing, meaning calls will only be connected using the 937
area code, is scheduled to begin on June 14, 1997.

 
Produced by Zender + Associates and Cincinnati Bell Telephone 
Copyright 1996 (c) Cincinnati Bell Telephone 


John Cropper, President  NiS Telecom Division 
POB 277, Pennington, NJ  USA  08534-0277 
voice: (800) 247-8675    fax:    (609) 637-9430 
psyber@usa.pipeline.com

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

Date: Thu, 06 Jun 1996 07:59:20 -0300
From: Bill McMullin <bill@interactive.ca>
Reply-To: bill@interactive.ca
Organization: Info-InterActive Inc.
Subject: VPN/opportunity/announcement


Pat, I am trying to find a good contact that knows the world of
Virtual Private Networks very well.  We are trying architect a network
for switched voice calls which allows us to place a telephony system
at a central point in a LATA (I guess a wire center) and have this box
accessible as a local call to a radius of about 25 miles, still within
the same LATA.  As an example, in California, each local calling area
has only a 13 mile radius which means there are a *lot* of calliing
areas.  It is not feasible to place a box in each one of these areas.
I suspect it is feasible to backhaul calls from the 25th mile into the
wire center through dedicated facilities. Whatever the solution it is
critical that the signalling information associated with the calls
(ie.  CLID, DNIS, redirecting number etc) be kept in tact. The boxes
will be trunked to the local switches through PRI ISDN.

Any suggestions on who might be the guru of this networking?

On another note, we (the board of my company) recently appointed Colin
Beaumont, just retired Nortel Chief Engineer, to our board of
directors.  Colin will also be a special advisor to my company as he
has retired to Halifax where the company is located.  I would like to
get the word out to the telecoms industry that Colin is "on board"
with us.  Could this be posted to the Digest?  As you can imagine,
involvement by such a high calibre individual in a small upstart
company will be tremendously impacting. He confirms and enhances our
credibility.  Colin is the 'grandfather' of the DMS as well as a
number of other key products which came out of Nortel over the last 25
years.


Regards,

Bill

Info InterActive Inc. is a publicly traded company on the Alberta
Stock Exchange.  The company specializes in the development and
management of a variety of network based enhanced services utilizing
telephony, Internet, and wireless data technologies.

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

From: David Baker <david@gmetra.po.my>
Subject: Local Call Costs in Various Countries?
Date: Thu, 06 Jun 1996 09:49:59 +0800
Organization: Unconfigured


We have just moved to timed local calls here in Malaysia, going from
untimed calls of approx US$0.05 to timed calls of US$0.04 for the
first 3 minutes + US$0.01 per minute after that.

I am trying to compare this against local call costs in other
countries as the local telecoms authorities have published figures to
support their increase, but I can't believe them - US$3.50/hour for
Australia being one of them when I know they have untimed calls of
US$0.20.

Would anyone know if there is a source of information on the Net detailing
costs of local calls around the world? If it was correlated against average
yearly wages this would be perfect! (I guess average wage here is about
US$6000/annum).

I am especially interested in which countries have timed local calls,
which have untimed local calls and even which have free local calls (NZ
for instance).

If not, would anyone be able to tell me the price of local calls in
the following countries (I have written the costs published by the
authorities here for comparison):

Country         Per hour

Australia       US$3.50
Indonesia       US$0.92
Japan           US$6.00
Singapore       US$0.60
UK              US$3.00

I would very much appreciate it if any repliers could cc to my email
address as well as posting -- our newsfeed to Malaysia is very poor
and I don't want to miss any info. (I will check Alta Vista in a day
or two just in case).


Dave

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

From: Michael Macedonia <mrm@brainiac.com>
Subject: TRADE Project -- Intercontinental ATM Link
Date: Wed, 05 Jun 1996 22:07:06 -0400
Organization: brainiac Services


CRCG Establishes First Intercontinental ATM Link for Virtual Reality

Fraunhofer Center for Research in Computer Graphics (CRCG), Inc.,
Providence, RI, has established the first international asynchronous
transfer mode (ATM) network for virtual reality (VR) research. The new
network is part of the MAY project sponsored by Deutsche Telekom and
Sprint International to investigate high-bandwidth distributed
multimedia applications for use with global telecommunications.

The network is composed of several links. The first is between
Providence and Sprint International in Reston, Virginia, using the
National ATM service of Sprint USA. The next hop is provided by a
Sprint International transatlantic fiber cable to Europe. Deutsche
Telekom distributes the data via a German national ATM network to the
Fraunhofer Institute for Computer Graphics in Darmstadt.

CRCG is the first Sprint National ATM customer in the state of Rhode
Island.  CRCG has also led the way in the state on the use of ISDN and
other advanced technologies for international video teleconferencing,
workflow automation, manufacturing design applications and WWW
development. These technologies are essential to companies trying to
compete in a global econonmy.

ATM offers the potential advantage of providing communications with
minimal delay with high bandwidth -- critical requirements for
interactive environments such as VR. CRCG is developing a number of
distributed VR applications for testing over the network, including
team-building environments and training systems for potentially
hazardous environments.  CRCG is also exploring the use of the Virtual
Reality Modeling Language and the Java language from Sun for virtual
environments.

For further questions about this ATM link don't hesitate to contact us.


Michael R. Macedonia, Ph.D.  	| URL:   http://www.crcg.edu
Vice President			| EMAIL: mmacedon@crcg.edu	
Fraunhofer CRCG 		|				
167 Angell Street 		| PH :   (+1) 401 453-6363	
Providence, RI 02906		| FAX:   (+1) 401 453-0444	

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

From: David Lyons <101644.2210@CompuServe.COM>
Subject: Vodafone Employees Organizing Announcement
Date: 6 Jun 1996 07:35:44 GMT
Organization: Society of Telecom Executives


The Society of Telecom Executives, the UK's premier Union for IT
people is organising in Vodafone.  Offering a first class range of
benefits and services for Vodafone employees, now is the time to find
out more.

Freefone: 0800 371 402
INTERNET: ste-orgniser@geo2.poptel.org.uk

For a confidential chat on any work related matter telephone:

01702 291825 or 0468 437575

Thank you for your interest.


David Lyons
STE - Organiser

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

From: mhubert@host.igs.net (mhubert)
Subject: Computer Telephony Equipment For Sale
Date: 6 Jun 1996 15:08:59 GMT
Organization: IGS - Information Gateway Services
Reply-To: mhubert@igs.net


Equipment for sale:

We were using the following equipment from Dianatel Corporation to
offer Internet access using T1 lines. Since our company no longer
offers Internet access, we are selling the equipment.  Dianatel
Corporation specializes in providing telephony solutions based on PC.
If you need information on how this equipment could be used, do not
hesitate to contact me at mhubert@igs.net . For more information on
Dianatel products, visit their WWW site at www.dianatel.com.

Everything was purchased only three months ago and is practically
brand new. In fact, one of the Central Office24 Unit and one of the
EasyAccess24 card have never been used. They were purchased as backup
equipment.

Here's the list of equipment from Dianatel Corporation:

Description				Quantity

EasyAccess24				3
Central Office24 Main Unit		3
CentralOffice24 4-port Borad	 	18
Cables for Office24 Unit		4
Cables for EasyAccess24 card		2

The total value of this package was $12,850 US three months ago.

Please email your offer to mhubert@igs.net before June 14.


Thank you.

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

From: reo@crl.com (Ross Oliver)
Subject: Re: Caller-ID Delay in California
Date: 4 Jun 1996 14:03:53 -0700
Organization: The Air Affair: http://www.airaffair.com/


mwcoen@hooked.net wrote:

> We have not heard a word about costs yet.  About $5-8/month for the
> *service*.  At that price, most residents can't afford it or won't be
> willing to spend that much each month to see who is calling them.
> However, businesses can afford that.

When I ordered CID service for my Sunnyvale residential line, I was
quoted a price of $6 per month, plus $5 installation.  CID is not yet
one of the orderable features on Pac Bell's automated order line,
where you can activate or deactivate any of the other custom calling
features (call waiting, call forwarding, speed dialing, etc) with no
installation charge.  I suspect in a few months, CID will be orderable
this way also, thus eliminating the installation charge.  Don't forget
the $30-40 for a CID box.  I haven't bought mine yet.

Since the monthly CID cost is comparable to other custom calling
features, (I pay $3.95/month for call forwaring, for example) I don't
think afforability is an issue.  Once CID decoding becomes a standard
feature of most telephones (like speed dial is now), more people will
get interested in the capability, although it may always be a
specialty service.


Ross Oliver  reo@taos.com

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

From: callbrand@aol.com (CallBrand)
Subject: Re: AT&T Movie Placement
Date: 4 Jun 1996 18:04:14 -0400
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Reply-To: callbrand@aol.com (CallBrand)


Pat, there was no reaction at all in the movie theater.  I think it
went right over most peoples' heads, although to me it stood out quite
audibly above the rest of the movie's background noise.

Whether or not it performs on some sort of unconscious suggestability
level would be interesting to find out.


Judith Oppenheimer

A leading source of information on 800 issues.
CallBrand@aol.com, 1 800 The Expert, (ph) 212 684-7210, (fx) 212 684-2714
http://pwp.usa.pipeline.com/~producer/

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

From: jra@scfn.thpl.lib.fl.us (Jay R. Ashworth)
Subject: Re: Cellular Caller ID
Date: 6 Jun 1996 00:18:48 GMT
Organization: University of South Florida


Mike Fox (mjfox@raleigh.ibm.com) wrote:

> Hmmm, that's interesting.  Here in Bell South territory, I have had
> calls I've made returned with *69, and I have blocking.  It was to my
> brother's phone.  He said that normally when he does *69, a recording
> gives him the number and then calls it.  In the case of my number, the
> recording states that it cannot give him the number, then calls it.
> So he calls me and doesn't know who he's calling until I answer.

This is the way the FCC has mandated that it has to work, if it's
allowed at all.  NorTel lists this in their DMS marketing literature
as "Last Call Return - Block to Private", and of course, they charge
the telco extra for it, so if they don't feel like paying for it, you
probably won't get LCR at all.


Cheers,

Jay R. Ashworth          jra@scfn.thpl.lib.fl.us
Member of the Technical Staff 
The Suncoast Freenet   Tampa Bay, Florida  +1 813 790 7592

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

From: dcoles@datlog.co.uk (Dave Coles)
Subject: Re: Telco Voice Mail Signaling
Date: 6 Jun 1996 15:03:40 GMT
Organization: Data Logic Limited


Guy St-Pierre (lmcgust@LMC.Ericsson.SE) wrote:

> Paul Chehowski (paulc@sulis.com) wrote:

>> Does anyone know how telco voice mail systems manage to signal a
>> subscriber's phone when they have voice mail waiting? The signaling
[snip]

Setting the message waiting indicator on a (digital) phone (lighting a
lamp) or via a single ring (or tinkle!) on an analogue phone at
pre-determined intervals, can either be accomplished by using one of
the voicemail systems lines to send DTMF tones to the switch, or in
the case of IBM's DirectTalk/6000, and others, by using a separate
signalling link to the switch. Depending on the switch, the link can
be either RS232, X.25 or proprietary link.

The voicemail system will receive signalling information from the
switch (called/calling id etc. associated with a call on an incoming
channel) and send message waiting indicator set/unset commands to the
switch. Protocols supporting these functions are VMS, SMSI and SMDI.


Regards,

David Coles                       email: dcoles@datlog.co.uk
Data Logic Limited,               Tel  : +44 (0)181 715 9696
CI Tower, St George's Square,     DDI  : +44 (0)181 388 0405
High Street, New Malden,          Fax  : +44 (0)181 715 1771
Surrey, KT3 4HH                   www  : http://www.datlog.co.uk

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

From: rishab@CERF.NET (Rishab Aiyer Ghosh)
Subject: Re: Internet Domain Names
Date: 6 Jun 1996 12:33:05 -0700
Organization: CERFnet Dial 'n' CERF Customer


shaw (ROBERT.SHAW@ITU.CH) wrote:

> chris@punk.net wrote:

>> If I had half-a-million sitting around, I'd start my own Internic
>> service. dot-corp or dot-bus anyone?

> Personally I think the proposal is a very bad idea. It is a historical
> accident that the US (unlike every other country in the world) does
> not use ISO country codes (e.g., .fr, .uk) to manage their top level
> domain (TLD) registrations. Although there is a .US TLD (see RFC
> 1480), it is not widely used since "domain name envy" makes everyone
> want to be in .com, .net or .org (currently with around ~350,000
> registrations).

The nice thing about the Internet is that it doesn't matter whether
you, the ISO, or anybody else thinks something is a bad idea or not.
The reason the current domain management structure -- and any other
protocol -- works is that those who think it is a _good_ idea use it,
and those who don't don't have to -- they're free to set up alternatives, 
in full knowledge that communication between the two may be impossible.

Personally, I do not think .com, .net and .org (or .edu or .gov for
that matter) should be administered as if they were US domains. As a
matter of fact they were neither intended to be -- it happened by an
"historical accident" -- nor are US domains. Unlike .us domains for US
sites, .fr for French etc, anyone anywhere in the world can get a .org
domain. If US origins dominate among non-ISO-country-code domains, it
is only because the US dominates the Internet as a whole.

I am aware that under present US law my dxm.org domain can be
challenged by an American trademark owner -- though I may own the
trademark in India, where the domain is located. I am also aware that
under present US (Minnesota) law, Wagernet, an on-line gambling site,
is illegal -- though it's in Belize.

> This problem is going to take a lot more thought and debate.

For a look at some of the thought on the Internet's effect on
traditional legal jurisdiction, see the paper by David Johnson and
David Post (of the Cyberspace Law Institute) in First Monday, May
1996. Hint: they advocate treating the Internet as a separate
jurisdiction.


Rishab Ghosh

First Monday - The Peer-Reviewed Journal on the Internet
http://www.firstmonday.dk/  Munksgaard International Publishers, Copenhagen

International Editor - Rishab Aiyer Ghosh (rishab@dxm.org)
H-34-C Saket New Delhi 110017 INDIA Tel +91 11 6853410; Fax +91 11 6856992

NOTE: New address (after June 9)      Pager +91 11 9622 162187
A4/204 Ekta Vihar, 9 Indraprastha Extn, New Delhi 110092 INDIA

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
public service systems and networks including Compuserve and America
On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. 

Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:

                 * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu *

The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
Townson of Skokie, Illinois USA. You can reach us by postal mail, fax 
or phone at:
                      Post Office Box 4621
                     Skokie, IL USA   60076
                       Phone: 500-677-1616
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*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from the              *
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* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
* ing views of the ITU.                                                 *
*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
yourself who provide funding in amounts deemed appropriate. Your help
is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of twenty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #273
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Thu Jun  6 18:51:25 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id SAA26404; Thu, 6 Jun 1996 18:51:25 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Thu, 6 Jun 1996 18:51:25 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606062251.SAA26404@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #274

TELECOM Digest     Thu, 6 Jun 96 18:51:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 274

Inside This Issue:                          Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    800 Numbers Now Customer Dialable Only (phractal@cloud9.net)
    Re: What Does A/B Carrier Mean? (Alan Dahl)
    Re: What Does A/B Carrier Mean? (Ed Ellers)
    Re: What Does A/B Carrier Mean? (David Crowe)
    Re: Third Wireless Carrier (Robert Beeman)
    Re: MCI Cellular (Stu Jeffery)
    Re: MCI Cellular - Clarifications (Lynne Gregg)
    Need WIN95/Rockwell Solution (J. David Cooper)
    Cellular Message Waiting Indicator (Jeremy Bond Shepherd)
    Looking For 12V Power Cord For Morotola Phone (Gerry Wheeler)
    Information Wanted on SMCM Long Distance: Legit? (Derek J. Tarcza)
    Re: UNIX DTMF-Decoding "Voicemail" Software? (Innovative Technologies)
    Re: Digital Cellular in North America Question (David Crowe)
    Re: Nevada Attorney General Investigates Excel (Ken Leonard)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: phractal <phractal@cloud9.net>
Subject: 800 Numbers Now Customer Dialable Only
Date: Thu, 6 Jun 1996 18:08:50 EDT


That's right, as of June 4th in the 914 area code in Nynex territory,
the 800 ac is customer dialable only. The operators say this is
because of FCC regulations, but there are still many other ac's in
which 800 numbers are not customer dialable only.


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: This is news to me. Perhaps other
readers will be able to report not only their experiences but whatever
guidelines their local telco is using.   PAT]

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

From: Alan Dahl <alan.dahl@attws.com>
Date: Thu,  6 Jun 96 13:29:46 -0700
Subject: What Does A/B Carrier Mean?


PAT writes:

> Well, what actually happened is a bit different. It turned out the
> only people really in a position with the technical knowledge and
> financial ability to start a cellular company in competition to the
> local telco were other telephone companies. So it came down to the
> local telephone company having the 'B' license as planned, but a
> phone company in some other distant community operating under some
> other name holding the 'A' license. For example, here in the Chicago
> area we have Ameritech (the 'traditional' telephone company of record)
> holding the 'B' license while Southwestern Bell, d/b/a/ Cellular One
> has the 'A' license. In St. Louis the exact opposite is the case
> where Southwestern Bell is the 'telco of record' and they operate the
> 'B' side as Southwestern Bell Mobility and Ameritech is the 'A' carrier
> there under some other name. Throughout the USA that is largely the
> case: telcos run the cellular service; the 'out of town' telco intrud-
> ing on the scene as the 'competitor' operates under a different name
> as the 'A' carrier.

Now, PAT you know that's not (or was not in the time frame being
discussed) strictly true, by far the largest non-wireline 'A' side
carrier used to be McCaw Cellular, which had no non-cellular phone
interests (it was a cable-TV company and not a big one at that). It's
also true that the bulk of the "Cellular ONE" network consisted of
markets wholly or partially owned by McCaw.

Of course with the sale of McCaw to AT&T a couple of years ago this
has changed but to infer that the bulk of A-side carriers were owned
by out-of-area landline telephone companies is overstating things just
a bit.


Alan Dahl
Axys Core Development Team     alan.dahl@attws.com
AT&T Wireless Services	       Phone: (206) 702-5231
P.O. Box 97060		       Fax:   (206) 702-5452
Kirkland, WA 98083-9760        http://www.eskimo.com/~adahl

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

From: Ed Ellers <edellers@delphi.com>
Subject: Re: What Does A/B Carrier Mean?
Date: Wed, 5 Jun 96 14:51:27 -0500
Organization: Delphi (info@delphi.com email, 800-695-4005 voice)


TELECOM Digest Editor noted in response to <cerna@ntep0403.ntep.tmg.
nec.co.jp>:
 
> The ruling was that the traditional telephone company of 
> record in the community would be granted one of the two cellular
> radio licenses if they wanted it -- of course, they all did -- and
> the second license would be granted to a competitor.  
 
I'm not aware that the FCC ever reserved the wireline licenses for the
local wireline carrier of record; in fact I can name three cities
right off where a different LEC's cellular subsidiary got the license.
(Indianapolis, in Ameritech territory, has GTE; Cincinnati, served by
Cincinnati Bell, has Ameritech cellular service; and Lexington, a GTE
city, has BellSouth Mobility cellular service, with GTE now owning the
*other* cellular carrier there!)
 
------------------------------

From: David Crowe <crowed@cadvision.com>
Subject: Re: What Does A/B Carrier Mean?
Date: Wed, 05 Jun 1996 13:28:11 +0000
Organization: Cellular Networking Perspectives Ltd.
Reply-To: crowed@cadvision.com


When cellular licenses were first granted, they were given to two
companies in each area. The "B" license was given to the local
telephone company and the "A" license was put up first for comparative
hearings, and then lotteries.

Since there are only two cellular licenses in any one geographical
area, there can only be one "A" carrier and one "B" carrier.


David Crowe

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

Date: 6 Jun 1996 12:33:34 -0500
From: Robert Beeman <robert.beeman@qm.sprintcorp.com>
Subject: Re: Third Wireless Carrier


Pat, 

I hope I can clear up some erroneous information regarding Sprint
Spectrum and PCS in general.

On June 3, 1996 Greg Monti wrote:

> Yes, there are now other wireless carriers popping up, although they
> don't go under the name "cellular" and don't use the same frequency
> band nor the same analog protocols.  In Washington-Baltimore, a
> Personal Communications Service carrier called Sprint Spectrum has
> been in commercial service since December, 1995.  They don't (yet)

You can distinguish between the existing cellular carriers who occupy
the "A" and "B" cellular blocks of frequencies in the 800 MHz region,
and the new PCS carriers who also have "A" and "B" blocks of
frequencies in the spectrum from 1850 MHz to 1990 MHz.

The PCS "A" and "B" block frequency auction was completed in March of
1995, and the winners of these MTA (Major Trading Area) licenses are
now building their systems.  APC in the Washington/Baltimore MTA was
the first operator to go on the air with commercial PCS services on
November 15, 1995.  APC received their MTA license as a "Pioneer's
Preference" award by the FCC for their research and contribution to
PCS technology.  They still had to pay big dollars for their "A" block
license, but they were assured of this opportunity by the award.

The PCS "C" block frequency auction was completed last month, but
these licenses occupy much smaller geographical areas called Basic
Trading Areas (BTA's).  Since an MTA includes several BTA's, there are
many more BTA licenses than MTA licenses.  Yet to be auctioned are the
"D", "E", and "F" BTA blocks.

With the two existing cellular carriers, and the six possible PCS
operators there can be as many as eight wireless companies per market,
and this does not count the ESMR guys!

> Sprint Spectrum is substantially owned by American Personal
> Communications, which is substantially held by the Washington Post
> Company.  They are one of the PCS carriers who performed market and
> technical research on the viability of PCS.  They (and two other
> companies) were given 'pioneer's preference' PCS licenses before the
> PCS spectrum auctions heated up.

The preceding information is not accurate.

Sprint Spectrum purchased the Washington Post's equity in APC, Inc.
Sprint Spectrum now owns 49% of APC, with APC retaining a 51% stake.
Sprint Spectrum itself is owned by Sprint Corporation, plus the three
cable companies Cox, Comcast, and TCI.  Sprint Spectrum is owned as
follows: Sprint Corporation has 40%; TCI has 30%; Cox and Comcast own
15% each.

The Sprint Spectrum BRAND is being marketed by APC, and will be
marketed by all the other MTA operations in the Sprint Spectrum fold.
These include APC, the Cox "Pioneers Preference" Los Angeles MTA, and
the 30 other MTA licenses owned outright by Sprint Spectrum.  The
Sprint Spectrum brand will be deployed nationally, marketing to 182.5
million pops.
 
I hope I have been of some help in correcting information about Sprint
Spectrum, and in supplying additional information about PCS in general.


Regards,

Bob Beeman
Sprint Long Distance
Wireless Marketing Group

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

Date: Wed, 5 Jun 1996 21:29:08 -0800
From: stu@best.com (Stu Jeffery)
Subject: Re: MCI Cellular 


In a posting to TELECOM Digest V16 #269 jra@scfn.thpl.lib.fl.us (Jay
R. Ashworth) wrote:

>> Mike Fox <mjfox@raleigh.ibm.com> wrote:

>> Technically speaking, there is *no* difference between PCS and
>> cellular systems in the U.S. aside from those systems operating on
>> different radio frequencies.

> Actually, there is.  PCS systems will be using, (and I believe it's
> already been decided, but I don't remember which way) the CDMA
> protocol designed by Qualcomm (IS-84?), which is also going into
> service with some cellular carriers to provide "digital service", or a
> protocol very silimar to, if not identical to the GSM (Groupe System
> Mobile, I believe is the French spelling) protocol used for all
> cellular service in Europe.

> Since most currently operating cellular telephony systems use either
> AMPS analog or TDMA digital, I think that saying that there's "no"
> difference, especially with emphasis ...

Then Mike Fox stated there is no difference, except for the frequency
band, and I think he is correct.  (Of course the frequency band
effects are real, especially in rural areas where smaller PCS cell
site radius impact cost of network build out.)

The Qualcomm CDMA protocol IS-95 is actually a cellular protocol and
it is being deployed in a number of cellular networks currently.  Yes,
it has also been chosen by a number of PCS operators and will be
deployed in that band.

GSM, called PCS-1900 in North America, will be extensively deployed in
the PCS bands, but so will IS-136 TDMA, IS-661, PACS, and some other
technologies.

Considering only the A and B band PCS licenses, upbanded IS-95 (CDMA)
has almost national coverage, with PCS-1900 (GSM) and PCS IS-136 TDMA
each having about one half of national coverage.

Further, the PCS IS-136 TDMA operators are ATT Wireless and SBC, both
of which have extensive cellular IS-54/IS-136 networks which are
geographically complementary to their PCS networks.

So I think Mike Fox's comments are right on target.


Stu Jeffery           Internet: stu@best.com
1072 Seena Ave.          voice: 415-966-8199
Los Altos, CA. 94024       fax: 415-966-8456

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

From: Lynne Gregg <lynne.gregg@attws.com>
Subject: Re: MCI Cellular
Date: Wed, 05 Jun 96 15:50:00 PDT


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: As sometimes happens, there becomes
confusion over exactly who said what when a thread gets three or 
four people replying to each other. I think Lynne Gregg made some 
of the comments attributed to Mike Fox above. I sent Lynne copies
of some messages which ran here yesterday and she will now try to
sort some of it out.   PAT]

Thank you for writing me directly on this, Pat.     I appreciate your 
calling it to my attention.

To clarify:

My point was, aside from frequency, there are no other differences in
today's cellular technologies and the PCS technologies being deployed
by those carriers who will operate at 1900 mhz.  These technologies
(or protocols, to be correct) are all CURRENTLY deployed in cellular
networks running at other frequencies here in the U.S. and abroad:
AMPS, TDMA, GSM, NAMPS.  CDMA is being tested in some cellular markets
in the U.S. and abroad.

Bill (WWalker@qualcomm.com) says:

> They both look like wireless telephone service to the customer.

Cellular and PCS services *are* identical from a user point of view.

Now to respond to other comments:

First, I WAS a McCaw person.  Now I belong to AT&T Wireless.

Second, to address the question at hand, here is a simple example that
proves both A and B cellular carriers talk the same frequency:

Each year, millions of cellular customers in the U.S.  roam seamlessly
between A and B networks.  They all use analog cellular phones tuned
to 850mhz frequency to do so - no matter who their carrier is (A or B).

It's a fact.  We (A and B side carriers) all use the same AMPS
technology operating at the same frequency.  A significant portion of
AT&T Wireless' business (A side) comes from former B side customers
who bring along their analog phones for activation on our system.
Each cellular phone is tuned to a particular frequency band.  Today,
for cellular that's 850 mhz.  For PCS entrants that will be 1900 mhz.


Regards,

Lynne

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

From: J. David Cooper <jdcooper@wsii.com>
Subject: Need WIN95/Rockwell Solution
Date: Wed, 05 Jun 1996 15:53:51 -0400


If anyone has Cheyenne's Bitware 4.0 (a 16bit product and the only
version that runs correctly in WIN95) or knows where I can get a hold
of a complete voice/fax mailbox system that will run my Rockwell
Chipset based Zoom 14.4 V/F/P voice/faxmodem PLEASE let me know!

The Bitware product does it all including fax forwarding/backing,
paging, caller ID etc etc etc, only v4 runs right in WIN95 according
to Cheyenne.


jdcooper@wsii.com

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

From: jbond@netcom.com (Jeremy Bond Shepherd)
Subject: Cellular Message Waiting Indicator
Date: Thu, 6 Jun 1996 11:19:35 PDT


I've been bugging my cellular carrier (Cellular One San Francisco) to
upgrade their network to enable the "Message Waiting" indicator on my
phone. This indicator is designed to provide a visual indication that
a new message is waiting in my voice mailbox.

Rolling out this feature seems to be a very low priority for C-1.

So I was just wondering: what other carriers in the US are offering
this service? (I know AT&T in Seattle is offering it.)

If you have the service, how well does it work for you? Do you find
that it significantly enhances the value of your cellular/voicemail
service?  For you, does the message waiting indicator negate the need
for carrying pager notification service and a separate pager? Does
your carrier charge you a premium over the standard cellular and
voicemail service charges?

Thanks in advance for your impressions.


Jeremy

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

From: gwheeler@gate.net (Gerry Wheeler)
Subject: Looking For 12V Power Cord for Morotola Phone
Date: Thu, 06 Jun 1996 13:27:37 GMT
Organization: SpectraFAX Corp.
Reply-To: gwheeler@gate.net


I'm looking for a 12V power cord for use with a Motorola cellular
phone. There are several for sale in the stores, but none mentions the
particular model of phone I have. Can anyone tell me which Motorola
models are equivalent and use the same cord?

The phone I have says "Motorola Pocket Classic 910" on the front. It
uses the same battery as the more common Motorola flip phone. It has
two connectors on the bottom -- a round type for the small overnight
charger, and the bigger port for the usual accessories. I don't care
which type the cord plugs into (I've seen both), although I think the
round one is easier to use.


Gerry Wheeler     gwheeler@gate.net
SpectraFAX Corp.  Phone: 941-643-8739
Naples, FL        Fax: 941-643-5070

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

From: Derek <DerekJ609@worldnet.att.net>
Subject: Information Wanted on SMCM Long Distamce: Legit?
Date: 06 Jun 1996 00:52:10 GMT
Organization: AT&T WorldNet Services


I am currently checking into the LD reseller SMCM. They have a
program, Affinity, which will give me an additional 10% of what I
currently save with AT&T. Right now, I'm on AT&T's True Savings, where
if I spend $10-49, I'll save 25%. They say with them, I'll get 25% +
their 10%, a whopping 35%. I would like to know if they are true to
their word, and this is not a gimmick. Also, if you have any
experiences with the company, I'd like to hear about them.

Thanks for your help.


Derek J. Tarcza
DerekJ609@worldnet.att.net
Lawrenceville, NJ
(609) 895-0234

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

From: innovative_technologies@actcom.co.il (innovative technologies)
Subject: Re: UNIX DTMF-Decoding "Voicemail" Software?
Reply-To: innovative_technologies@actcom.co.il
Organization: innovative technologies
Date: Thu, 6 Jun 1996 00:04:39 GMT


jelson@condor.cs.jhu.edu (Jeremy Elson) wrote:

> I am interested in setting up an interactive telephone service which
> will allow customers to get information on my company and, more

>  <SNIP>

> So, I have two questions.  First, what kind of hardware do I need to
> put in my UNIX box (a PC running Linux) to get this to work?

A voice modem.

> And, second, what I'd like to find is if there are any public domain
> (freeware, GPL, or whatever) software packages that will let me do
> this, or even software libraries that will let me write my own
> software to do this under UNIX.

We've heard about a configurable voicemail system for the PC called
VoiceGuide. Unfortunetly it runs only in WINDOWS ...

> Am I going to be able to do this "on the cheap" or do I have to spend
> big bucks to get this to work?

Big bucks or BIG TIME INVESTMENT (with big BUGS...:-)

Thats our two cents.


Best regards,

Innovative Technologies
Telecom, Multimedia and VoiceMail products
and home of the TYIN adavanced utilities.
email: innovative_technologies@actcom.co.il
Check our WEB site at:
WWW:   http://www.israel.net/innovative/
PS: When responding, an email in addition to posting here would be appreceated.

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

From: David Crowe <crowed@cadvision.com>
Subject: Re: Digital Cellular in North America Question
Date: Wed, 05 Jun 1996 13:32:55 +0000
Organization: Cellular Networking Perspectives Ltd.
Reply-To: crowed@cadvision.com


> In a recent trip to Australia, I met a lot of overseas travelers
> who had brought their GSM phone and were using it in Australia. Being
> from Canada, I could not do that if I had had a digital telephone.

No, but you could do that with an AMPS analog phone!

> In North America, it *seems* that the push for digital cellular 
> phones is not very strong. (At least Cantel no longer pushes 
> digital phones).

I don't think that is true. There is a second generation of TDMA
digital cellular coming out any time now (IS-136, the standard is
published, but little equipment is yet available). And, the first CDMA
system has been turned up for limited commercial service in LA.

> Are digital telephone more popular in GSM countries compared to 
> those few who resisted GMS to go with the USA standard ?

If you want a compatible, worldwide system, you have two choices, GSM
or AMPS. One happens to be digital, the other analog. I don't think
that customers care too much.

> Are applications such as SMS available for North American cellullar
> systems? Or do they lag behind? (I assume that the USA dig system 
> does have the same functionality as SMS?)

SMS and similar applications will be available with second generation
TDMA digital (IS-136) and CDMA digital. Standards are already in
place, it is just necessary to get equipment in place.


David Crowe

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

From: ken@kaiwan009.kaiwan.com (Ken Leonard)
Subject: Re: Nevada Attorney General Investigates Excel
Date: 5 Jun 1996 13:59:05 -0700
Organization: KAIWAN Internet (310-527-4279,818-756-0180,909-785-9712,714-638-4133,805-294-9338)


Tad Cook (tad@ssc.com) wrote:

> Nevada Attorney General's Office Investigates Long-Distance Company
> By MICHELLE DeARMOND

>  An Excel employee was charged in a Federal Trade Commission
>  investigation earlier this year for allegedly making unsubstantiated
> claims about earnings for work-at-home businesses. Robert Serviss of
> Stamford, Conn., was accused of offering no proof that consumers would
> earn up to $4,000 or more each month, as they were told.

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I think when all is said and done, the
> facts will emerge that Excel is *NOT* illegal in any way, shape or 
> form. I had someone write me the other day to complain that I was very
> prejudiced against multi-level marketing; and the truth is I do not
> really care for that business practice, however it is legal as long
> as it does not become a 'pyramid scheme', and in Amway's case at 
> least, it has been ruled legal. I feel pretty sure that Excel is
> following the law closely. One thing I do feel merits a close look
> is Excel's new pricing of nine cents per minute at night, putting
> them in direct and very close competition with Sprint. If you have
> a high volume of traffic at night, it may well be that at this time
> Excel is the best bargain around.  PAT]

Pat, thanks for clearing up your position on MLM and Excel in general.
These 'investigations' will continue to occur as Excel continues to
grow.  There are a lot of people out there that would love to see
Excel fail.  AT&T I am sure would love to see Excel get in trouble in
one state so that they could eliminate a very hairy thorn in their
side.

As for the new Simply One 9.00 cpm rates. I have a comparison chart
published in our latest newsletter and in most cases ExcelPlus II is
better than Spints Sense plan and of course Excel's Simply one. I will
send along this comparison later when I have time.


Ken

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
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Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
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     ------------------------------------------------------------

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All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
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should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #274
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Fri Jun  7 10:59:22 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id KAA26434; Fri, 7 Jun 1996 10:59:22 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Fri, 7 Jun 1996 10:59:22 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606071459.KAA26434@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #275

TELECOM Digest     Fri, 7 Jun 96 10:59:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 275

Inside This Issue:                          Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Teleglobe Canada Reduces Rates (Martin Stewart)
    Top Message: Second Virtual Answer System by France Telecom (J. Condat)
    Free CD-ROM Giving 25 Million France Telecom Users (Jean-Bernard Condat)
    Call Waiting and Caller ID Together (Art Kamlet)
    LD Competition in Canada (Philip Evans)
    FCC Crackdown on AOS Pricing (Ed Ellers)
    Roam Cell Calls on AT&T Wireless Dallas Not Possible? (Alexandre Polozoff)
    Nokia 232 Accesories (was Re: Nokia 232 Questions) (Jeffrey C. Honig)
    USA 456 Area Code From the UK (James E. Bellaire)
    TR303/V5.2 Protocol (Paul Rheaume)
    Re: 800 Numbers Now Customer Dialable Only (Mark Brader)
    Re: 800 Numbers Now Customer Dialable Only (Lisa Hancock)
    Re: Telco in the Movies (was Reel World Product) (aerostar@ccia.com)
    Re: Digital Cellular in North America Question (Jean-Francois Mezei)
    AT&T Calling Card & Caller ID (Derek J. Tarcza))
    Re: Sprint Fridays Were Free (Joel M. Hoffman)
    Re: Followup on Sprint Fridays Free (Tom Horsley)
    Re: Followup on Sprint Fridays Free (Joel M. Hoffman)
    Re: AT&T Wireless Tells Cellular Roamers: Don't Call Police (lr@access2)
    Re: Fight Turns Nasty: Ameritech/AT&T Take Off Gloves (Joel M. Hoffman)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Thu, 6 Jun 1996 15:42:01 -0700
From: Martin Stewart <martin@cti-tel.com>
Subject: Teleglobe Canada Reduces Rates


Teleglobe Canada recently announced that as of June 1st, they have
reduced their international calling rates by 5% across the board!  My
concern is whether the Stentor member companies in Canada will pass on
these savings to the consumer.  I would appreciate any comments
concerning this issue from Stentor members.


Martin Stewart
CTI Telecommunications  **  www.stockgroup.com/CLO.htm
tel: 604-893-1555         fax: 604-893-1599              1-800-573-3284

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

Date: Fri, 07 Jun 1996 11:10:31 +0100
From: Jean-Bernard Condat <jeanbc@informix.com>
Subject: Top Message: The Second Virtual Answer System by France Telecom


   Paris (France), Juny 7th, 1996--France Telecom propose today a new
service called "Top Message" for all the Ile-de-France users. It's a
classical voice system that work without any special box. You can
memorize all possible phone calls messages without having a voice mail
private system.

   Top Message is only a link between an already existing phone line
and a voice mail box. It's for travel people or those receiving a
great number of phone calls.  You have the possibility of receiving 50
messages of maximum two minutes. You can receive five messages at the
same time. The message are stored and maintain until the first reading,
and 48 hours after they have being read. They can be delete as soon as
read, too. You can easily read a message from a simple phone.

   To test the service you can dial the toll free number 36 75 10 10
from your phone line. A four-digit secret code will be create for a
security reasons. Each Top Message' client can choose a second phone
number on which he can receive all the messages.

   The fees are of 22 FF monthly. The reading of the message is free
from the phone line and at a local cost from all other phone number.
The only option of this service is the "message notification" (5 FF
monthly) that permit to the owner of the phone line to receive a call
asking it to read his/her voice mailbox.  If the caller don't answer,
3 other tentatives are do to deliver the message noti- fication. If
the line is busy, you can receive a voice message, too.

   This service is already available in Paris, near Paris, and in
Toulouse or Metz.  If all the users don't ask for the "satisfy or paid
back" option of the two months countrat, Top Message will be available
in France for the end of the year. Good luck for this service that I
already have use via a corporate service called PRV ("poste restante
vocale", voice poste restante). Try to test the service by calling my
PRV' virtual voice mailbox: +33 1 41238807.


Jean-bernard Condat, Senior Consultant, Smart Card Business Unit
Informix, La Grande Arche, 92044 La Defense Cedex, France
Phone: +33 1 46963770, fax: +33 1 46963765, portable: +33 07238628
Private: +33 1 41238807, e-mail: jeanbc@informix.com

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

Date: Fri, 07 Jun 1996 11:42:39 +0100
From: Jean-Bernard Condat <jeanbc@informix.com>
Subject: Free CD-ROM Giving 25 Million France Telecom Users


Paris (France), Juny 7th, 1996--France Telecom propose to all people
asking the toll free number 05 23 45 67 to test the new edition of the
French electronic phone book on CD-ROM. Betwwen Juny 6 and July 31,
France Telecom freely send you the CD-ROM called "Les Pages Coup de Fil."

Compatible with all PC or Macintosh, this CD-ROM give only the phone
number of all phone, fax, ISDN for 25 million of France Telecom's
users. No address will be available. You can combine all availble
fields (name, vorname, department, Zip code, town, activity) with the
boolean operators. For a quickest connection, you have the possibility
to compose automatically a phone number found.

Two years ago, France Telecom tested this concept with the CD-ROM
called "Disque Telecom" propose to all companies. This time, it's a
CD-ROM for all that integrate new genial idea. October 18th at 23:00,
all phone numbers with pass from 8 to 10 digits. The CD-ROM will
automatically change the old numbers in new phone numbers.

If you don't have the chance to live in France, try to use the
marvellous Web site to ask the French electronic phone book:
http://www.epita.fr:5000/11/.


Jean-bernard Condat, Senior Consultant, Smart Card Business Unit
Informix, La Grande Arche, 92044 La Defense Cedex, France
Phone: +33 1 46963770, fax: +33 1 46963765, portable: +33 07238628
Private: +33 1 41238807, e-mail: jeanbc@informix.com

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

From: kamlet@infinet.com (Art Kamlet)
Subject: Call Waiting and Caller ID Together
Date: 6 Jun 1996 22:29:36 -0400
Organization: InfiNet
Reply-To: kamlet@infinet.com


Today I received a brochure from Ameritech (Ohio) offering call
waiting service with Caller ID.  Using an Ameritech Display Phone they
offer to provide the CID of the call waiting caller "at no extra
charge."

The catch is you have to purchase an Ameritech display phone.

Has anyone heard of this before?  I assume the line has to be somehow
set to provide something like "CID on busy/cw" -- is that a new CLASS
feature?  I assume it does not require anything as exotic as DDSN or
else they'd be charging quite a bit more?

I currently have both call waiting and CID/ they claim there is no
additional charge to get CID on busy/cw, as long as I get the phone --
either purchase it or rent it at $7/month.

Any insights?  Am I right in assuming I don't need the phone but they
won't provision my line with CID on busy unless I get it?  Do I really
have to buy the phone in order to get the feature?


Art Kamlet   Columbus, Ohio    kamlet@infinet.com  


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: No, I think you *do* need the phone.
It has some electronics in it to make the process work. Caller-ID
is not normally transmittable when your phone line is in use. Others
here may be able to give you a more technical explanation. You may 
not need to buy *their* phone, but you do need a special phone.  PAT]

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

From: pevans@mindlink.bc.ca (philip evans)
Subject: LD Competition in Canada
Date: Fri, 7 Jun 1996 02:49:39 GMT
Organization: MIND LINK! - British Columbia, Canada


I don't make a lot of LD calls, so I was a bit surprised when Unitel
called me today to offer "25% off".

"25% off WHAT" I asked.  

"Off whatever LD plan, including discounted rates, that you currently
have."

"If I say 'yes', do you change my default LD provider."

"Hunh?"

[I repeat the question, s-l-o-w-ly].

"Um, yes, we do."

"Ok, send the the details IN WRITING and I'll consider it."

[Turns out they know my address, etc.]

I call BC Tel Customer service, go through voicemail prompts, get a
busy.  Twice.  I dial zero, the operator says, "no problem, I'll
connect you to a *special* line."  She does so.

Lois answers on the second ring.  Lois says that yes, she is aware of
Unitel and Sprint doing some cold-calling.  I ask her if there are LD
access carrier codes, she says yes, BC Tell is 10323, but she does not
any other companies' codes.  Lois also tells me that the Unitel offer
is 25% off if I make over $25 worth of calls per month, it's 15% for
$15 to $25, and zero below $15.  Lois hints that some LD companies and
re-sellers have done b-a-d things like blocking access codes, but that
in such cases BC Tel can remove such blocking.

Lois is quite nice and polite.  So was the Unitel guy.  Maybe If I
wait a bit there'll be some cheques offered.  I'll let you know what
the Unitel deal is when it comes in the mail.

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

From: Ed Ellers <edellers@delphi.com>
Subject: FCC Crackdown on AOS Pricing
Date: Thu, 6 Jun 96 21:09:07 -0500
Organization: Delphi (info@delphi.com email, 800-695-4005 voice)


The Associated Press is running a story (which I saw on CompuServe)
that the FCC is considering a regulation on long-distance calling from
coin phones to force any company whose rates are more than 15% more
than the average of the major carriers to play a recording announcing
the rate for the call before ringing the called party.

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

From: aspex@ibm.net (Alexandre POLOZOFF)
Subject: Roam Cell Calls on AT&T Wireless Dallas Not Possible?
Date: Fri, 07 Jun 1996 00:37:45 GMT
Reply-To: Alexandre POLOZOFF <aspex@ibm.net>


This last week I drove from Austin back to my home Cellular One
district in Durham, NC.  When I was in AT&T Wirless-Dallas I tried to
call a friend of mine in Dallas.  I got the "You are not authorized
 .. " recording and dialed 611 as suggested in the recording.  The rep
that came one was helpful and we spent a good 15 mins while he tried
to figure out what was wrong.  All he could find was some switching
problem with my home Cell carrier??  But why was it a problem for
Dallas and not elsewhere?? (I had no problems making phone calls from
AT&T Wireless-Austin).

Essentially, he ended up having to dial the phone number for me and
patching me through on his 611 line.

Is this where we are at in cellular technology??  


Alexandre Polozoff aspex@ibm.net  http://www.exoweb.com/polozoff/

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

From: jch@bsdi.com (Jeffrey C Honig)
Subject: Nokia 232 Accesories (was Re: Nokia 232 Questions)
Date: 07 Jun 1996 13:47:25 GMT
Organization: Berkeley Software Design, Inc.; Ithaca, NY USA


And speaking of the Nokia 232, does anyone know an inexpensive place
to get accessories for one?  Hello Direct now carries 232 specific
accessories (car cradle, batteries, chargers, hands-free adaptors),
but they seem pretty pricey.

Thanks.


Jeff

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

Date: Thu, 06 Jun 1996 20:36:32 -0500
From: James E. Bellaire <bellaire@tk.com>
Subject: USA 456 Area Code From the UK


I found the following in uk.telecom and was wondering if you
could shed some light on it:

> From: Traci Shanahan <traci@nastysex.com>
> Newsgroups: uk.telecom
> Subject: USA 456 area code from the UK
> Date: 4 Jun 1996 07:03:10 GMT
> Organization: Cloud 9 Internet, White Plains, NY, USA

> Is anyone famillar with the US 456 area code that can only be
> called from the UK. Apparently UK companies can earn money with it.
> I have some info, if anyone else has any more please email me.

> Traci

I thought 456 was 'for 56k data'.  I wonder if the sleaze carriers are
using it for International Inbound to porn?

Any thoughts?


James E. Bellaire  (JEB6)  bellaire@tk.com
WebPage at http://www.holli.com/~bellaire/

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

From: prheaume@toucan.net (Paul Rheaume)
Subject: TR303/V5.2 Protocol
Date: 7 Jun 1996 01:42:19 GMT
Organization: Toucan Internet Publishing


Looking for TR303 and V5.2 protocol stacks and vendors of TR303/V5.2
test equipment.

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

From: msb@sq.com (Mark Brader)
Subject: Re: 800 Numbers Now Customer Dialable Only
Organization: SoftQuad Inc., Toronto, Canada
Date: Fri, 7 Jun 1996 05:00:48 GMT


> That's right, as of June 4th in the 914 area code in Nynex territory,
> the 800 ac is customer dialable only. ...

Huh?  Please explain.


Mark Brader, msb@sq.com    SoftQuad Inc., Toronto 


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: In the past if you asked (for whatever
reason) for assistance from an operator in dialing an 800 number, they
would do so. Now it appears there are some places in the USA where
the operator is unable to dial an 800 number from her console. It has
always been the case as far as I know that zero-plussing an 800 number
never did accomplish anything, but you could just dial zero and
discuss it with the operator. The writer contends that no longer works
in area code 914.  I asked for other experiences on this.   PAT]

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

From: hancock4@cpcn.com (Lisa)
Subject: Re: 800 Numbers Now Customer Dialable Only
Date: 7 Jun 1996 01:35:56 GMT
Organization: Philadelphia City Paper's City Net


For years I've had trouble getting an operator to connect me to an 800
number.  If I dialed 0, the operator would say in response to a
complaint "well, you are probably outside of the service area of that
number."

If I dialed 0+800+number, an operator would NOT answer, but it would
go directly through to the connection (or non-connection as they case
may be.)

In my area, there were never any clear signals if an 800 number you were
dialing was out of range -- you got some vague intercept.

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

From: aerostar@ccia.com
Date: Fri, 7 Jun 1996 02:37:39 EDT
Subject: Re: Telco in the Movies (Was Reel World Product Placement)


Tad Cook <tad@ssc.com> wrote:

> THE REEL WORLD Product Placement: Consumerism Reaches New Heights in
> Movies By JOHN HORN
> AP Entertainment Writer
> LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Here's the swing -- and the pitch.

<SNIP>

> Coca Cola successfully asked Oliver Stone to cut a Coke commercial 
> from the ultrviolent "Natural Born Killers".

Funny, but when I saw this weird movie on cable, the Coke commercial
was in there.

For a number of years now I have noticed the AT&T logo (letters, not
the death star) on the lower portion of the handset when an actor is
on the phone, but I have never seen the logo on any *real* AT&T phone.

Product placement in the movies has been around for a while, but the
pioneer must be Stanley Kubrick's "2001 A Space Oddity" circa 1968. We
are just a few years away from the time when this movie takes place.
Without mentioning the obvious differences, Kubrick did his best to
give us a grand vision of the future, and there was a distinct effort
to *ground* the audience in subtle ways.

Do you recall the 1964 era Bell System logo on the PicturePhone that
Dr.  Floyd used to call call his daughter on from the space station
Hilton? A toll charge was shown at the end of the call, which I don't
recall exactly, but it seemed expensive (6-7 dollars?). Maybe Dr.
Floyd should have signed up for "Friends And Family". Hello, Dime
Lady...?

Probably the most interesting was HAL; (just a step ahead of IBM, get
it?)  a great big mainframe. HAL was the natural progression of
computer technology as seen with late 1960's goggles on.

Hindsight vision is 20/20. We have watched computer technology
proliferate to a point unimaginable twenty five years ago. On the
other hand, the U.S.  space program is still bogged down with a system
that lacked a vision just as far back.


Eric Friedebach    aerostar@ccia.com   

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

From: Jean-Francois Mezei <jfmezei@istar.ca>
Subject: Re: Digital Cellular in North America Question
Date: Thu, 06 Jun 1996 21:31:41 GMT
Organization: Vaxination Informatique
Reply-To: jfmezei@istar.ca


>> In a recent trip to Australia, I met a lot of overseas travelers
>> who had brought their GSM phone and were using it in Australia. Being
>> from Canada, I could not do that if I had had a digital telephone.

> No, but you could do that with an AMPS analog phone!

When will the analog telephones no longer be supported? When Cantel
introduced its digital services, I had been told that within ten years,
it would no longer support analog phones. But now that Cantel is
practically giving away analog phones with its Amigo service, I doubt
that Cantel still intends to stop supporting analog phones.  What are
policies around the world with regards to long term support of the
analog phones?

> If you want a compatible, worldwide system, you have two choices, GSM
> or AMPS. One happens to be digital, the other analog. I don't think
> that customers care too much.

Well, I care if AMPS is to be phased out because right now, AMPS is
the only worldwide standard. Once AMPS is gone, North Americans will
be restricted to their own continent and a few pockets here and there
while others will be technically free to roam with their phones.

I do not know who is responsible for preventing North America from
supporting the worldwide GSM standard, but I hope that they will be
remembered as the ones who perpetuated a stupid and silly politics
game that we all hoped would have stopped at analog TV (NTSC, PAL,
SECAM etc) I also find it hard to understand why companies such as
Motorola and Nokia would not have strongly objected to this split
since in the end, they have to make different models for each
telephone. (Motorola GMS phones are made in Singapore, so I guess some
USA jobs were lost because of that).

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

From: Derek <DerekJ609@worldnet.att.net>
Subject: AT&T Calling Card and Caller ID
Date: 5 Jun 1996 19:17:38 GMT
Organization: AT&T WorldNet Services


Today, 6/5, I used a payphone at a local deli during my lunch break to
check messages at home, using my AT&T universal card. When I get home,
looking at the caller ID, the name and number actually showed up from
where I called. Normally, all I would get is "out-of-area." New
feature?  If it is, will using *67 still render 'private'?

Thought this would be of interest to many of you.


Derek J. Tarcza
DerekJ609@worldnet.att.net
Lawrenceville, NJ
(609) 895-0234

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

Date: Thu, 6 Jun 96 19:18:00 EDT
From: joel@exc.com (Joel M. Hoffman)
Subject: Re: Sprint Fridays Were Free
Organization: Excelsior Computer Services


In article <telecom16.272.4@massis.lcs.mit.edu> is written:

> Maybe we might all get a little more satisfaction from Sprint if we
> didn't react to every action of theirs by summoning lawyers, and maybe
> made a few calls to their friendly customer service people instead.
> [...]
> Shouldn't we remember that everyone who subscribed to Sprint Fridays
[got two months of free Fridays]

I see two problems.  First, real businesses (such as myself) had the
program changed in the middle, and that's simply illegal.

Secondly, people who were lured by Sprint representatives into
accepting Free Fridays were victims of illegal bait and switch
advertising.

There are clear laws against what Sprint is doing.  What will happen
when your bank tells you that they'll give you 15% interest for one
year if you switch, and then changes the rate to 2.4% because they're
losing money?  Even if you get 15% for a month, you lose, becuase
you've probably already planned ahead based on the money you were
going to get.  Maybe you've already spent it.

Anyone who planned on using Sprint's promised service for the entire
year (e.g., promised to call people overseas, made billing
arrangements based on free calls, etc.) is LOSING MONEY because of
Sprint's tactics.  This is not simply a matter of have gotten only two
months instead of twelve.  It's a matter of Sprint getting money
illegally.


Joel   (joel@exc.com)

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

From: Tom.Horsley@worldnet.att.net
Subject: Re: Followup on Sprint Fridays Free
Date: 06 Jun 1996 21:33:29 -0400
Organization: Society for Performance Based Government
Reply-To: Tom.Horsley@worldnet.att.net


> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Oh, really now, I don't think writing
> to Congress about this is worth the effort. I would not bother those
> people with this issue.

Hey, these were the people talking about holding hearings on breakfast
cereal prices only a month or two ago. Nothing is too trivial for them
if they sense an opportunity to get on TV :-).


See <URL:http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/TomHorsley> for
information on Government by Performance

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

From: joel@exc.com
Date: Thu, 6 Jun 96 19:21:00 EDT
Subject: Re: Followup on Sprint Fridays Free
Organization: Excelsior Computer Services


>> Does anyone else have anything to add?

> Sure. Make copies of everything, along with an explaination of the
> circumstances and send it off to your congresscritter. After all, its

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Oh, really now, I don't think writing
> to Congress about this is worth the effort. I would not bother those

Neither do I.  But I did file a complain with the FCC, and never heard
back from them.  I called them to follow up, left a message, and never
heard back from them.  Does anyone know how the complaint process
works, and how long it's supposed to take them to take action on a
complaint?  (I sent the letter when Sprint first threatened to take
Israel off of their free calling list.)


Joel    (joel@exc.com)


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: And if you wrote to congress I doubt
you would hear anything back from them either.   PAT]

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

From: lr@access2.digex.net (Sir Topham Hatt)
Subject: Re: AT&T Wireless Tells Cellular Roamers: Don't call NJ Police
Date: 7 Jun 1996 00:20:11 GMT


Paul Robinson (paul@TDR.COM) wrote:

> - All gasoline sold in New Jersey is both mandatory Full Service, it
> is at least 15 to 40c per gallon cheaper than any gas, even self
> service, in New York City, Delaware or Washington, DC.

The small service station operators have a very powerful lobby and
have kept it out.  The reason gas is cheaper is that there is no state
gasoline tax.  It helps that there are two large oil companies
headquartered in the state (Exxon and Citgo).

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

Date: Thu, 6 Jun 96 19:33 EDT
From: joel@exc.com (Joel M. Hoffman)
Subject: Re: Fight Turns Nasty: Ameritech/AT&T Take Off Gloves


In article <telecom16.263.5@massis.lcs.mit.edu> you write:

>> Isn't this a shameful state of affairs when customers have to get
>> caught up in the middle of the fight?

> What's shameful is that AT&T is cancelling the MCHA's with the RBOC's
> (and refuses to come clean about it with the press or their own
> customers.) The reason is simple ... they want to divert calling
> revenue from the Bell networks to the AT&T network. And they're doing
> it on the backs of their own customers.

And what's really shameful is that most countries are moving toward
easier and more convenient calling, while America is moving the other
way!  In most countries, you can buy a phone card, from >the< telco,
and place calls with it from any payphone at a low, standard, rate.
Here in the US, you have to dial digits (11 for 1800callatt, 14 for
your card number, and 10 for the number) from a payphone to make a
call if you don't have change.  >That's< outrageous.  In most
countries you can still get an operator, too, and directory
information.  (Here in Nynex country, I usually get a fast busy from
411.)

The bottom line is that the phone network is not supposed to be a
money-making endeavor.  It's supposed to be a service to citizens.
And America isn't providing that service.


Joel    (joel@exc.com)

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Now wait a minute! *Who says* that
telecom is not supposed to be a money-making endeavor? Perhaps that
is the case in some countries, but here in the USA telephone companies
have stockholders and pay dividends to those stockholders. Do you
think the investors put money in just for the sake of being good guys
to the rest of the nation?  PAT]

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
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On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
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Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
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The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
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     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
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All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
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should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #275
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Mon Jun 10 12:09:25 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id MAA12518; Mon, 10 Jun 1996 12:09:25 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 12:09:25 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606101609.MAA12518@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #276

TELECOM Digest     Mon, 10 Jun 96 12:09:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 276

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    LA Cellular Rumors (John Marquette)
    508/978 and 617/781 Splits (John Grossi)
    Re: Home Phone Switch Needed (Bob Bell)
    Re: Information Wanted on SMCM Long Distance: Legit? (Jeff Colbert)
    Soundcard/Voice Modem/Phone/Phone Line Integration (Innovative Tech)
    Re: Webphone 2.0 Beta (Charles Fitzgerald)
    Re: Around and Around With Jeff Boy (North Coast Communications)
    Re: Hurting Public Utilities Hurts Public Service (Robert Jacobson)
    Re: Digital Cellular in North America Question (Osman Rich)
    Re: AT&T 9300 - Spread Spectrum "Technology"? (Roy A. McCrory)
    Re: Great Circle Mileage Equations (Col. G.L. Sicherman)
    Dueling Machines (ADAD versus Answering-Machine) (Melvin Klassen)
    Re: Sprint Fridays Are Free (Clifford D. McGlamry)
    Re: Sprint Fridays Were Free (Heflin Hogan)
    Re: Sprint Fridays Were Free (Poll Dubh)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: John Marquette <jmarquette@pobox.com>
Subject: LA Cellular Rumors
Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 08:48:27 -0700
Organization: Caltech


Can anyone provide any insight on the future of LA Cellular?  I
understand AT&T has a 50% ownership share, and a friend of a friend
said that a name change from LAC to AT&T Wireless was imminent --
along with a MEGA rate reduction ($15 access per month).  In fact, an
Office Depot (or was it Staples?) ad for cellphones in the LA Times a
couple of days ago stated that activation was through AT&T Wireless.

I wonder what's going to happen to our company's "500+" deal with LAC,
in which individuals can get corporate pricing instead of retail
pricing?  Will rates plummet or will we be tied into the current
approx. $30/month access and $0.33/0.215 charges?


John

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

Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 11:33:46 -0400
From: John Grossi <jgrossi@mu.bbn.com>
Subject: 508/978 and 617/781 Splits


The June 7 {Boston Globe} had an article on the new area codes that are
slated for Eastern Massachusetts.

NYNEX is still favoring the overlays, but a consortium of would be
competitors (AT&T, MCI, Continental Cablevision, etc...) have advanced
a proposed split.

Basically the 617/781 split moves the following major towns to the new
area code: Waltham, Woburn, Medford, Lynn (basically the northern
suburbs with the Charles as a dividing line) Boston's Charlestown
neighborhood is slated to go to the new area code, while Cambridge is
slated to stay 617. (The following towns are also slated to go both
ways: Newton, Somerville, Watertown). I'd personally expect to see the
towns sent one way or the other.

The 978/508 split is again a north/south split. 978 would get the
following major towns: Athol, Gardener, Fitchburg, Leominster, Lowell,
Lawrence, Haverhill, Salem.  508 would stays for: Worcester, New
Bedford, Fall River, Brockton, and Cape Cod.  (again several towns
such as Marlborough and Framingham are thrown both ways-- a sure fire
way for a big political fight)

The splits that the paper shows don't look like the best thing to
me ... personally a better thing to do would be to let Worcester
county keep 508. Send the old Plymouth Colony to 978, and then send
Essex County, and the northern 'burbs of Boston (Middlesex County
mostly) to 781 ... that makes some sense ... admittedly it's rearranging
the 508/617 line but ...


John Grossi    jgrossi@bbn.com

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

From: bbell@incite.com (Bob Bell)
Subject: Re: Home Phone Switch Needed
Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 10:40:01 GMT
Organization: Intecom


On 4 Jun 1996 17:01:38 GMT, n8mdy@falcon.ic.net (n8mdy) wrote:

>    I have a problem with telephone lines, long distance and abusive
> children. We recently received a $280 phone bill, all local long
> distance calls. My teenage son thinks it ok to talk to the next
> exchange for hours at a time. Well, I cut off long distance service on
> the family telephone; I have a separate line in my office for my own
> use.

>    Is there a phone switch, which would cost $500 or less, available?
> I would like to assign access codes, call accounting and possibly an
> intercom or paging system.

Panasonic makes a very nice small switch. Called the 803, I think, it
supports eight stations and three CO lines. It has a wide variety of
features and includes least cost routing and access codes, if I
remember correctly. A company I did some work for once used it as a
test switch.

The cost for the switch as of three years ago was about $700.00.  This
may have dropped in the interrim. I saw it through the "Shoppers
Advantage" electronic mall on Compuserve.


Hope this helps,

Bob Bell    Principal Engineer
Incite Division, Intecom Inc.
bbell@incite.com

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

From: Jeff Colbert <jcolbert@earthlink.net>
Subject: Re: Information Wanted on SMCM Long Distance: Legit?
Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 08:03:51 -0700
Organization: Earthlink Network, Inc.


I could be wrong, but usually when they say something like that it is
10% off the discounted portion which would equate to 32.5% instead.
Still good, but not 35%.


Jeff

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

From: innovative_technologies@actcom.co.il (innovative technologies)
Subject: Soundcard/Voice Modem/Phone/Phone Line Integration Solution
Reply-To: innovative_technologies@actcom.co.il
Organization: innovative technologies
Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 10:01:48 GMT


Dear fellow net'ers,

Due to many past requests on usenet for a flexible and reliable
solution to integrating a sound card, a voice modem, a telephone and
the phoneline, as well as simply interfacing a sound card to the phone
line (two way), we thought it might interest the usenet community that
such a device is indeed available, low cost. We call it "VOICEbox".
For further info, please visit our WWW site (prefered method) or send
us email. 


Best regards,

        Innovative Technologies
        Telecom, Multimedia and VoiceMail products
        and home of the TYIN adavanced utilities.
        email: innovative_technologies@actcom.co.il
        Check our WEB site at:
        WWW:   http://www.israel.net/innovative/

(PS: When responding, an email in addition to posting here would be
appreceated).

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

From: Charles Fitzgerald <charlesf@MICROSOFT.com>
Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 03:37:19 -0700
Subject: Re: WebPhone 2.0 Beta


> I did a brief follow-up on the recent article announcing the release of the
> WebPhone 2.0 beta, and received this response:

>  From: 	ross schindler[SMTP:ross@netspeak.com]
>  Sent: 	Thursday, June 6, 1996 12:50
>  To:	 	'jcdowns@strategic-vision.com'
>  Subject: 	RE: WebPhone 2.0

>> Thank you for your interest in the WebPhone 2.0 beta 1.  Currently
>> the beta version of the WebPhone does contain a text area called the
>> Noteboard.  You can do multi-line conference calling.  You do not need
>> to have a static IP address to use the WebPhone.  You dial by e-mail
>> address.  Please visit our web page at www.netspeak.com to see the
>> WebPhone and it features.

> This Internet phone release looks as if it might be mature enough to
> be considered as more than a "isn't this fun!" add-on for the PC.
> There is still the issue of no standards (the different Net phone
> applications are currently unable to interconnect), limitations
> (technology is available to connect with traditional phone service,
> but it is not commonly available), and the potential for Net capacity
> problems.

Actually, there are standards for realtime communications over the
Internet (and circuit-switched networks as a bonus), courtesy of the
ITU.  T.120 supports multi-point data conferencing and H.323 provides
standards for call setup, audio and video.  Microsoft NetMeeting was
introduced last week and supports these standards.  T.120
dataconferencing capabilities include whiteboard, file transfer, chat
and the ability to share arbitrary applications so everyone on the
conference can view and/or control them without having to have that
application installed on any machine except that of the user who is
sharing it.  And it supports H.323-based Internet telephony.  And
about 20 companies like MCI, ConferTech, VideoServer, CheckPoint, etc.
announced network conferencing services, bridges, firewalls, etc. that
interoperate thanks to those standards.  First version is Windows 95 -
Windows NT and Macintosh versions on the way as well as H.323 video.
NetMeeting is freely downloadable from http://www.microsoft.com/ie/conf.

A rich set of collaboration tools, tens of millions of people to talk
to, plus the infrastructure in the network is going to make change the
way people communicate in realtime.

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

Date: Mon, 10 Jun 96 10:40:00 EDT
From: North Coast Communications <0005082894@mcimail.com>
Subject: Re: Around and Around With Jeff Boy


Silly me. While calling Jeff @ 800.351.8085 (to ask questions about
                                          ^
his product of course ;+), I reached 800.351.8084 and got some guy
                                                ^
that "sounded just like him" with a different sales spiel. What do
you think guys? Is it my hearing or what? Sounds like the same person
to me. ;+)
      
And maybe you telecom experts can tell me ... is 800.351.8086 (dialed
                                                           ^
accidently of course!) a fax machine or computer? Hmmmmm....8083...8087...


Kristen       

(Still waiting for one of Mr. Jeff's awards!)

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

From: Dr. Robert Jacobson <bob@worldesign.com>
Subject: Re: Hurting Public Utilities Hurts Public Service
Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 01:22:27 -0700
Organization: Worldesign Inc. Seattle Information Design - www.worldesign.com


Henry Baker wrote [in part]:

> Suppose I have two competitors providing service to the same customers
> in the same city, and suppose that they have to 'duplicate' the
> infrastructure.  Even in the worst case, the total cost is only double
> that of the lowest cost single provider.  But now consider the
> monopoly, and factor in the featherbedding of the monopoly service
> unions, the backdoor payments by the monopoly to the politicians
> (legal here in L.A.), the bloated tax payments on 'phantom profits'
> generated by unrealistic depreciation schedules, the continued use of
> completely obsolete 50-100 year old technology, and your 
> 'infrastructure cost' balloons to at least 10X that of the lowest cost 
> system.

In fact, the early history of the railroad industry may be pertinent.
Hoardes of speculators obtained federal licenses to build railroads
to both cash in on "unlimited" demand and salt away some land grants.
When unlimited demand did not materialize -- can it ever? -- the
industry went into total collapse, leading eventually to de facto
monopolies on many, if not most, railroad lines.

An earlier example of the same sort of overdone "infrastructure" might
be seen in the Great Tulip Crash that nearly destroyed Holland as a
nation in the 17th Century.

If infrastructure is overbuilt, there is a collapse.  If it's under-
built, demand is unsatisfied.  In both cases, given the free market,
monopoly or at best, duopoly emerges.  Who looks out for everyone else?


Bob

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

From: Osman Rich <osman@ntcsal01da.ntc.nokia.com>
Subject: Subject: Re: Digital Cellular in North America Question
Date: Mon, 10 Jun 96 07:17:00 PDT


eeipcn@eei.ericsson.se (Pat Cronin) wrote:

> It would be technically feasible to make a system that supported
> multiband operation (GSM 900 and PCS 1800) in exactly the same way
> that the systems in Europe do. The limiting factors would be
> availability of bandwidth, the economics of providing GSM 900 cells in
> a largely PCS 1900 market, the design and availability of muliband
> (GSM and PCS 1900) phones, and some small switch and base station
> redesign, perhaps.

> So, with a GSM based system, it is technically feasible to support the
> North American and European based standards in the same system.  But
> perhaps, the business case is not so strong?

Actually the problem is that there are services in the US using the bands
that GSM900 and DCS1800.  This prevents licensing GSM and DCS systems.

> Also there may be other solutions, using interworking register nodes,
> that allow a, say, PCS roamer access to a GSM system, but having
> temporary use of a GSM phone in that market.

This is a service that AT&T Wireless offers today.

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

From: Roy A. McCrory <mccrory@erebus.fc.dna.mil>
Subject: Re: AT&T 9300 - Spread Spectrum "Technology"?
Date: 10 Jun 1996 10:17:27 GMT
Organization: Los Alamos National Laboratory


So does anyone know how frequently the tx frequency hops for this
cordless?  


Roy

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

From: root@nntpb.cb.att.com
Subject: Re: Great Circle Mileage Equations
Date: 9 Jun 1996 20:51:32 GMT
Organization: Save the Dodoes Foundation


In <telecom16.258.7@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, jmayson@p100dl.ess.harris.com wrote:

> I derived this formula to calculate great circle mileage equations.  I don't 
> know if this is the best way to do it, but it works.

You have a few typos, and indeed this can be done more efficiently.

> Define NORTH latitudes as POSITIVE,
>        SOUTH latitudes as NEGATIVE.
> 
> Define EAST longitudes as POSITIVE,
>        WEST longitudes as NEGATIVE.

O.K.  This "bc" program prints the great-circle distance between two
points, and the bearing from the first point along the great circle.
For non-UNIX people, the functions s, c, a denote sin, cos, and
arctan.  This is GUARANTEED to have no more bugs than the average UNIX
program....

#!/bin/ksh

# Print spherical distance in radians from lat1,long1 to lat2,long2.
# Arguments are in degrees.
# Also prints bearing from point 1 along great circle to point 2 in
# degrees clockwise from N.

if [ $# -ne 4 ]; then
	print -u2 "usage: spherical lat1 long1 lat2 long2"
	exit 1
fi

if [ $1 -gt 90 -o $1 -lt -90 -o $3 -gt 90 -o $3 -lt -90 ]; then
	print -u2 "spherical: latitude must be between -90 and 90"
	exit 1
fi
if [ $2 -gt 180 -o $2 -lt -180 -o $4 -gt 180 -o $4 -lt -180 ]; then
	print -u2 "spherical: longitude must be between -180 and 180"
	exit 1
fi

print "
define r(x) {	/* radians */
	auto x
	return (x*3.1415925/180)
}
define j(q) {	/* arc cos (q squared) */
	auto q
	if (q==0) return (3.14159265/2)
	return (a(sqrt(1/q-1)))
}
define k(x) {	/* arc cos */
	auto x
	if (x<0) return (3.14159265-j(x*x))
	return (j(x*x))
}
define y(q) {	/* arc sin (q squared) */
	auto q
	return (a(sqrt(1/(1-q)-1)))
}
l = r($1)
m = r($3)
o = r($2)
p = r($4)
e = 1-c(o-p)
d = (1-c(l-m)+c(l)*c(m)*e)/2	/* sin squared of central angle/2 */
/* PRINT THIS: */   2*y(d)

/* we need sin of the full central angle: */
u = 2 * sqrt(d*(1-d))
/* dot product of normal vectors: */
define w (l) {
	auto l
	return((c(l)*s(m) + s(l)*c(m)*c(o+p)) / u)
}
z = k(w(l))
/* correct it to get the shorter way around */
a = o-p
if (a<0) a =+ 2*3.14159265
if (a<3.14159265) z =+ 3.14159265
/* PRINT THIS: */    z * 180/3.14159265
" | bc -l

Beware - usually the bearings at the ends won't match.  Great-circle
routes don't have constant bearings.

The constant (loxodromic) bearing from one point to another isn't so
simple -- when you travel in a constant direction other than north or
south or along the equator, you don't travel along a great circle.


Col. G. L. Sicherman
sicherman@lucent.com

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

From: klassen@UVic.CA (Melvin Klassen)
Subject: Dueling Machines (ADAD Versus Answering-Machine)
Date: 10 Jun 1996 10:58:03 GMT
Organization: University of Victoria


Recently, my personal answering-machine (actually, it's the telco's
voice-mail system) has been recording messages consisting of:

>  is interested in finding out about the fastest-growing
>  home-based business, press 1 now, or, if not, hang-up.  Thank you.

Obviously, the Automatic Dialing-Announcing Device is "talking"
long before the 'beep', so that's all that is recorded.   :-)

I've contacted the telco, and asked them to remind their customer
that the use of ADAD's for purposes of solicitation is prohibited.

Caller-ID shows that the originating-number is (604) 479-0923,
but calls to that number connect to a voice-response system.  Sigh!

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

Date: 10 Jun 96 11:00:42 EDT
From: Clifford D. McGlamry <102073.1425@CompuServe.COM>
Subject: Re: Sprint Fridays Are Free


I have a friend who works for Sprint.  I asked her if Robin Loyed even
exists.  She said that he is in fact a real person who lives and works
in Dallas, TX.


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Maybe she should tell him to check his
voicemail once in a while and clear it out. The other day it was full
and would accept no new messages.    PAT]

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

From: mhh001c@pdnis.paradyne.com (Heflin Hogan)
Subject: Re: Sprint Fridays Were Free
Date: 10 Jun 1996 15:15:00 GMT
Organization: AT&T Paradyne	


In article <telecom16.275.16@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, joel@exc.com (Joel
M. Hoffman) writes:

> In article <telecom16.272.4@massis.lcs.mit.edu> is written:

[snip]

> I see two problems. First, real businesses (such as myself) had the
> program changed in the middle, and that's simply illegal.

> Secondly, people who were lured by Sprint representatives into
> accepting Free Fridays were victims of illegal bait and switch
> advertising.

Actually, you seem to have only one point: that Sprint has done
something illegally.

> There are clear laws against what Sprint is doing. What will happen
> when your bank tells you that they'll give you 15% interest for one
> year if you switch, and then changes the rate to 2.4% because they're
> losing money? Even if you get 15% for a month, you lose, becuase you've
> probably already planned ahead based on the money you were going to
> get. Maybe you've already spent it.

Please demonstrate that Sprint has broken the law (and what law, while
you're at it). I doubt you will be able to. I am sure whatever tariff
that Sprint filed for the program has language that allows them to do
just what they did.

> Anyone who planned on using Sprint's promised service for the entire
> year (e.g., promised to call people overseas, made billing arrangements
> based on free calls, etc.) is LOSING MONEY because of Sprint's tactics.
> This is not simply a matter of have gotten only two months instead of
> twelve. It's a matter of Sprint getting money illegally.

Once again you assert that Sprint has done something illegal. Where is
your proof? If I do business with XYZ Corp and fail to read the
contract, has XYZ Corp violated the law? If you failed to read
Sprint's filings and take them into account, whose fault is that?

Please understand that I am not defending Sprint's decisions. They
*should* swallow the loss that bad marketing caused. However, a good
legal department gave them an out and they took it. Bad business, yes.
Unethical, probably. Illegal, no.

This whole debacle is a good reason to do away with the tariff system,
at least as far as IXCs go. The tariff substitutes for a contract or
disclosure sheet for the long distance conmpanies, and it makes it
difficult for the small business or individual to know the terms that
they are doing business under.


Heflin Hogan

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

From: singular@oort.ap.sissa.it (Poll Dubh)
Subject: Re: Sprint Fridays Were Free
Date: 9 Jun 1996 14:57:06 GMT
Organization: Lasciate ogni speranza voi ch'entrate


In article <telecom16.275.16@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Joel M. Hoffman
<joel@exc.com> wrote:

> I see two problems.  First, real businesses (such as myself) had the
> program changed in the middle, and that's simply illegal.

Perhaps. (I'm no lawyer, and I haven't read every clause of Sprint's
original contract with you, so it's doubly impossible for me to be
more definite.) What does that mean in practical terms? That you may
be able to persuade/force Sprint to pay you damages. If you think it's
in your best interest to do so, go ahead and try. It is still likely
that Sprint's readiness to indemnify you will depend on the total
amount of claims they get. If others settle, it may make Sprint less
nervous about forking out to you.

> There are clear laws against what Sprint is doing.  What will happen
> when your bank tells you that they'll give you 15% interest for one
> year if you switch, and then changes the rate to 2.4% because they're
> losing money?  Even if you get 15% for a month, you lose, becuase
> you've probably already planned ahead based on the money you were
> going to get.  Maybe you've already spent it.

What does a bank do when people default on their loans? It recovers
what it can, swallows the loss, and tries to make safer loans to
compensate.  What do you do when your bank, or telephone company, or
whatever, defaults on its engagements? You recover what you can (as I
said, go ahead), swallow the loss, and lower its credit rating, i.e.
stop lending it money/relying on its services/etc.

What amazes me is that you didn't see this coming, i.e. that you
thought Sprint's offer worthy of credit in the first place. After all,
giving out free calls in the US only costs Sprint extra load on its
network but free overseas calls mean actual payments to the phone
companies at the other end and so have a direct impact on cash flow.
Do you also buy into pyramid schemes? And when you go on vacation, do
you always look for the absolute cheapest fares, on chartered flights
by obscure airlines, the kind that goes bankrupt before your return
trip?  Not without first assessing the risks, I hope.

> Anyone who planned on using Sprint's promised service for the entire
> year (e.g., promised to call people overseas, made billing
> arrangements based on free calls, etc.) is LOSING MONEY because of
> Sprint's tactics.  This is not simply a matter of have gotten only two
> months instead of twelve.  It's a matter of Sprint getting money
> illegally.

I can readily believe that the unexpected change is making you lose
money. I'm less convinced that Sprint is "getting money" in this
affair; it's more likely that they are trying to cut their own losses.
That doesn't mean they don't owe you compensation for the trouble they
caused.  How much is a matter between you and them and any judges and
lawyers you choose to bring in.


"Timeo Sprint et dona ferens" (as they might say in Troy, NY?)

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
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     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
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All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
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------------------------------

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #276
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Mon Jun 10 13:33:02 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id NAA21376; Mon, 10 Jun 1996 13:33:02 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 13:33:02 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606101733.NAA21376@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #277

TELECOM Digest     Mon, 10 Jun 96 13:33:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 277

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    More USCC Stupidity (Stanley Cline)
    Can't Call 500 Numbers! (Stanley Cline)
    Indian Cable Union Bans ESPN For Charging (Rishab Aiyer Ghosh)
    Pacific Bell Foundation Publishes Annual Report On WWW (Mike King)
    Nevis-St. Kitts Telco (Determine@aol.com)
    Modems in Spain (Kris Nelson)
    Splitting Ends Of A T1? (Craig Nordin)
    52nd UCLA Engineering and Management Program (Bill Goodin)
    CallerID *Only* Line? (Hillary Gorman)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: scline@usit.net (Stanley Cline)
Subject: More USCC Stupidity
Date: Sun, 09 Jun 1996 00:06:04 GMT
Organization: Catoosa Computing Services


United States Cellular is getting even worse than I thought.

Because of their obnoxious behavior in Knoxville, TN (I'm in
Chattanooga) and other areas, I re-established service with Cellular
One/GTE (which covers virtually the whole state of Tennessee.)  The
intent here is to use the CellOne number in Tennessee (to avoid USCC
in Knoxville, and intrastate long distance charges) and other specific
areas where roaming rates are lower, and the BellSouth line in Georgia
(most of GA is either 35c or 65c/min, unlike CellOne) and out-of-state.

While talking with the CellOne salesperson about my hellish experiences
with USCC, I found this tidbit out:

As I may have said before, CellOne has been trying for *years* to do
something about Dalton, GA, just to the south of here.  In Dalton, the
A-side carrier is USCC; the B-side carrier is BellSouth.  CellOne
(along with Atlanta AirTouch and certain other carriers) have been
clamoring for lower rates and NACN availability in Dalton.  USCC
finally gave into pressure, making NACN roaming available in Dalton.
They also lowered the rate for Atlanta AirTouch roamers to 35c/min, to
be more in line with BellSouth.  USCC also told GTE that they would
charge Chattanooga roamers 60c/min.  (As it stood, Chattanooga A-side
roamers must switch to the COMPETITOR -- BellSouth -- for 60c/min
roaming!)

The problem: USCC is still billing Chattanooga roamers $3/day and
99c/min (the $3/day charge was once eliminated, but they reinstated
it!)  This is DESPITE WHAT THEY TOLD GTE.

Also, when roaming in the USCC Dalton area, it is IMPOSSIBLE to call a
"Georgia-only" 800/888 number ... all calls from Dalton are switched
in Concord/Knoxville, TN, 140 miles to the north.  ANI from USCC's
system is sent as "423-680-xxxx" (just as if I were on the Knoxville B
system), NOT a NPA 706, 770, or 404 number as would be expected --
therefore throwing off NPA/geographic routing of 800/888 calls, and
making IXCs believe 800/888 calls originate in Tennessee rather than
Georgia.

I have seen this odd ANI/800/888 behavior in cellular systems that
split states (such as both carriers in Chattanooga TN-GA, Memphis
TN-MS-AR, and Bristol TN-VA) but for a system (coverage area, to be
more specific) that is ENTIRELY within Georgia this is unacceptable.
BellSouth (who switches their calls in Atlanta/Decatur, GA) has no
such trouble.  Their switch sends ANI as "404-792-xxxx."

USCC is selling the Dalton RSA (GA-1) to Palmer Wireless (who is
supposedly entering into a switch agreement with GTE, so that
Dalton-area cellular calls are switched in Chattanooga!) -- it is
obvious it's high time for it.  Now if only something would happen
with Knoxville.

I believe USCC's consistent overbilling may be grounds for a
class-action lawsuit, or at the very least a complaint with the TN and
GA Attorneys General.  It is beginning to look like fraud.

                              ... ...

6/7/96: I received a personal reply from H. Donald Nelson, president
of USCC -- he has forwarded my last letter (dated April 15, but sent
in mid-May) to the VP of Operations for the Eastern region for
detailed investigation.  Maybe this nightmare will end.


  Stanley Cline (Roamer1 on IRC) ** GO BRAVES!  GO VOLS!
mailto:scline@usit.net **  http://www.usit.net/public/scline/
     CompuServe 74212,44 ** MSN WSCline1 ** AOL SUCKS!
            All opinions are strictly my own!

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

From: scline@usit.net (Stanley Cline)
Subject: Can't Call 500 Numbers!
Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 00:06:09 GMT
Organization: Catoosa Computing Services


The subject line says it all ...

I cannot call any 500 numbers (whether 1+ or 0+) from MY number
(706-861-xxxx.)  In every case, I get a fast busy!  What's really
strange is that 500 numbers work just fine from my OTHER line
(706-866-xxxx) and from other 861-xxxx numbers.  Trying to force-PIC
500 calls through AT&T (10288+1-500...) resulted in the same fast
busy.  (Having to force-PIC 500s is absurd, as they're routed as
800/888/900 calls are, by carrier handling the number being called,
not the PIC of the caller.)

I finally called BellSouth repair service; this afternoon I got a call
from "Kathleen" in "Translations" at BellSouth (I called them back
from looking at caller ID, they had CID and had the trouble ticket up
when I called back!), informing me that they had no problems with 500
numbers (from Nashville), and that switch software here (we're on a
DMS-100) looked correct.

BellSouth gave me this TEST 500 # -- 1-500-288-9999 -- to call; it
gave me a fast busy dialing direct.  Calling it via 1-800-Call-ATT
(using PIN 1234) works fine, as well as calling it from my other line.
"Kathleen" told me they'd have a CO tech down here look at this.

I have no toll restrictions (not even 900 Block) on this line; this
line is nonpublished, but that should make no difference.  Has anyone
heard of this strange behavior before -- a SINGLE line unable to call
500 numbers, being blocked by the LEC?


  Stanley Cline (Roamer1 on IRC) ** GO BRAVES!  GO VOLS!
mailto:scline@usit.net **  http://www.usit.net/public/scline/
     CompuServe 74212,44 ** MSN WSCline1 ** AOL SUCKS!
            All opinions are strictly my own!

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

Date: Sun, 9 Jun 1996 13:39:07 -0700
From: Rishab Aiyer Ghosh <rishab@best.com>
Subject: Indian Cable Union Bans ESPN For Charging


The Indian Techonomist: bulletin, June 9, 1996
Copyright (C) 1996 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh. All rights reserved

     June 9, 1996: Early this week the Maharashtra Cable
     Sena, a union of cable operators in western India
     announced its decision to ban the ESPN sports channel
     across the entire state of Maharashtra, including state
     capital Mumbai (Bombay). This was the result of what
     was called an emergency meeting on May 30, soon after
     ESPN decided to start charging its viewers. The Cable
     Sena stated that its action was intended to "discourage
     the practice of earning extra revenue" through a pay-TV
     channel.
     
     The Cable Sena is better known for its attacks on what
     it calls obscenity on television; it is loosely
     affiliated to the Shiv Sena, a militant right-wing
     political party that is particular about Maharashtrian
     values - and happens to run the state. In acting
     against ESPN - for the channel's crime of charging
     viewers to see cricket matches - the Sena has only done
     what most cable operators might wish. This is not of
     any great concern for viewers, who pay cable operators
     anyway, albeit only about $5 a month. (In India, small
     sums add up - cable subscribers paid some $600 million
     last year, and the revenues are growing at well over
     30% annually.)
     
     Rather, cable operators are concerned that they may
     have to share their considerable income with the
     channels they carry. With some 30,000 to 40,000 cable
     operators in an extremely disorganised and unregulated
     business, cable TV in India is a bit like the Internet
     business in the US - small, decentralised providers
     offering low rates, contributing little to a strong,
     reliable infrastructure and returning nothing to the
     originators of content that make their services
     valuable in the first place. Instead of sharing
     subscriber revenue, the unfortunate channels have to
     rely on advertising - a comparatively low $300 million
     is expected in TV ad spend this year, most of it going
     to state-owned Doordarshan, which has an audience share
     exceeding 75% due to its terrestrial network.
     
     Private channels are not yet allowed to broadcast
     terrestrially (and are unlikely to want to invest in a
     huge network like Doordarshan, which covers the whole
     country). They are forced to rely on cable operators
     for building a mass audience, the only way to attract
     advertising. Cable operators have taken full advantage
     of this, refusing to pay to carry signals, and
     occasionally trying to extort carriage fees from the
     broadcasters. Consolidation within the industry,
     proceeding at a snail's pace, does not appear to help
     much - it was InCable, a largish network in Delhi and
     Mumbai owned by the Hindujas that was rumoured to ask
     for $2 million per channel in carriage fees.
     
     And not every broadcaster can match Zee TV (affiliated
     to News Corp's STAR network) which has built its own
     cable network, Siti Cable. Siti recently announced
     plans to spend $30 million over the next year improving
     service, providing cable-only movie and "film-based"
     channels, and connecting 15 more cities greatly
     increasing its (claimed) subscriber base of 2.2 million
     homes.
     
     Instead, the bright hope for satellite channels -
     particularly niche channels without tremendous
     advertising potential - is direct-to-home (DTH)
     broadcasting. If the many projects at various stages of
     planning (proponents include Doordarshan, Malaysia's
     MEASAT, STAR/Asiasat, Thailand's Shinawatra, and
     possibly Hughes, Loral and DirecTV) take off, and
     prices of receivers fall, then ESPN will finally be
     able to treat the Cable Sena with the indifference it
     deserves.
     
     On why television and radio is officially a state
     monopoly in India, and how this will change thanks to a
     Supreme Court verdict see http://dxm.org/techonomist/regu.html#IBA     

The Indian Techonomist: weekly summary. http://dxm.org/techonomist/news/
Copyright (C) 1996 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh (rishab@techonomist.dxm.org)
A4/204 Ekta Vihar 9 Indraprastha Extension New Delhi 110092 INDIA
May be distributed electronically provided that this notice is attached

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

From: Mike King <mk@wco.com>
Subject: Pacific Bell Foundation Publishes Annual Report On WWW
Date: Sun, 9 Jun 1996 16:54:53 PDT


Forwarded to the Digest FYI:

  Date: Tue, 04 Jun 1996 06:18:38 -0700
  Reply-To: NEWS-LIST@list.pactel.com
  From: sqlgate@list.pactel.com
  Subject: Pacific Bell Foundation Publishes Annual Report On The WWW

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
June 3, 1996

FOR MORE INFORMATION:
John Abbott
(415) 394-3638
Ben Voris
(415 394-3685


Pacific Bell Foundation Publishes Annual Report On The WWW

New Web site highlights grantmaking, application procedures

SAN FRANCISCO -- Taking advantage of new technology, the Pacific Bell
Foundation (formerly known as the Telesis Foundation) published its
1995 annual report on the World Wide Web (WWW). The electronic report
highlights the Foundation's 1995 grantmaking, outlines its funding
priorities, and even includes application procedures for potential
grant applicants.

The Foundation is one of the first regional philanthropic organizations
to venture into cyberspace.

"We believe that many of our clients will use this new technology to
communicate, exchange information, and market their services," says
Jere Jacobs, president of the Foundation. "Just as important, one of
our priorities is to support organizations that use information-based
technologies to improve their effectiveness. In this way, we hope to
model the use of technology that we encourage our clients to adopt,
and set an example for other corporate funders."

The Foundation Web site has several main areas:

   * The President's Letter
   * Education
   * Community
   * Arts and Culture
   * Grants database
   * Application procedures

Visitors to the site can search the database of grants from the past two
years by category or recipient, review guidelines for funding, and send
an e-mail message to the staff (grant proposals are not accepted by
e-mail). They can also request a printed version of the annual report by
filling out an electronic order form.

"Our presence on the Internet will enable us to provide timely
information to grant applicants," Jacobs says. "It will also connect us
to community-based resources, and quicken our response to the needs of
the communities we serve."

The emphasis on technology was apparent in the Foundation's giving last
year. It made two $100,000 "cluster" grants, which were divided among a
number of different agencies in a specific area. The first was to
support technology planning in two school districts in Nevada; the
second was to increase the capacity of 10 Los Angeles-area nonprofit
groups to better serve their clients through the acquisition of
telecommunications equipment.

The Foundation's largest technology grants, however, focused on efforts
to improve student learning, teaching practice and school management. It
made a $500,000 grant to the award-winning Education for the Future
Initiative to implement its framework for school improvement in several
California public schools. In addition, the Foundation developed a
partnership with Pacific Bell's Education First technology initiative to
integrate technology and organization improvement at 12 demonstration
sites in selected schools, libraries and community colleges around
California.

Other agencies used Foundation grants to purchase and upgrade computer
systems, to present a special conference that helps people with
disabilities learn about computers and adaptive devices, and to conduct
distance learning programs that link teachers and students by video
conference.

In total, the Foundation made $6.1 million in grants in 1995 in
education, the community, arts and culture, and United Way.

"Technology won't solve all our problems," Jacobs says. "But it is a
tool that can give all of us the opportunity to enhance learning,
leisure and work, no matter what our cultural or ethnic background might
be."

The Foundation site may be accessed directly at: http://www.
pactel.com/found/home.html. It may also be reached through the Pacific
Telesis Web site at http://www.pactel.com under the "In the Community"
section.

The Foundation was formed in 1984 by the Pacific Telesis Group, a
diversified communications company based in San Francisco.

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

Mike King   *   Oakland, CA, USA   *   mk@wco.com


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Gee, maybe someone with some savvy in
this sort of thing would review that material and see if it could be
possibly of value to this Digest. I can certainly tell you having our
friends at Microsoft leaving at the end of this month has started to
get me a little panicy. For all I may be good at, I am terrible when
it comes to fund raising.  :(    PAT]

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

From: Determine@aol.com
Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 10:49:24 -0400
Subject: Nevis-St. Kitts Telco


Dear Pat,

We're a small call-back provider (Section 214-licensed, no less!)

SkanTel (the local Cable & Wireless Telco) in St. Kitts-Nevis
(Windward Islands, Caribbean) is rather territorial.  Some months ago,
a client of mine in that country was being harrassed by SkanTel for
having a callback connection, so my client and I agreed that it was
best to deactivate his account.  (Incidentally, the FCC does not list
Nevis-St. Kitts as being a contry that US callback providers must not
connect to.)

This morning, my former client called me via his AT&T calling card
from St.  Kitts.  (He can't call my customer service number directly,
as SkanTel has blocked that.)  He told me that he "was no longer being
harrassed and that SkanTel seemed to have stopped blocking his current
callback provider, a firm in Seattle, WA.  He asked whether we could
provide him a DID number which I did, giving it to him over the phone.
The number, incidentally, is in a New York City exchange. Six minutes
later, that particular DID came in but "rang out," (that is, if there
are more than x rings, the call "connects" and plays back a reorder
tone and no callback results.  This is to prevent inadvertant
callbacks by someone dialing a wrong number).  Over the next five
minutes, his DID number "rang out" three more times.  Yet, I knew that
my client was fully aware that he should only allow the DID number to
ring once.

I called him in St. Kitts and asked him whether he was having trouble
and he said, "No, I haven't even tried to call in yet."

Far be it from me to suggest that SkanTel is monitoring international
calls place to or by their subscribers.  However, if you intend to do
business in that country and require a reasonable degree of privacy,
you might be well advised to get an e-mail account and a copy of PGP
(International Edition, of course).


Juan

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

Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 08:14:08 PDT
From: Kris Nelson <krisn@u.washington.edu>
Reply-To: Kris Nelson <krisn@u.washington.edu>
Subject: Modems in Spain


I am going to be spending next school year studying in Spain (at the
University of Granada, if you care) and plan to bring my trusty little
Powerbook with me to do email, etc. UG appears to have dial-in lines,
so that's no problem.

But I have two questions:

(1) Can I actually use my U.S. modem (a Hayes Accura 288) on Spanish
phone lines? (Legally?)

(2) What kind of physical phone jacks are in use in Spain? Radio Shack
only has adapters for the U.K., Germany, and France (all different,
interestingly). If Spain differs from these three, where can I get an
adapter?

Thanks for your help.


Cheers,

Kris Nelson 
krisn@u.washington.edu http://weber.u.washington.edu/~krisn/
CHID/English  Comparative History of Ideas Staff  U of Wash, Seattle

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

From: cnordin@vni.net (Craig Nordin)
Subject: Splitting Ends Of A T1?
Date: 10 Jun 1996 02:06:44 -0400
Organization: Virtual Networks 


     In this case, split-ends are good!

I'm searching for the solution that *does NOT* have me building a
small telco rack alter to the thing with many expensive pieces.  I
know that there are some splitting CSU/DSUs out there and so I'm
trying to figure out how to do it cheap and right ...

I'm running a long distance T1 and I want to use most of it for TCP/IP
data and 4 x 64K channels for voice connections.

How do I peel off the 4 channels efficiently and affordably?

          POP                                POP
 
Local Svc POTS  ---\                   /---  POTS  Local Fwd    
Local Svc POTS  ---\-------------------/---  POTS  Local Fwd
Local Svc POTS  ----   LD T1 Circuit   ----  POTS  Local Fwd
Local Svc POTS  ---/-------------------\---  POTS  Local Fwd
V.35      DATA  ---/                   \---  DATA    V.35


Local Svc = Terminates at a local phone number;
Local Fwd = Terminates in forwarding to another local location.
 
I'll summarize any e-mail I recieve on the subject!


http://www.vni.net/
cnordin@vni.net     Fly VNI:  Send E-Mail to  info@vni.net

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

From: BGoodin@UNEX.UCLA.EDU (Goodin, Bill)
Organization: UCLA Extension
Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 07:00:01 -0700
Subject: 52nd UCLA Engineering and Management Program


September 15-20, 1996

For more than 40 years, UCLA Extension's Engineering and Management
Program has provided "how to" answers to the challenges that technical
managers face daily.

The program is designed for experienced first-level technical
supervisors, mid-level technical managers, technical professionals
with high advancement potential, and non-technical managers in
technology-based organizations.

A special feature is the opportunity for participants to personalize
their own curriculum by selecting four courses, each one meeting two
hours per day.

Participants may choose from 24 course offerings to address these and
other important management questions:

o  How can I develop products and services that will have a market?
o  How can I use technology as one of the drivers of organizational change?
o  How can I influence persons who do not report directly to me or to
   my boss?
o  How can I create a culture that nourishes creativity, customer service, 
   risk taking, and accountability?
o  How can I communicate in-house with peers, subordinates, and superiors,
   and with global customers and suppliers?
o  How can I carry out my managerial role in the face of major change in the 
   organization?
o  How can I prepare myself for emerging trends and an uncertain future?
o  How can I better use or change aspects of my style of leadership to get
   desired results?
o  How can I identify and eliminate costly, nonvalue-added activities?

Instructors are drawn from the UCLA faculty, other universities, and
the business community.  All combine research and theory with practice
and application.

The program advisory committee, which includes technical managers from
Hewlett Packard, Trillium Digital Systems, TRW, Sandia National
Laboratories, Beckman Instruments, Amgen, Telegenics, Rockwell, and
ARCO, actively participates in the selection and evaluation of the
courses.

The program fee of $1,995 includes all texts and materials for courses
in which the participant is enrolled, five continental breakfasts,
five luncheons, social events, parking at UCLA, and use of University
facilities and equipment.

For further information and a complete program booklet, please contact
Beverly Croswhite at:

(310) 825-3858
Fax (310) 206-2815,
e-mail:  bcroswhi@unex.ucla.edu

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

From: hillary@netaxs.com (Hillary Gorman)
Subject: CallerID *Only* Line?
Date: 9 Jun 1996 19:50:20 GMT
Organization: Philadelphia's Complete Internet Provider


I am very curious about what the hell was going on at my friends' house. 

They moved into a new apartment and ordered residential phone service
with call waiting and caller ID from Bell Atlantic here in Pennsylvania.  
When they arrived at their apartment having been assured that their
line was connected and ready to go, they were surprised to find that
there was no dial tone on the line. They tried plugging several
different telephones into the jack, but the line was obviously dead.

They were even *more* surprised, however, when shortly after finding
their line to be dead, the phone *rang*, and caller identification was
displayed on the caller ID box. Picking up the phone yielded only
silence. So, for a couple of weeks, my friend was returning calls made
to his apartment by checking the caller ID box and calling back from
his cellphone. How did Bell Atlantic manage to send caller ID data
without even delivering dial tone?


hillary gorman..........hillary@netaxs.com


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I don't know why this should have been
allowed to continue 'for a couple of weeks' unless your friends did
not report it or telco was very incompetent about correcting the problem.

The problem as I see it was probably one of three conditions which were
overlooked by telco when the line was installed. One, the line was
configured as 'ground start' meaning the subscriber has to send the
line to ground for a short period -- usually just a second or less --
to get dial tone. There are good reasons why some subscribers need
this type of line, based on their own equipment attached to the line.
It may well have been the line was was configured as 'ground start'
for the previous subscriber and no one noticed it or got around to
changing it before your friends were assigned that line. To a subscriber
not knowledgeable of this configuration, the line would appear to be
dead; i.e. dead silence when off hook; not even 'battery' or side tone
of any sort or cross-talk in the background, etc. This does not usually
prevent incoming calls, and it would not explain why they could not
speak with persons who called them. If call forwarding was somehow
turned on, that would explain why no matter how fast they lifted the
receiver they would not be able to speak to the caller and lacking
dial tone why they would have just gotten silence.

The second configuration which may have occurred which I think was
less likely is the line was configured for one-way, incoming calls only.
This is also a desirable configuration for some subscribers based on 
their needs. In this configuration, usually lifting the receiver will
produce at least battery or side tone of some sort, but dial tone will
never be heard. Again it should not have prevented incoming calls
unless call forwarding had somehow been turned on also.

A third possibility is the line was configured to just send ANI to a
former subscriber. A large phone room for example might have a large
number of incoming 800 lines and a line used only by telco to transmit
certain data about incoming calls to the subscriber. Years ago when I
had some association with Amoco Credit Card for example, the phone 
room used for 'sales authorization' (dealers calling in to get approval
to allow a credit card sale) got ten to twelve thousand incoming calls
per 24 hours from various types of phone lines all over the USA via
an 'automatic call distributor' which tossed the incoming calls to 
credit representatives on duty. In the supervisor's office, a control
unit kept track of how many calls each rep received; how many calls in
total were receieved' how many calls were 'lost' (that is, the caller
abandoned the call before getting a live answer from a rep); and how
many calls were turned away by telco because all incoming lines were
busy, etc. Telco had a 'data control line' (is what I think they called
it) which did nothing but constantly send little blips down the line
to this control unit telling it what to record for the subscriber's
review; i.e. 'here comes a call from area code 219' or 'you just now
had a caller hang up because he did not get answered after five rings'
or 'four callers have received a busy signal in the last thirty seconds'.
This unit in the supervisor's office was watched closely around the 
clock and someone had the specific duty of 'reading' it once an hour
so that management would know what was going on. To the employees in
the phone room it was also a tool used to spy on them they thought:
'why did position seventeen spend three minutes on that call instead
of the usual thirty seconds or less?' or 'why was position five not
taking calls at all for twenty minutes?' ... so the line might have
been configured in previous use for something like that and no one at
telco ever noticed it.

But why 'two weeks' before correction?  Please ask your friends to 
answer these questions and then get back to us for a bit more advice.

1) Exactly WHAT did they hear when off hook attempting to make a call?
Was it dead silence or mostly dead silence with an occassional click
or 'pop' in their ear? Did they hear side-tone or noise like the line
was alive but just not ever getting around to dial tone?

2) What did the *people who called them* during that two weeks get as
a result?  Did the connection ring once (or not at all) and then just
'wander off' and get lost in the network somewhere? If so, what happened
if they reported to the operator there was 'no ring/no answer' and
asked the operator to assist in dialing? Did they get a recording saying 
the number was not in service?  If so, what did the recording *say*?
Did it recite the number dialed and claim it was not in service, or
in service for one type of call but not another? Did it sound like
the number connected with something/somewhere but then the phone was
never picked up on the other end?

Most important, did telco ever say what was wrong or did one day the
line just start working correctly, with or without a call to repair
service to prompt them into getting it fixed?  Let us know.   PAT]
 
               ------------------------------

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
public service systems and networks including Compuserve and America
On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. 

Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:

                 * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu *

The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
Townson of Skokie, Illinois USA. You can reach us by postal mail, fax 
or phone at:
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*************************************************************************
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* International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in Geneva, Switzerland    * 
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* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
* ing views of the ITU.                                                 *
*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
yourself who provide funding in amounts deemed appropriate. Your help
is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of twenty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #277
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Mon Jun 10 14:20:00 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id OAA26732; Mon, 10 Jun 1996 14:20:00 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 14:20:00 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606101820.OAA26732@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #278

TELECOM Digest     Mon, 10 Jun 96 14:20:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 278

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    BellSouth Signs Local Interconnection Agreement With Time Warner (M. King)
    FCC Grants Pacific Bell Delay On CID (Mike King)
    Mass. Area Code Proposals (Boston Globe via oldbear@arctos.com)
    Oki 900 Apple Macintosh Software - Anyone Interested? (Steve Bagdon)
    Dassault Tries Out CT2 in India (Rishab Aiyer Ghosh)
    Telco: Service or Business (Joel M. Hoffman)
    Telecom Technical Conference (Amy Dario)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Mike King <mk@wco.com>
Subject: BellSouth Signs Local Interconnection Agreement With Time Warner
Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 06:44:53 PDT


Forwarded to the Digest, FYI:

  Date: Fri, 7 Jun 1996 10:18:35 -0400
  From: BellSouth <press@www.bellsouth.com>
  Subject: BELLSOUTH SIGNS LOCAL INTERCONNECTION AGREEENT WITH TIME WARNER
  Reply-To: press@www.bellsouth.com


BELLSOUTH SIGNS REGIONAL LOCAL INTERCONNECTION AGREEMENT WITH TIME WARNER

ATLANTA, GA. - June 4, 1996--BellSouth (NYSE: BLS), and Time Warner
Communications, two of the leading communications companies in the
country, announced they've signed a two-year agreement which will
enable Time Warner to begin providing local phone service in direct
competition with BellSouth soon. This agreement is significant in that
these two competitors have negotiated a pact that will enhance
competition in the southeast and provide millions of customers a
choice of who provides them local telephone service. This is the first
regional interconnection agreement signed by BellSouth that complies
with key requirements detailed in the national telecommunications
legislation enacted earlier this year.

It's also the second regional agreement BellSouth ha s signed with a
major competitor since the legislation was passed.

"This agreement builds on the pro-competitive position that we've
consistently demonstrated in our negotiations with our competitors,"
stated Charlie Coe, Group President - Customer Operations for
BellSouth.  "It promises to bring more choices to businesses and
consumers in the fastest growing part of the country," added Coe.

While the agreement applies to the entire nine-state BellSouth region,
Time Warner currently has plans to build networks in order to provide
local phone service in Florida, North Carolina and Tennessee.
BellSouth serves over 10 million phone lines in these three states
which contain many of the top markets for the company.

"Time Warner is pleased with this agreement with BellSouth because it
will speed our efforts to bring competitive local telephone service to
business and residential consumers in some of our most important
operations in the southeastern U.S.," said Thomas J. Morrow, president
of Time Warner Communications.

The agreement establishes the groundrules under which the two
telephone companies will interconnect their networks, including:
non-discriminatory rates, terms and conditions for local
interconnection and interim number portability; as well as an offer to
Time Warner to resell BellSouth's telecommunications services and
access to its unbundled network elements.

As a result of this agreement, BellSouth has taken another step closer
to being able to enter the long distance market place in its region.
"This agreement contains all the checklist items required by the
national legislation and is further proof that com petition in our
local markets is imminent," stated Coe. "By meeting these checklist
requirements, we move closer to being allowed to offer long distance
to our customers in the southeast. Our customers have indicated this
is a service they want from us an d it's a business we're actively
positioning ourselves to be in as soon as we can," added Coe.

This deal is announced as the Federal Communications Commission and
various state commissions open proceedings on the terms of
implementing local competition. This agreement meets the intent of the
national legislation because these companies, with much at stake in
the new environment, have negotiated the mutually agreed-upon set of
terms by which they will compete against each other in the local
telephone market.  Various state commissions in the southeast must now
approve the agreement so that competition in the local exchange can
begin.

"This agreement is an excellent first step in our effort to compete in
BellSouth's region," said Morrow. "Now, we can move quickly forward
with our preparations to offer a competitive local service. As the new
telecommunications law stipulates, only when new providers are
actually in the marketplace offering customers a real choice of
service will true competition exist."

Time Warner Cable is the nation's second largest cable television
operator, currently serving, with affiliated companies, 11.7 million
customers in 37 states. It is a unit of Time Warner Entertainment
Company, L.P.

BellSouth is a $17.9 billion communications services company.  It
provides telecommunications, wireless communications, directory
advertising and publishing and other information services to more than
25 million customers in 17 countries worldwide. Its telephone
operations provides service over one of the most modern
telecommunications networks in the world for approximately 21 million
telephone lines in a nine-state region that includes Alabama, Florida,
Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North C arolina, South
Carolina and Tennessee.

	                         ###

Summary - Time Warner Agreement			06/04/96

The Agreement covers nine states and specifically includes the Time
Warner entities of Digital Media Partners, Time Warner AxS of Florida,
Time Warner Communications of North Carolina, and Time Warner AxS of
Tennessee.

The other Time Warner entities may be added throughout the term of the
Agreement.  The term is two years.

The Agreement states that the parties agree that the provisions of the
Agreement are consistent with the checklist requirements of the Act.

The charge for interconnection is a flat rate of $.01 applicable in
any of the states.  The charge is reciprocal.  The rates are based on
an average of the switched access rates, less the interconnection
charge and the CCLC.  There is a 105% cap on compensation to address
out of balance traffic.  Interconnection may be established at any
technically feasible point and may be through physical collocation,
virtual collocation, or through the purchase of transport facilities.

The first six months of operation will be a testing period and as
such, there will be no charges accrued or compensation paid.  The
parties will exchange billing information and usage data.  There are
three six month periods that follow, each of which hav e a threshold
billing amount of $40,000, $30,000 and $20,000.  The threshold amount
is calculated prior to application of the cap.  The threshold billing
amount will be $0.00 for any period after the expiration of the
Agreement but prior to the execution of a new agreement.

The Agreement provides for interim number portability in all states at
the following rates: Residential services --$1.15 for up to 6 paths,
$.50 for each additional path; Business services -- $2.25 for up to 10
paths, $.50 for each additional path.

BellSouth will provide Time Warner nondiscriminatory access to
numbering resources and will provide access to 911/E911; will provide
directory listings and directory distribution; will provide both
remote call forwarding and DID interim number portability ; will
provide access to poles, ducts, conduits, and rights of way; and
BellSouth will offer Time Warner nondiscriminatory access to unbundled
network elements, access to directory assistance and operator call
completion services, unbundled loops, unbundled switching, and
unbundled transport.  The Agreement also authorizes Time Warner to
resell BellSouth's telecommunications services.

The Agreement includes a "More Favorable Provisions" clause.  The
clause allows the parties to substitute more favorable terms and
conditions as a result of any proceeding before a court, commission,
or FCC, voluntary agreement or arbitration proceeding pursuant to the
Act.


For Information Contact:
Joe Chandler, BellSouth Telecommunications
(404)529-6235
Mike Luftman, Time Warner Cable
(203)328-0613

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

Mike King   *   Oakland, CA, USA   *   mk@wco.com

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

From: Mike King <mk@wco.com>
Subject: FCC Grants Pacific Bell Delay On Passage Of Calling Party Numbers
Date: Sun, 9 Jun 1996 16:48:40 PDT


Forwarded to the Digest, FYI:

  Date: Wed, 05 Jun 1996 16:50:51 -0700
  Reply-To: NEWS-LIST@list.pactel.com
  From: sqlgate@list.pactel.com
 Subject: FCC Grants Pacific Bell Delay On Passage Of Calling Party Numbers


FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Susan Petoletti
(415) 542-4541

SAN FRANCISCO -- The Federal Communications Commission granted Pacific
Bell a waiver on the passage of calling party numbers (CPN) May 31,
saying it has the option to begin passing on or before July 1, 1996.
The waiver allows Pacific Bell to complete a customer notification
requirement mandated by the California Public Utilities Commission
(CPUC) without being in violation of the federal rule requiring
California phone companies to pass CPN on June 1, 1996.

The FCC mandate to pass CPN will bring California into compliance with
phone companies in 49 other states who are passing CPN and providing
Caller ID service to their customers.

California consumers had been anticipating the statewide launch of
Caller ID on June 1, 1996, pending CPUC approval, but Pacific Bell
recently received an extension from the CPUC. Pacific Bell needed time
to complete its customer notification process and expects to launch in
early June.

Four California local exchange carriers -- Roseville, Happy Valley,
Siskyou and Evans -- will comply with the FCC order and pass CPN.
These companies will also make Caller ID service available June 1 so
that customers who order the service and buy the display units will be
able to see the numbers of incoming calls. The CPUC recently approved
the launch of Caller ID by these four companies who serve an
approximate aggregate of 103,000 customers in Northern California, the
majority of whom are in the Sacramento area.

Pacific Bell customers' numbers will be delivered (unless they choose
to block) to phone customers served by Roseville in the Sacramento
area, as well as Evans customers in the Patterson and Livingston
areas, and Siskyou and Happy Valley customers in the Redding area.

Pacific Bell customers can block their number from being passed by
exercising blocking options.

Pacific Bell is a subsidiary of Pacific Telesis Group, a diversified
telecommunications company.


                            ----------- 

Mike King   *   Oakland, CA, USA   *   mk@wco.com

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

Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 16:12:34 -0300
From: The Old Bear <oldbear@arctos.com>
Subject: Mass. Area Code Proposals


THE BOSTON GLOBE
June 7, 1997

PHONE COMPANIES BATTLE OVER 2 NEW AREA CODES FOR MASSACHUSETTS

By Bruce Mohl
GLOBE STAFF

     The deck of area codes in eastern Massachusetts is about to be
shuffled once again, as phone service competitors yesterday offered
very different proposals for squeezing new area codes into eastern
Massachusetts.

     The proposals, aimed at keeping up with the public's unchecked
appetite for phone numbers, are expected to cause widespread consumer
confusion.  And some subscribers in the 508 area, who endured the
wrenching process of changing their numbers when that code was created
in 1988, may find it an unwelcome case of deja-vu.

     "There's no way around the fact that there's going to be some
disruption here," said George Dean of the state attorney general's
office.  "People are going to have to change the way they dial."

     Nynex Corp. is asking the state Department of Public Utilities to
"overlay" two new area codes - 781 and 978 - on the existing 617 and
508 areas.  Current customers would keep their area codes, while new
customers, though sharing the same geographic area, would receive the
new codes.

     "We believe it's the least disruptive," said Thomas J. DeSisto,
managing director for state regulatory planning at Nynex.  Existing
customers would keep their area codes and not have to reprint
stationery, repaint trucks, revise advertising and adjust data-
processing equipment.

     But some of Nynex's competitors, recent arrivals in the
intrastate market, say the firm is trying to stack the deck against
them.  They say the Nynex proposal would mean all their customers
would receive the new area codes and be forced to dial an 11-digit,
number (1 plus the area code plus the phone number) every time they
make a call to another code -- which could be a call next door.
	
     "Local competition is coming to Massachusetts" and Nynex is
attempting to stop it," said Robert Lopardo, regional director for
public 	policy at MCI.  "No one agrees with the Nynex proposal because
it is anticompetitive."
	
     MCI, AT&T, Continental Cablevision and a host of other would-be
Nynex competitors favor a plan that would carve the new 781 and 978
area codes out of the existing 508 and 617 area codes, the way 508 was
sliced from 617 in 1988.
	
     Under their proposal, the new 781 area code would include
communities north of Boston that are now in the 617 area code.  The
group includes Arlington, Belmont, Lexington, Malden, Medford, Revere
and Wellesley.
	
     The 978 area code would encompass communities in the northern
half of the 508 area code, including Andover, Concord, Danvers,
Fitchburg, Gloucester, Lawrence, Lowell, and Salem.

     In some communities there would be two area codes. Newton, 
Watertown, Somerville and Charlestown would mostly be in the 781 
area code, but some residents would remain in 617.  Framingham, 
Hudson, Marlborough, Northborough, Princeton, Sterling and Wayland 
would mostly be in 978, but portions would remain in 508.

     When the 508 area code was divided from 617 in 1988, the
expectation was that it would last at least 20 years.  But the
proliferation of fax machines, modems, pagers and cellular phones has
accelerated the timetable.  The 617 area code needs relief by early
1998. and 508 will last only a bit longer.

     Robin Sayre, an AT&T spokeswoman, said the Nynex proposal would
mean someone adding a second phone line could end up with two
different codes in the same house.  She also said someone living just
around the corner could have a different area code.

     As a result, Sayre said, someone calling one of the new area 
codes would have no way of knowing whether it was a local or a 
toll call.

     Yet DeSisto said phone customers would over time become familiar
with the new overlay environment, dialing a 7-digit number within
their area code and a 11-digit number when the call is outside that
area code.

     "People generally have a sense of what's local and toll based 
on distance," he said.

     DeSisto insisted customers who wanted to leave Nynex for another
carrier could take their phone number with them, but officials from
MCI and AT&T said that process would require them to pay a fee to
Nynex and also would limit the number of services the customer could
receive.  Nynex's rivals expect that most of their customers would be
issued numbers with the new area codes, putting them at a disadvantage
relative to Nynex customers.

     While both sides said their proposals would serve the consumer
best, neither plan offers a long-term solution to the growing scarcity
of phone numbers.

     Indeed, some companies are expected to recommend to the DPU that
the best approach would be to have every customer in eastern
Massachusetts dial an 11-digit number every time he or she made a call
within the area code.

     Nynex has asked the DPU to decide which area-code proposal to
adopt by October, but the agency has set no timetable yet for hearings
or a decision.  "This is going to be a free-for-all " said Tim
Shevlin, executive director of the DPU.

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

Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 09:04:45 -0500
From: bagdon@rust.net (S and K Bagdon)
Subject: Oki 900 Apple Macintosh Software - Anyone Interested?


I am thinking about *finally* starting my Oki 900 to Apple Macintosh
software project. This would be along the lines of the Network Wizards
CTEK (Cellular Telephone Experimentors Kit) for the PC. It is
'technically' possible to run the CTEK software on a Macintosh (by
using something along the line of SoftAT, SoftWindows, etc) but I have
always wanted to write this to run on the Mac as 'native'.

Any input would be greatly appreciated. Has this already been tried
and accomplished? Has this already been tried and written-off? Would
anyone else out there like to be able to control their Oki 900 with a
Mac (maintain the phone numbers from a Mac, etc), or is this the
answer to the question that nobody asked?

If all goes well, I might actually gain inertia, and write some
software for the Newton -- that would be interesting, interfacing the
Newton to the 900, true portability.

Any comments (good, bad, indifferent) would be greatly appreciated.


Steve B.
bagdon@rust.net (h) USFMDDKT@ibmmail.com (w)
http://www.rust.net/~bagdon
Katharine aNd Steve (KNS)
'91 MR2T (daily driver), '85 MR2 (parts car)
Mitsubishi DiamondTel 22X, Motorola MicroTAC Lite, Oki 900
Pinnacle Micro RCD-1000 - Feel The Burn
Delta Airlines Gold Medallion

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

Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 14:58:50 -0700
From: Rishab Aiyer Ghosh <rishab@best.com>
Subject: Dassault Tries Out CT2 in India


The Indian Techonomist: bulletin, June 6, 1996
Copyright (C) 1996 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh. All rights reserved

Dassault tries out CT2 in India

     June 6, 1996: Dassault Automatisme et
     Telecommunications, the telecom wing of the French
     defence equipment manufacturer, has succeeded where
     many have failed - in selling new technology, in the
     form of a pilot project, to India's Department of
     Telecommunications (DoT). During the next few weeks,
     Dassault will install wireless-in-local-loop systems
     for 1,000 subscribers each in the cities of Calcutta
     and Vijayawada, based on its EASYNET CT2/CAI
     technology. The contract, valued at FFr 8.46 million
     (approx. US$ 1.5 million) includes equipment (72 base
     stations, eight base station concentrators), on-site
     network engineering and technical assistance, as well
     as the training (in France) of DoT staff. The trials
     will last for three months.
     
     For these two sites, Dassault will be paid regardless
     of the DoT's evaluation of the project's success or
     failure (technical and commercial) - being, after all,
     merely an equipment provider. Another experiment, on a
     much smaller scale - the expense will be borne by
     Dassault - is in the rural areas around the town of
     Ludhiana in north-west India. This will commence
     sometime next month, and involve only 10 subscriber
     terminals. It is meant to prove the technology's
     viability over larger distances, as the density of
     telephones - though not necessarily of the population -
     is low in rural areas. Sunil Aggarwal, consultant to
     Dassault's Indian operations, hopes this field trial
     will translate into orders for EASYNET systems in rural
     areas across the country. Such orders could be from the
     DoT - or from the various private basic telephony
     providers likely to have their licences confirmed by
     the new government after a confidence vote in
     Parliament next week.
     
     About 75% of India's 900 million population is found in
     villages; only a third of these (say 200,000) have even
     a single phone. This makes total telephone density
     still below 1 per hundred people, but the situation on
     the ground is much worse when 400 million people cannot
     access - leave alone own - a phone. The DoT bears some
     moral responsibility to increase the pathetic telephone
     density in rural India. Private telecom providers, on
     the other hand, have contractual obligations.
     Commitments to build "Village Public Telephones" -
     rural pay-phones which, thanks to low levels of
     telephone ownership, have very high usage rates - were
     given a weightage of 15% in the tender evaluations
     (against 72% for the bid licence fee). Most bidders
     gave high assurances of coverage, promising to reach
     all villages within the first year or so of operations.
     This is quite unrealistic, unless very heavy use is
     made of wireless technologies. The DoT, in the tender
     documents, has specified the uniform use of fibre,
     copper permitted only in the last 500 metres of the
     loop. Wireless technology is encouraged, but even in
     rural areas, analogue technology requires special
     permission. Normally, all rural wireless systems will
     be digital - like Dassault's EASYNET. EASYNET uses a
     CT2/CAI  protocol defined by the European
     Telecommunications Standards Institute, uses time-
     division duplexing for digitised (ADPCM) voice. It is
     designed to fit transparently between subscriber and
     exchange equipment intended for wireline use, and can
     also provide fax and modem connections.
     
     Despite its EASYNET projects, the DoT has not in
     general been very receptive towards new technologies,
     even for rural areas. Dassault itself took two years
     persuading the DoT to let it conduct the minimal rural
     field trials outside Ludhiana. But US West, which
     planned a pilot project involving broadband and
     wireless communications in rural districts of the
     southern state of Tamil Nadu, is not sure it will be
     able to go ahead at all. Unlike Dassault, US West
     invited publicity, and its project quickly became
     controversial. The DoT feared competing private
     providers arguing that the project violated basic
     telephony licences. It did not, though - the tenders
     specifically gave the DoT a right to commission pilot
     projects to test new technology, irrespective of the
     licences. But a lawsuit might have dragged on, and the
     verdict could have been unfavourable (see a forthcoming
     report on Indian courts and telecom) - so the DoT slept
     over it. Similar worries made the DoT reject mobile
     trials of EASYNET - cellular service licensees could
     object, so the trials are for fixed-wireless only.
     Besides, Dassault supplied equipment and services for a
     fee, with which the DoT felt comfortable. US West
     intended to manage its experimental service itself,
     with the possibility of earning profits however small,
     but also, and this was perhaps forgotten by both the
     DoT and private competitors, the risk.
     
     A report on India's courts and telecom will be
     available later next week at 
     http://dxm.org/techonomist/news/
     
     Information on cellular and basic telephony
     privatisation is at
     http://dxm.org/techonomist/news/bids.html
     
The Indian Techonomist: weekly summary. http://dxm.org/techonomist/news/
Copyright (C) 1996 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh (rishab@techonomist.dxm.org)
A4/204 Ekta Vihar 9 Indraprastha Extension New Delhi 110092 INDIA
May be distributed electronically provided that this notice is attached

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

Date: Mon, 10 Jun 96 12:55:00 EDT
From: joel@exc.com (Joel M. Hoffman)
Subject: Telco: Service or Business
Organization: Excelsior Computer Services


> The bottom line is that the phone network is not supposed to be a
> money-making endeavor.  It's supposed to be a service to citizens.
> And America isn't providing that service.

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Now wait a minute! *Who says* that
> telecom is not supposed to be a money-making endeavor? Perhaps that
> is the case in some countries, but here in the USA telephone companies
> have stockholders and pay dividends to those stockholders. Do you
> think the investors put money in just for the sake of being good guys
> to the rest of the nation?  PAT]

It's all a matter of how you look at it.  Certainly a company, with
investors and so forth, wants to make money.  But the question is
this: if it comes down to telco's making money or people having better
phone service, which is to be preferred?

Universal residential service is a money-losing endeavor.  Maybe we
should just get rid of that, because no one's making money on it?


Joel   (joel@exc.com)


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I do not think making money and providing
good customer service are mutually exclusive goals. I think they go hand
in hand. After all, when did telco make the vast majority of its billions
of dollars in reserves? They did it back in the earlier years of this
century when prompt installation/repair/customer service were paramount
features. Granted, they were the only game in town, and you either got
service from them or you did not get service at all, but there was a
time not so long ago when telco employees were among the most dedicated
people you would ever find anywhere. 

Where universal service is concerned, you need to remember that phone
service is unlike any other utility in that it takes two to tango.
What I mean by that is that in your electrical service the brand of
lightbulb you purchase or how much you use it has no bearing at all or
very little on my use of electrical service. How much gas you use to
operate your furnace in the winter has no bearing on if I choose to
sit here cold because I don't want to spend the money. But with phones
on the other hand, if you and I were the only people to have phone
service it is quite likely we would not have it either. I need your
cooperation to use my phone and vice-versa. Phones are only of value
when all of us have one or more of them. If you choose not to
subscribe because either you don't want to or can't afford it, then
the value of my service is lessened. Telephones are 'give and take'
between subscribers cooperating in their use while gas, electricity
and water distribution are strictly 'outbound' from the utility to the
subscriber. None need be concerned about the others; an exception
being perhaps that one subscriber could 'hog' the resources and make
it difficult or impossible for the others to have any; but with phones
if you choose not to participate, then where does that leave me? I
suppose I could sit and dial ring-back numbers and such all day long.

So we say universal service is an important goal since it unites all
of us and makes the service of each of us much more valuable. I never
would claim every last item or department at telco should be a profit
center in and of itself, only that overall a profit to the shareholders
is not a bad thing, and that good service often times means a bigger
profit when properly administered.   PAT]

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

From: a.dario@ieee.org (Amy Dario)
Subject: Telecom Technical Conference
Date: 10 Jun 1996 17:10:13 GMT
Organization: ECM


IEEE will hold a technical conference in Orlando, Florida June 25-27.
Technical sessions on Telecommunications, Satellite, Wireless, DSP,
Advance Digital Communications, et. al will be presented, organized by
the industry leaders and universities in the Florida area.

For a list of subjects covered and complimentary registration see
http://www.southcon.com or in the U.S. call (800) 877-2668, ext. 250.

Complimentary registration allows you into all technical sessions and
exhibit Free-of-Charge (advance registration strongly advised).


Amy Dario     a.dario@ieee.org

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
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there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
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On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
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Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
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The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
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*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
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     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
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All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
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------------------------------

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #278
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Tue Jun 11 11:53:34 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id LAA26740; Tue, 11 Jun 1996 11:53:34 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Tue, 11 Jun 1996 11:53:34 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606111553.LAA26740@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #279

TELECOM Digest     Tue, 11 Jun 96 11:53:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 279

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    BellSouth Signs Local Interconnection Agreement With Hart (Mike King)
    Book Review: "Computer Networks" by Tanenbaum (Rob Slade)
    Re: Roam Cell Calls on AT&T Wireless Dallas Not Possible? (Bob Goudreau)
    Pacific Bell & IBM Alliance Promise LAN-Desktop Integration (Mike King)
    FCC Finally Acts on Pay-Phone Ripoffs (John R. Levine)
    International 800 Numbers (Jorene Downs)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Mike King <mk@wco.com>
Subject: BellSouth Signs Local Interconnection Agreement With Hart
Date: Tue, 11 Jun 1996 10:58:43 PDT


Forwarded to the Digest, FYI:

  Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 08:30:43 -0400
  From: BellSouth <press@www.bellsouth.com>
  Subject: BellSouth Signs Local Interconnection Agreement with Hart
  Reply-To: press@www.bellsouth.com

BELLSOUTH SIGNS LOCAL INTERCONNECTION AGREEMENT WITH HART COMMUNICATIONS
CORPORATION

Agreement Addresses 14-point Checklist of National Law
     
Birmingham, AL-June 6, 1996 BellSouth (NYSE: BLS) has announced it has
signed a nine state agreement with Hart Communications Corporation
that will allow competition for local phone service in Alabama and the
other eight BellSouth states soon.  This agreement is significant in
that these two competitors have negotiated a pact that will enhance
competition in Alabama and the southeast, helping provide millions of
customers a choice of local telephone service providers.

"This agreement builds on the procompetitive position that we've
consistently demonstrated in our negotiations with our competitors,"
stated Neal Travis, President Alabama Operations for BellSouth.  "It
promises to bring more choices to businesses and consumers in the
fastest growing part of the country," added Travis.

The agreement establishes the groundrules under which the two
telephone companies will interconnect their networks, including:
nondiscriminatory rates, terms and conditions for local
interconnection; interim number portability; and the resale and the
unbundling of BellSouth's services and network capabilities.

Robert A. Hart (Drew) IV, Chairman of the Board of Hart Communications
Corporation and Chairman of the Board and CEO of 21st Century Telesis,
stated, "We are pleased to be working closely with BellSouth and look
forward to providing comprehensive services to subscribers in Alabama
as we move toward the 21st century."

As a result of this agreement, BellSouth has taken another step closer
to being able to enter the long distance market place in Alabama.
"This agreement contains all the checklist items required by the
national legislation and is further proof that competition in our
local markets is imminent," stated Travis.  "By meeting these
checklist requirements, we move closer to being allowed to offer long
distance to our customers in the southeast.  Our customers have
indicated this is a service they want from us and it's a business
we're actively positioning ourselves to be in as soon as we can,"
added Travis.

Hart Communications is a newly formed corporation formed by people
with experience in the telephone industry to take advantage of new
legislation.  The company plans to hire many local people to
facilitate delivery of new services, according to Hart.

In addition to this agreement, BellSouth has also signed regional
agreements with two national telecommunications competitors including
Time Warner.

BellSouth is a $17.9 billion communications services company.  It
provides telecommunications, wireless communications, directory
advertising and publishing and other information services to more than
25 million customers in 17 countries worldwide.  Its telephone
operations provides service over one of the most modern
telecommunications networks in the world for approximately 21 million
telephone lines in a ninestate region that includes Alabama, Florida,
Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South
Carolina and Tennessee.


For Information Contact:
Bill Todd, 205-972-2984
1-800-803-2236

Hart Engineers
504-927-6815


                          ---------------
 
Mike King   *   Oakland, CA, USA   *   mk@wco.com    

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

Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 15:25:38 EST
From: Rob Slade <roberts@decus.ca>
Subject: Book Review: "Computer Networks" by Tanenbaum


BKCMPNWK.RVW   960513
 
"Computer Networks, Third Edition", Andrew S. Tanenbaum, 1996, 0-13-349945-6
%A   Andrew S. Tanenbaum
%C   One Lake St., Upper Saddle River, NJ   07458
%D   1996
%G   0-13-349945-6
%I   Prentice Hall
%O   800-576-3800 +1-201-236-7139 fax: +1-201-236-7131 beth_hespe@prenhall.com
%P   813
%T   "Computer Networks, Third Edition"
 
Tanenbaum's "Computer Networks" is well known as the standard data
communications textbook, and with ample reason.  Using the, by now
fairly standard, layered model, this work gives thorough coverage to
the concepts, and many technical details, of the whole field of
communications.
 
The author has not been resting on previous laurels.  This edition
examines examples from digital cellular, ATM (Asynchronous Transfer
Mode), fast ethernet, IPv6, and HTML (HyperText Markup Language).
There is even an insightful examination of the potential problems in
Java applet security.  There is an alphabetical bibliography, but also
an annotated list of "further readings".  I might argue with a few
inclusions, but the bulk of the listings are good.
 
copyright Robert M. Slade, 1996   BKCMPNWK.RVW   960513. Distribution
permitted in TELECOM Ditest and associated publications.


roberts@decus.ca           rslade@vcn.bc.ca           rslade@vanisl.decus.ca
     "Watch me disappear!"  CLICK.  - Ryan's version of the "Treasure" Cat
Author "Robert Slade's Guide to Computer Viruses" 0-387-94663-2 (800-SPRINGER)

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

Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 14:34:00 -0400
From: goudreau@dg-rtp.dg.com (Bob Goudreau)
Subject: Re: Roam Cell Calls on AT&T Wireless Dallas Not Possible?


> This last week I drove from Austin back to my home Cellular One
> district in Durham, NC.  When I was in AT&T Wirless-Dallas I tried to
> call a friend of mine in Dallas.  I got the "You are not authorized
>  .. " recording and dialed 611 as suggested in the recording.  The rep
> that came one was helpful and we spent a good 15 mins while he tried
> to figure out what was wrong.  All he could find was some switching
> problem with my home Cell carrier??  But why was it a problem for
> Dallas and not elsewhere?? (I had no problems making phone calls from
> AT&T Wireless-Austin).

> Essentially, he ended up having to dial the phone number for me and
> patching me through on his 611 line.

> Is this where we are at in cellular technology??  

I wonder if this wasn't due to the PIN program that GTE Cellular One
is phasing in for its North Carolina customers.  We also have an
account with them, and just last week we got a notice from them saying
that GTE Cellular One was "pleased" to introduce its new anti-fraud
PIN protection program, available at no charge! (Wow, like we should
feel grateful that calling is becoming more difficult).  Under this
program, which is being phased in during June, you won't be able to
make calls while roaming out of state without first enabling your
phone for that area.  To do this, you dial *560 followed by your
4-digit PIN, and then hit the SEND key.  You can then make outgoing
calls in that area for the rest of the day; it's only necessary to
re-authorize if you roam to a different area or if the clock strikes
midnight.  No PIN authorization is required to receive incoming calls,
or to call 911 or 611, or to make calls while roaming within NC.

The brochure also explains that if you have trouble placing a roaming
call or if you forget your PIN, you should call 611 for help.  It
sounds like AT&T Wireless in Dallas is now requiring PIN authorization, 
even if AT&T Wireless in Austin isn't.  Or perhaps your Dallas
attempts took place on the first day that PIN authorization became
mandatory for your account, and your Austin calls were just before
that deadline.


Bob Goudreau			Data General Corporation
goudreau@dg-rtp.dg.com		62 Alexander Drive	
+1 919 248 6231			Research Triangle Park, NC  27709, USA

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

From: Mike King <mk@wco.com>
Subject: Pacific Bell & IBM Alliance Promises LAN-Desktop Integration
Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 15:41:30 PDT


Forwarded to the Dgiest, FYI:

  Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 13:29:45 -0700
  Reply-To: NEWS-LIST@list.pactel.com
  From: sqlgate@list.pactel.com

Scott E. Smith, Pacific Bell
(415) 542-0597
sesmith@legsf.pacbell.com
Ken Neal, ISSC/IBM
(914) 766-4494
kneal@vnet.ibm.com

Pacific Bell and IBM Alliance Promises LAN-Desktop Network Integration

Alliance to target skyrocketing LAN-Desktop market

[Editor's note: An audio replay of the news conference can be heard
through 6/11/96 at 1 800 221-7409]

SAN FRANCISCO -- Pacific Bell and IBM have announced plans for a
technology services alliance that will bring a new approach to
managing networked desktop computer systems, a market that industry
experts project will rise 290 percent in five years. Potential revenue
for the alliance is estimated to be $1 billion over seven years.

Under the alliance, Pacific Bell and IBM, through their subsidiaries,
will jointly market desktop-to-desktop solutions by providing a single
point of contact for desktop and local-area network (LAN) design,
support services, monitoring and maintenance.

IBM's wholly-owned services subsidiary, Integrated Systems Solutions
Corporation (ISSC), will handle help-desk operations, and support
services for desktop systems. Pacific Bell Network Integration will
provide networking equipment, network professional services and LAN
management. The companies will focus on businesses in California.

"This alliance proposes to quell the demand among businesses for major
players in the computer and data networking industries to join forces to
offer customers one trusted source for any need that involves networked
PCs," said Dave Dorman, president of Pacific Bell.

Pacific Bell--First Alliance Customer

In addition to the technology alliance, Pacific Bell will look to IBM
to support its desktop infrastructure. Under the agreement, IBM will
oversee the operation of more than 28,000 Pacific Bell desktop
systems, including responsibility for asset management, application
maintenance, help-desk and local computer support, and client-server
infrastructure management.

"Like our customers, Pacific Bell strives for true operating
efficiencies and unparalleled service from suppliers," said Bob Lee,
president of Pacific Bell business communications services. "As a
testament to our own belief in the alliance, Pacific Bell has
entrusted its business-critical desktop systems to IBM. The bottom
line is that we have set the stage for cost effective migration to
ever-advancing information systems. We see our agreement with IBM as a
model for the very high caliber of reliability and trust that
customers of the alliance can expect."

Need To Reduce Costs

The distributed desktop computing market includes networked desktop
computers for such applications as exchanging electronic mail, sharing
documents and accessing corporate records. The growth of the
distributed desktop outsourcing market is being driven by the need for
companies to have access to skills and technology, and reduce support
costs. These costs can range up to $8,000 per year for each computer
and can account for up to 75 percent of the total cost of a
distributed desktop computing environment.

Together, IBM and Pacific Bell will provide custom and packaged
desktop networked solutions to meet these key business needs.
Prepackaged products that combine IBM's strength in desktop computing
and Pacific Bell's expertise in business communications will provide
cost effective solutions to help customers focus on business
productivity, instead of keeping up with LAN-Desktop technology.

"One Trusted Source"

"The job of managing computer and data communications systems
internally has simply become too much of a burden for most
businesses," said Jim Pflaging, president of Pacific Bell Network
Integration. "Even large organizations are throwing up their hands.
They can't keep trained staff. They can't manage the multitude of
vendors. They can't keep up with the technology. And, they can't
believe the cost. But, until now, there was no one with the reputation
and resources that they could trust to do the job -- the whole job -- for
them."

"Our complementary strengths in information technology and
telecommunications will enable IBM and Pacific Bell to drive the
growth of the desktop services market," said Steve Mucchetti, IBM's
general manager, telecommunications and media industry. "Together, we
will businesses become more competitive by providing them with
integrated communications and computing technologies."

"We are very pleased to have several exciting opportunities with
Pacific Bell, including the chance to provide technology services that
will help the company operate more efficiently and be free to
concentrate on its core business in the fast-changing telecommunications 
marketplace," said Doug Elix, president and CEO of ISSC.

For more information, customers can call 1 888 333-1900.

ISSC, part of IBM Global Services, provides business and information
systems consulting, outsourcing, systems integration, client/server
technology, application development and maintenance, distributed
systems management, and business recovery services. ISSC is
headquartered in Somers, N.Y. Visit the ISSC home page at
www.issc.ibm.com 

Pacific Bell is a subsidiary of Pacific Telesis Group, a diversified
telecommunications corporation based in San Francisco. Pacific Bell
Network Integration, a new subsidiary of Pacific Bell, offers
integrated solutions, that include Pacific Bell FASTRAKSM transport
services, equipment from leading vendors, project coordination, and
network management. Information about Pacific Bell can be found on its
home page at www.pacbell.com and Pacific Network Integration at
www.pbni.com.

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

       Mike King   *   Oakland, CA, USA   *   mk@wco.com

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

Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 10:53:31 EDT
From: John R Levine <johnl@iecc.com>
Subject: FCC Finally Acts on Pay-Phone Ripoffs


The FCC has finally acted on the continuing problem of excessive
charges for calls from payphones, hotels, and similar places.  The
proposed rule says that if the charge is more than 15% above the
average of the big three IXCs, they have to notify you and give you a
chance to hang up before completing the call.

I learned about this while staying in an otherwise respectable hotel
in Palm Springs where the card next to the phone proudly states that
long distance calls are charged at the AT&T rate plus a surcharge, but
neglected to mention that the surcharge is 100%.  Yow.  It's about
time.

At the same time in a separate rulemaking, they propose to change the
rules for payphones so that in effect all payphones become COCOTs, but
there's a consistent way for payphone owners to be compensated for
calls, and for payphone owners to use CO based coin collection.


Regards,

John Levine, johnl@iecc.com, Trumansburg NY
Primary Perpetrator of "The Internet for Dummies"
and Information Superhighwayman wanna-be

                    ---FCC Press release follows---

NEWSReport No. DC 96-50    ACTION IN DOCKET CASE               June 6, 1996

                FCC PROPOSES PRICE DISCLOSURE  REQUIREMENT
                 FOR HIGHER-PRICED AWAY-FROM-HOME CALLS
                  Callers Could "Hang Up On High Rates"
                           (CC DOCKET NO. 92-77)

     As part of its continuing effort to address consumer complaints
about high rates for away-from-home calls, the Commission has proposed
to require that long distance carriers providing service at public
payphones automatically disclose their rates to consumers at the time
the call is made if those carriers charge rates significantly above
the industry norm.  The automatic price disclosure would give
consumers the opportunity to hang up on high rates and to place the
call using another service provider.

     In a Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) released today,
the Commission proposed to require those interexchange carriers (IXCs)
offering operator services through payphones and other aggregator
locations to disclose their rates to callers before the call is
completed and any charges have been incurred.

     The Commission tentatively concluded that it should establish
benchmarks for charges of operator service providers (OSPs), and for
any associated aggregator surcharges.  The Commission also tentatively
concluded that it should require OSPs that charge, or allow, rates
above that benchmark level to disclose orally those rates to callers
before connecting the call.  Alternatively, the Commission sought
comment on requiring all OSPs to disclose their rates on all 0+ calls
from payphones or other aggregator locations.

     "Consumers have a right to know what they will pay when they use
a payphone," said Common Carrier Bureau Chief Regina Keeney.
"Hundreds of carriers compete to offer this service.  A caller should
not unknowingly incur what that consumer considers an unreasonable
charge for placing a long distance call.  We want consumers to have
the information they need to decide who should carry that call.  This
will have the added benefit of encouraging those high priced carriers
to lower their rates -- or lose their potential customers."

     Interstate 0+ calls from payphones, hotels, motels, and other
aggregator locations are routed to the OSP chosen by the premises or
payphone owner.  While some callers generally used access codes to
"dial around" the presubscribed OSP to reach their preferred OSP
carrier, some aggregators blocked the use of such access codes.
Congress responded with the Telephone Operator Consumer Services
Improvement Act of 1990, prohibiting blocking, but this did not fully
resolve the problem for many callers.  Between August 1, 1994, and
August 31, 1995, the Commission received more than 4160 complaints
about OSPs' interstate rates and more than 880 complaints about their
intrastate rates.

     The Commission initially proposed a system of Billed Party
Preference (BPP), whereby aggregators would be required to ensure that
all 0+ calls are automatically routed to the carrier preferred by the
party billed for the call, after consulting a database indicating the
billed party's preferred OSP.  After making a cost-benefit analysis of
the data it initially received, the Commission sought corrections and
confirmation of its data and analysis, as well as alternatives to BPP.

     Two parties proposed alternatives in early 1995.  The National
Association of Attorneys General proposed that OSPs charging rates
above the level of the largest IXC be required to make a disclosure to
callers.  CompTel proposed a higher benchmark and that OSPs charging
rates above that level be required to justify the rates with cost
support.  After seeking comment on those proposals, the Commission
decided to propose the price disclosure mechanism included in the NPRM
released today.

     The Commission also seeks comment on whether, under the
recently-enacted Telecommunications Act of 1996, must forbear from
applying informational tariff filing requirements and, if not, on
proposed rules and a waiver policy with respect to the filing of such
tariffs.  Comments are also requested on whether the public interest
would be better served by means other than BPP for calls from
inmate-only telephones in prisons.

     Action by the Commission June 4, 1996, by Second Further Notice
of Proposed Rulemaking (FCC 96-253).  Chairman Hundt, Commissioners
Quello, Ness and Chong.


                                   -FCC-

     News Media contact: Mindy J. Ginsburg at (202) 418-1500. 
     Common Carrier Bureau contact: Adrien R. Auger at (202) 418-0960 and
Mark Nadel at (202) 418-1580. 

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

Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 08:34:33 PDT
From: Jorene Downs <jcdowns@strategic-vision.com>
Subject: International 800 Numbers


GENEVA, SWITZERLAND, 1996 JUN 7 (NB) -- The International
Telecommunications Union (ITU), a division of the United Nations, has
announced plans to allow country-specific telecoms companies to
support international toll-free numbers.

Currently, the only way for, say, a US software house to allow, say,
customers in France to call them toll-free, would be to rent a toll-
free number in France, even though they may already have a toll-free
number in the US. The French number, rented from France Telecom would
route to the company's US headquarters, across France Telecom's
circuits.

Not only is this cumbersome, with international companies having to  
contract with multiple telcos around the world, it can be expensive, 
as telephone rates differ on a country by country basis. Under the 
ITU's rule change, telecoms companies would be obliged to honor 
international toll-free numbers and route them to their destination 
country without charge -- the destination company then pays their local 
telco the appropriate rate for an international toll-free call. 

According to the ITU, the rule change has been made to allow  
international mail order companies to set up a single toll-free number 
in their home country and elect to pay for all calls, even 
international ones, routed to that number. 

Toll-free numbers were first implemented in the US back in 1966, but  
it took until the early 1970s before European telcos introduced their 
own versions, usually at prohibitive prices. 

To make life easier for users of international toll-free numbers, the
ITU has mandated a new numbering structure of 0800, followed by eight
digits, rather than the five, six or seven digit structure that is
seen on existing toll-free numbers around the world. The ITU has
recommended that companies offering 0800-xxxx-xxxx numbers clearly
indicate them as "international freephone service" numbers with a
special logo.

The ITU, the successor to the CCITT, is a division of the United
Nations, is responsible, by common agreement, for international
numbering schemes. As new countries arrive on the world's political
scene, such as in the CIS (Commonwealth of Independent States), it is
the ITU's function to allocate codes, and prevent any dialling
confusion.

Although the US has more than 90 percent of the world's toll-free  
numbers, using its 1-800 and newly introduced 1-888 area codes, the 
ITU says its expects to see more use of toll-free numbers as companies 
realize the benefits, especially on international calls. Plans call 
for the new 0800-xxxx-xxxx numbering system to start early next year. 


(Sylvia Dennis/19960606/Press & Reader Contact: ITU +42-22-730-5111)
  	   	
                ------------------------------

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
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Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
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     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
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     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
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All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
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should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #279
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Tue Jun 11 14:22:14 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id OAA12535; Tue, 11 Jun 1996 14:22:14 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Tue, 11 Jun 1996 14:22:14 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606111822.OAA12535@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #280

TELECOM Digest     Tue, 11 Jun 96 14:22:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 280

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Dry Pairs Dry Up (Frank Rockenstein)
    PC Phone Board (David C. Meyer)
    Nynex ISDN Billing (Mark Foster)
    Re: FCC Crackdown on AOS Pricing (Dave Levenson)
    Re: Wireless Ethernet Transceivers (Leonid Shousterman)
    Re: Arrogant Internet Providers (Rich Greenberg)
    Re: Telco: Service or Business (Bill Halverson)
    Re: Telco: Service or Business (Jeremy Parsons)
    Re: Roam Cell Calls on AT&T Wireless Dallas Not Possible? (R. Maceyko)
    Re: More CID Frolics! (Lars Poulsen)
    Re: Third Wireless Carrier (A. E. Siegman)
    Re: USA 456 Area Code From the UK (Mark J. Cuccia)
    Last Laugh! The Dilbert Principle (Jorene Downs)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Tue, 11 Jun 1996 11:33:15 -0800
From: Frank Rockenstein <fdrpc@isrv.com>
Reply-To: fdrpc@isrv.com
Organization: BaudShop
Subject: Dry Pairs Dry Up


Gee how strange -- just when we find out that the HDSL/ADSL technology
is going to allow us to turn a $10/mo "dry pair" into a 6 mbit trunk
to anyone located within a three or four mile radius of our home, the
dirt cheap "dry pair" has become unavailable.

I was quoted an installation price of $57 plus $10/month to my ISP
located about one mile away by Sprint/United. Two days later I was
informed that the quote was no longer valid - "dry pairs" were no
longer available.

If you don't know about ADSL/HDSL, check out -

http://www/alumni.caltec.edu/~dank/isdn/adsl/html

Be sure to check out the "pairgain" link. It goes to www.pairgain.com
I believe.

The bottom line is that the LECS are sitting on a goldmine of
copper.

Perhaps -- the subscribers should get some of the divies from this
technological windfall.

Therefore I propose that the Utilities commissions should mandate the
creation of SAPs (Subscriber Access Ports).

These ports would be located at the CO end of the subscriber line, and
would be switchable at the customers request to any other customers
SAP -- the result being a 6 mbit " dry pair".

This concept would truly break the monopoly of the LEC's control over
subscriber access to services by providing competition at the local
loop.


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Sprint made the offer one day and then
withdrew it the next day huh?  <snicker> ... really now, do you think 
the LEC's will promote anything which would break their monopoly over
subscriber access?    PAT]

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

From: David C. Meyer <dcmeyer@cts.com>
Subject: PC Phone Board
Date: Tue, 11 Jun 1996 08:24:03 +0000
Organization: CTS Network Services
Reply-To: dcmeyer@cts.com


I wish to use a PC to handle four or more incoming voice phone lines
and six standard phone instruments.  Capabilities would include call
routing, voice mail, call transfer and conference calling.  Anyone
heard of such a board for a PC?


David   (dcmeyer@cts.com)

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

From: mark_b_foster@ccmail.res.ray.com (Mark Foster)
Subject: Nynex ISDN Billing
Date: 10 Jun 1996 17:07:20 GMT
Organization: EDL


Hi,

My BRI ISDN is configured with 1 B channel set to DFR (flat rate) and
the other B channel set to DMR (measured service). Is this an accident
or can NYNEX (mass) do split billing on the two B channels?


-mark

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

From: dave@westmark.com (Dave Levenson)
Subject: Re: FCC Crackdown on AOS Pricing
Organization: Westmark, Inc.
Date: Tue, 11 Jun 1996 03:00:59 GMT


Ed Ellers (edellers@delphi.com) writes:

> The Associated Press is running a story (which I saw on CompuServe)
> that the FCC is considering a regulation on long-distance calling from
> coin phones to force any company whose rates are more than 15% more
> than the average of the major carriers to play a recording announcing
> the rate for the call before ringing the called party.

Almost ...

The details, as taken from the FCC's Internet mailing list, are that
the carriers who charge more than 15% over the average of the major
carriers must announce the price before the caller enters the card
number.  This will apply to 0+ calls from hotels, dormitories, and
other aggregators, as well as coin phones.

The proposal to is allow consumers to make an informed choice of
carriers.  It is being proposed as an alternative to price-cap
regulation of 0+ carriers.


Dave Levenson		Internet: dave@westmark.com
Westmark, Inc.		UUCP: uunet!westmark!dave
Stirling, NJ, USA	Voice: 908 647 0900  Fax: 908 647 6857

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

From: Leonid Shousterman <leonids@madge.com>
Subject: Re: Wireless Ethernet Transceivers
Date: Tue, 11 Jun 1996 08:14:17 -0400
Organization: BreezeCOM Ltd.


Thaddeus Cox wrote:

> What we are looking for is a (pair of) devices which could be
> connected to one of these local networks and serve as a wireless
> connection between it and the campus-wide, internet-connected ethernet
> which appears in another part of the building, approximately 300-400'
> through concrete and steel construction.  I don't know what kind of
> throughput these sort of devices offer, but I was thinking somewhere
> in the 1 to 2 megabit range.

> I'm interested in information on new or used equipment which would
> meet the requirements as I've laid them out, and any ideas about
> alternative solutions would also be gladly accepted.  Email replies
> and I will forward them in condensed form to the digest if anyone is
> interested.

BreezeCOM (Breeze Wireless Communications Inc.) develops various
wireless communication devices including wireless LANs and wireless
point-to-point T1/E1 links. BreezeCOM's products operate at raw data
rate up to 3Mbit/s in 2.4 GHz frequency range (licence free spread
spectrum)

For more information contact the URL:

http://www.breezecom.com


Leon

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

From: richgr@netcom.com (Rich Greenberg)
Subject: Re: Arrogant Internet Providers
Organization: Organized?  Me?
Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 20:26:22 GMT


In article <telecom16.259.1@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Tad Cook
<tad@ssc.com> wrote:

> Arrogant Internet providers tell customers to get lost
> By Peter H. Lewis

> {New York Times}

Pat, this was discussed extensively on the (internal only) newsgroup
netcom.general recently, including postings from a netcom person who
was present when his officemate was taking some of the calls from Mr.
Lewis.

Mr. Lewis has (had?) a slip account with netcom, which is specifically
sold with NO phone support, email only.  A shell account comes with
the slip (aka PNC) account.  (Netcom no longer offers these PNC
accounts which have a fixed IP address, only "Netcruiser" accounts
which are similar but with dynamic IP addresses.)

In spite of having agreed to the email support only, Mr. Lewis made
many calls to netcom support, demanding help.  and getting very
abusive when told to send email for assistance.  Thats the purpose of
the shell account, to be able to get email when the slip account isn't
working.

He was never told that shell accounts were being discontinued.  Netcom
has about 30,000 active shell accounts (including mine) and while it
seems to us that the squeeky wheel on the 100k netcruiser accounts get
more support, netcom has never said they were going away.

One additional note here.  One of the netcom people sent a letter to
the {NY Times} refuting Mr. Lewis' article, but they declined to print
it.

The same article also ran in the {San Jose Mercury} recently.


Rich Greenberg            
N6LRT   TinselTown, USA   Play: richgr@netcom.com               310-649-0238
Pacific time.    I speak for myself & my dogs only.        VM'er since CP-67
Canines: Val(Chinook,CGC), Red(Husky,(RIP)), Shasta(Husky)


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: One thing you seem to be overlooking
here (and perhaps the netcom person who offered the correction was not
even aware of it) is that sending articles like that to NYT is usually
a waste of time. NYT *never* prints anything refuting or 'correcting'
whatever it is they have said earlier. The netcom person who wrote to
them probably assumed that the pages of that newspaper were like most
of the electronic journals on the net or many of the newsgroups, i.e.
a wide variety of opinion, a 'give-and-take' between one writer and
another expressing different points of view, etc. NYT does not operate
that way. Their agenda is their agenda.  Peter Lewis is like a sacred
cow to the publishers there. You simply do not contradict whatever it
is he says, but of course that holds true for most of what appears in
NYT from day to day. Oh, they allow a certain amount of token opposition
in minor matters (should some administrative thing in city government
be done one way or another) but nothing of any substance which does
not coincide with their own bigoted points of view is ever going to
see the light of day there -- particularly when Peter Lewis or a
couple other staff writers have vented their spleen or discharged
their venom -- and most people know that by now, so they simply do not
bother wasting the paper or their energy at a keyboard. It is pretty
much the same way with the {Washington Post} and its companion publi-
cation News Weak magazine. Either you agree with the bigoted and biased
stuff they print or else you are just too dumb and stupid to know 
any better. 

I can see where the person at netcom thought NYT might be interested
in factual corrections to something Lewis had written. Lord knows
there are enough corrections possible in his portfolio. Coming from an
Internet/Usenet tradition, he probably thought you write something 
decent and coherent and send it in to the editor, like you would to a
newsgroup moderator. Uh, uh ... not at NYT you don't. In my own opinion,
netcom should cancel his account if they have not done so already, refund
all of his money paid since he first started with them, and tell him
to get lost. He would rage and flame about it in NYT for awhile and
then eventually find something new to sputter about.    PAT]

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

From: Bill Halverson <william@netpros.net>
Subject: Re: Telco: Service or Business
Date: Tue, 11 Jun 1996 06:56:05 GMT
Organization: Network Associates


Joel M. Hoffman wrote:

>> The bottom line is that the phone network is not supposed to be a
>> money-making endeavor.  It's supposed to be a service to citizens.
>> And America isn't providing that service.
 
>> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Now wait a minute! *Who says* that
>> telecom is not supposed to be a money-making endeavor? Perhaps that
>> is the case in some countries, but here in the USA telephone companies
>> have stockholders and pay dividends to those stockholders. Do you
>> think the investors put money in just for the sake of being good guys
>> to the rest of the nation?  PAT]

> It's all a matter of how you look at it.  Certainly a company, with
> investors and so forth, wants to make money.  But the question is
> this: if it comes down to telco's making money or people having better
> phone service, which is to be preferred?

> Universal residential service is a money-losing endeavor.  Maybe we
> should just get rid of that, because no one's making money on it?

>SNIP<

It's interesting to note that most things considered to be 'a utility'
are run by some form of government ... police, fire protection
services, and municipal power and water and sewage ...

So if we added up all the employees in "the utility" business I would
not be surprised to see most of them were civil service.

Telecom went that route in most of the world, too.  You might say that
the USA is/was an exception to the rule on this.  Anyway, I see a very
contentious period coming for telecom.

On one hand, citizens and politicians still want universal service,
even an expanded one [note the FCC reform act requires rural areas
have access to telecom services for healthcare at comprable rates to
rates in urban areas] whereas the telcos and CATV companies want
freedom to set prices on a pure economic basis.

We are at a crossroads, just like we were in the '50s when the
decision was taken to build the interstate highway system.  If you
believe that highway decision accelerated the collapse of our cities,
imagine what universal immdeiate access to highbandwidth networks will
do.


Bill Halverson
William@Netpros.net

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

From: Jeremy Parsons <jparsons@candw.ky>
Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 17:00:49 -0400
Subject: Re: Telco: Service or Business


Joel M. Hoffman wrote:

> It's all a matter of how you look at it.  Certainly a company, with
> investors and so forth, wants to make money.  But the question is
> this: if it comes down to telco's making money or people having better
> phone service, which is to be preferred?

> Universal residential service is a money-losing endeavor.  Maybe we
> should just get rid of that, because no one's making money on it?

It all depends on whether you want to fossilise it!  Residential
service (I guess you're talking USA) is not loss-making, but some
customers are.  The protect-it-in-a-glass-case approach says
subsidize!  Guarantee!  Enforce!  But what's the end result?  A
museum-piece service, instead of creative enterprise applied to the
problem.  What's the incentive to drive down the cost?  What's the
incentive to look at new ways to share cost?  Nothing.

Let's get a little less telephonic. Is water less or more essential?
How is it paid for and why?  How about electricity?  How about postal
services?  How about foodstuffs?  In truth, most services contain
'cross-subsidy' (in flattening out price structures), but few are
offered in ways which institutionalise loss-making, and for very sound
reasons.

The counter-argument is that telephone services are like roads -- it's
a government job to decide what to provide, where, how funded and so
on.  That was pretty much the approach around the world fifteen and
more years ago, and its results have been astounding.  But times
change, and now the sophisticated communications networks behind
telephone service are capable of delivering far more -- stuff that is
already demanded and stuff that's still a twinkle in an entrepreneur's
eye.  Different roads are possible, and different vehicles.

Governments aren't expert in that sort of thing, and increasingly want
to farm it out to companies whose competence it is.  The government
role should by and large be confined to regulating simply,
transparently and fairly, and to creating or supporting such subsidy
mechanisms as it may deem appropriate.  The present US system is a
mess, but doesn't need to be so.  After all, there are only four
topics to consider: 

1. Under what (if any) circumstances should a geographic area be subsidized?

2. Under what (if any) circumstances should an individual be subsidized?

3. Where are subsidy monies collected?

4. Who can (compete to) provide subsidized service?


What this creates is in essence a modification to cost allocation,
leaving businesses the task of providing service profitably -- as is
the case in other industries.  One thing is left -- efficiency.  In a
competitive market that is (given sufficiently light regulation) a
non-issue.  However, not every market is viable for competition.  In
such cases there needs to be some reliance on traditional methods
(price caps or profit caps, for instance).

Not-for-profit telephony sounds great, but in the days of the
knowledge revolution it won't mean much if Microsoft, IBM et al decide
not to convert to charitable status.


Jeremy Parsons

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

From: rm55+@pitt.edu (Rudolph Todd Maceyko)
Subject: Re: Roam Cell Calls on AT&T Wireless Dallas Not Possible?
Date: 11 Jun 1996 10:43:13 GMT
Organization: University of Pittsburgh


In article <telecom16.275.7@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Alexandre POLOZOFF
<aspex@ibm.net> wrote:

> When I was in AT&T Wirless-Dallas I tried to
> call a friend of mine in Dallas.  I got the "You are not authorized
> .. " recording and dialed 611 as suggested in the recording.  The rep
> that came one was helpful and we spent a good 15 mins while he tried
> to figure out what was wrong.  All he could find was some switching
> problem with my home Cell carrier??  But why was it a problem for
> Dallas and not elsewhere?? (I had no problems making phone calls from
> AT&T Wireless-Austin).

The past few weekends I had difficulties roaming between Pittsburgh PA
and Harrisburg PA and between Pittsburgh PA and Frederick MD.  Roaming
in the Washington DC area worked just fine.

After many calls to AT&T Wireless-Pittsburgh, it was determined that
some "internal" address ranges had been changed, and that all 10,000
numbers in my cellular NPA-NXX were affected.

The "fix" was for AT&T Wireless to re-contact the affected cellular
systems to change the "addresses".


Rudy Maceyko    <rm55+@pitt.edu>

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

From: lars@anchor.rns.com (Lars Poulsen)
Subject: Re: More CID Frolics!
Date: 11 Jun 1996 10:49:23 -0700
Organization: RNS / Meret Communications


In article <telecom16.229.13@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Stan Schwartz
<usfunx2b@ibmmail.com> wrote:

> For the last few weeks, I've been puzzled by a number that had been
> appearing on my all of my CID devices (I'm up to 5 in the house).  It
> wasn't any valid NPA or NNX and the name showed up as "--------------".
> Last night, it clicked.  The number displayed is the first ten digits
> of an account number that I have with a bank in the northeast.  This
> doesn't seem like mere coincidence to me.

My guess is that you are using a "home banking" software to speak to
the bank's computer, and that the connection runs at a rather slow bit
rate ... using the same modem modulation technique that the caller-ID
data uses. And during a call to the bank, the caller-ID devices
trigger on the online data.

> Today, I received another "interesting" call.  There was no message on
> the machine, but all of my CID devices have the name "WASHINGTON" (for
> the state, I assume), and a number 206-959-0525.  This number is not
> only not dialable, but 959 does not exist in either the 206, 360, or 509
> NPA's.

Probably a call leaving a large PBX on a one-way dial-out trunk.
Maybe originating on a cellular phone in service with a non-wireline
carrier.


Lars Poulsen			Internet E-mail: lars@RNS.COM
RNS / Meret Communications	Phone:        +1-805-562-3158
7402 Hollister Avenue 		Telefax:      +1-805-968-8256
Santa Barbara, CA 93117		Internets: designed and built while you wait

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

From: siegman@ee.stanford.edu (A. E. Siegman)
Subject: Re: Third Wireless Carrier
Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 18:02:38 -0700
Organization: Stanford University


A side note on the A and B channels in the 800 MHz band, as I
understand them (warning: this is based on just one technical talk I
heard some months ago) ...

The actual frequency bands assigned to the A and B channels in any
given area are not just two separate but adjacent bands of frequencies
(e.g., 800 to 810 MHz for A and 810 to 820 for B), as you might guess
would be simplest.  Rather they're a series of narrower "frequency
bandlets" interleaved among each other in the overall frequency band
assigned to A+B.

As a result, the task of filtering the rf signals received off the air
into channels A or B is substantially more challenging than it might
be.  In fact, the only easy way of achieving sufficiently narrow
passbands to do this with simple passive filters is to use
superconducting coils to achieve the necessary high Q values in the
resonant circuits.

As a result -- and this was the point of the technical talk I heard --
this may be at the minute the _only_ practical engineering application
(as distinguished from research applications) where high-temperature
superconductivity will find a commercial market.

Again, this is second-hand info.

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

Date: Mon, 10 Jun 1996 19:34:16 -0700
From: Mark J. Cuccia <mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu>
Subject: Re: USA 456 Area Code From the UK


James E. Bellaire wrote:

> I found the following in uk.telecom and was wondering if you
> could shed some light on it:

>> From: Traci Shanahan <traci@nastysex.com>
>> Newsgroups: uk.telecom
>> Subject: USA 456 area code from the UK
>> Date: 4 Jun 1996 07:03:10 GMT
>> Organization: Cloud 9 Internet, White Plains, NY, USA

>> Is anyone famillar with the US 456 area code that can only be
>> called from the UK. Apparently UK companies can earn money with it.
>> I have some info, if anyone else has any more please email me.

> I thought 456 was 'for 56k data'.  I wonder if the sleaze carriers are
> using it for International Inbound to porn?

Special Area Code 456 within the NANP (Country Code +1) was reserved
or assigned by Bellcore NANPA back in Summer 1993 for "International
Inbound" functions. I was informed back in March (by one of the
participants at the INC meeting here when it was held here in New
Orleans, who is with one of the major US long distance carriers, and
who incidently reads this Digest) that the primary intended use of 456
was for "Switched 56k Data" originating from overseas and destined for
locations in the NANP. From the Bellcore NANPA and INC mailings on 456
that I received two years ago, there was still the question about
whether it could be used for routings between two different countries
within the NANP.

The 456-NXX codes are to be assigned to specific carriers by
Bellcore's NANPA (similar to the way Bellcore NANPA assigns the codes
and numbering of 500-NXX, 900-NXX, 555-xxxx, 10-XXX/101-XXXX/950-XXXX,
and prior to full portability the 800-NXX codes back in the 1986-92
time period, and the way Industry Canada assigns 600-NXX codes). But
since six-digit translation is still used on outbound international
calls from many foreign countries (I understand that seven-digit
translation *is* going to be the ITU recommendation at "Time-T" at the
end of this year), 456-NXX codes are going to be assigned in
'blocks-of-ten' as 456-NX(x) to a particular carrier. (Six digit
translate from overseas the +1-456-NX to a particular carrier).

I haven't purchased any Bellcore TRA materials (Local Exchange Routing
Guide) since December 1994. At that time, there were no 456-NX(x)
assignments indicated in the LERG. At this point in time, there aren't
any 456-NX(x) codes assigned for Canadian purposes, but if/when there
are, the assignments would be indicated in the (free) Canadian
National Numbering Index. This listing is prepared by the Canadian
Numbering Administrator of the Canadian Government's "Industry Canada"
department.

As for the sleazy telesex possibly using +1-456, even though this
special area code is intended for International Inbound Switched 56
Kbps Data, I think that it is possible that some of these sleaze
teleporn companies might be misrepresenting themselves to get yet
another special dialing code which hasn't become 'stigmatized'.
Remember that about a year ago there were sleazy teleporn operations
using 500-NXX numbers, and although 700 is for "Carrier defined
services", back in the 1980's, some carriers were using it for
expensive (pay-pay-pay-per-call) "chat" services or "party" lines.

And remember that some years back, some foreign telephone
administrations and overpriced sleaze services arranged +1-610
numbers, since 610 was strictly for Canadian TWX, and there wouldn't
be any need for a telephone in another part of the world to be dialing
TWX numbers +1-N10-NXX-XXXX. In Fall 1993, what was left of Canadian
TWX and the growing Canadian Datalink and ISDN services on Area Code
610 were 'splash cut' to 600, so as to make 610 available for the
split of southeastern PA's 215 area code in January 1994. There were
some foreign locations which had pay-pay-per-call telesleaze numbers
using +1-600, again as no foreign telephone would be dialing a
Canadian Datalink +1-600-NXX-XXXX number.

Unfortunately, in today's competitive situation, it is quite difficult
to police such abuses. There was the 1990 FCC inquiry and Consumer
Protection law regarding private payphones and AOSlime, as to
'branding' 0+ calls, unblocking 950-xxxx and 800- access numbers, and
10-XXX access codes. Many AOSlime *STILL* don't properly 'brand'
themselves. And there are many a COCOT which don't properly allow the
end-user access to/thru the carrier of *their* choice! Only the other
day did we hear that the FCC intends on special regulation regarding
AOSlime prices on calls placed via COCOTS and "hospitality" PBX
systems. I hate to sound cynical, but ... good luck!


MARK J. CUCCIA   PHONE/WRITE/WIRE:     HOME:  (USA)    Tel: CHestnut 1-2497
WORK: mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu |4710 Wright Road| (+1-504-241-2497)
Tel:UNiversity 5-5954(+1-504-865-5954)|New Orleans 28  |fwds on no-answr to
Fax:UNiversity 5-5917(+1-504-865-5917)|Louisiana(70128)|cellular/voicemail

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

Date: Tue, 11 Jun 1996 09:30:49 PDT
From: Jorene Downs <jcdowns@strategic-vision.com>
Subject: Last Laugh! The Dilbert Principle


I can't believe nobody spotted this one and passed it along!  I love
it!  :)))))))

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

"Normal people ...     believe that if it ain't broke, don't fix it.
Engineers believe that if it ain't broke, it doesn't have enough
features yet."  ----- S. Adams, The Dilbert Principle


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I love that comic strip which appears
in the Sunday paper here. Entire issues of the Digest could easily be
devoted to discussing the events which go on at his place of employment
each week.    PAT]

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
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there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
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On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
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Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:

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The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
Townson of Skokie, Illinois USA. You can reach us by postal mail, fax 
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*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
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All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
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should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #280
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Wed Jun 12 12:10:37 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id MAA21813; Wed, 12 Jun 1996 12:10:37 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 12:10:37 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606121610.MAA21813@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #281

TELECOM Digest     Wed, 12 Jun 96 12:09:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 281

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    BellSouth 911 Enhancement for Private Systems (Mike King)
    Pac Bell Delays CLID Two Weeks (Tad Cook)
    The Central Office (Tara D. Mahon)
    Employment Opportunity: Jobs For DSP (Henry Hallinan)
    Talking to PBXs (bookworm@execpc.com)
    Looking for Fiber Optic Solution (John A. Leonowich)
    VisualJava in the Limelight (R. Jagannathan)
    Customer Care in Telecom (lmoran@planet.net)
    Re: 800 Numbers Now Customer Dialable Only (Mark J. Cuccia)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Mike King <mk@wco.com>
Subject: BellSouth 911 Enhancement for Private Systems
Date: Tue, 11 Jun 1996 23:01:14 PDT


Forwarded to the Digest, FYI:

  Date: Tue, 11 Jun 1996 16:07:30 -0400
  From: BellSouth <press@www.bellsouth.com>
  Subject: BELLSOUTH OFFERS 9-1-1 ENHANCEMENT FOR PRIVATE SYSTEMS
  Reply-To: press@www.bellsouth.com

BELLSOUTH OFFERS 9-1-1 ENHANCEMENT FOR PRIVATE COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS

ATLANTA, GA.  -- Some of the most sophisticated telecommunications
users -- large businesses with private communications systems -- have
never enjoyed the full benefits of Enhanced 9-1-1 service -- until
now.
     
Businesses, universities, malls and other institutions with Private 
Branch Exchange (PBX) communications systems can now make their 
premises safer for employees, clients and visitors with BellSouth's 
9-1-1 PinPointSM service.  When someone calls 9-1-1 from a phone on a 
PBX system, 9-1-1 PinPoint service automatically furnishes emergency 
personnel with the exact telephone number and location of the caller.
     
Without the service, only the main PBX telephone number and company 
address are delivered to emergency personnel, which could result in a 
loss of valuable time in a life-or-death situation.
     
This becomes especially critical to businesses, shopping malls, 
apartment complexes and universities with large buildings or multiple 
locations where it may be difficult to find the exact location of an 
emergency without the detailed information that BellSouth's PinPoint 
service provides.
     
"BellSouth is the first telecommunications company in the Southeast 
and one of the first in the nation to offer this enhancement to 9-1-1 
for PBX customers," according to Neil Hediger, vice president of 
Marketing for BellSouth Business Systems.
     
"Many people work for, do business with or visit businesses or 
institutions that have PBX systems.  PBX users across BellSouth's 
nine-state region can make their environments safer for these people 
with BellSouth's 9-1-1 PinPoint service."
     
Disney's Vero Beach Resort, The Walt Disney Company's first resort 
beyond its theme park locations, was the first 9-1-1 PinPoint service 
customer.  As the largest resort in Indian River County, Fla., Disney 
needed to pinpoint the exact location of a 9-1-1 call coming from one 
of the 208 guest rooms and 11 buildings on the resort.
     
"We are very satisfied with this new BellSouth product and have been 
especially pleased with the resulting exceptional response from the 
county Emergency Medical Service," said Sonya Deese, general manager 
of Disney's Vero Beach Resort.
     
"Our PinPoint service is another example of BellSouth's commitment to 
the local communities and customers we serve.  We are using our 
advanced technology to make our communities safer places to live and 
work," said Hediger.
     
PBX users interested in BellSouth's 9-1-1 PinPoint service should call 
their BellSouth Business Systems' representative.
     
BellSouth provides telecommunications services in Alabama, Florida, 
Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina and 
Tennessee.  With headquarters in Atlanta, BellSouth serves more than 
21 million local telephone lines over one of the most modern networks 
in the world.  For more information on BellSouth, visit our site on 
the World Wide Web at http://www.bellsouth.com.


For Information Contact:
Ted Creech, BellSouth
(404)330-0550<br>
Pager: (800)946-4646<br>
PIN: 1130604


BELLSOUTH ENTERS INTO CO-MARKETING AGREEMENTS WITH PROCTOR AND TELIDENT
FOR 9-1-1 PBX SERVICE

ATLANTA, GA -- BellSouth announced today that it has entered into
co-marketing agreements with Proctor & Associates, Inc. and Telident,
Inc. for equipment and technology related to BellSouth's new 9-1-1
PinPointSM service for PBX users.
     
Under BellSouth's Network Complementary Applications Program (NCAP) 
agreements, BellSouth, Proctor and Telident will market, service and 
support PBX station identification equipment and technology for 9-1-1 
PinPoint service, a new application BellSouth is now offering 
throughout its nine-state southeast region.
     
BellSouth will provide 9-1-1 PinPoint service transport and database 
services, and Proctor and Telident will supply the interface equipment 
that enables the new service to work with a PBX.  PBX systems that use 
Primary Rate ISDN (PRI) service do not need this interface equipment.
     
9-1-1 PinPoint service enables a PBX system to send to 9-1-1 operators 
the exact extension number and location of a 9-1-1 caller.  Without the 
service, only the main PBX telephone number and company address are 
delivered to emergency personnel, which could result in slower response 
times for emergency personnel.  Immediate identification of an 
individual's exact location becomes especially critical for businesses 
with large, multi-building, multi-floor environments served by PBXs.
     
"BellSouth will work closely with Proctor and Telident to ensure that 
9-1-1 PinPoint service and our customers' PBXs are properly integrated 
with the larger public 9-1-1 systems," according to Neil Hediger, vice 
president of marketing for BellSouth Business Systems.
     
Ray Dellecker, Proctor's national marketing and sales manager, said, 
"The new service will dramatically improve the response time and 
effectiveness of the emergency services.  This is particularly 
important in responding to 9-1-1 calls from school campuses, branch 
offices, institutions and apartment complexes with shared tenant 
services.  The system's local notification capabilities simultaneously 
alert on-site officials, such as security personnel, of any 9-1-1 
activity."
     
Michael J. Miller, Telident president and CEO of Telident said, "Our 
products provide advanced safety and security features, and without 
the Telident interface, the system can only identify the main trunk 
numbers and billing locations, not the actual location from which 
people are calling.  We are pleased that BellSouth has chosen to 
co-market these products to its customer base."
     
BellSouth provides telecommunications services in Alabama, Florida, 
Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South 
Carolina and Tennessee. With headquarters in Atlanta, BellSouth serves 
21 million local telephone lines and provides local exchange and 
intraLATA long distance service over one of the most modern 
telecommunications networks in the world. For information on BellSouth, 
visit the site on the World Wide Web at http://www.bellsouth.com.
     
Proctor is a leading manufacturer of telecommunications equipment, 
including all segments of the 9-1-1 network, from call control and 
processing, to network backup and PBX and wireless caller ID.
     
Telident is a leading designer of systems which enable precise 
identification of the location of caller to emergency 9-1-1 systems 
from within a PBX, and state-of-the-art hardware and software for the 
public safety (9-1-1 call answering) market.


For Information Contact:
Ted Creech, BellSouth
(404)330-0550
Pager: (800)946-4646
PIN: 1130604

Ray Dellecker, Proctor
(206)881-7000

Michael Miller, Telident
(612)623-0911 


                     ----------------------
 
Mike King   *   Oakland, CA, USA   *   mk@wco.com

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

From: Tad Cook <tad@ssc.com>
Subject: Pac Bell Delays CLID Two Weeks
Date: Tue, 11 Jun 1996 23:01:47 PDT


Pacific Bell Delays Caller ID Service Two Weeks
By Mario C. Aguilera, {North County Times}, Escondido, Calif.

Knight-Ridder/Tribune Business News

Jun. 4--A flood of last-minute responses has pushed the start of
Pacific Bell's Caller ID service back two weeks to June 15, and
possibly later, the telephone company announced Tuesday.

Caller ID is a program that makes the number of callers available to
those on the receiving end through devices built into or attached to a
phone. California is the last state to offer the service.

While the initial deadline was May 1 for consumers to choose which
level of blocking they desired --- selective or complete blocking ---
millions of responses have come in well past the deadline.

The California Public Utilities Commission requires Pacific Bell to
issue a letter in confirmation of the consumer's request.

"At one point in mid-May we had two million requests come through in
72 hours and at another point we were backed up with four million
letters to send out," said John Britton, a Pacific Bell spokesman in
San Diego.

Britton said the late rush could be the result of Caller ID
advertising, which may have confused consumers into thinking June 1,
the day the service was initially scheduled to start, was the deadline
for responding to the blocking options, instead of May 1.

Pacific Bell is now hoping to catch up with its letters backlog and
initiate Caller ID by June 15, but admits that date is also tentative.

More than 18 million inserts outlining options were sent to Pacific
Bell customers in their March and April phone bills.

Under the selective blocking option, users press 67 before each call
they don't want showing up on the receiver's end. Through the complete
blocking option, consumers' numbers are automatically blocked, unless
they press 82 before each call they want released to the receiver.

In either case, blocking doesn't work when dialing 800, 900 or 911
calls.

Consumers who don't make a selection will be assigned selective
blocking. They can change their blocking option for no charge until
the end of the year, after which Pacific Bell will charge $5 for a
switch.

On the receiving end, those who choose to pay for the service ---
$6.50 a month for residential and $7.50 monthly for businesses ---
will see an area code and number, and in some cases the name of
unblocked callers, when their phone rings.

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

Date: Tue, 11 Jun 96 15:16:02 +0000
From: Tara D. Mahon <tara@insight-corp.com>
Subject: The Central Office


Contact:    Tara D. Mahon, Director of Marketing
            (201) 605-1400

For Immediate Release

TELCO LEVELING LAWS CAN'T CRUMBLE CENTRAL OFFICE, SAYS INSIGHT
RESEARCH

LIVINGSTON, NJ. The telephone company central office, the center of
telecom deregulation efforts, remains local telephone services' unique
asset despite attempts at legislative leveling, says a new report from
Insight Research.  Even after the FCC announces its new rules for
hooking into local phone networks, removing the artificial distinction
between local and long-distance phone services, the CO will continue
as the preeminent center of all telecommunications traffic.  Moreover,
a technology overhaul now under way ensures its longevity.

According to "Telecommunications in the 21st Century: Change and the
Central Office," the unassailable value of the CO lies in its
function--as an access line concentration point. The overriding design
consideration behind the CO was to physically locate it near the
geographic center of a cluster of subscribers.  With only modest
changes in population demographics over the last twenty years, the
number and locations of COs has changed little, so it remains the
tangible point of contact to nearly all telecom users.

"Right now we've got a new law on the books that is going to try to
level the playing field for competing local and long-distance
carriers," explains Insight's president Robert Rosenberg.  "And it may
well work from the pricing point of view, but the central office
remains a unique asset that can't be duplicated overnight by AT&T,
MCI, or Sprint."  Indeed, with the size of investment they represent,
COs won't be duplicated at all; in the densest urban areas, they
concentrate as many as 300,000 access lines under one roof and across
multiple switches.  Even in small towns, COs serve business areas
where density is 5,000 access lines per square mile.  To get to their
customers, the long-distance providers all have to pass through those
offices.  Their pass-through rights are now legislated.

As part of the technology overhaul, the switching function
traditionally taking place within the walls of the central office is
being pushed closer to the end user, in the form of small, remote
switches and digital loop carrier systems that increase the carrying
capacity of subscriber lines.  The net effect of this trend
paradoxically increases the importance of the CO's concentration
function, since increasingly larger circuit groups terminate there.

Further projections and analyses are published in Telecommunications
in the 21st Century: Change and the Central Office, now available from
Insight Research for $3,495.  Insight Research, based in Livingston,
NJ, is a leading provider of telecommunications market research and
analysis.  Insight can be reached via the World Wide Web at
http://www.wcom.com/Insight/insight.html.  For more information on
this study, please contact:


Tara D. Mahon                       tara@insight-corp.com
The Insight Research Corporation    www.wcom.com/Insight/insight.html
354 Eisenhower Parkway              (201) 605-1400 phone
Livingston, NJ  07039-1023 USA      (201) 605-1440 fax

Comparative Market Research, Competitive Analysis for Telecom Industry

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

From: Henry Hallinan <tcisvcs@mail.idt.net>
Subject: Employment Opportunity: Jobs For DSP
Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 11:07:23 -0700
Organization: Internet Online Services


We currently have jobs for DSP programmers with data communications
systems, algorithms for audio/voice processing and in enabling
applications for computer telephony integration (CTI).  If interested
in hearing more on this opportunity call 1-800-243-4495.  Thank you
for your time.  Ask for Henry.

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

From: bookworm@execpc.com
Subject: Talking to PBXs
Date: 12 Jun 1996 11:59:59 GMT
Organization: Exec-PC BBS - Milwaukee, WI


I have never seen an FAQ for this group and hope that means there is
no such thing as a stupid question.
 
I am just getting my ears wet (mixed metaphor intended) in this domain
after agreeing to design a synthetic speech product for my employer
that can dial up a number on the PSTN, annunciate a message, and hang
up.
 
Originally I understood I would only be dealing with the PSTN and have
been gathering data on it, but yesterday another engineer claimed we
also had to be able to dial out of a PBX.  In all the years I have
worked with modems I have never seen one that didn't require you to
have a dedicated line to answer or originate calls, and I figure there
has to be a good reason for this.
 
Anybody know why?


bookworm@execpc.com

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: There is an FAQ for this group and from
time to time I send it out, however to get a copy all you have to do
is pick one up in the Archives or write and ask me for a copy. And no,
there is no such thing as a stupid question in this group.  PAT]

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

Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 08:10:22 -0400
From: johnl@universal.dca.net (John A. Leonowich)
Subject: Looking for Fiber Optic Solution


Can anyone recommend a manufacturer of a fiber optic interface that
takes a 110 punchdown block, extends it over fiber optics, and
provides another 110 punchdown block on the remote end?  We have an
area in our manufacturing facility that has available fiber, but not
the copper that we need to accomodate a minimal 50 pair for voice and
data requirements.

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

Date: Wed, 12 Jun 96 1:52:31 PDT
From: R. Jagannathan <jagan@csl.sri.com>
Subject: VisualJava in the Limelight
Reply-To: R. Jagannathan <jagan@csl.sri.com>


A very impressive feat:

Tony Faustini's visualJava system was used as the main Java demo at
Scott McNealy's (Sun's CEO) keynote address at JavaOne.  Visit
http://www.javasoft.com/java.sun.com/javaone/McNealy.html for detailed
transcript of the keynote where visualJava and Tony get due attention.

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

From: lmoran@planet.net
Subject: Customer Care in Telecom
Date: 11 Jun 1996 19:23:43 GMT
Organization: Planet Access Networks - Stanhope, NJ


Customer Care in Telecom

July 31 & August 1, 1996
Washington, DC

Increase brand image and potential profit;
Effective customer satisfaction, support and retention measurers.

Hear from the following companies:

Pacific Bell
Bell Atlantic Int'l Wireless
AT & T Wireless
Nynex
AT & T
Bell Atlantic
Cabledata
Price Waterhouse
and many more!!!


For more information call:  800-882-8684 or e-mail info@iqpc.com
Visit our homepage for a complete conference agenda:  http://www.iqpc.com

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

Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 11:18:25 -0700
From: Mark J. Cuccia <mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu>
Subject: Re: 800 Numbers Now Customer Dialable Only


I called the BellSouth (intra-LATA 'only') operator on a single-0
today and requested an 800 number which I can call from my 'service
area'. From here, BellSouth still will connect to an 800 number.
However, the ANI of the calling line is not realtime transmitted.

When I could dial 800-MY-ANI-IS, (LEC) operator dialed calls to that
number would result in "Your ANI is: 800-000-5555" or something
similar. When a BellSouth operator dials 800-CALL-ATT or 800-321-0ATT
for me, I get a computer generated "AT&T, What is the number you are
calling from" followed by a live human AT&T operator on the line.
Realtime ANI is necessary for proper operation of those 800 numbers,
as they are used for access to AT&T in Card or AT&T Operator assisted
calls.

Back in the 1980's (I don't remember if it was pre-divestiture or
after), I could dial 0+800- from here and it would act as if I dialed
1+800-.

When the LEC's (South Central Bell, now BellSouth in my case) began
their intra-LATA 'only' TOPS operators around 1986 (known as "BOC
operator takeback"), I was forwarded by them to an AT&T TSPS operator
when requesting an 800 number connection, even if I knew that the 800
number was in my own LATA.

When "other common carriers" began providing 800 services around 1987,
using their own dedicated 800-NXX codes (assigned by Bellcore), an
AT&T TSPS operator *could* at that time connect me with those 800
numbers. The LEC intra-LATA single-0 operator *still* would always
forward me on to an AT&T operator if I requested connection to an 800
number.

Around 1990 (when AT&T began replacing TSPS with OSPS, and LEC
payphones could 'default' inter-LATA 0+ calls to 'other-than-AT&T'
according to the location provider), AT&T operators would still
*attempt* to connect me with a requested 800 number, but the call
would only go through if the 800 number was one handled via the AT&T
network. i.e., the 800-NXX was one used by AT&T or maybe
Telecom-Canada.

Shortly thereafter, Bell (LEC) operators would start connecting me
with *any* 800 number on request. Of course, all of this depends on
whether the holder of the 800 number 'purchased' my service area for
originating the call.

As for intercept type recordings, MCI, Sprint and others have their
own variety of recordings. AT&T would always let me know that I had
reached an 800 number that was 'out of my service area' if the 800
number was a US one.  If the 800 number was located in Canada, and the
holder didn't purchase the US at all, I would get an AT&T 'call cannot
be completed as dialed', as if there was no such number. It seems that
those types of Canadian 800 numbers weren't in AT&T's 800 database at
all. If a Canadian 800 number was available from certain parts of the
US but not *my* location, I would get 'dialed a number not available
from your service area', as the Canadian 800 number was included in
AT&T's 800 Database, although flagged as not available from my
location.

BTW, I asked a BellSouth operator to dial 800-CALL-ATT for me. There
was no 'realtime' ANI transmitted, so I got an AT&T OSPS operator
doing an ONI (Operator Number Identification) on me. I asked her if I
would be able to enter in the number I wanted and my card number. She
said no, that she could do it. I asked her about the *rate*. Would I
be billed the most expensive Operator Handled, the 'middle' Operator
Assisted, or the cheaper Customer dialed Card rate? She told me that I
would be billed the Customer card rate, as there were 'a problem' when
I attempted to place the call. *If* that's really true, I'm glad to
see that AT&T has gone back to giving the customer a cheaper dial or
customer card rate when there are problems and the customer has the
AT&T operator assist them. About three or so years ago, they seemed to
have ceased giving customers the cheaper customer dialed or customer
card rates, even if the customer reported a problem when they had
attempted to dial it themself!


MARK J. CUCCIA   PHONE/WRITE/WIRE:     HOME:  (USA)    Tel: CHestnut 1-2497
WORK: mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu |4710 Wright Road| (+1-504-241-2497)
Tel:UNiversity 5-5954(+1-504-865-5954)|New Orleans 28  |fwds on no-answr to
Fax:UNiversity 5-5917(+1-504-865-5917)|Louisiana(70128)|cellular/voicemail

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
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On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
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Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
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*************************************************************************
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     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
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     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
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     ------------------------------------------------------------

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All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
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------------------------------

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #281
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Wed Jun 12 13:15:14 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id NAA28606; Wed, 12 Jun 1996 13:15:14 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 13:15:14 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606121715.NAA28606@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #282

TELECOM Digest     Wed, 12 Jun 96 13:15:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 282

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Re: More CID Frolics! (Jay R. Ashworth)
    Re: Home Phone Switch Needed (Tom Thiel)
    Re: Home Phone Switch Needed (William Randolph)
    Re: FCC Crackdown on AOS Pricing (John Cropper)
    Re: AT&T Calling Card and Caller ID (John Cropper)
    Re: AT&T Wireless Tells Cellular Roamers: Don't Call NJ Police (M. Smith)
    Re: Pac Bell *69 (Return Call) (Robert F. Holloman, Jr.)
    Re: What Does A/B Carrier Mean? (Stanley Cline)
    Re: What Does A/B Carrier Mean? (John R. Levine)
    Re: What Does A/B Carrier Mean? (Wes Leatherock)
    Wanted LGE Modules for Newbridge 3624 Channel Bank (Ron Johnson)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: jra@scfn.thpl.lib.fl.us (Jay R. Ashworth)
Subject: Re: More CID Frolics!
Date: 11 Jun 1996 23:49:51 GMT
Organization: University of South Florida


Lars Poulsen (lars@anchor.rns.com) wrote:

> In article <telecom16.229.13@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Stan Schwartz
> <usfunx2b@ibmmail.com> wrote:

>> For the last few weeks, I've been puzzled by a number that had been
>> appearing on my all of my CID devices (I'm up to 5 in the house).  It
>> wasn't any valid NPA or NNX and the name showed up as "--------------".
>> Last night, it clicked.  The number displayed is the first ten digits
>> of an account number that I have with a bank in the northeast.  This
>> doesn't seem like mere coincidence to me.

> My guess is that you are using a "home banking" software to speak to
> the bank's computer, and that the connection runs at a rather slow bit
> rate ... using the same modem modulation technique that the caller-ID
> data uses. And during a call to the bank, the caller-ID devices
> trigger on the online data.

The line modulation protocol used for CNID delivery is a (possibly
very slightly modified) version of the old Bell 202J half-duplex
1200bps protocol.

According to my copy of McNamara's _Technical_Aspects_Of_Data_Communications_
(Digital Press, 1978) 202 used 1200Hz as a space, and 2200Hz as a
mark, in only one direction (making it pretty well suited for this
sort of work.

Since I didn't have references handy for any of the modems in the
house, I went and took a look at http://www.zyxel.com, and the specs
for the Elite 2864 (the analog modem) list Bell 212A and 103 (the old
1200 and 300bps full-duplex protocols, respectively), but not 202.

Given the wide differences in design between the 202 and {anything in
use today}, I'm forced to say that I'd find it difficult to believe
that this could be the case.

_My_ question for the original poster is: do you use a bank-by-touch-tone
service?  It's just possible, as an outside idea, that maybe the bank
has an ADSI arrangement set up with your LEC, and that's how the
information is getting there. 

_I_, in turn, am not completely certain what protocol ADSI uses, but
I'd be willing to bet some small amount of money that it is also 202.


Cheers,

Jay R. Ashworth   jra@scfn.thpl.lib.fl.us
Member of the Technical Staff  The Suncoast Freenet  
Tampa Bay, Florida   +1 813 790 7592

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

From: tomthiel@aol.com (Tom Thiel)
Subject: Re: Home Phone Switch Needed
Date: 11 Jun 1996 19:47:49 -0400
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)


If you could do without the intercom part, a Mitel SmarT-1 Dialer
could handle your requirements. It is installed on an RJ-31 series
jack ahead of all of your telephone sets, and can be programmed to
require a valid account code before completing a call.  Its normal
purpose is to reroute long distance calls to an ALD carrier by
transparently dialing the local access number, waiting for second dial
tone, dialing a PIN number, waiting for third dial tone, and then
dialing out the long distance number that you input. You would need to
customize the route tables, so that it simply looked for a valid
account code, then redialed the number out on the line.

It also has an RS-232 port which you could either run to a serial
printer for "print-on-the-fly" logs, or into a cheep pc running some
type of call accounting software.

They are availble in 1, 2, and 4 port versions, from most any
interconnect supply house. Also, at least in my area, if you sign up
with some ALD carriers, they will install and maintain it for free or
low monthly cost (this is also how they get your intra-LATA/local-long
distance traffic, which can save you some $)

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

From: randolph@coax.net (William Randolph)
Subject: Re: Home Phone Switch Needed
Date: Tue, 11 Jun 1996 21:10:35 -0400


n8mdy wrote:

>     I have a problem with telephone lines, long distance and abusive
> children. We recently received a $280 phone bill, all local long
> distance calls. My teenage son thinks it ok to talk to the next
> exchange for hours at a time. Well, I cut off long distance service on
> the family telephone; I have a separate line in my office for my own
> use.

>     Is there a phone switch, which would cost $500 or less, available?
> I would like to assign access codes, call accounting and possibly an
> intercom or paging system.

A company named Hello Direct has a catalog with a device that will fix 
your problem. Their number is 800-444-3556 or on the web 
http://www.hello-direct.com  Hope this helps. This catalog is a phone
lovers xmas wish list. 


73, 

Bill Randolph w8vft

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

From: psyber@usa.pipeline.com (John Cropper)
Subject: Re: FCC Crackdown on AOS Pricing
Date: 12 Jun 1996 14:34:21 GMT
Organization: Pipeline USA


On Jun 06, 1996 21.09.07 in article <FCC Crackdown on AOS Pricing>, 'Ed
Ellers <edellers@delphi.com>' wrote: 
 
> The Associated Press is running a story (which I saw on CompuServe) 
> that the FCC is considering a regulation on long-distance calling from 
> coin phones to force any company whose rates are more than 15% more 
> than the average of the major carriers to play a recording announcing 
> the rate for the call before ringing the called party. 
 
I can see it now ... 
 
You deposit the quarter, dial, and hear, "The surgeon general has
determined that the announcement of the rate you are about to pay
could cause coronary side-effects. Please have at least five dollars
in change and cardiac medication handy. Thank You." :-)
 

John Cropper, President 
NiS Telecom Division 
POB 277, Pennington, NJ  USA  08534-0277 
voice: (800) 247-8675 
fax:    (609) 637-9430 
psyber@usa.pipeline.com

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

From: psyber@usa.pipeline.com (John Cropper)
Subject: Re: AT&T Calling Card and Caller ID
Date: 12 Jun 1996 14:45:26 GMT
Organization: Pipeline USA


On Jun 05, 1996 19.17.38 in article <AT&T Calling Card and Caller ID>,
'Derek <DerekJ609@worldnet.att.net>' wrote: 
 
> Today, 6/5, I used a payphone at a local deli during my lunch break to 
> check messages at home, using my AT&T universal card. When I get home, 
> looking at the caller ID, the name and number actually showed up from 
> where I called. Normally, all I would get is "out-of-area." New 
> feature?  If it is, will using *67 still render 'private'? 

> Thought this would be of interest to many of you. 
 
Passing of CID information was supposed to be mandatory for every
carrier June 1, 1996. Only a small handful of carriers are _not_ in
compliance at this point (two known are GTE and Pac*Bell, both in CA).
Most everybody else *is* in complaiance and passing every single call
(that is not blocked); many are also sending name info (to their
customers) as well.
 

John Cropper, President 
NiS Telecom Division 
POB 277, Pennington, NJ  USA  08534-0277 
voice: (800) 247-8675 
fax:    (609) 637-9430 
psyber@usa.pipeline.com

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

From: Mark Smith <msmith@pluto.njcc.com>
Subject: Re: AT&T Wireless Tells Cellular Roamers: Don't call NJ Police
Date: Wed, 12 Jun 96 10:25:03 EDT
Organization: New Jersey Computer Connection, Lawrenceville, NJ


In article <telecom16.271.4@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, <paul@TDR.COM> write:
 
> - All gasoline sold in New Jersey is both mandatory Full Service, it
> is at least 15 to 40c per gallon cheaper than any gas, even self
> service, in New York City, Delaware or Washington, DC.

Been that way a long time -- it was a safety issue when it became law
and every time they try to repeal the safety question stops it.  I
work in PA and always buy gas at home.

> - If you go into New Jersey, the signs tell you to dial #95 to report
> such things to the state police.

> - The state radio system (1610 AM) reports such calls are toll and
> airtime free from MOST major cellular services.

> - Along part of the New Jersey Turnpike - near exit 10, for example -
> calls *do go through* using #95.

> - When attempting to use the service past the airport at Newark, New
> Jersey, (exit 14A/B/C, Jersey City and the Holland Tunnel) to report a
> car abandoned on the road, dialing #95 produces an error message
> similar to the following:

I had a problem where these calls were being billed by Bell Atlantic
Mobile on my phone (Philadelphia supersystem - Trenton, NJ number)
only when used north of exit 11 or so.  They were billed as "800
service" in what is a roaming area for me at the cost of 95 cents per
minute (back then).

I had to complain by phone and e-mail to Bell Atlantic.  Now, those
calls are toll and airtime free for me the entire length of the
Turnpike.

I'd contact AT&T Wireless and ask them to get on the stick and fix the 
problem.

By the way, calling #95 on the NJ Turnpike really helps out the
stranded motorist -- somebody will get there in five or ten minutes
versus waiting up to an hour for a turnpike police or repair vehicle
to pass by.  Use 911 for emergencies, though (fire, accident, etc).


Mark

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

From: Robert F. Holloman, Jr. <Holloman@cris.com>
Subject: Re: Pac Bell *69 (Return Call)
Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 13:34:15 GMT
Organization: Concentric Internet Services


zev wrote:

> Does anyone know what other LECs do regarding these services? Are
> there others that charge for attempts that are not possible? I plan to
> write to the California PUC about this - anyone have a useful name to
> write to?

Here in NC there was a story on a local TV newscast about BellSouth's
new pay-per-use Call Return, Repeat Dialing, and Three-Way Calling.
BS did explain them in the customer-information area (in fairly small
print I understand) in phone bills just prior to activation.  Children
soon discovered these new features and spread a rumor around area
schools saying it was a result of thunderstorms or some such.

Parents, many of whom overlooked the bill notices, were shocked to get
bills with dozens of these 75 cent charges.  BS decided to drop the
charges for the first month and to block the services for those who
request it.  Plus they'll include a large, colorful insert in the next
bill to explain the services.

Children weren't the only ones fooled.  Someone misinformed person
told my boss that the features would be free for one month.  He was
using them quite a bit until I broke the news to him.  And even I was
tricked by my LEC - Sprint/Carolina Telephone (CT).  A couple weeks
ago I discovered that Call Return and Repeat Dialing worked on my
modem line (I already subscribe to them on my voice line).  I assumed
CT activated them on the modem line by mistake, which wouldn't be
surprising considering they accidentally disconnected my voice line
after I placed an order for CID!  Anyway, I recently heard a CT radio
commercial advertising these "no subscription necessary"-75-cent-per-
use features.  That really makes me hot because they haven't mentioned
this in any bill.

I suspect BS and CT also charge for attempts to use these features on
"out of area" numbers.

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

From: scline@usit.net (Stanley Cline)
Subject: Re: What Does A/B Carrier Mean?
Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 00:05:58 GMT
Organization: Catoosa Computing Services


On Mon, 03 Jun 96 09:34:33 +0900, Pat wrote:

> The ruling was that the traditional telephone company of 
> record in the community would be granted one of the two cellular
> radio licenses if they wanted it -- of course, they all did -- and

Note that the carrier that got the B license did not necessarily have
to be the DOMINANT LEC in the area.

Take Knoxville, TN (ugh!) for instance.  BellSouth is the LEC in much
of the Knoxville MSA and adjoining RSAs, but the B license went to
United States Cellular, owned mostly by TDS Telecom.  The reason: TDS
Telecom owns a small telco (Concord Telephone Exchange) in western
Knox County.

In other areas, small telephone *cooperatives* have been granted
licenses for B-side service, even in areas dominated by BellSouth or
other companies.  Examples: Fort Payne, AL (Farmers Tel Co-Op),
Dyersburg, TN (Yorkville [TN] Tel Co-Op), etc.

The B license always went to *SOME* telco in the MSA/RSA, but not
necessarily the BIGGEST telco.  (Areas served by CommNet -- i.e. most
of South Dakota -- may be an exception; I know of no connection
between them and any LEC.  However, CommNet may have acquired licenses
from USWest or other LECs.)

> the 'B' license. The assumption was further made that the various
> 'B' carriers (or existing telephone companies) would probably band
> together and work in each other's best interest through roaming
> agreements, etc. The new competition in each community (the 'A'

Most large B carriers (with the glaring exception of US Cellular) have
"banded together", in the MobiLink consortium.  Roaming agreements
among MobiLink carriers are fairly standardized, although a few
carriers (360, SNET) have been reluctant to lower rates.

> local telephone company having the 'B' license as planned, but a
> phone company in some other distant community operating under some
> other name holding the 'A' license. For example, here in the Chicago

This is *very* common in this area also.  The first major example of
this was Atlanta, where Pac*Tel (now AirTouch) is the A-side carrier.
In most of Tennessee, GTE (Contel before that) owns the A-side
licenses.  In Georgia RSA 1 (Dalton), USCC/TDS is now (but soon won't
be!) the A-side carrier; TDS owns the telco in Blue Ridge, GA.

In some areas, particularly the Carolinas, carriers (on both the A and
B bands) have changed hands (Charlotte and Columbia going from
BellSouth to ALLTEL, 360 buying parts of BellSouth and USCC areas,
etc.), so the rule that "B=LEC and A=someone else" does not
necessarily hold now.  (It still does in most areas.)

However, there are A-side cellular companies (Palmer Wireless,
Vanguard Cellular, GenCell, etc.) that have NOTHING to do with local
telephone service.  These were the "competition" the FCC expected; in
some documents I have seen, the A-side carrier is referred to as a
"common radio carrier" or something similar, rather than another telco
(as many A-side carriers are!)

These are also the carriers most likely to use the "Cellular One"
name.  (It turns out that telco-owned A-side carriers are slowly
moving away from the CellOne name, especially with the increasing
competition from PCS.  AT&T Wireless dumped the name completely;
CellOne here now refers to itself as "a GTE service" -- I expect them
to just call themselves GTE Mobilnet before long.)

> has the 'A' license. In St. Louis the exact opposite is the case
> where Southwestern Bell is the 'telco of record' and they operate the
> 'B' side as Southwestern Bell Mobility and Ameritech is the 'A' carrier

Mobile, Alabama is _very_ unusual:

The major LEC is BellSouth.  Other LECs in the area include
Frontier/Alabama, GTE/Contel, Gulf Telephone, and perhaps Sprint.  The
A-side cellular carrier is -- BellSouth.  The B-side cellular carrier
is Contel/GTE (note: it's Frontier/Alabama in Monroeville and other
areas to the north.)

This is REALLY bad -- a Mobile cellular customer going to Birmingham,
Chattanooga, Nashville, etc. must switch their phone from A to B, or
from B to A, to get lower roaming rates!  (In all other nearby cities
that they service, BellSouth is B and Contel/GTE A.  Richmond, VA and
Bakersfield, CA are the same way -- although the LEC isn't BellSouth.
This makes for some interesting bills and mad roamers!)

US Cellular and 360 also tend to "flip" from A to B, especially in
North Carolina.  In Greenville, NC 360 is the A carrier (while being B
in the rest of the state); USCC is the B carrier (they're A further
south along the coast.)

> never considered at all back in 1983. According to Lynn Gregg, some
> of the newcomers with their own infrastructure won't be A or B ...
> they will be on their own radio frequencies with a totally different
> thing altogether.    PAT]

The PCS carriers are being referred to as "A" and "B" too, at least in
the spectrum auctions.  For Chattanooga, this leaves us as follows:

CELLULAR A = GTE Mobilnet dba CellOne
CELLULAR B = BellSouth
PCS A = InterCel (PowerTel)
PCS B = AT&T Wireless
PCS C = To be announced
PCS D = To be announced
 ...

(I may have flipped the PCS carriers ... anyone?)


Stanley Cline (Roamer1 on IRC) ** GO BRAVES!  GO VOLS!
mailto:scline@usit.net **  http://www.usit.net/public/scline/
     CompuServe 74212,44 ** MSN WSCline1 ** AOL SUCKS!
            All opinions are strictly my own!

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

Date: Tue, 11 Jun 96 23:16:00 EDT
From: johnl@iecc.com (John R Levine)
Subject: Re: What Does A/B Carrier Mean?
Organization: I.E.C.C., Trumansburg, N.Y.


> I'm not aware that the FCC ever reserved the wireline licenses for the
> local wireline carrier of record; in fact I can name three cities
> right off where a different LEC's cellular subsidiary got the license.

There was quite a lot of horse trading after the original round of
license awards.  In many cases carriers swapped licenses around to get
larger contiguous areas that'd be easier to serve.  Also, the
boundaries of the cellular RSAs and MSAs are along county lines which
need bear no relationship to exchange boundaries, so there were often
multiple LECs in a particular cellular area, in which case there'd be
a lottery among the LECs.

In my area, for example (Ithaca NY) most of the territory is served by
NYNEX, with a couple of small independents such as Empire Telephone
and the Trumansburg Home Telephone Company.  There was a cellular
lottery and Trumansburg won.  Then (after a long and not particularly
relevant challenge from a local Indian tribe who claimed preference
for the license) Trumansburg made a deal with NYNEX who in turn made a
deal with Frontier, who actually built and operates the system.  This
makes sense because the territory is adjacent to other Frontier
territories in the Rochester area.


John R. Levine, IECC, POB 640 Trumansburg NY 14886 +1 607 387 6869
johnl@iecc.com "Space aliens are stealing American jobs." - Stanford econ prof

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

From: wes.leatherock@hotelcal.com (Wes Leatherock)
Subject: Re: What Does A/B Carrier Mean?
Date: Wed, 11 Jun 1996 03:27:18 GMT


Ed Ellers <edellers@delphi.com> wrote:

> TELECOM Digest Editor noted in response to <cerna@ntep0403.ntep.tmg.
> nec.co.jp>:
 
>> The ruling was that the traditional telephone company of 
>> record in the community would be granted one of the two cellular
>> radio licenses if they wanted it -- of course, they all did -- and
>> the second license would be granted to a competitor.  

> I'm not aware that the FCC ever reserved the wireline licenses for the
> local wireline carrier of record; in fact I can name three cities
> right off where a different LEC's cellular subsidiary got the license.
> (Indianapolis, in Ameritech territory, has GTE; Cincinnati, served by
> Cincinnati Bell, has Ameritech cellular service; and Lexington, a GTE
> city, has BellSouth Mobility cellular service, with GTE now owning the
> *other* cellular carrier there!)

       But many communities have more than one "traditional telephone
company of record."  GTE has quite substantial operations in the
Houston metropolitan area, and there are (or were) several other
smaller companies operating in the area.

       GTE has its headquarters in the middle of the Dallas-Fort Worth
metropolitan area, in some of the substantial amount of territory it
serves there.  (Texas Stadium, too, is in GTE territory.)

       And there are other GTE operations, and smaller company operations,
in other Southwestern Bell areas.

       So at one time, and maybe still, Southwestern Bell and GTE
agreed that GTE would get the Houston system and Southwestern Bell
would get the others.  But actually, as I recall, each company
(including some or all of the smaller companies) owned discrete
percentages of each system, but the `B' carrier was run by GTE under
their name in Houston.

       I don't know if this is still the case, but that's how it started
out.  The same thing may be true in some other areas of the USA.


Wes Leatherock                                                             
wes.leatherock@hotelcal.com                                                 
wes.leatherock@origins.bbs.uoknor.edu                              

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

From: Ron Johnson <rjohnson@scsn.net>
Subject: Wanted LGE Modules for Newbridge 3624 Channel Bank
Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 00:44:08 -0700
Organization: National SUPPORT Center


Wanted LGE modules for Newbridge 3624 Channel Bank

We are looking for 10 LGE modules for the Newbridge 3624. Will buy
lesser amounts if price is right!


Ron Johnson
rjohnson@scsn.net
800-672-3683

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
public service systems and networks including Compuserve and America
On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. 

Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:

                 * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu *

The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
Townson of Skokie, Illinois USA. You can reach us by postal mail, fax 
or phone at:
                      Post Office Box 4621
                     Skokie, IL USA   60076
                       Phone: 847-329-0571
                        Fax: 847-329-0572
  ** Article submission address: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu

Our archives are located at mirror.lcs.mit.edu and are available by using
anonymous ftp. The archives can also be accessed using our email
information service. For a copy of a helpful file explaining how to
use the information service, just ask.

*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from the              *
* International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in Geneva, Switzerland    * 
* under the aegis of its Telecom Information Exchange Services (TIES)   * 
* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
* ing views of the ITU.                                                 *
*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
yourself who provide funding in amounts deemed appropriate. Your help
is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of twenty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #282
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Wed Jun 12 15:37:59 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id PAA15467; Wed, 12 Jun 1996 15:37:59 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 15:37:59 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606121937.PAA15467@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #283

TELECOM Digest     Wed, 12 Jun 96 15:37:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 283

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Yellowstone Park Begins Cellular Service (Billings Gazette via D. Herrick)
    Book Review: "Doing Big Business on the Internet" (Rob Slade)
    Need Help Canceling Service Plan (Leo J. Irakliotis)
    Questions About Ringing (Apollo Shyong)
    Re: PC Phone Board (Jay R. Ashworth)
    Re: PC Phone Board (Bruce A. Pennypacker)
    Re: PC Phone Board (Scot E. Wilcoxon)
    Re: Third Wireless Carrier (Eric Kammerer)
    Re: Modems in Spain (Angel Barrio Ruiz)
    Re: Modems in Spain (Marcos Garcia)
    Need Copy of FCC Tariff #9 (Jed De Rose)
    Pagers - 149 MHz vs. 800 MHz (Rick Catterson)
    Re: What Does A/B Carrier Mean? (Greg Monti)
    Re: 800 Numbers Now Customer Dialable Only (Babu Mengelepouti)
    Last Laugh! If Microsoft HQ in South Georgia (John W. Shaver)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 12:28:16 -0400
From: daniel lance herrick <daniel.herrick@cle.ab.com>
Organization: Allen-Bradley Company
Subject: Yellowstone Park Begins Cellular Service 


YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, Wyo. (AP) - Cellular service is the latest
visitor to one of the nation's most popular parks.

Yellowstone National Park officials have worked out a deal with Cody,
Wyo.-based Metacomm Communications to install three cellular
transmitters inside park boundaries. Park officials say cellular
phones can help rangers respond in emergency situations.

Not everyone is pleased.

"What's next, cable?" Chad Snopek of Los Angeles asked after returning
from a few nights in the park. "It takes away from what you come here
to get away from."

Snopek said he has no plans to put a cellular phone in his backpack
the next time he visits the 2.2 million-acre park.

Assistant park superintendent Marv Jensen said benefits of the service
outweigh the negatives.

"It's (a hiker's) choice whether they decide to take a cellular phone,
and therefore intrude on their wilderness experience," said Jensen.
"It's not going to affect anyone else."

Under the phone service, which won't be ready until later this summer,
the park receives $500 a year plus 70 phones and 5,000 free minutes a
month. Unlimited free service would be provided if there was a
disaster like the fires of 1988.

Jensen added that a new law requires federal land managers to allow
commercial cellular facilities unless there is a compelling reason to
deny the request. Others noted that phones in Yellowstone are nothing
new, as a land-line phone system was first installed in 1886.

Gary Begaman of Metacomm declined to say how much his company was
investing in the deal. But he was confident plenty of the 3 million
annual visitors would use the system, whether on the backcountry
fishing trip or driving through the park. Complete backcountry
coverage would not be possible, however, because of the limited number
of transmitters.

Jensen said no environmental damage will occur because the
transmitters will be installed on existing antennae at Old Faithful,
Grant Village and on top of Mt. Washburn, one of the park's tallest
peaks.

Park ranger Tom Tankersley said that despite the lack of a resource
impact, he had mixed feelings about going wireless.

"But it does lend itself to a wonderful philosophical discussion," he
said. "If you can't escape from the telephone in places like Yellowstone, 
where can you?"

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

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: The point is you *can* escape from phones
anytime you wish; just don't have one with you. On the other hand, I 
think this is going to be a marvelous improvement in security in the
nation's largest wilderness area. You don't have to turn the phone on;
you can leave it turned off in your backpack. No one needs to have
your cellular number. You need not ever touch the phone. But then when
the time comes -- and invariably it will and does come for some people --
that there is an accident or a breakdown of your car, think how great
it will be -- if you choose to do so -- to be able to call for help.
Do *you* want to be out there having fallen down and broken your leg
or having been hurt by an animal or just plain getting sick or getting
lost and have to stumble around for a couple days looking for help?

I regard cellular phones in the same way I regard computers, television
sets and other modern things in our time: they are tools for my use as
I see fit. I do not rely on the computer; it relies on me to give it
a task to accomplish.  Perhaps in your backpack you should not carry
any aspirin or first aid supplies either if you like the wilderness so
much and want to leave civilization behind. I can think of far worse
'commercial enterprises' to have in a wilderness area like Yellowstone
than cellular phone service.   PAT]

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

Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 13:15:31 EST
From: Rob Slade <roberts@decus.ca>
Subject: Book Review: "Doing Big Business on the Internet" by Hurley/Birkwood


BKBGBSIN.RVW   960501
 
"Doing Big Business on the Internet", Brian Hurley/Peter Birkwood, 1996,
1-55180-029-2, $14.95
%A   Brian Hurley bhurley@magmacom.com
%A   Peter Birkwood birkwood@magmacom.com
%C   1481 Charlotte Road, North Vancouver, BC   V7J 1H1
%D   1996
%G   1-55180-029-2
%I   Self-Counsel Press
%O   $14.95 +1-604-986-3366 fax: +1-604-986-3947 selfcoun@pinc.com
%P   174
%S   Small Business Guide"
%T   "Doing Big Business on the Internet"
 
This is the usual Internet for business guide, with, unfortunately,
the usual lack of technical information and rigour and the usual lack
of feel for Internet culture.  This shortcoming is particularly odd
for a pair of electrical engineers who we are told have been on the
Internet for "over a decade".
 
The authors have, however, distinguished themselves by providing a
series of pointers to business related resources on the Internet.  The
layout and design of the book makes this even more useful: the URLs
are contained in marginal notes, quickly identifiable when browsing
and quickly accessed while reading the text.
 
The size of the book means that it has to be fairly limited, but those
resources that have been included are not always of the best quality.
The bibliography, for example, highly recommends some very mediocre
works.  The usual myths of the advertising effectiveness of a Web page
is reiterated with little mention of the need to advertise your Web
page itself.
 
For those who already know about the Internet, this book does provide
a quick "checklist" guide for starting an online business venture.

 
copyright Robert M. Slade, 1996   BKBGBSIN.RVW   960501. Distribution
permitted in TELECOM Digest and associated publications. Rob Slade's
book reviews are a regular feature in the Digest.


Vancouver      ROBERTS@decus.ca      | "A ship in port is safe,
Institute for  rslade@vanisl.decus.ca|  but that is not what
Research into  Rob.Slade@f733.n153/  |  ships are for."
User                .z1.fidonet.org  |   Adm. Grace Murray Hopper
Security       Canada V7K 2G6        |      after John Parks

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

From: irakliot@lance.colostate.edu (Leo J. Irakliotis)
Subject: Help Needed Canceling Service Plan
Date: 11 Jun 1996 21:33:20 GMT
Organization: Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO  80523


Within two days after I got a new service plan for cellular telephone,
and a new handheld unit, I realized that I was not satifisfied with
the service.  The retailer says he cannot take the phone back and
refund.  What can I do?  Is there some regulation to protect me?  I
only had the phone and the service for two days, and I only have ten
minutes of off-peak airtime on it.  Surely common sense should prevail
somehow.

I heard something about a cooling period during which I can return the
unit and cancel the plan at no penalty.

Any advice will be greatly appreciated.


Thanks, 

Leo   irakliot@lance.colostate.edu

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

From: apollo_shyong@acer.com.tw
Date: Wed, 12 Jun 96 13:25:23 PST
Subject: Questions About Ringing


I am confused about some terminology about RINGing in subscriber loop. 
Can you give me any advice?
     
     [1] RINGDOWN
     
     [2] RING CADENCE
     
     
Best regards,
     
     
Y.L.Shyong


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: 'Ringdown' generally refers to a type
of phone line where the ringing occurs either automatically when a
phone at one end of a circuit goes off hook (the other end then begins
ringing) or when the ringing is done manually by pressing a button at
one end or the other. In any event, it is when a ringing signal is 
given that was not generated in the usual way by a telephone switching
device. If I dial your phone and the central office starts ringing
your line, that is not a ringdown situation. If you and I have between
us a 'private line' or 'dedicated circuit' that just the two of us use
and it is necessary for one or the other of us to go off hook and/or
press a button/turn a crank/pull a switch to one position or another
to cause an audible signal and get the other one's attention that *is*
considered a 'ringdown' type phone line. 

'Ring(ing) Cadence' refers to *how* the signal is given out. It is
intended to transmit a message in and of itself. For example, you and
I mutually agree in advance that in the process of signalling to your
end if I make a short ring followed by a long ring or two short rings
and then a period of silence followed by two more short rings I am 
telling you in advance that a certain person is calling or a certain
subject is to be discussed. Many years ago when 'party line' phone 
service was common and several people shared the same circuit, the
cadence (or manner and method of ringing) imposed on the line told 
the various end-users *which one of them* was expected to respond and
which ones were expected to not respond. Now in more modern times 
with 'multi-number' service from telco (more than one number assigned
to the same single phone line) a certain cadence or rythym in the
ring tells the subscriber which actual phone number was dialed. 
Examples of cadence might include a long ring followed by two short
rings, or two shorts and a long, etc. 'Long' and 'short' are of
course relative terms, meaning one lasts for a longer or shorter
period than the other.   PAT] 

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

From: jra@scfn.thpl.lib.fl.us (Jay R. Ashworth)
Subject: Re: PC Phone Board
Date: 12 Jun 1996 14:27:03 GMT
Organization: University of South Florida


David C. Meyer (dcmeyer@cts.com) wrote:

> I wish to use a PC to handle four or more incoming voice phone lines
> and six standard phone instruments.  Capabilities would include call
> routing, voice mail, call transfer and conference calling.  Anyone
> heard of such a board for a PC?

Most of the major CT manufacturers produce products that will allow
you to build such a server.  You _really_ should be reading {Computer
Telephony} magazine, if you want to get into this stuff.

The most difficult part will be finding a board that can generate ring
current to ring your internal sets; I seem to remember there's only one
or two companies producing those, right now.

You want a small PBX, right?  Have you seen the Siemens OfficePoint
3-BRI ISDN PBX?

Here are a few URLs to look at:
  http://www.comdial.com/
  http://www.dialogic.com/
  http://www.dianatel.com/
  http://www.mvip.org/
  http://www.pika.ca/
  http://www.rhetorex.com/
  http://www.siemensrolm.com/
  http://www.versit.com/

Um ... have fun(?)


Cheers,

Jay R. Ashworth         jra@scfn.thpl.lib.fl.us
Member of the Technical Staff
The Suncoast Freenet  Tampa Bay, Florida
+1 813 790 7592

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

From: Bruce A. Pennypacker <brucep@stylus.com>
Subject: Re: PC Phone Board
Date: 11 Jun 1996 21:21:33 GMT
Organization: Stylus Products Group, Artisoft Inc.


In article telecom16.280.2@massis.lcs.mit.edu, David C. Meyer
<dcmeyer@cts.com> said:

> I wish to use a PC to handle four or more incoming voice phone lines
> and six standard phone instruments.  Capabilities would include call
> routing, voice mail, call transfer and conference calling.  Anyone
> heard of such a board for a PC?
 
Contact Dialogic at 800-755-4444 (or http://www.dialogic.com).  Their
various telephony cards can be combined to handle what you need.  If
you explain to them exactly what you want in detail they should be
able to set you up with the hardware and a list of software products
that can do what you need.


Bruce Pennypacker   |  Stylus Products Group  |  Phone: +1 617 621 9545
Software Engineer   |     Artisoft, Inc.      |  Fax:   +1 617 621 7862
Resident TAPI guru  |      201 Broadway       |  http://www.stylus.com
brucep@stylus.com   |   Cambridge, MA 02139   |  sales: sales@stylus.com

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

From: sewilco@fieldday.mn.org (Scot E. Wilcoxon)
Subject: Re: PC Phone Board
Date: 11 Jun 1996 19:00:23 -0500


Hmm.  I sent him email with some info, and in the process learned
something new. {Computer Telephony} magazine has a Web site with
quite a few links for the field.  As that's of interest to this group:
   Linkname: Computer Telephony Home Page
        URL: http://www.computertelephony.com/ct_home.html
 

Scot E. Wilcoxon	sewilco@fieldday.mn.org

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

Date: Wed, 12 Jun 96 09:15:45 PDT
From: erick@sac.AirTouch.COM (Eric Kammerer at Sac Net)
Subject: Re: Third Wireless Carrier


> The actual frequency bands assigned to the A and B channels in any
> given area are not just two separate but adjacent bands of frequencies
> (e.g., 800 to 810 MHz for A and 810 to 820 for B), as you might guess
> would be simplest.  Rather they're a series of narrower "frequency
> bandlets" interleaved among each other in the overall frequency band
> assigned to A+B.

Some details on the A/B split:

In 1983, the FCC allocated 40MHz of spectrum, containing 666 channels,
for AMPS.  Channels are spaced 30Khz apart.  The transmit and receive
channels are spaced 45 Mhz apart.  The mobile transmits in the range
of 825.030 - 844.980 MHz.  The cell site transmits in the range of
870.030 - 889.980 MHZ.  Of the 666 channels, 42 are used for
signalling, leaving 624 for voice.

The 666 channel pairs were divided into two equal bands to allow for
competition within the same coverage area.  Thus, each band has 312
voice channels, and 21 signalling channels.  The Radio Common Carriers
were assigned the first band (Band A) and the wireline common carriers
(telcos) were assigned the second band (Band B). The highest 21
channels of Band A and the lowest 21 channels of Band B are signalling
channels, the remaining channels are voice channels.

In 1986, an additional 5 MHz was allocated for cellular, and called
E-AMPS for Extended-AMPS.  This increased the total number of channels
to 832.  Only voice channels were added, no signalling channels.  The
mobile transmit range was increased to 824.040 - 848.970 MHz. The cell
site transmit range was increased to 869.040 - 893.970 MHz.  A total
of 790 voice channels and 42 signalling channels became available (395
voice and 21 signalling channels per band).

When the 5 Mhz was allocated, the FCC could not find a contiguous
block in the 800 MHz range.  Therefore, they found 1 MHZ prior to the
AMPS band, and 4 MHz after the AMPS band.  Since 1 MHz is not
sufficiently large to handle the additional 83 channels assigned to
Band A, the new channels were split across both parts of the new
allocation.  Since this would require extra filtering in Band A
systems (an expensive competitive disadvantage), the FCC placed the
extra Band A channels between the original Band B channels, and the
extended Band B channels -- forcing the Band B carriers to install
additional filters also.

The actual layout looks like this:

Channel Range           Description
--------------------------------------------
991 - 1023              Band A E-AMPS Voice
1 - 312                 Band A AMPS Voice
313 - 333               Band A Signalling
334 - 354               Band B Signalling
355 - 666               Band B AMPS Voice
667 - 716               Band A E-AMPS Voice (continued)
717 - 799               Band B E-AMPS Voice


Eric Kammerer   erick@sac.AirTouch.com

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I always have wondered why there were
no cellular channels numbered 800 through 990 (the numbering stops
at 799 and resumes again at 991 as you show above.) Maybe they wanted
to remain consistent with the gap in the frequency range with the
191 unavailable 'channels' (800-990).   Any ideas on how the channel
numbering was decided upon? 

I know in CB radio the channel numbers are out of sequence with the
frequency at times also, with channels 24-25 actually appearing
frequency-wise between channel 22-23 of the original layout, i.e. 
channel 21, 22, 24, 25, 23, even though where the users are concerned
the numbers appear in the proper order on the radio tuning dial.   PAT] 

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

Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 17:10:39 +0200
From: abarrio@tid.es (Angel Barrio Ruiz)
Subject: Re: Modems in Spain


> I am going to be spending next school year studying in Spain (at the
> University of Granada, if you care) and plan to bring my trusty little

Beautiful place, you will love it.

> But I have two questions:

> (1) Can I actually use my U.S. modem (a Hayes Accura 288) on Spanish
> phone lines? (Legally?)

Yes, you certainly can. There use to be restrictions about non-standarized
modems but that was over a couple of years ago.

> (2) What kind of physical phone jacks are in use in Spain? Radio Shack
> only has adapters for the U.K., Germany, and France (all different,
> interestingly). If Spain differs from these three, where can I get an
> adapter?

The standard jack is JP-7. I believe it is exactly the same the US
has.  Anyhow, the PTT (which incidentally I work for) will be eager to
change any real old phone plug for an standard one. The PTT charges
pretty expensive fares for this service, though (around $50 for a
simple plug).
 
Have a nice stay in Spain.

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

From: marcos.garcia@t-online.de (Marcos Garc\ma)
Subject: Re: Modems in Spain
Organization: SAP-AG Walldorf
Date: Tue, 11 Jun 1996 22:02:59 GMT


In article <telecom16.277.6@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Kris Nelson
<krisn@u.washington.edu> says:

> I am going to be spending next school year studying in Spain (at the
> University of Granada, if you care) and plan to bring my trusty little
> Powerbook with me to do email, etc. UG appears to have dial-in lines,
> so that's no problem.

> But I have two questions:

> (1) Can I actually use my U.S. modem (a Hayes Accura 288) on Spanish
> phone lines? (Legally?)

> (2) What kind of physical phone jacks are in use in Spain? Radio Shack
> only has adapters for the U.K., Germany, and France (all different,
> interestingly). If Spain differs from these three, where can I get an
> adapter?

The modem should be no problem; as far as I know the standards are the
same. The jack may differ from line to line. Definitely it is not the
German jack. I do not know how the French and British look like. In
private homes you still sometimes see no jack at all. The cables are
just screwed to the outlet. In modern homes and offices you see jacks
that look like the ones used in the US and other countries. So maybe
you need no adapter at all.  


Good luck, 

Marcos

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

Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 16:53:12 -0400
From: ged@netaxs.com (Jed De Rose)
Subject: Need Copy of FCC Tariff #9


Do you have, or know where I can get, a copy of the FCC Tariff #9,
specifically concerning the cap on ABM T1 charges?

Any help would be great.

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

Date: Tue, 11 Jun 1996 19:44:09 -0400
From: Rick Catterson <rickc@ca.newbridge.com>
Subject: Pagers - 149 MHz vs. 800 MHz 


I went to about five outlets last weekend, looking for a basic numeric
pager. Bell Mobility (a large paging and celular operation in Toronto)
offers virtually identical paging services (at the same price) on both
the 149 MHz and the 800 MHz bands.  I was wondering if anybody could
explain the pros and cons of the two frequency bands.  While the sales
people seemed to knew their paging features quite well, they clearly
didn't understand the differences between the two frequency bands.


Rick Catterson                  rickc@newbridge.com
Newbridge Networks Corporation  (613)591-3600 x6470


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Personally I think 800 tends to
penetrate a little better into steel buildings, basements and other
hard to reach places while 149 tends to cover a larger geographical
distance but falls short when it comes to rooting its way into
computer rooms, for example. Each type of radio wave has different
characteristics than other radio waves and the frequency selected for
use is very much an applications thing. Also, the type of antenna
needed for various frequencies is a consideration. The lower the
frequency, the larger the antenna has to be, and this could be
cumbersome at very low frequencies. The difference in size of antenna
between 149 and 800 is not that much (as compared to say, 27 megs or
'ten meter' and 'eleven meter' stuff) so that would not be a concern
with pagers, but the propogation of the wave or the way the signal
gets around would matter a lot for many people.

I remember many years ago when police officers and firemen used to
have radios at 27 megs and they drove around with those great big
antennas on their vehicles. Then they all moved to the 150-155 megs
area and had much better transmission, etc. Now many large urban 
police forces have ditched that frequency and use 450-470 for all
their transmissions with very good results. Generally, the higher
the frequency, the better the overall results in transmission although
I am not sure what all the technical reasons are.   PAT]

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

Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 17:50:07 GMT
From: cc004056@interramp.com (Greg Monti)
Subject: Re: What Does A/B Carrier Mean?


On 5 Jun 96, Ed Ellers <edellers@delphi.com> wrote:

> TELECOM Digest Editor noted in response to <cerna@ntep0403.ntep.tmg.
> nec.co.jp>:

>> The ruling was that the traditional telephone company of 
>> record in the community would be granted one of the two cellular
>> radio licenses if they wanted it -- of course, they all did -- and
>> the second license would be granted to a competitor.  
 
> I'm not aware that the FCC ever reserved the wireline licenses for the
> local wireline carrier of record; in fact I can name three cities
> right off where a different LEC's cellular subsidiary got the license.

[snip]

David Crowe <crowed@cadvision.com> wrote:

> When cellular licenses were first granted, they were given to two
> companies in each area. The "B" license was given to the local
> telephone company ... [snip]

I think there's more to it than that.  Most of the posters so far have
assumed that there is always only ONE local landline phone carrier per
cellular service area and that it was therefore destined to be the B
carrier.

Allow me to postulate (corrections welcomed): Cellular franchise
boundaries for B carriers do NOT conform to franchise boundaries of
landline telephone companies and were sometimes purposely designed to
cover a larger area than that of the existing landline franchisees.
Since each cellular service area could cover multiple landline company
franchises, the only requirement was that the B carrier be ONE of the
landline franchisees who seves *any portion* of the cellular area.

Case 1: Baltimore-Washington: The cellular franchise area is served by
at least three phone companies (Bell Atlantic, GTE and Armstrong
Communications).  Only one of those companies, Bell Atlantic, got the
B franchise.  Bell Atlantic serves a larger portion of the landline
customers than the other two, but that's not always the case.

Case 2: San Francisco: Cellular area served by at least two landline
companies (GTE and Pacific Bell).  Pacific Bell serves more people.
GTE got the B franchise.

Case 3: Indianapolis: Cellular area served by landline companies
Ameritech and GTE.  I don't know which company serves more customers
in that area.  GTE got the B franchise.

Case 4: Los Angeles: Cellular area served by landline companies GTE
and Pacific Bell.  Pacific Bell bigger?  Pacific Bell (now Airtouch)
got the B franchise.

Case 5: New York: A special case, and a rarity.  Cellular area served
by (what was then) New Jersey Bell and New York Telephone.  They
*jointly* (received and?) operated the B franchise, branded under
different names in different states.  Eventually merged their cellular
ventures into a single company.  Now the two parent companies are
merging and the division is becoming moot.

The above discussion applies to B carriers only.  As noted by other
posters, the A carriers can be an even more complex situation.


Greg Monti   Jersey City, New Jersey, USA   gmonti@interramp.com

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

Date: Tue, 11 Jun 1996 23:20:41 PDT
From: Babu Mengelepouti <prophet@baker.cnw.com>
Subject: Re: 800 Numbers Now Customer Dialable Only


> That's right, as of June 4th in the 914 area code in Nynex territory,
> the 800 ac is customer dialable only. The operators say this is
> because of FCC regulations, but there are still many other ac's in
> which 800 numbers are not customer dialable only.

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: This is news to me. Perhaps other
> readers will be able to report not only their experiences but whatever
> guidelines their local telco is using.   PAT]


Bell Atlantic will also no longer dial 800 numbers.

If 1-800-CALL-ATT is dialled through a LEC operator, when the operator
drops off the line the call is now dropped.

The reason for both of these problems is probably that most LEC
operators do not pass ANI -- the ANI appears as NPA/000-5555.  This
has been used by phreaks for various nefarious purposes (as well as
people who just like privacy when calling persons such as Jeff Slaton,
who incidentally now routes all calls where no ANI is received to a
recording saying "This program is not available at this time" on his
800 number).

That is one theory.  The other theory is that operators are instructed 
not to dial 800 numbers because, being toll-free, the LECs cannot charge 
anything to dial them, and dialing an 800 number takes as much time as 
dialing a "revenue producing" call.  I think that the real reason is a 
combination of both.  Fraud can result from calls placed to long distance 
operators with no ANI, and that's a ready excuse to use to stop dialing 
toll-free numbers.  On the other hand, it's an awfully good excuse to 
save operator time, which may mean that they can lay off a couple more 
operators.

In either case, the big losers are disabled people and others who are
not able to dial the phone themselves, since such people no longer are
able to reach 800 or 888 numbers.

If YOU are in a state served by Nynex or Bell Atlantic, contact your
state public utility or public service commission and request that
operators be required to dial toll-free numbers on request.

As for the situation elsewhere, I personally have had operators dial 800 
numbers in the Southwestern Bell, BellSouth, USWest, and GTE areas with 
no difficulty.

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

From: Shaver, John W. <shaverj@huachuca-emh16.army.mil>
Subject: Last Laugh! If Microsoft HQ in South Georgia
Date: Wed, 12 Jun 96 08:18:00 PDT


Pat,

I couldn't resist this one.  Vic Wallace of this station added the line 
about the DoubleWide on concrete blocks.

John

[[ MICROSOF.GEO : 2083 in MICROSOF.GEO ]]


Subject:  [53L]: FW: MONDAY BLUES:  If Microsoft was HQed in South   
Georgia


Ways things would be different if Microsoft was headquartered in South
Georgia

   1. Their #1 product would be Microsoft Winders;

   2. Instead of an hourglass icon you'd get an empty beer bottle;

   3. Occasionally you'd bring up a window that was covered with a Hefty   
      bag;

   4. Dialog boxes would give you the choice of "Ahh-ight" or "Naw";

   5. Instead of "Ta-Da!", the opening sound would be Dueling Banjos;

   6. The "Recycle Bin" in Winders '95 would be an outhouse;

   7. Whenever you pulled up the Sound Player you'd hear a digitized drunk
      redneck yelling "Freebird!";

   8. Instead of "Start Me Up", the Winders '95 theme song would be
      Achy-Breaky Heart;

   9. PowerPoint would be named "ParPawnt";

  10. Microsoft's programming tools would be "Vishul Basic" and "Vishul   
      C++";

  11. Winders 95 logo would incorporate Confederate Flag;

  12. Microsoft Word would be just that: one word;

  13. Instead of WWW servers, Microsoft would have KKK servers;

  14. New Shutdown WAV: "Y'all come back now!";

  15. Instead of VP, Microsoft big shots would be called "Cuz";

  16. Hardware could be repaired using parts from an old Trans Am;

  17. Microsoft Office replaced with Micr'sawft Henhouse;

  18. Four words: Daisy Dukes Screen Saver;

  19. Well, the first thing you know, old Bill's a billionaire;

  20. Speadsheet software would include examples to inventory dead cars in
      your front yard;

  21. Flight Simulator replaced by Tractor pull Simulator;

  22. Microsoft CEO: Bubba Gates;

  23. Redman plug'n'play interface;

  24. They could still use Ky-row as code name for next upgrade, but Albenny
      would be the one after that;

  25. Screen saver would be a kudzu vine which would consume your program
      manager;

  26. Instructions for use would include "mash the control key."; 

  27. The HQ building will be a double wide on cinder blocks, because
      MICROSOFT is hyear to stay.

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

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Smile: That's all very cute, and if anyone 
in Georgia has their feelings hurt, please accept my apologies. I only
wish someone who had Bubba Gates by the ear would convey to him the
desparate straits things are getting into around here with the loss
of Microsoft's very generous support for the year ahead. Corporate
financial support for the Digest is urgently needed: would you like to
see your company's name in the boilerplate of in each issue of the
Digest where Microsoft's now appears as of July 1? Please do something
ASAP. And I am not smiling when I add this final note.    PAT]  

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
public service systems and networks including Compuserve and America
On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. 

Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:

                 * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu *

The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
Townson of Skokie, Illinois USA. You can reach us by postal mail, fax 
or phone at:
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*************************************************************************
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* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
* ing views of the ITU.                                                 *
*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
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is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of twenty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #283
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Wed Jun 12 17:03:14 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id RAA24797; Wed, 12 Jun 1996 17:03:14 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 17:03:14 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606122103.RAA24797@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #284

TELECOM Digest     Wed, 12 Jun 96 17:03:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 284

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Late Bulletin: Communications Decency Act Overturned! (Van Heffner)
    Real Time Fax Compressed 16 to 1 (Bob Stone)
    Re: Call Waiting and Caller ID Together (Brent Ellacott)
    Re: Call Waiting and Caller ID Together (Sean E. Williams)
    Re: Call Waiting and Caller ID Together (Peter Bartnik)
    Re: Help With Draconian Contract (Damon Kelly)
    Re: Caller-ID *Only* Line (Hillary Gorman)
    Re: Old Phone Bills (James Jacobs)
    Re: Cellular Message Waiting Indicator (Sean E. Williams)
    Re: BRI Butt Set - Cheap ? (Lars Poulsen)
    Re: Help Needed Building Step-by-Step Switches (Dave Levenson)
    Re: Local Exchange Information Wanted (Dave Levenson)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 11:28:27 -0700
From: vantek@northcoast.com (VANTEK COMMUNICATIONS)
Subject: Late Bulletin! Communications Decency Act Overturned


Philadelphia, PA, June 12, 1996 (DLD DIGEST) -- Thanks in large part
to testimony concerning the effectiveness of SurfWatch Software Inc.'s
Internet filtering and parental control software, a federal court in
Philadelphia today ruled that the Communications Decency Act, signed
into law on February 8, is an unconstitutional infringement of freedom
of speech over the Internet.

Specifically, the ruling upheld a challenge of the act by the
Citizens' Internet Empowerment Coalition (CIEC), who based their case
largely on the availability of effective Internet filtering software
such as SurfWatch.

The intent of the Communications Decency Act (CDA) was to prevent
minors from inadvertently stumbling upon `indecent' or `patently
offensive' material in the normal course of using the Internet and
World Wide Web. The CIEC, however, claimed that government control
over the Internet constituted censorship that violated the freedom of
speech of all users of the Internet, and that the CDA was an
unnecessary intrusion because filtering software, such as SurfWatch,
already provides effective control over what minors can access.

`We are extremely gratified that the voices of reason have prevailed
in this case,' said Ann Duvall, president of SurfWatch Software, Inc.,
and one of the expert witnesses called to testify at the trial.
`There's a delicate balancing act between protection of minors and the
widespread use of the Internet for communication, education and
commerce. I'm glad that we were able to convince the court that
Internet filtering software such as SurfWatch is a far more viable and
less restrictive solution than government censorship.'

In particularly dramatic testimony, a Department of Justice expert
witness, Howard Schmidt, who originally testified that he had been
able to search for and find sexually explicit Internet sites that
SurfWatch did not block, revealed under cross examination by CIEC
attorney Ann Kappler that he had conducted his initial searches
without SurfWatch running. In response to further questioning by
Kappler, Schmidt admitted: `SurfWatch would not have allowed the
(initial) search.' 

SurfWatch Software Provides an Alternative to Censorship.

SurfWatch lets parents, teachers and employers block unwanted sexually
explicit and other material from their computers' Internet
access-without restricting the access rights of other Internet users.
The SurfWatch software removes no material from the Internet or any
server, but simply blocks it at any computer or local network where it
is installed. SurfWatch screens Internet newsgroups, World Wide Web,
FTP, Gopher, Chat and other services.

SurfWatch's unique Dynamic Filtering Technology not only blocks
sexually explicit Internet content, but it also keeps users from
initially searching for material in many of the popular Internet
search engines. This powerful feature has helped to make SurfWatch the
market leader in Internet filtering and parental control software.

SurfWatch Software, Inc., based in Los Altos, California, is
pioneering the development of new technologies for the Internet.
SurfWatch was acquired in April 1996 by Spyglass, Inc. (NASDAQ: SPYG),
a leading licensor of World-Wide Web client and server technology.
SurfWatch Software, Inc. was the first company to ship Internet
software for blocking access to inappropriate material and has
licensed Internet filtering technology to the on-line services
industry.  SurfWatch Software can be reached at 415/948-9500,
info(at)surfwatch.com, or via the World Wide Web at
http://www.surfwatch.com.


Van Hefner - Editor
Discount Long Distance Digest
On The Web: http://www.webcom.com/longdist/

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

From: bobstone@fairfield.com (Bob Stone)
Subject: Real Time Fax Compressed 16 to 1
Date: Wed, 12 Jun 96 18:42:33 GMT
Organization: LISCO, an Iowa Internet Provider


Our company, Voice & Data Systems has a technology which can help
carriers by sending real time fax, compressed 16 to 1, as packets of
X.25 data. No callback is involved. For more information, see our web
page at http://www.fairfield.com/terra_globe

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

Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 15:54:41 +0000 
From: Brent_Ellacott@nt.com
Subject: Re: Call Waiting and Caller ID Together 


kamlet@infinet.com (Art Kamlet) wrote:

> Today I received a brochure from Ameritech (Ohio) offering call
> waiting service with Caller ID.  Using an Ameritech Display Phone they
> offer to provide the CID of the call waiting caller "at no extra
> charge."

> The catch is you have to purchase an Ameritech display phone.

> Has anyone heard of this before?  I assume the line has to be somehow
> set to provide something like "CID on busy/cw" -- is that a new CLASS
> feature?  I assume it does not require anything as exotic as DDSN or
> else they'd be charging quite a bit more?

> I currently have both call waiting and CID/ they claim there is no
> additional charge to get CID on busy/cw, as long as I get the phone --
> either purchase it or rent it at $7/month.

> Any insights?  Am I right in assuming I don't need the phone but they
> won't provision my line with CID on busy unless I get it?  Do I really
> have to buy the phone in order to get the feature?

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: No, I think you *do* need the phone.
> It has some electronics in it to make the process work. Caller-ID
> is not normally transmittable when your phone line is in use. Others
> here may be able to give you a more technical explanation. You may 
> not need to buy *their* phone, but you do need a special phone.  PAT]

Yes you do need the phone.  Your caller ID phone today recieves a
Class signal to display the Name & Number.  The set they are probably
renting or selling to you is Nortel's Poertouch 350 (Vista 350 in
Canada).  You can view this in Nortel's Hompage
www.nortel.com/english/phones/power350.html

It is an ADSI set.  You can refer to earlier diologue on this
newsgroup that defines ADSI better than I.  Simply put, in a CLASS
call, the Name and number is sent after the first ring, and displayed
on your set (that is why if you pick your phone up too quickly, the
caller is not displayed).  To see a "call waiting" callers name &
number, the beep you hear is slightly diferent than what you hear
today, and it is called a CAS tone.  During that micro second (I could
look up the exact length of time - but I don't have the time) the set
is muted and the data is sent to the ADSI capable set and displayed
for you.  They probably call this Visual Call Waiting - we call it
SCWID (Sequential Call Waiting ID).  It might a be free service, but
you need to subscribe to Call Waiting and Call Display.

This set can also do DSCWID (Sequential Call Waiting with
DISPOSITION).  The telco might call this Visual Call Waiting Deluxe.
Your RBOC may not have this feature.  This is a powefull service.

Here is how it works.  Your on the call with your mom.  Your boss
calls.  You see his name and number, but you know your mom gets mad when
you ask her to hold while you check the other call.  Options pop up on
the six soft keys on the Powertouch 350.  You can press a soft key to
tell your boss "the caller knows you are there and will be with you
shortly.  Please hold".  You can send him to voice mail.  Switch calls
like you would normally do, or have him join in on the original call.
This Call Waiting Deluxe might not be offered yet in your area, and
might not be a free service.

If they do offer a rental option on the set, try it.  The most it will
cost is $7.

Disclaimer - I work for Nortel - I might have a one sided view.


Brent Ellacott
Account Manager
Nortel

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

Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 17:51:08 -0400
From: Sean E. Williams <sew7490@ritvax.isc.rit.edu>
Subject: Re: Call Waiting and Caller ID Together


> Any insights?  Am I right in assuming I don't need the phone but they
> won't provision my line with CID on busy unless I get it?  Do I really
> have to buy the phone in order to get the feature?

Rochester Telephone began offering this service last month in my
exchange (716 461) and in many area exchanges as well.  Along with the
Caller ID/Call waiting service, my "message waiting" lamp now works
with the telco voicemail.  Apparently, anyone who has telco voicemail
and Caller ID now gets the CW/Caller ID for no additional charge.

My call waiting tone has changed.  It's now a higher-pitched tone
followed by a very brief burst of modem data.  My phone doesn't
understand this data, maybe a phone that did would know to mute the
earpiece when the modem data came across.

RochesterTel is offering phones and display units for use with this
service.


Hope this helps,

Sean

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

From: peter@galileo.net (Peter Bartnik)
Subject: Re: Call Waiting and Caller ID Together
Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 04:21:38 GMT
Organization: Galileo.NET 


The phone you have to purchase is a new type of screen phone that uses
a Bellcore spec called ADSI, Analog Display Subscriber Interface, and
the service is called Call Waiting with Disposition. The phone is
probably a Nortel Powertouch 350, a neat little gem "Hello Direct"
sells for $299.

Right now there is not a lot of choice with ADSI phones. Colonial Data
has one called the Telesmart 4000 which also has a card swipe, and
Philips have one based on a 386 chip with a keyboard and all.

Ameritech has an ADSI server in their network that downloads little
scripts to the phone so you can use it for other services like paying
bills, shopping and looking up phone numbers.


Peter Bartnik, Dallas, TX

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

From: damon@umbc.edu (Mr. Damon Kelly)
Subject: Re: Help With Draconian Contract
Date: 12 Jun 1996 01:55:17 -0400
Organization: University of Maryland, Baltimore County


In article <telecom16.259.6@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, <rsingh@rmplc.co.uk>
wrote:

> I am interested in providing voice /data communications,
> Internet and payphone services throughout the country. How can I
> provide these services without getting into legal battles with the new
> owners. 

Well, you can convince Company X to subcontract the services you want
to offer to your company; that's the best way to avoid legal
entanglements.  A second suggestion would involve running your telecom
system through the radio (or microwave?) spectrum.  I don't know how
feasible that is, since I'm a practiced layman who reads very
carefully.

> Is there some different interpretation of the proposed services
> so that it doesnt breach the agreement? 

If there is, a lawyer/solicitor/law agent/whatever from the country
you want to serve could provide the answer.

> What about providing these services for members of a cooperative
> society, or company providing services to private customers?

I think that Paragraph (a) limits you to businesses/groups that want
to build internal networks for themselves.  You'd *still* have to buy
telecom equipment from Company X **unless** the internal network is
radio-based.  If the organization is internationally-based, you *may*
be able to build a independent, private right-of-way out of the
country depending on how the country defines private property.  If the
path out of the country isn't radio-based, you'd probably have to buy
some equipment from Company X.

Interconnecting those private, non-radio-based internal networks could
be dangerous.

> Your help will be greatly appreciated.

Disclaimer:  Free advice from *this* non-lawyer is worth every cent!

Good luck.

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

Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 16:01:32 EDT
From: Hillary Gorman <hillary@netaxs.com>
Subject: Re: Caller-ID *Only* Line  


> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I don't know why this should have been
> allowed to continue 'for a couple of weeks' unless your friends did
> not report it or telco was very incompetent about correcting the problem.

Ok, let me clarify a bit. The friend in question is Avi Freedman,
president of a regional ISP in Philadelphia. Bell Atlantic seems to
enjoy giving him a hard time. They were in fact difficult about giving
him a line at all - when he placed the order, they said "Avi Freedman?
*the* Avi Freedman? You can't have a residential line, you are an ISP!"

Of course, he informed them that since a) he was ordering service to
his residence, and b) he does not do business out of his residence,
they were damn well going to give him a residential line. Then, the
line turned out to be as I originally described it. I am certain that
he reported it about four days after noticing it. I am also certain
that it took at least three days after reporting it for it to be
fixed. Beyond that I am sketchy on dates, sorry.

> 1) Exactly WHAT did they hear when off hook attempting to make a call?
> Was it dead silence or mostly dead silence with an occassional click
> or 'pop' in their ear? Did they hear side-tone or noise like the line
> was alive but just not ever getting around to dial tone?

Well, I heard it myself. It was a live line with no dial tone, I think. It
made that hissing sound.

> 2) What did the *people who called them* during that two weeks get as
> a result?

It would ring four times and then go to voicemail. Even if you picked
up the phone on the first ring, you would simply hear silent hissing,
while the caller would get four rings, and then the voicemail.

> Most important, did telco ever say what was wrong or did one day the
> line just start working correctly, with or without a call to repair
> service to prompt them into getting it fixed?  Let us know.   PAT]

They never offered an explanation, and I know that Avi asked them
several times. They simply finally fixed it. Now, bear in mind, again,
that in MY opinion, Bell Atlantic just doesn't like Avi. I mean, when
I got my residential line installed in MY new apartment, the tech said
to me, "so, what do you do for a living?" and I said "I work for Net
Access" and he said "oh. Avi Freedman, huh? hmmm."

But, anyway, I was just looking for opinions on the technical
implications of what happened to Avi's phone line. I would be pretty
surprised if there were any kind of call forwarding in place on the
line. It was a new line put into an old apartment. I know that the
already in place copper was rotten and had to be replaced at the
initial install.


hrg
-hillary
http://www.hillary.net


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Okay, my thinking is it was probably a
one-way incoming-only line installed in error. You say after four
rings it went to voicemail. There may have been 'immediate call 
forwarding' installed on the line which (I guess) would have sent him
the Caller-ID but forced the call itself to a (apparently very slow
answering) voicemail. Was it *his* voicemail that it went to? Do you
know if he ordered a voicemail option on that line?  I would say that
your mention of 'after four rings it went to voicemail' seems to imply
there was a 'transfer on busy/no answer' option installed on the line
however this would not account for him never being able to speak with
the caller even when he answered immediatly. Anyone else have any
ideas on this?    PAT]
 
------------------------------

From: James Jacobs <jjacobs@worldfax.com>
Subject: Re: Old Phone Bills
Date: 12 Jun 1996 13:07:36 GMT
Organization: AT&T WorldNet Services


> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Thanks for your followup. I know nothing 
> at all, or very little about Boston, so I am glad someone who does
> know the area was able to contribute to this. What about the address
> of 881 Commonwealth Avenue, which is the return address on the envelopes
> during 1932 and much of 1933?

881 Commonwealth Ave. is a six story office building, located west of
Kenmore Square, about four miles from downtown.  The building was
occupied by New England Telephone until the mid-1960's.  It is
surrounded by the campus of Boston University. 881 Commonwealth was
sold to B.U. in the late 1960's and fully renovated. The last time
that I ran across the address (many years ago), it housed B.U.'s
Metropolitan College -- a two year Junior College within the
University.


JIM JACOBS             e-mail           jjacobs@worldfax.com
Tampa, Florida, USA    Voice Mail       +1 813 330 2500


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Thanks for this additional information.
I still have some of those old telephone bills from 1932-36 available
here for anyone who wants one and sends a large self addressed stamped
envelope. If you will include your subsription donation for this year
to the Digest at the time you request one, it will be very much apprec-
iated. Write to TELECOM Digest, PO Box 4621, Skokie, IL 60077.   PAT]

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

Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 17:59:54 -0400
From: Sean E. Williams <sew7490@ritvax.isc.rit.edu>
Subject: Re: Cellular Message Waiting Indicator


> So I was just wondering: what other carriers in the US are offering
> this service? (I know AT&T in Seattle is offering it.)

Sprint Cellular offers the service in the Harrisburg, PA market, where
they are the B-side carrier.  It has been available for about two years,
now.

> If you have the service, how well does it work for you? Do you find
> that it significantly enhances the value of your cellular/voicemail
> service?  For you, does the message waiting indicator negate the need
> for carrying pager notification service and a separate pager? Does
> your carrier charge you a premium over the standard cellular and
> voicemail service charges?

I found the message waiting indicator to be extremely useful.  When in
a class or meeting, I could turn the phone off.  Callers would be
greeted by my voicemail.  Then, at the end of the class or meeting, I
could power up the phone.  Within a few seconds, I'd know if I had
received a message by looking at the indicator.  The fact that the
light would work even if the phone had been off (or had been out of
the service area for a period of time and then returned to the home
system) was helpful.


Good luck,

Sean

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

From: lars@anchor.rns.com (Lars Poulsen)
Subject: Re: BRI Butt Set - Cheap ?
Date: 12 Jun 1996 15:26:54 -0700
Organization: RNS / Meret Communications


In article <telecom16.268.3@massis.lcs.mit.edu> John Schmerold
<JMSCHMER@katy.com> writes:

> Anyone know a source for BRI Butt set?

Our local GTE installers use a set made by Tektronix, and I am buying
one. It isn't cheap, I think I'll be paying USD 3750 (give or take a
couple hundred).

The reason it gets to be so expensive, it that it is includes a data
line protocol analyzer for the D channel. The reason I want one, is
that I am sick of our lines apparently frequently losing or changing
provisioning parameters causing "interesting" malfunctions.  When this
happens, GTE invariably blame the problems on CPE configuration or
implementation.

We have 50 lines of BRI from a 5ESS, provisioned (per our request)
in a mixture of:

 - NI-1 multipoint
 - 5ESS custom  multipoint
 - 5ESS custom point-to-point

All lines are configured for two voice and two data, and a few lines
form hunt groups (pilot number, UCD). All under a CENTREX group, with
two lines going OPX to an adjoining central office.

The reason for this elaborate configuration is that we are a
manufacturer of ISDN CPE: Routers for remote dana network access, and
we need to ensure that our equipment is compatible with the major
variations of service. If GTE had a DMS-100 in our LATA, we would also
have brought in several versions of DMS BRI ! (But they don't.)

Just last week, we were unable to get the OPX to work. After four
hours of GTE's data desk telling us that we were mistaken, everything
was really working, but the CPE must be misprogrammed, we managed to
talk to the switch technician at the local CO, who observed that the
CO-to-CO wire pairs used for our OPX happened to coincide with the
wire pairs referenced on a work order he was currently working on
(unrelated to us). Shortly thereafter, our problem magically went
away.

When WE get screwed like that, you can imagine the amount of trouble
seen by innocent people trying to use ISDN to get to their ISP, and
maybe you will share my admiration for our help desk staff, who
patiently help customer after customer talk their local telco through
troubleshooting !!

If Steven Lichter is still around, I want to thank him for staying
with his customers, although I suspect that trying to maintain some
level of technical standards in GTE may be a losing battle.


Lars Poulsen			Internet E-mail: lars@RNS.COM
RNS / Meret Communications	Phone:        +1-805-562-3158
7402 Hollister Avenue 		Telefax:      +1-805-968-8256
Santa Barbara, CA 93117		Internets: designed and built while you wait

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

From: dave@westmark.com (Dave Levenson)
Subject: Re: Help Needed Building Step-by-Step Switches
Organization: Westmark, Inc.
Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 16:00:00 EDT


Mike G. Zaiontz (mgzaiont@nol.mobil.com) writes:

> Someone in this group may be able to assist me. I am attempting to
> assemble a very small step-by-step switch.

Mike, that sounds like a really fun project!  About 20 years ago, when
a company once known as New Jersey Bell was tearing down a bunch of
step-by-step PBX equipment, a lot of it ended up at Frank Goldiere's
Sons, a scrap metal dealer in Morristown, NJ.  I used to rumage
through the scrap heap, and managed to salvage a connector and a
linefinder.  I never tried to get any frames or shelves, because the
stuff wouldn't fit in my car!  (I did drag home a 10 x 20 crossbar
relay, and it's still sitting here in my basement study!)  (I later
traded the stepper switches for some other telecom stuff, but I saved
the crossbar.)

Perhaps the telco in your area can direct you to their salvage
operations.  Alternatively, there may still be some stepper switches
in service, somewhere in the world, and there may be somebody
providing refurbished spare parts for them.  I think that equipment
was manufactured by Weco, Stromberg-Carlson, and Automatic Electric.
Those companies still exist and may be able to direct you to a source
for their discontinued products.

Good luck, and please keep the rest of us advised on your progress!


Dave Levenson		Internet: dave@westmark.com
Westmark, Inc.		UUCP: uunet!westmark!dave
Stirling, NJ, USA	Voice: 908 647 0900  Fax: 908 647 6857
[The Man in the Mooney]

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

From: dave@westmark.com (Dave Levenson)
Subject: Re: Local Exchange Information Wanted
Organization: Westmark, Inc.
Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 03:15:22 GMT


cannet.com@cannet.cannet.com writes:

> In which publication is it identified which Local exchanges an call
> other local exchanges?  This seems like some very simple information
> that is very hard to get. I am always pointed to the front of the
> phone books.  Does there exist a entire list of local calling areas by
> Area-code exchange?  Does the FCC require the Local telephone to
> identify this information?  How does one get it?

Several companies are in the business of compiling and distributing
tariffs and other public information.  For a price, they'll deliver
the V&H co-ordinates, local calling definitions, rates, equipment
type, and other facts for every central office in the North American
Numbering Plan.  They'll deliver it on line, on diskettes, CD-ROM, or
magnetic tape, and they'll update it weekly, monthly, quarterly, or
once-only, depending upon what it's worth to you.

CCMI/McGraw Hill is one such company.  Teletech is another.  If I were
at the office, rather than at home, I'd have telephone numbers for
these firms.  The information is available, but not inexpensive.


Dave Levenson		Internet: dave@westmark.com
Westmark, Inc.		UUCP: uunet!westmark!dave
Stirling, NJ, USA	Voice: 908 647 0900  Fax: 908 647 6857
[The Man in the Mooney]

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
public service systems and networks including Compuserve and America
On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. 

Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:

                 * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu *

The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
Townson of Skokie, Illinois USA. You can reach us by postal mail, fax 
or phone at:
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  ** Article submission address: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu

Our archives are located at mirror.lcs.mit.edu and are available by using
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*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from the              *
* International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in Geneva, Switzerland    * 
* under the aegis of its Telecom Information Exchange Services (TIES)   * 
* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
* ing views of the ITU.                                                 *
*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
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All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
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should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #284
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Thu Jun 13 14:04:19 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id OAA27795; Thu, 13 Jun 1996 14:04:19 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Thu, 13 Jun 1996 14:04:19 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606131804.OAA27795@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #285

TELECOM Digest     Thu, 13 Jun 96 14:04:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 285

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    TBTF Bulletin: Communications Decency Act Overturned (Monty Solomon)
    Opposition: FRC on CDA Decision (Monty Solomon)
    Re: Late Bulletin! Communications Decency Act Overturned (Mike P. Storke)
    Re: Late Bulletin! Communications Decency Act Overturned (Chas McGuinness)
    Sneaky Surfwatch Advertisement in News Bulletin (Eric Florack)
    LATA Boundaries will be Replaced by PSAs (tmitariffs@aol.com)
    Access All Areas II Conference Update (Simon Gardner)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 22:04:52 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.COM>
Subject: TBTF Bulletin: Communications Decency Act Overturned
Reply-To: monty@roscom.COM


Forwarded to the Digest FYI:

  Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 14:26:02 -0500
  From: dawson@atria.com (Keith Dawson)
  Subject: TBTF Bulletin: Communications Decency Act overturned

I received this note on David Bennahum's Community Memory mailing
list.  It's history in the making. -- KDawson

- - - - - - -

Wednesday morning at 9:00 a.m. EST a three-judge panel in Philadelphia
ruled that the Communications Decency Act violates the principles of
the First and Fifth Amendments to the Constitution of the United
States, and overturned the law.  A full text of the decision is
available at:

http://www.vtw.org/speech/decision.html

It is a remarkable document [~250K] which describes the origins of the
Internet, and the technology which makes the Internet possible, in
plain, clear English.  The word cyberspace is used extensively.  The
decision then goes on to conclude that the CDA is unconstitutional in
the United States.  What follows is an excerpt of the conclusion,
written by Judge Dalzell:

"Cutting through the acronyms and argot that littered the hearing
testimony, the Internet may fairly be regarded as a never-ending
worldwide conversation.  The Government may not, through the CDA,
interrupt that conversation.  As the most participatory form of mass
speech yet developed, the Internet deserves the highest protection
from governmental intrusion.

True it is that many find some of the speech on the Internet to be
offensive, and amid the din of cyberspace many hear discordant voices
that they regard as indecent.  The absence of governmental regulation
of Internet content has unquestionably produced a kind of chaos, but
as one of plaintiffs' experts put it with such resonance at the
hearing:

               What achieved success was the very
               chaos that the Internet is.  The
               strength of the Internet is that
               chaos.

Just as the strength of the Internet is chaos, so the strength of our
liberty depends upon the chaos and cacophony of the unfettered speech
the First Amendment protects.

For these reasons, I without hesitation hold that the CDA is
unconstitutional on its face.

                IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
             FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA"

       ______________________________________________________

Keith Dawson   dawson@world.std.com   dawson@atria.com

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

Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 22:06:27 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.COM>
Subject: Opposition: FRC on CDA Decision
Reply-To: monty@roscom.COM


Forwarded to the Digest FYI:

  Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 13:11:45 -0700
  From: telstar@wired.com (--Todd Lappin-->)
  Subject: OPPOSITION: FRC on CDA Decision


CDA DISASTER NETWORK
June 12, 1996

What do the censors at the Family Research Council have to say about
today's CDA decision?

They think it's "It is an arrogant decision which flies in the face of the
Supreme Court and our society."

Read on for all the whining details!

Work the network!

--Todd Lappin-->
Section Editor
WIRED Magazine

===========================================

  Date: Wed, 12 Jun 96 15:29 EDT
  Sender: www-user@townhall.com
  To: telstar@wired.com
  From: frc@townhall.com
  Reply-to: frc@sojourn.com

This Press Release was sent out minutes ago.  For additional information
about The Family Research Council please visit our Web Site at:

http://www.frc.org

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: June 12, 1996
CONTACT: Kristin Hansen, (202) 393-2100

ARROGANT DECISION CONTRADICTS PRIOR CASES ON PORNOGRAPHY DISTRIBUTION
TO MINORS, FRC SAYS

FRC Director of Legal Studies Cathy Cleaver says decision on the
Communications Decency Act not a pro-family defeat

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- "What else should we expect from an
ACLU-hand-picked judge than a sweeping, radical decision allowing
adults to knowingly send and display pornography to minors on the
Internet?" Director of Legal Studies Cathy Cleaver said Wednesday.
"Nevertheless, this is not an ultimate defeat for American families
and children.  No matter where this case goes next - either to the
full Eastern District Court or the Supreme Court - the Department of
Justice will have a better opportunity to defend the constitutionality
of this statute."

Cleaver made her remarks as the Federal District Court for the Eastern
District of Pennsylvania released their decision Wednesday on the ACLU
v. Reno case involving the regulation of pornography distribution to
minors on the Internet.  Family Research Council presented a "friend
of the court" brief defending the cyberporn provisions of the
Communications Decency Act.  The decision, written by Dolores K.
Sloviter, Chief Judge of the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals and Carter
appointee, contradicts previous Supreme Court decisions on the
distribution of indecent material through the media.

"It is an arrogant decision which flies in the face of the Supreme
Court and our society," Cleaver said. "We have long embraced the
principle that those who peddle harmful material have the obligation
to keep the material from children.  Outside cyberspace, laws restrain
people from displaying sexually explicit images in public places and
from selling porn magazines to children.  So, on the Internet, the
burden of protecting children from exploitation should not rest solely
on the parents."

In her decision, Judge Sloviter maintains that it is "either
technologically impossible or economically prohibitive" for
pornographers to comply with the regulations. However, Cleaver said
that "this decision reflects the Court's unwillingness to consider
proposed regulations by dismissing them as 'burdensome.'  There are
constitutional ways to protect children from cyberporn but not
restrict the freedom of speech of the pornographers or the adults."

Cleaver continued, "Cyberspace is a work in progress. We should not
squander the opportunity to examine and appreciate a world where
pornography knows no bounds. Failure to enact strong laws is a
concession that the information superhighway should belong to
pornographers.  It would be like leaving a loaded gun in a
playground."

FOR INFORMATION OR INTERVIEWS, CONTACT THE FRC MEDIA OFFICE.

- END -

+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+
This transmission was brought to you by....

        THE CDA DISASTER NETWORK

The CDA Disaster Network is a moderated distribution list providing
up-to-the-minute bulletins and background on efforts to overturn the
Communications Decency Act.  To subscribe, send email to
<majordomo@wired.com> with "subscribe cda-bulletin" in the message body.

WARNING: This is not a test!            WARNING: This is not a drill!
+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+

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

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: One thing which has left me very
cynical about the federal judiciary in the United States has been  
how, as the FRC phrases it, the 'ACLU hand-picked judges' rule on
cases involving the ACLU. A large number of federal judges are members
of the ACLU, yet it has never occured to them they should recuse
themselves -- or step away from a case -- when it involves the ACLU.
If you were involved in a trial, would you want the judge to be a
member of the plaintiff group or a member of the defendant group?
I suspect you would want the judge to be independent of either group.
How can you in fairness belong to a group and support the agenda and
beliefs of that group and then rule *fairly* in a court case which
involves that group?  I should imagine the Supreme Court will overturn
this decision when it reaches that level as it surely will. 

Unfortunatly, the American Civil Liberties Union is an extremely
weathly, extremely powerful organization with a lot of unwarranted
influence which allows them to pretty much ride roughshod where the
federal courts are concerned. Most organizations coming up against
them have the same chance of winning as a snowflake has of surviving
in July. I think I may have said here a couple months ago that when the 
judicial panel was announced it was pretty clear which way it would go
the rest would just be formalities to make things look fair.   PAT] 

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

From: storkus@heather.greatbasin.com (Mike P. Storke)
Subject: Re: Late Bulletin! Communications Decency Act Overturned
Date: 13 Jun 1996 09:05:27 GMT
Organization: Great Basin Public Access UNIX, Reno, NV


In article <telecom16.284.1@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, VANTEK COMMUNICATIONS
<vantek@northcoast.com> wrote:

> Philadelphia, PA, June 12, 1996 (DLD DIGEST) -- Thanks in large part
> to testimony concerning the effectiveness of SurfWatch Software Inc.'s
> Internet filtering and parental control software, a federal court in
> Philadelphia today ruled that the Communications Decency Act, signed
> into law on February 8, is an unconstitutional infringement of freedom
> of speech over the Internet.

<snip>

  Finally!!  Its nice to see the good guys winning for a change!

  Now, if they could just do the same with the ECPA (Electronic
Communications Privacy Act -- the law that made 800 MHz scanners without
cellular blocking illegal, among other things) ...


Mike P. Storke N7MSD  Snailmail: 2308 Paradise Dr. #134 *Windoze: NEVER!!
Inet: storkus@heather.greatbasin.com     Reno, NV 89512 *Linux FOREVER!!!


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: But of course! Why shouldn't we have
the unfettered right to spy on our neighbors and snoop on their phone
calls if we want to?  You don't mind it when people unkown to you
listen in on your calls do you?    PAT]

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

Date: Thu, 13 Jun 1996 09:55:39 -0400
From: Charles McGuinness <jyacc!charles@uunet.uu.net>
Subject: Re: Late Bulletin! Communications Decency Act Overturned


> Philadelphia, PA, June 12, 1996 (DLD DIGEST) -- Thanks in large part
> to testimony concerning the effectiveness of SurfWatch Software Inc.'s
> Internet filtering and parental control software, a federal court in
> Philadelphia today ruled that the Communications Decency Act, signed
> into law on February 8, is an unconstitutional infringement of freedom
> of speech over the Internet.

Odd, I don't remember any of the press coverate mentioning SurfWatch.
I did read things like the law being "profoundly repugnant" and "the
Internet deserves the highest protection from governmental intrusion";
perhaps I missed the part where they said they were overturning the
law and granting an injunction based upon their giving Surfwatch a
good review.  ;-)

(By the way, if the Communications Decency Act is profoundly repugnant,
does that make it illegal under itself?)

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

Date: Thu, 13 Jun 1996 08:09:30 PDT
From: Eric_Florack@mc.xerox.com (Florack,Eric)
Subject: Sneaky Surfwatch Advertisement in News Bulletin


On  Wed, 12 Jun 1996 11:28:27 -0700  vantek@northcoast.com posted:

> Philadelphia, PA, June 12, 1996 (DLD DIGEST) -- Thanks in large part
> to testimony concerning the effectiveness of SurfWatch Software Inc.'s
> Internet filtering and parental control software, a federal court in
> Philadelphia today ruled that the Communications Decency Act, signed
> into law on February 8, is an unconstitutional infringement of freedom
> of speech over the Internet.

> Specifically, the ruling upheld a challenge of the act by the
> Citizens' Internet Empowerment Coalition (CIEC), who based their case
> largely on the availability of effective Internet filtering software
> such as SurfWatch.

And here, we clearly see the results of judges making rulings on
technology they have no hope whatsoever of understanding. If the
judges in question did in fact understand the technology, they would
know full well that SurfWatch is incapable of 'filtering' a goodly
amount of the items that people who buy it are concerned about.

> The intent of the Communications Decency Act (CDA) was to prevent
> minors from inadvertently stumbling upon `indecent' or `patently
> offensive' material in the normal course of using the Internet and
> World Wide Web.

Patently incorrect. 'Inadvertently stumbling' was not the issue! Their
ability to access it AT ALL, was the issue. Are we concerned about
minors inadvertently stumbling across' Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms,
etc.? Or are we concerned that they might have ANY access to it, by
their intent /or/ by accident?  Same thing should apply to porn. Funny
thing, though, how that concern disappears when SurfWatch income is at
stake, huh?

> `We are extremely gratified that the voices of reason have prevailed
> in this case,' said Ann Duvall, president of SurfWatch Software, Inc.,
> and one of the expert witnesses called to testify at the trial.

Ah. No commercial influence here, huh?  Consider what happens to
SurfWatch, if the Judges knew what we all know: That the product is
insufficient for the task. SurfWatch ceases to exist. Could this be
their motivation, as opposed to the 'freedom of speech' issue? Nah,
that'd be just too cynical of me, huh?

If it's just me being cynical, why is the rest of their release taken
up with what amounts to an unpaid advertisement for SurfWatch?

Pat: We've corresponded for a long time, so you understand the respect
I have for you and for this NG. At the same time, in this case, you'll
pardon me if I'm totally non-plussed.


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I thought it was pretty clever of them
myself. Picture future advertising from the company: a statement on
the box saying 'this software has been approved by the United States
Federal Courts for use by parents who don't want their children getting
molested or kidnapped by 'new friends' they meet online or correspond 
with in those newsgroups we all know are very naughty.' Yes, thanks
to SurfWatch our children are safe once again. And God bless the ACLU
and the federal judges for saving the rest of us from ourselves while
I am thinking about it. 

And you say you are non-plussed? I admit, it was sort of a cruel way
to bring the Good News to the net, and if I had not been feeling sort
of impish I would have tossed the item in the bit bucket and used some
other article in its place. But instead like Mr. Pulitzer, I said to 
myself the TD readers will believe what I tell them to believe, so
I'll run this press release and let them meditate on that for a day or
so. Oh ... you don't share my sick sense of humor?  <g>    PAT]
 
------------------------------

From: tmitariffs@aol.com (TMITARIFFS)
Subject: LATA Boundaries Will be Replaced by PSAs
Date: 13 Jun 1996 01:07:20 -0400
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Reply-To: tmitariffs@aol.com (TMITARIFFS)


Will LATA Boundaries become an anachronism with the new Telecom Act?

I think so.  Within a year, the competive forces brought about by
Bell/s crossing of the Rubicon (LATAs), will create initial havoc for
the IXCs in the DS0/DSI marketplace, AT&T and the others are pricing
INTERLATA service from POP to POP.  Bell will enter this marketplace
as as Exchange to Exchange, as a mere extension of what they have
always provided.

The most plausible marketing response by the IXCs will be be either to
mabve backe to a rate center to rate center environemnt, (of course, that
won't work ... they moved out of that structure because of high access leg
costs).  More likely they will move to "POP Serving Areas" or PSAs.

PSAs will overtake LATA Boundaries and render them relics of a bygone era.

Now a bolder prediction: Three years hence: Once the Local Dial Tone
Wars have subsided, bundling of Internet, Local, LD, Cellular and
cable will be demanded by consumers.  In such an environement, one has
to believe that that PSAs will ultimately be synonomous with Local
Calling Areas.

He who has the most POPs wins.

Any thoughts would be appreciated.  I will summarize in a week or so.

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

From: Simon Gardner <info@access.org.uk>
Subject: Access All Areas II Conference Update
Date: Thu, 13 Jun 1996 03:07:01 +0100
Organization: Access All Areas
Reply-To: info@access.org.uk


                           ACCESS ALL AREAS II
                 Computer Security & Hacking Conference
                          6th - 7th July, 1996
                          (Saturday &  Sunday)
                               London, UK

                   Conference Update v1.04  (12/06/96)


   -----------------------WHAT-IT-IS-----------------------------

Following the success of last years event, Access All Areas II - Computer
Security and Hacking Conference, is to be held in London later this year.

It is aimed at computer hackers, phone phreaks, computer security
professionals, cyberpunks, law enforcement officials, net surfers,
programmers, and the computer underground.

This will be a conference for people that are interested in various
aspects of computer culture.  Respected industry professionals, legal
experts and computer hackers will be presenting talks about such subjects
as illegitimate computer access, telephone fraud, legal aspects and much,
much more.

It will be a chance for all sides of the computer world to get together, 
discuss major issues, learn new tricks, educate others and meet "The
Enemy".


        ----------------------WHERE-IT-IS--------------------------

Access All Areas II is to be held during the first weekend of July 1996 at
a venue in central London.

Due to circumstances beyond our control we have had to change the
location of the conference.  The new venue will be announced closer to
date of the event on the Access All Areas web page, mailing lists, and
as a pre-recorded message on the information hotline.


       -----------------------WHAT-WILL-HAPPEN----------------------

A large lecture theatre will be used for talks by computer security
professionals, legal experts and hackers alike.  The topics under
discussion will include computer hacking, phone phreaking, computer
fraud, telephone fraud, encryption technology, privacy, big brother
and the secret services, biometrics, cellular telephones, pagers,
magstrips, smart card technology, UNIX security risks, legal aspects
and much, much more.

Technical workshops on several of the topics listed above, will also be
running throughout the conference.

An Internet link, being provided for the duration of the conference by
Easynet, will be connected to a Local Area Network allowing World Wide
Web access, Internet Relay Chat sessions, and Cu-See-Me video
conferences to take place.  A limited number of connections will also
be provided so that conference delegates can connect laptop computers
to the LAN.

A video projector will be showing various films, documentaries and other
unique hacker related footage.

A full range of refreshments will be available at the event.


      -------------------------SPEAKERS-------------------------

This is a provisional list of speakers for Access All Areas II.
Additional guests will be announced as they are confirmed.

    o  Bryan Clough is the author of Approaching Zero: Data Crime and the
       Computer Underworld.  Approaching Zero included two incidents of 
       credit card fraud which excited a disproportionate amount of 
       interest and led to his second book Cheating at Cards - Plastic 
       Fraud: Sharp Practices and Naive systems.  He will be speaking 
       about Plastic Fraud and More Secure Payment Systems.

    o  Peter Cox is the Managing Director of the European operation of
       Border Network Technologies, an industry leader in Firewall
       technology.  Peter is an experienced TCP/IP developer and
       consultant who has spent the last two years focused on all
       aspects of Internet Firewalls from the emergence of the first
       commercial products to recent developments, including IPsec based
       encryption mechanisms.

    o  Simon Davies is one of the world's leading experts on privacy and
       technology.  In 1990 he founded the international watchdog
       organization Privacy International, and since then has led
       campaigns across the world on a vast range of surveillance issues.
       He is a Visiting Law Fellow in the University of Essex and the
       University of Greenwich, and is Senior Research Associate in
       Chicago's John Marshall Law School.  He now lives in London with
       his computer.

    o  Stephen Kapp is a former virus writer and member of the British
       virus group ARCV.  He is now a student and computer programmer
       interested in the virus exchange world, cryptography and general
       computer security related topics.  Stephen is the author of
       RSAEuro - a cryptographic toolkit.

    o  Michael McCormack is a freelance journalist who began covering
       hacking and Internet issues while working for the Edinburgh Evening
       News.  His stories have included Russian Mafia money laundering in
       Edinburgh, FBI investigation of Scottish university computers and
       the exposure of two large software piracy rings.  He is now a
       contributing editor to .Net magazine and Computer Fraud and
       Security Bulletin and covers technology issues for most of the
       British national papers.

    o  Alec Muffett is the European Internet Services Manager for a
       large American UNIX/Internet company.  He writes and lectures
       about Internet security and is the author of several popular
       freeware network security auditing tools.  He will be describing,
       analysing and discussing "ITOD" (Internet Tool Of Doom), a new
       network breaking tool.

    o  Dan O'Brien hacks the media.  His work includes a one man show
       about his 80's hacking experiences which transferred to the West
       End, writing for Wired, and appearences on TV and Radio as "some
       sort of expert".  He also presents "Guerrilla TV", the BBC 2 show
       about camcorder activism.  He currently edits Need To Know, the
       British geekzine.  He will talk a lot of theory, but promises to
       include code listings!

    o  Robert Schifreen was arrested in 1984 and charged with a number of
       hacking offences.  His famous Prestel hack resulted in him and his
       colleague Steve Gold gaining system-manager access to the entire
       Prestel network and to accounts including that of Prince Philip.
       Robert is now the editor and publisher of The Computer Security
       Encyclopaedia, and runs a free BBS for professional IT security
       personnel.

    o  Dr Alan Solomon is a virus technology expert and founder of S&S
       International.

    o  The Dark Tangent is the organiser of Def Con, the US hacker
       convention that is held annually in the unreal world of Las Vegas,
       Nevada.  He also operates the Def Con voice bridge which is
       frequented by phreaks and Feds alike!

    o  Vamprella hales from sunny California and will be speaking
       extensively about the recent Tower Records hack in her talk
       entitled "Guilty on Both Counts".


       -------------------------SPECIAL-EVENTS------------------------

A number of special events are planned for the duration of the conference.

    o  HACK THE BORDERWARE FIREWALL SERVER COMPETITION

       The BorderWare Firewall Server(tm) is the complete Internet gateway
       and security system in one.  It prevents access by unauthorized
       users to a trusted internal network while giving internal users the
       benefits of full access to the Internet.

       Border Network Technologies Europe will be bringing along their
       BorderWare Firewall Server and challenge anyone to try and break
       through during the conference.

       A generous prize will be on offer for any successful attack.

       The Firewall will be connected to the local network, protecting a
       second network and UNIX system running SMTP and the usual network
       services (FTP, Telnet, etc).  An attack will be judged successful
       if the Firewall can be penetrated and a file can be retrieved from
       the internal UNIX system.

       Full rules will be available at the conference.


    ---------------------------COST--------------------------

The price of admission will be 25.00 UKP cash only per person at the door 
and will include a door pass and conference programme.


    -------------------------REGISTRATION---------------------

Registration will take place at the door on the morning of Saturday 6th
July from 11:00am.  The Conference will commence at 12:00 noon.  Lectures
and workshops will run until late Saturday night and will continue on
Sunday 7th July from 12:00 noon until 6:00pm.

Pre-registration is not available.


    -------------------------ACCOMMODATION---------------------

A limited amount of accommodation is available for the duration of the
conference in University Halls of Residence.  All prices quoted are per
person, per night and include a Continental breakfast.

        Finsbury Hall           : 19.50 UKP
        Walter Sickert Hall     : 30.00 UKP

All bookings must be made directly with the University.  They accept
payment by cash, cheque and credit card.

To make a booking call the relevant number...

        Finsbury Hall           : +44 (0)171 477 8811
        Walter Sickert Hall     : +44 (0)171 477 8822


    -------------------------MORE-INFORMATION------------------------

More detailed information about the event, including a map of the area, is
available on the Access All Areas web page...

        http://www.access.org.uk

Two mailing lists have also been set up for conference announcements and
general discussion about Access All Areas II.  To join either of the lists
visit the Access All Areas web page and use the automated form, or send an
email to majordomo@access.org.uk with the following in the body of the
message...

        subscribe  aaa-announce  your.name@your.domain.com
or...
        subscribe  aaa-list  your.name@your.domain.com


If you have any further questions about Access All Areas II, please
contact one of the following...

        Email   : info@access.org.uk
        Web     : http://www.access.org.uk

        Tel     : +44 (0)973  500 202
        Fax     : +44 (0)1428 727 100

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
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Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
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The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
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Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
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All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
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------------------------------

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #285
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Thu Jun 13 16:07:29 1996
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From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
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Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #286

TELECOM Digest     Thu, 13 Jun 96 16:07:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 286

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    BellSouth Foundation Funds Creative Uses of Technology (Mike King)
    Law Enforcement RF Channels (John W. Shaver)
    France Telecom Introduces Voice Mail For Residential Users (Eric Tholome)
    Power Lines For Telecommunication (Annette Gronqvist)
    Re: Questions About Ringing (Mark J. Cuccia)
    Re: Arrogant Internet Providers (Ross Oliver)
    Re: Arrogant Internet Providers (Wm. Randolph U. Franklin)
    Cellular vs. PCS Mix-up (John Stahl)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Mike King <mk@wco.com>
Subject: BellSouth Foundation Funds Creative Uses of Technology
Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 18:53:54 PDT


Forwarded to the Digest FYI:

 Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 15:14:27 -0400
 From: BellSouth <press@www.bellsouth.com>
 Subject: BELLSOUTH FOUNDATION FUNDS CREATIVE USES OF TECHNOLOGY
 Reply-To: press@www.bellsouth.com

BELLSOUTH FOUNDATION FUNDS CREATIVE USES OF TECHNOLOGY TO IMPROVE
LEARNING IN SOUTHEAST REGION'S SCHOOLS

ATLANTA-The BellSouth Foundation has awarded $2 million to 21
community organizations, school districts, colleges, universities and
other organizations throughout the Southeast.

The grants are the first by the Foundation that place a greater
emphasis on school reform, local autonomy, accountability and creative
uses of technology in the schools of the region.

"The new awards clearly reflect that commitment, with nearly a third
of the grants designed to have a technology connections impact," said
BellSouth Foundation Executive Director Leslie Graitcer.  "Others will
impact on community involvement in schools, K-12 system reform, school
readiness and family involvement, and teacher and administrator skill
building."

Among the nation's 25 largest corporate foundations, the BellSouth
Foundation devotes nearly all of its grants to educational improvement
in BellSouth's nine-state southeast region.

The grants cover a range of innovative educational initiatives,
including linking Mississippi, Tennessee and Alabama middle schools to
the vast resources of the Smithsonian and using new music technologies
and the Internet as a powerful touchstone to enhance learning in basic
disciplines in Memphis.

After contributing nearly a quarter billion dollars to meet the needs
of schools in the nation's most educationally challenged region over
the past five years, BellSouth and its foundation in March announced
that their educational contributions would become more focused,
innovative, technological, and results-oriented.

The new emphasis on results and accountability were major themes last
March at the Education Summit. BellSouth Chairman John Clendenin
served on the planning committee of the Summit, which was convened by
the nation's governors and top corporate CEOs in Palisades, NY, in
March to focus on the need for high academic standards for schools
along with productive uses of technology to enhance learning.

Graitcer cited a sampling of other new BellSouth Foundation grants
which use technology to:

* Train a cadre of teacher leaders in 13 South Carolina school
districts on the effectiveness of technology to reach students
with diverse learning needs.

* Link Owensboro, Kentucky, schools and social service agencies
through a computer network and provide computer training to participants.

* Create a model for technology training and implementation
in rural school districts through Florida's Kennedy Space Center's
Astronauts Memorial Foundation.

* Improve managerial and leadership skills of administrators
through statewide seminars using the North Carolina Information
Highway.

Other grants aim to create school and community environments which
improve learning and professionally develop educators and family
members:

* Expanding the Families and Schools Together (FAST) program,
which promotes great parent involvement in inner city education,
to two additional Knoxville, Tennessee, schools.

* Train Florida business and community leaders to be champions
of world class education in their communities by expanding the
Florida Chamber of Commerce's campaign.

* Create a Parent Resource Library and Child Development Center
to promote new linkages for family involvement in education through
Strong Families, Inc., a new organization in Hattiesburg, Mississippi 
-- the product of an earlier BellSouth Foundation grant.

* Involve southeast students on the adequacy and relevancy of
their education through a national project by the Public Agenda
Foundation.

* Improve pre-school tutoring and enrichment programs in Long
Beach, NC, to prepare students and their parents for schools success.
Restructure the school day, curriculum, and school calendar
in three Selma, Alabama, high schools and provide related staff
development.

* Support the Southeast Teacher Advancement Project which encourages
rigorous performance standards and a certification process for
teachers akin to medicine and law.

BellSouth is a $17.9 million communications services company.
It provides telecommunications, wireless communications, directory
advertising and publishing, and information services to more than
25 million customers in 17 countries worldwide. 

Internet users: For more information about BellSouth Corp. visit
the BellSouth Webpage http://www.bellsouth.com


For Information Contact:
Leslie Graitcer, BellSouth Foundation
(404)249-2429

John Schneidawind, BellSouth Corp.
(202)463-4183


                              ------------ 
 
Mike King   *   Oakland, CA, USA   *   mk@wco.com

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

From: Shaver, John W. <shaverj@huachuca-emh16.army.mil>
Subject: Law Enforcement RF Channels
Date: Thu, 13 Jun 96 08:03:00 PDT


Pat,

You sounded as though you might be interested in some additional data
on the law enforcement activities.  Mobile communications are about to
take a couple of leaps which will enhance capability and provide more
security in the transmissions.  Currently some departments use
cellular phones to avoid presenting critical information over the
existing communications nets.

Currently there are three bands in use, VHF, UHF, and 800MHZ.  The VHF
(approximately 150 Mhz) provides the best geographic coverage in our
part of the world.  Unfortunately most of those channels are in use.
VHF has some ability to be difracted and can cover areas which are not
quite line-of-sight.  The UHF and 800 MHZ get progressively more
line-of-sight and their ability to go over mountains etc is
diminished.  Actually there were 4 bands. The early systems used the
range from about 35 MHZ to just under Channel 2.  Many of those
systems still are used.  Those frequencies are more given to the
sunrise and sunset phenomina of "skip" which permitted departments to
talk across the country, but not to their own locality.  Skip occurs
in the shortwave bands and in the Citizens Radio Band. Hams delight in
using the skip to go distances which are several thousand miles to
around the world.  Citizens Band operators are prohibited from using
"skip" although I can't imagine anyone policing that currently.

Those of you who enjoy scanning the law enforcement bands will be
happy to learn that departments are gradually converting to trunked
systems where individual channels are not assigned, but the next
frequency availble in a pool is chosen for you when you push-to-talk.
At that same time many departments are buying systems which are
digital rather than analog in nature.  Even if one should buy a
receiver with digital capability the departments are also going to
scrambing techniques which require advance knowledge of the decription
data.

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

From: tholome@francenet.fr (Eric Tholome)
Subject: France Telecom Introduces Voice Mail For Residential Users
Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 22:18:02 +0200


France Telecom has just (3rd of June, I believe) introduced voice mail
for residential users under the name "Top message". I don't have all
the details yet, but here is what the saleswoman told me on the phone:

For 22FF (US$4.40) per month, you get a voicemail box which will take
your calls on busy and no answer (after five rings).

Retrieving messages is free from home, standard call rate from anywhere
else.

For an additional 5FF (US$1.00) per month, the voice mail system will
call you at predefined times to notify you of new messages. No real
notification system is available (what do BT and American Telcos offer
for notification?  Modified dial tone? Message waiting light?)

Voice mail can be turned on and off.

I don't know how well it interacts with other features such as Call
Waiting (cf Call Minder and Call Minder 2 in the UK).

Minimum subscription time: two months (as opposed to the usual six
months for other FT features). This is supposed to encourage you to
subscribe to it when you leave for summer vacation for instance. But
no free trial, as far as I know.

I was quite surprised to hear that they were introducing voice mail.
So far, all we've got here is call waiting, call forwarding (basic)
and three way calling (and we've had them for years). Voice mail
almost seems like a quantum leap. FT is also introducing quite a few
plans similar to MCI's Friends and Family. Maybe they are indeed
getting ready for competition. Or maybe they've realised that Voice
mail is a killer service. Well, kinda. It is a killer for mobile
users, who do not have the option to hook up an answering machine to
their mobile phone, but I'm not too sure how popular voice mail can be
for residential users. Anybody has some figures for this?

Anyway, the idea of having a voice mail system taking my calls while
I'm on the phone sounds nice to me, but I don't think I'll give up my
answering machine so easily, at least not until they offer a decent
notification system and cut down the monthly fee.


Eric Tholome                             private account
23, avenue du Centre                tholome@francenet.fr
78180 Montigny le Bretonneux    phone: +33 1 30 48 06 47
                 France    fax: same number, call first!

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

From: gronqan1@tkk.tele.fi (Annette Gronqvist)
Subject: Power Lines For Telecommunication
Date: 13 Jun 1996 12:46:46 GMT
Organization: Telecom Finland News Service


I'm interested in getting information on the possiblity to
provide telecommunication services through electric power lines.

Does anyone know more about this?


Annette.Gronqvist@tkk.tele.fi


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: For a ling time -- many years -- the
Chicago Transit Authority operated a communications system between 
personnel operating the subway trains and the 'controllers' at
various locations using the electrical current on the 'third rail',
the power supply which moves the trains. I think the transmission 
sounded terrible. There were also trackside telephones at intervals
of every half mile or so for use by maintainence employees which 
were linked to each other and the central switchboard at CTA offices
via the third rail. The phones at the fare collection booths were
extensions from the main switchboard downtown also but they were 
connected using regular pairs. Every time I had occassion to hear
a transmission eitehr on the overhead speaker in the train or on a
speaker on the platform while waiting for a train I noticed how 
noisy and crude it sounded. I guess technology has improved somewhat
but the CTA no longer uses this method. Everything they do now is 
on UHF radio at 470 megs.  PAT]

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

Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 17:43:35 -0700
From: Mark J. Cuccia <mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu>
Subject: Re: Questions About Ringing


Reading Pat's comments to Apollo Shyong's post brought to mind a few
things:

For the most part in the US and Canada, ringing is done in a six-second
cycle. The most common ringing pattern used has been two-seconds on and
four-seconds off. Some PBX systems use a different cycle, and the actual
power ringing over the loop of the called party is *not* synchronized with
the 'indication' signal the calling party hears. Also, many PBX systems
(and many public telco switch-based 'multi-line variety packages' and
Centrex systems use two different patterns of power ringing to
differentiate an 'outside call' (single 'long' rings) from an 'inside' or
'group' call (double short rings).

Ringing patterns within a single six-second cycle used over the years on
party lines, and now today on CLASS or distinctive ringing multi-number
services are:

(single 'long' rings)
2.0 sec ON, 4.0 sec off

(double 'short' rings)
1.0 sec ON, 1.0 sec off, 1.0 sec ON, 3.0 sec off

(two 'short' rings, one 'long' ring)
0.5 sec ON, 0.5 sec off, 0.5 sec ON, 0.5 sec off, 1.5 sec ON, 2.5 sec off

(one 'long' ring, two 'short' rings)
1.5 sec ON, 0.5 sec off, 0.5 sec ON, 0.5 sec off, 0.5 sec ON, 2.5 sec off

('long-short-long' rings)
1.5 sec ON, 0.5 sec off, 0.5 sec ON, 0.5 sec off, 1,5 sec ON, 1.5 sec off

The above is *not* intended to be a complete list of possible ringing
patterns used in North America. There have been other 'coded' ringing
patterns used over the decades. Different manufacturers of central
office power equipment, or different operating companies have all done
things in various ways.

Ringing is an Alternating Current (AC), usually in the range of 90 to
110 Volts. "Bell System" areas (WECO manufactured switches) used 20 Hz
(cps) AC for power ringing. Many 'independent' areas (non-WECO
equipment, such as AE, Kellogg, Stromberg, etc) have used 'tuned'
ringing, with various frequencies for selecting the proper called
party on a multi-party line. Their various frequencies have been in
the range of 16 Hz to 66 Hz. The individual ringers were 'tuned' to
their particular frequency and didn't clang the bell if an incoming
call was for another party on the line.

Bell and the independents did 'divide' a party-line in two, with half
of the parties on the 'tip-to-ground' side and the other half on the
'ring-to-ground' side. All phones on a particular side of the party
line had to be wired a certain way so that their phone would respond
to ringing if any party on their side of the line were being called,
but would be silent if a call was for a party on the 'other' side of
the line.

Another way that Bell companies used to 'divide' a party line was to
'bias' the ringer to either positive or negative. This wasn't used
everywhere, but it could give full selective ringing on a four-party
line, where *only* the called party's phone would ring. 'Biased'
ringing (and tip/ring differentiation) on an eight-party line would
give a more distinct selectivity of the particular called party. At
any incoming call, only *two* of the parties' phones would ring --
only the two on the same tip/ring side *and* having the same *ringer
bias*. Any pair would know which party was being called by needing
only *two* of the above 'coded' ringing patterns, instead of four.

One thing that *IRKS* me is how "Hollywood" handles ringing the called
phone and ringing indication to the calling party, when a telephone
call is used in fiction (TV, Radio, Motion Pictures). They are *not*
always consistant with the above patterns. Sometimes, they have used
North American ringing patterns when the TV/Radio program or movie
takes place in Europe, which has its own distinct ringing patterns.
But for movies and TV/Radio programs which take place in North
America, "Hollywood" has at times used *extra-long* rings with a *very
short* pause between the ringing. And they don't necessarily allow the
'bell' to have 'resonance' after the clapper has finished striking. I
saw a movie on TV the other night where the ringing of the phone
stopped *abruptly* with *NO* reasonance, just before the person picked
up their phone.

Sometimes, "Hollywood" uses the *wrong* type of bell when a phone is
shown ringing. Bell sounds used on Western Electric (North American)
telephones have been used on telephones in a program or movie which
takes place in Europe! Sometimes, a WECO 500 set is shown (brass gongs
54-A and 54-B), but the ringing heard is that of a WECO 302 phone
(brass gongs labelled 41-A and 41-B), and vice-versa, as well as the
sound of the bells might be that of the brass gongs used in old steel
or bakelite ringer boxes, while the telephone shown *has* its *own*
type of ringer. In the movie I saw the other night, a Trimline phone
was shown (with its own type of bell pitch), but the ringing heard was
that of a WECO 500. This is just as disturbing as a single-slot
payphone shown in a movie or TV program, but you hear the distinct old
style three-slot 'ding-ding' of a dime or 'dong' of a quarter!

In some movies, two telephone calls come in at different times on the
same telephone shown. Each time the phone is shown to be ringing, a
different type ringer gong has been used. I remember this in a scene
of "Vertigo" (James Stewart and Kim Novak) and in a scene of
"Imitation of Life" (Lana Turner and Juanita Moore). In both movies
(circa late 1950's), the same telephone rings like a WECO 302 in one
scene, but like an old bakelite ringer box in another scene!

"Hollywood" has also been inconsistant with regard to "ringing
indication" and other "call progress" tones. "City Ring" has been used
in Step-by-Step offices, Panel offices, and #1 Crossbar offices.
"Rural Ring" has been used in small "CDO" Step offices. But back in
the 1930's through earlier 1960's, radio/TV programs and movies have
*frequently* used "rural ring" when "city ring" was actually used in
real-life in that location. Sometimes "Hollywood" has used "city ring"
or "#5 Crossbar" or "ESS" call-progress tones, and for the most part
today, "ESS" or "precise frequency" call progress tones are being used
in movies and TV programs, and most movies and TV programs made today
which also take place today are using contemporary electronic tone
ringer style phones instead of real brass bell ringers.

Somewhere, I have a list of the frequencies of the sounds for the
various brass bells used in WECO phones and ringer boxes, as well as
the frequencies of various 'call-progress' tones used over the years.
If I find it, I'll try to prepare an article on them.


MARK J. CUCCIA   PHONE/WRITE/WIRE:     HOME:  (USA)    Tel: CHestnut 1-2497
WORK: mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu |4710 Wright Road| (+1-504-241-2497)
Tel:UNiversity 5-5954(+1-504-865-5954)|New Orleans 28  |fwds on no-answr to
Fax:UNiversity 5-5917(+1-504-865-5917)|Louisiana(70128)|cellular/voicemail


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Even though on the old party lines the
bells were fixed so they would only ring when a call was specifically
intended for that subscriber, the other phones on the party line had a
bad habit: their bells would make a very slight, barely audible (you
had to be standing right next to the phone to hear it) 'tick tick'
sound as the coil would energize and move the gong back and forth 
slightly a couple times. If you were a nosy old woman with nothing
better in your life to do -- if you had a life at all -- you knew to
set your metal-case phone on top of a *galvanized wash tub* when you
were sitting out on your front porch on a summer evening. Then when
your neighbor down the street got a phone call and thier phone actually
rang, your phone and that of others on the party line would make that
'tick' sound amplified several times due to the galvanized metal.
One person would go into her house to *legitimatly* answer a phone
call; up and down the block you would see other old biddies get
up from their rocking chair and after glancing around to see if 
anyone was watching go into their house where they would first 
uscrew the mouthpiece from their phone then quickly lift the receiver
and listen silently to what the other one was talking about. If
the click when they went off hook was heard and they were angrily
challeged by the person on the other phone they would pretend to
hang up by noisily dropping the receiver back on the hook but 
immediatly -- at the same instant -- put the receiver back to
their ear again, as often as not to hear the legitimate user saying
something like, "did you hear that old biddy trying to spy on us?
I made her get off the line!" ... smile ... of course you did.

The frustrating part for the old women was they never could confront
the person whose secrets they had heard. All they could do was chatter
among themselves, and even then none would ever admit to the others
they had spied on the party line. It was always they heard the news
via some third person whose name 'I promised not to give out'. 

When I was about twelve years old my best friend was a kid named
Dennis Hill who was my age. We had a private line at our house but
Dennis' parents were on a party line. We were talking one day, in 
the manner of speaking and selection of topics that twelve year
old boys are likely to prefer. I heard a click on the line and right
away told Dennis he better shut up because 'it sounds like someone is
listening ...' Dennis' very blaise response was, "oh, that's just 
Mrs. Jones. She has been our party line neighbor for years, and if
she does not know everything about our family and our private life
by now then she never will learn." In my mind I visualized this woman
hearing that and her face getting red but Dennis concluded, "she is
way beyond getting mortified or emabrassed by the things we do here
at our house."  About that time there was another click which was
either Mrs. Jones hanging up the receiver or pretending to hang up
while she actually continued listening.   PAT]
 
------------------------------

From: reo@crl.com (Ross Oliver)
Subject: Re: Arrogant Internet Providers
Date: 12 Jun 1996 13:53:21 -0700
Organization: The Air Affair: http://www.airaffair.com/


I have had a Netcom shell account on and off for about four years.  In
that time, I have come to view their service as "you pays your money
and you takes your chances" meaning if it works, great, if not, forget
about getting any help.  As far as I know, no direct telephone support
is available at all.  Netcom currently quotes a three-week response
time to email support requests.  It has been my experience that email
support is limited to the parrotting of pre-composed responses to
common problems.  Since requests are not assigned any sort of trouble
ticket or tracking number, and responses come from a generic "support"
address rather than an actual person, email requests are one-shot
items.  If you don't get the information you need, you have to start
all over again (complete with another three-week delay).  Requests to
assign the problem to senior staff or a manager are ignored.  Although
I have never tried this myself, I have heard from others that for
those customers who are angry and persistent enough to reach someone
in authurity, they are thrown a bone of a month or two of free
service, whether or not their problem is actually fixed.

I have dealt with quite a few ISPs, both for my own personal use, and
on behalf of clients.  I have yet to find one that offers what I
consider an acceptable level of reliability and customer service.
Competition among ISPs has forced prices into the basement, which
doesn't leave much money left over for a quality tech support staff.
I would be willing to pay a premium for quality service, but I have
yet to find an ISP willing to offer it.

You may have noticed that I am not posting this message from Netcom.
The reason for this is that I am troubleshooting a network performance
problem with another ISP.  I am forced to lead them by the nose like a
naughty puppy and rub their nose in the problem before they will take
action, or even admit that there is a problem.


Ross Oliver, reo@taos.com

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

From: wrf@ecse.rpi.edu (Wm. Randolph U Franklin)
Subject: Re: Arrogant Internet Providers
Date: 12 Jun 1996 22:56:42 GMT
Organization: ECSE Dept, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY, 12180 USA
Reply-To: wrf@ecse.rpi.edu (Wm. Randolph U Franklin)


In article <telecom16.280.6@massis.lcs.mit.edu> on Mon, 10 Jun 1996
20:26:22 GMT, richgr@netcom.com (Rich Greenberg) writes:

> In spite of having agreed to the email support only, Mr. Lewis made
> many calls to netcom support, demanding help.  and getting very
> abusive when told to send email for assistance.  

If he had sent email, would Netcom have replied?

A Netcom user once broke into one of my systems.  Since I knew exactly
when the cracker had telnetted in, I emailed Netcom for help.  I
emailed to root, and to two people that CERT told me were relevant.
They all ignored me until I posted a complaint to comp.security.unix
about Netcom's not caring that their users attacked other systems.
Then one of the ignorers finally replied to me.  Unfortunately,
conveniently, by then the logfiles had been deleted.


wrf@ecse.rpi.edu (Wm. Randolph U Franklin)

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

Date: Wed, 12 Jun 1996 20:07:50 GMT
From: John Stahl <aljon@worldnet.att.net>
Subject: Cellular vs. PCS Mix-up


In article <telecom16.255.8@massis.lcs.mit.edu> Pat writes:

> Does anyone know of any plans to open the market to a third or
> fourth (a 'C' or 'D' or whatever you would call them) carrier?  I do
> not mean just as a reseller of A/B as happens now, I mean genuine
> infrastructure for a third or fourth cellular company in some markets?

Russell E. Sorber <sorbrrse@cig.mot.com> responded to the above:

> Yes.  New infrastructure is being installed by the PCS operators in
> many US cellular markets.  The FCC auctioned off these PCS frequencies
> several months ago.

However, what he is indicating is not an answer to your question.
There are two different and distinct syatems here being mixed together
by Russell. Cellular which is separate and totally different from PCS.
Firstly, Cellular frequencies are in the 800 to 900 Mhz. range and
have specific usage as originated by (The) Bell System back in the
early 1970's and licensed by the FCC in the 1980's.

PCS (Personal Communication System) was devised many years later for
use in homes and business' to be operated similar to 'wireless phones'
but with system supplier owned (as opposed to user owned) miniature
transponders (transceivers) maintaining the communications path to the
hard-wire service.  PCS was given frequency spectrum by the FCC in the
1500 Mhz. range (as an aside there is a frequency usage problem
created by this new frequency allocation that the FCC has addressed by
requiring the PCS to make the necessary arrangements with any local
microwave communications supplier on the same -- shared -- frequency to
give them dollars to purchase the necessary equipment to change their
frequency from the new PCS carriers frequencies -- and this has slowed
the turn-up of this service).

The Cellular carriers must make equipment available for customers that
will run on all frequencies (the B and A frequencies for Wireline and
non-Wireline service providers, respectively - one each in each MSA
area) for anywhere in the US. The PCS frequencies will probably all be
different in each area and since the service is intended for LOCAL
usage; the units will presumably be programmed for the particular
service provider's coverage area only. Cellular is national and PCS is
local.

Also, there are no additional frequencies available in the frequency
band allocated for cellular usage by the FCC for any other groups of
frequencies (the C & D Pat mentioned) NOR is the portable cellular
radio (telephone) equipment able to use any additional frequencies.


John Stahl   Aljon Enterprises
Telecom/Data Consultants - Telecommunications/data systems design
email: aljon@worldnet.att.net

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

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End of TELECOM Digest V16 #286
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Fri Jun 14 10:44:27 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id KAA29200; Fri, 14 Jun 1996 10:44:27 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Fri, 14 Jun 1996 10:44:27 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606141444.KAA29200@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #287

TELECOM Digest     Fri, 14 Jun 96 10:44:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 287

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    French Police Raid Leading ISPs (Jean-Bernard Condat)
    Re: Late Bulletin! Communications Decency Act Overturned (D. Hultberg)
    Re: Late Bulletin! Communications Decency Act Overturned (Steve Bagdon)
    Re: Late Bulletin! Communications Decency Act Overturned (B Frankenberger)
    Re: Late Bulletin! Communications Decency Act Overturned (Jon M. Taylor)
    Re: Sneaky Surfwatch Advertisement in News Bulletin (John Lull)
    Re: Sneaky Surfwatch Advertisement in News Bulletin (lr@access.digex.net)
    Re: Sneaky Surfwatch Advertisement in News Bulletin (Peter Bell)
    Re: Sneaky Surfwatch Advertisement in News Bulletin (Van Heffner)
    CDA Fallout: Internet Rating System Waits in The Wings (David Richards)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Fri, 14 Jun 1996 14:06:43 +0100
From: Jean-Bernard Condat <jeanbc@informix.com>
Subject: French Police Raid Leading ISPs


   Paris, June 14th, 1996 -- As I have so far seen no reports in the
obvious Usenet newsgroups of the recent police raids on leading French
Internet service-providers, and I can no longer post contributions to
them myself, I send you the following English translations from the
French newspaper "Liberation", which may inspire you to report them
there. Note that Mr. Francois Fillon have propose one Conseil
Superieur de la Telematique depending of the Bourges' CSA (Conseil
Superieur de l' Audiovisuel) that will rapidly act like a high
telematics authority like the new French Internet Society (ISOC).

 From the "Cahier Multimedia" of "Liberation", 3 May 1996:

"Netiquette according to Mr Fillon" (La Netiquette de Fillon):

   Lacking the power to police the Internet, France will invite its G7
partners (at Lyons in June) to consider the co-ordinated introduction
of a "code of good conduct". A sort of "modus vivendi" which, as
Francois Fillon explained to his colleagues at their recent meeting in
Bologna, would guarantee a mimimum degree of protection to network
users. For, as the French Telecoms Minister pointed out, "if the
Internet constitues an extraordinary valuable collective resource
(...), nevertheless it conceals as many risks for its users."  To
attempt to keep it locked up on the basis of national regulations
alone would be pointless with such an inherently transnational
network.  Hence, according to Mr Fillon, the need to establish
coordination at a European (OECD) level, with the aim of drafting an
agreement [une convention]. Its signatories would establish the
principles for legal collaboration, and a certain number of rules on
ethics and on the legal responsibility common to on-line publishers
and ISPs.  And, in the event of a breach, the Minister also proposes
to establish, once and for all,that "by default, the principle that
the rules of the originating country, so far as the signatories are
concerned, and [those] of the receiving country are applicable. "

But in "Liberation" of 8 May 1996:

"Police raid on the Internet" (Descente des gendarmes sur l'Internet):

Two Information Service Providers (ISPs) arrested for distibuting
pornographic pictures of children, by Franck Johannes

   The police are very proud of themselves, and say prudently that "as
far as they are aware" this is a world permiere: the first time that
the police have intervened in the Internet. Without perhaps realising
what a storm they have produced, if not in legal circles then on the
Network. The chief executives of two ISPs have been detained for
questioning on allegations that they have been distributing pornogra-
phic pictures of children.

   "We keep hearing that there is a legal vacuum", explained
Lieutenant-Colonel Gerard Browne. "But that's not in fact the case;
distributing such picures is prohibited by Art. 227-23 of the Penal
Code, that's all". The gendarmes, who are apparently unwilling to
provide background details, were tipped-off at the end of January
1996. It seems that a regular Net-user came across the pictures in
question via FranceNet and World-Net, both of which claim to be the
leading providers of access to the Internet. (...)

   The Parisian research service immediately began exploring the
services with the support of the informatics branch of the criminal
research institute of the national gendarmerie (IRCGN). They took
copies of the various newsgroups, in other words the thousands of
messages giving information on all sorts of themes, from fly-fishing
to vegetable gardening, untimately arriving at that with the children.
This could scarcely be by accident; it is necessary to look, for
example, in a list which has the advantage of being clear, for
"alt.binary.pictures.erotic.pedophilia", to find a prohibited picture.
According to the police, some 5 to 10% of the contents of the
thousands of newsgroups accessible in this way every day are illegal.

   The dossier was transferred to the Parisian prosecuting
authorities, which in March opened an investigation entrusted to
Christine Berkani, the principal investigating magistrate in cases
involving minors. On Monday [6 May] the police siezed piles of floppy
disks in the offices of the two ISPs, and then the manager of
WorldNet, Sebastian Sochard, and his counterpart from FranceNet, Raffi
Haladjian, were arrested and held in custody on charges of "having
distributed, fixed, recorded or transmitted a pornographic picture of
a minor", contrary to the provisions of Art. 227-23 of the Penal Code.
They risk being sentenced to up to three years in prison and fined up
to half a million francs, because childern under 15 years old are
involved.

   At WorldNet, this came as "a bolt from the blue" and his colleagues
were astonished that Sebastian Socchard, 27, had been detained in
custody on Monday.  Last year, the young man had set up the SCT Sarl
company (for Security, Concept and Technology) before becoming active
as an ISP at his clients' request. Today, WorldNet has some 30
employees and claims 9000 clients, each of whom pay FF 99.00 monthly
for access to the Internet.

   "This affair merely illustrates the legal vacuum", protested
Isabelle Perichon of WorldNet. "We don't produce any pictures, we just
store them. Every day, we receive between 50,000 and 100,000
news-messages from the University at Jussieu: Jussieu sends them to
France Telecom, which forwards them to us automatically."  Jussieu was
slightly upset by this. "France-Telecom doesn't normally get its data
from us", explained an engineer from the University. "We get our news
from the United States, they must be doing the same. In any case,
there has never been anything like that on our server. A lot of people
are anxious to prevent the network from degenerating, and if any of
them found it they would let us know within a couple of hours." The
Gendarmes have plenty to keep them busy; the investigators now have to
identify the source of the pictures, which "come from just about
everywhere", sighed Lieutenant-Colonel Browne.  

Then from  Liberation, 9 May 1996: 

"Net: si on avait su, on aurait filtre" ("If we had known, we would
have filtered the Internet") - the director of WorldNet [Mr. Sebastien
Socchard, an old student of the well knowned EPITA computer school in
paris] under investigation, denies all responsibility.

(report by Laurent Mauriac)

   In their desire to comply with French law, the ISPs are cutting off
their noses in order to spite their faces. In reaction to the arrest
of the managers of WorldNet and FranceNet "for simply doing their
job", the four members of the French Association of Internet Professionals
(AFPI) - Calvacom, FranceNet, Imaginet and Internet-way - have
announced that they have cut off their subscribers' access to *all*
Usenet newsgroups.

   "That is the only way to apply the law", according to the director
of Imaginet, Patrick Robin, who claims it would be impossible to
monitor everything that is routed via his hard disks. Most ISPs carry
more than 120 thousand messages every day, and any of them potentially
contain pictures among which a few might be prohibited by French law.

   No doubt fewer than 5% of them, according to AFPI; the whole
problem is that of identifying this 5% within the great flow of
continually-renewed data.  That is why Patrick Robin is calling for
the creation of a committee "similar to the Press's Committee for the
protection of youth" and having the resources it would need to be able
to inspect newsgroups regularly. The AFPI is also calling for the
status of ISPs to be defined clearly: as carriers, not distributors.
Making the same distinction, World-Net's director, Sebastian Socchard,
commented as follows on his dealings with the law-enforcement
authorities:

   You could have filtered out the "outlawed" newsgroups - why didn't you
do so?

   [SS]: We could have removed certain newsgroups, but we didn't know
which ones, or how to filter their contents. If we had know that that
kind of thing was present, we would have acted.

   Weren't you responsible for the distribution of the contents of
everything stored on your servers?

   [SS]: No, and I'm not happy with the expression "stored"; it
doesn't correspond to the situation. Our equipment merely passes on
pictures, it doesn't really store them. They do indeed transit via our
hard disks, but that is merely part of our job of carrying them, a
means to enable the users to access them more quickly. We would be
equally responsible if our users obtained the pictures directly from
other servers on the Web (whereas the contents of newsgroups are
stored temporarily on every ISP's server, Web pages are generally
stored only on one server, and accessed directly from it when required
by a user). I am not legally responsible for publishing the contents
of our server.

   All the same, don't you have a duty to keep an eye on the data that
can be accessed through your servers? Is WorldNet responsible for
everything that can be found on the Internet?

   [SS]: There are 6300 newsgroups, and it would take about an hour to
inspect the contents of one of them. So to check all of them in 24
hours you would need 270 people. And if we had to do that for the
newsgroups, why not do it for the Web and e-mail too?

   What do you think the solution is?

   [SS]: I fully agree that whatever is forbidden in France ought to
be filtered out, things like racism and child-pornography, for
example. But it's not an easy thing to do. If one newsgroup is
excluded, it can change its name or put its contents into another one.
We want the government to define precisely what must be censored, as
has been done for the Minitel and audiovisual services.

   A lot of legal experts are saying that there is no legal vacuum;
all that's needed is to apply the existing law...?

   [SS]: They are assuming that the Internet is no different from
other transmission systems. In that case, we are a carrier like the
rest of them, and we should be treated as such.

   Do you think that you are the victim of injustice?

   [SS]: If we are deemed to be responsible, then so should France
Telecom or Transpac [its specialised network-operating subsidiary].
The pictures are carried through France Telecom's lines, and it is
Transpac that supplies them to us automatically from its server. As
the head of the Gendarmerie admitted: by attacking the two main French
ISPs, they hope that the other 98 will also stop whatever they are
doing wrong.

   What happened when you were taken in for investigation?

   [SS]: The gendarmes arrived without warning. They were well-behaved; 
they knew that we weren't gangsters. They said that they were simply
carrying out routine procedures. It was obvious that they knew nothing
about the Internet.  I didn't see any experts. I suspect that the
Gendarmerie wanted a high-profile operation to catch the media's
attention, possibly to launch the debate.  They could easily have sent
us registered letters, but in that case nobody would have heard about
it. Even if all this is out of all proportion for five miserable
pictures, as operators we are quite happy that the debate has now
begun.


Jean-bernard Condat, Senior Consultant, Smart Card Business Unit
Informix, La Grande Arche, 92044 La Defense Cedex, France
Phone: +33 1 46963770, fax: +33 1 46963765, portable: +33 07238628
Private: +33 1 41238807, e-mail: jeanbc@informix.com

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

From: news@news.fmso.navy.mil
Subject: Re: Late Bulletin! Communications Decency Act Overturned
Date: Fri, 14 Jun 96 13:45:57 GMT
Organization: C&D Railroad


In article <telecom16.285.3@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, storkus@heather.
greatbasin.com (Mike P. Storke) wrote:

> Now, if they could just do the same with the ECPA (Electronic
> Communications Privacy Act -- the law that made 800 MHz scanners without
> cellular blocking illegal, among other things) ...

and our Esteemed Moderator responded:

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: But of course! Why shouldn't we have
> the unfettered right to spy on our neighbors and snoop on their phone
> calls if we want to?  You don't mind it when people unkown to you
> listen in on your calls do you?    PAT]

The problem with the ECPA is that it is a fraud.  The cellular phone
salesman use it to dupe the technically ignorant public into believing
that their telephone conversations are private, even when broadcast by
a radio transmitter.  Anyone who talks about anything sensitive when
either party is using a cordless or cellular phone is deluding
themselves if they think they can't be overheard.  ECPA is bad
legislation that can't possibly solve what is actually a technical
problem.  

I've spent a lot of time in the military communications field,
including working with our friends at <N>o <S>uch <A>gency and it
taught me that any conversation over an unencrypted radio circuit may
be monitored.  Remember the story a few years ago of the US monitoring
Soviet leaders "private" carphone traffic from a spy satellite?  The
DOD has a program in place right now that will eventually make all DOD
email, even unclassified/non-sensitive email, encrypted from the
senders desktop to recipient's desktop.  Also remember there are large
numbers of pre ECPA scanners out there capable of monitoring your
cellular and cordless phone conversations.  Law enforcement is
powerless to stop this monitoring done in the privacy of one's home,
unless someone is stupid and brags about what they heard.  Bottom
line, if we want our cellular communications to really be private, we
need to encrypt them.


David B. Hultberg, Director      david_b_hultberg@nslc.fmso.navy.mil
Information Resources Management dave.hultberg@paonline.com         
Naval Sea Logistics Center       http://www.nslc.fmso.navy.mil      
P.O. Box 2060                    (717) 790-4507 or DSN 430-4507     
Mechanicsburg, PA 17055-0795     (717) 790-2915 or DSN 430-2915(FAX)

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

Date: Fri, 14 Jun 1996 07:28:02 -0500
From: bagdon@rust.net (S and K Bagdon)
Subject: Re: Late Bulletin! Communications Decency Act Overturned


>  Finally!!  Its nice to see the good guys winning for a change!

> Now, if they could just do the same with the ECPA (Electronic
> Communications Privacy Act -- the law that made 800 MHz scanners without
> cellular blocking illegal, among other things) ...

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: But of course! Why shouldn't we have
> the unfettered right to spy on our neighbors and snoop on their phone
> calls if we want to?  You don't mind it when people unkown to you
> listen in on your calls do you?    PAT]

There could be a lot of other info in that freq range besides cellular -
trunked, police band, etc. If newspapers can monitor 100mhz and 400mhz
ranges for police calls, then why should 800mhz be any different?

This is going to start an entirely new debate about electronic privacy. But
here's my standpoint from a *user* -- if its over an open freq, it's like
printing it on the front page.

Besides, who needs an 800mhz capable scanner -- cellular phone 'test
mode' give audio listenting capability, and more (if I wanted to do
this, of course).


Steve B.
bagdon@rust.net (h) USFMDDKT@ibmmail.com (w)
http://www.rust.net/~bagdon

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

From: brettf@netcom.com (Brett Frankenberger)
Subject: Re: Late Bulletin! Communications Decency Act Overturned
Organization: NETCOM On-line Communication Services (408 261-4700 guest)
Date: Thu, 13 Jun 1996 20:51:35 GMT


In article <telecom16.285.3@massis.lcs.mit.edu>,

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: But of course! Why shouldn't we have
> the unfettered right to spy on our neighbors and snoop on their phone
> calls if we want to?  You don't mind it when people unkown to you
> listen in on your calls do you?    PAT]

I think a better question is: "Why should people have the right to
transmit electromagnetic radiation into my residence or vehicle without
me having the right to demodulate such radiation?"

As a matter of fact, I do mind when people listen on my private
conversations.  Which is why I don't place them on electromagnetic
carriers and propogate them in all directions, or, if I do, I first
encrypt them.

Your argument seems to be "the ECPA is good because Privacy is good."
I don't dispute that privacy is good.  Which I do dispute is the
assertion that the ECPA is the only way (or even a good way) to acheive
privacy.


Brett  (brettf@netcom.com)

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

From: taylorj@ecs.ecs.csus.edu (Jon M. Taylor)
Subject: Re: Late Bulletin! Communications Decency Act Overturned
Date: 13 Jun 1996 20:34:33 GMT
Organization: California State University, Sacramento


	Of course we all want as much privacy as we can get in our
telephone conversations, but crippling associated technologies like
scanners in order to get it is a really lousy solution.  A better way
would be to implement strong cryptographic scrambling, so that it
wouldn't *matter* if people could hear your transmission.  The same is
true for all communications media -- forget about making things
tap-proof, just encrypt everything!


Jon Taylor = <taylorj@gaia.ecs.csus.edu> | <http://gaia.ecs.csus.edu/~taylorj>

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

From: lull@acm.org (John Lull)
Subject: Re: Sneaky Surfwatch Advertisement in News Bulletin
Date: Fri, 14 Jun 1996 02:22:17 GMT
Organization: Windsmith


In the waning years of the 20th century, Eric_Florack@mc.xerox.com
(Florack,Eric) wrote (with deletions):

> And here, we clearly see the results of judges making rulings on
> technology they have no hope whatsoever of understanding. If the
> judges in question did in fact understand the technology, they would
> know full well that SurfWatch is incapable of 'filtering' a goodly
> amount of the items that people who buy it are concerned about.

If you read the decision you'll find that the judges knew quite
clearly what they were doing, and understood the technology well
enough (far better than I had expected).  They specifically recognize
that SurfWatch and its ilk are not now and never will be perfect.  But
they also recognize that the CDA would be even more ineffective in
accomplishing its stated goals.

The publishers of SurfWatch, however, either have not read the
decision, or totally ignored what it said in writing their press
release.  Their press release is WILDLY inacurate in its reporting,
and I think does a serious injustice to their allies in this effort.

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

From: lr@access1.digex.net (Sir Topham Hatt)
Subject: Re: Sneaky Surfwatch Advertisement in News Bulletin
Date: 13 Jun 1996 19:58:27 GMT
Organization: Intentionally Left Blank


Florack,Eric (Eric_Florack@mc.xerox.com) wrote:

> And here, we clearly see the results of judges making rulings on
> technology they have no hope whatsoever of understanding. If the
> judges in question did in fact understand the technology, they would
> know full well that SurfWatch is incapable of 'filtering' a goodly
> amount of the items that people who buy it are concerned about.

Well, not the way I read the decision.  While surfwatch and other
industry measures to provide filtering are mentioned, they are in not
in the body of the opinion.  It was overturned because it too broadly
provides prior restraint on speech.  The opinion specically states
that it is near impossible to provide the filtering required by an
ideal implementation of the act.

>> The intent of the Communications Decency Act (CDA) was to prevent
>> minors from inadvertently stumbling upon `indecent' or `patently
>> offensive' material in the normal course of using the Internet and
>> World Wide Web.

> Patently incorrect. 'Inadvertently stumbling' was not the issue! Their
> ability to access it AT ALL, was the issue. Are we concerned about
> minors inadvertently stumbling across' Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms,
> etc.? Or are we concerned that they might have ANY access to it, by
> their intent /or/ by accident?  Same thing should apply to porn. Funny
> thing, though, how that concern disappears when SurfWatch income is at
> stake, huh?

Despite the "intent", the judges have found that the act infringes on
constitutional speech, and while it may be legal to restrict minors
from such material, the CDA goes too far.  You should really read the
decision or at least an objective review of it rather than relying on
some hoopla press release fromm a software vendor.  The truth of the
decision is summed up in one judge's words ... that the "provisions are
so vague as to violate the First and Fifth Amendments."


Ron

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

Date: Thu, 13 Jun 1996 16:59:52 -0400
From: Peter Bell <bell@minerva.cis.yale.edu>
Subject: Re: Sneaky Surfwatch Advertisement in News Bulletin
Organization: Yale University


In article <telecom16.285.5@massis.lcs.mit.edu> TELECOM Diest Editor
noted:

> ... 'this software has been approved by the United States
> Federal Courts for use by parents who don't want their children getting
> molested or kidnapped by 'new friends' they meet online or correspond 
> with in those newsgroups we all know are very naughty.' 

Let's see, Pat: molestation *is* already a crime, no?  Kidnapping?
Corrupting the morals of a minor?  Statutory rape?  I guess not, as
you seem to be maintaining that the sting operations we've already
seen covered on The Nooz involving feds pretending to be kids and
luring pedophiles in for their arrests were all just faked.  That we
*needed* the CDA to cover any crime in which a computer, however
briefly, might play a role?

No?  I'm not characterizing that right?  

> ...  And God bless the ACLU and the federal judges for saving the
> rest of us from ourselves while I am thinking about it.

Excuse me?  Pat?  Reread that last sentence again, por favor?  

It was *Congress* and *Ralph Reed* and *people such as yourself* who
were hell bent on saving us from ourselves.

The judges told you to stay outta my newsfeed, and I thank them for it.  

But that is the slickest reality inversion I've seen on this yet.  The
backers of Amendment 2 in Colorado are making much the same argument:
that they've been deprived of the right to snoop in and judge their
neighbors lives, and that it's that Bad Federal Court System Saving
Them From Their Snoopiness.

Many read it as something Quite Different, Pat.  


Cheers,

peter   bell@minerva.cis.yale.edu

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

Date: Fri, 14 Jun 1996 06:30:43 -0700
From: vantek@northcoast.com (VANTEK COMMUNICATIONS)
Subject: Re: Sneaky Surfwatch Advertisement in News Bulletin


> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: One thing which has left me very
> cynical about the federal judiciary in the United States has been  
> how, as the FRC phrases it, the 'ACLU hand-picked judges' rule on
> cases involving the ACLU. A large number of federal judges are members
> of the ACLU, yet it has never occured to them they should recuse
> themselves -- or step away from a case -- when it involves the ACLU.
> If you were involved in a trial, would you want the judge to be a
> member of the plaintiff group or a member of the defendant group?
> I suspect you would want the judge to be independent of either group.
> How can you in fairness belong to a group and support the agenda and
> beliefs of that group and then rule *fairly* in a court case which
> involves that group?  I should imagine the Supreme Court will overturn
> this decision when it reaches that level as it surely will. 

Though I really have little interest in the ACLU, I don't believe that
a membership in an organization necessarily makes one biased to the
point of not being able to (legally) make a decision that may involve
that organization.

For example ... if a judge was a Republican, would that automatically
disqualify him from making a decision about any case that may involve
Republicans, or even the Republican Party? Can any judge (or human
being) really be expected to have absolutely no personal bias for or
against any given subject?

The fact that someone happens to belong to a political organization
(or religion, race, many other groups ...) does not necessarily mean
that they subscribe to all of that group's beliefs. I believe that
anyone who has taken an oath to uphold and defend the Constitution
should be able to set-aside his personal beliefs when making critical
interpretations of law. Our present jury system is entirely dependant
upon such a principle.

In any case, I HIGHLY doubt that any judge, or other member of the
ACLU, agrees with EVERY stance they have ever taken. As a Democrat
(don't laugh!), I don't believe in every official party position, but
that doesn't mean that I'm not a Democrat.

BTW, in regards to the press release I forwarded to TELECOM Digest
from SurfWatch, it was asolutely self-serving of the company to
put-out, but was factual. It was not only the very first source of
information on the outcome of the case that flowed to me via the
internet (scooped all other "hard news" sources at my disposal),
but was also the only article I had that was non-copyrighted. Press
releases are a vital (if not slightly slanted) source of information
to those looking for news on the internet. Without them, I would
be hard-pressed to find free information on many telecom subjects.


Van Hefner - Editor
Discount Long Distance Digest
On The Web: http://www.webcom.com/longdist/ 

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

From: dr@ripco.com (David Richards)
Subject: CDA Fallout: Internet Rating System Waits in the Wings
Organization: Ripco Internet BBS, Chicago
Date: Fri, 14 Jun 1996 03:49:24 GMT


In article <telecom16.285.3@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Mike P. Storke
<storkus@heather.greatbasin.com> wrote:

> In article <telecom16.284.1@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, VANTEK COMMUNICATIONS
> <vantek@northcoast.com> wrote:

>> Philadelphia, PA, June 12, 1996 (DLD DIGEST) -- Thanks in large part
>> to testimony concerning the effectiveness of SurfWatch Software Inc.'s
>> Internet filtering and parental control software, a federal court in
>> Philadelphia today ruled that the Communications Decency Act, signed
>> into law on February 8, is an unconstitutional infringement of freedom
>> of speech over the Internet.

>  Finally!!  Its nice to see the good guys winning for a change!

Due to the CDA and related factors, there has been much discussion on
the possibility of enacting some sort of mandatory or (if we're lucky)
voluntary internet rating system.

The discussion has mostly focussed on rating web site and similar MIME
encoded content, and with the general opinion of proponents of ratings
being that the burden of censorship should be on the content provider,
rather than the consumer.

Logistics aside, Ripco's (and I suspect many other provider's)
position is that if we are required to rate content originating on our
system we will gladly do so ...

But since we can't possibly review every message and page, Ripco will
apply a blanket rating of 'X (under 21 forbidden)' across the board.

X-CDA-RATING: X/21-over
X-CDA-OFFENSIVENESS: sex,violence,libertarianism,angst,...

If (when) every site that turned their pages black, sets their rating
to X (just as 'blackpage' scripts were widely distributed, so can
'rate-X' programs make it possible for the most technically illiterate
to set their ratings), the censors won't have to worry about children
getting to smut, but neither will children get to any of the other
educational and instructive resources that the backers of censorship
cite as reasons to 'make the internet safe for children'.


David Richards                             Ripco Communications Inc.
My opinions are my own,                    Public Access in Chicago
But they are available for rental          FREE Usenet and Email
dr@ripco.com                               (312) 665-0065

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

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information service. For a copy of a helpful file explaining how to
use the information service, just ask.

*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from the              *
* International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in Geneva, Switzerland    * 
* under the aegis of its Telecom Information Exchange Services (TIES)   * 
* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
* ing views of the ITU.                                                 *
*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
yourself who provide funding in amounts deemed appropriate. Your help
is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of twenty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #287
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Fri Jun 14 11:25:01 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id LAA04044; Fri, 14 Jun 1996 11:25:01 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Fri, 14 Jun 1996 11:25:01 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606141525.LAA04044@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #288

TELECOM Digest     Fri, 14 Jun 96 11:25:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 288

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    IEEE J-SAC Call For Papers: Very Low Bit-rate Video Coding (Argi Krikelis)
    What You See Is Who You Get (Mike King)
    Call For Papers - CYBER://CON.97 (David E. Sorkin)
    FCC Adopts Rules On Cellular 911 (Jorene Downs)
    Tax on Cellphones in Maryland (Joseph Bergstein)
    Excel to Provide Discount Pager Service (Tom Zinn)
    Re: Pagers - 149 MHz vs. 800 MHz (Ed Ellers)
    Re: Pagers - 149 MHz vs. 800 MHz (Gary Sanders)
    Re: Pagers - 149 Mhz vs. 800 Mhz (Steve Bagdon)
    Re: Pagers - 149 MHz vs. 800 MHz (Tony Pelliccio)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Argi Krikelis <Argi.Krikelis@brunel.ac.uk>
Subject: IEEE J-SAC Call For Paper: Very Low Bit-rate Video Coding
Date: 14 Jun 1996 13:05:05 GMT
Organization: Brunel University, Uxbridge, UK


         IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications
                            Call for Papers
                     Very Low Bit-rate Video Coding
  
Technology advances and application demands lead to the inevitable
merging of telecommunications and computing areas. Future user
requirements are anticipated to be dominated by video-driven
applications, with demands for a very high degree of flexibility and
extensibility. Applications will include real-time, high quality
interactivity using natural and/or synthetic video data over limited
bandwidth communication lines and access of limited capacity storage
media, providing ability to achieve scalability with fine granularity
in spatial and temporal resolution and complexity. Such demands will
require robust and efficient very low bit-rate video coding
approaches, able to support resilient transmission/accessing of very
high quality video pictures.
  
Current video processing technologies and international standards will
not be able to cope with such requirements because of well known
limitations, e.g., block and mosquito artifacts. The development and
evolution of alternative video coding techniques and video processing
systems is necessary. The nature of the required research poses a
number of challenges in algorithm development and specification and
development of coding tools which will allow a very high degree of
application-specific functionality, evolution of processing
(especially highly parallel) architectures to efficiently support the
required operations, etc.
  
The IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications is developing an
issue with the broad theme of very low bit-rate video coding. This
issue will include, but is not limited to, papers on the following
topics:
  
    Very low bit-rate video coding techniques for video transmission and 
    storage
        content-based
        model-based
        vector quantisation
        wavelets
        fractals

    Scalability issues in very low bit-rate coding

    Very low bit-rate coding of hybrid (video and synthetic) data

    Very low bit-rate video coding for multimedia (e.g. stereoscopic 
    images and 3D views)

    Robustness of very low bit-rate video coding in error-prone environments

    Processing architectures for very low bit-rate video coding.
  
Prospective authors of original work should submit six (6) copies of
their manuscripts to one the Guest Editors listed below, according to
the following schedule:
  
   six (6) copies of the full manuscript              September 1, 1996
   notification of decisions                          December 1, 1996
   final version of the manuscript                    Feburary 1, 1997
   publication date	                              Fourth quarter 1997
  
                                   Guest Editors
  
  Dr. Kazumasa Enami                           Dr. Anargyros (Argy) Krikelis
  Science and Technical Research Labs          Aspex Microsystems Ltd.
  Japan Broadcasting Corporation (NHK)         Brunel University
  1-10-11 Kinuta, Setagaya-ku, Tokyo 157       Uxbridge, UB8 3PH
  JAPAN                                        United Kingdom
  Tel: +81 3 54942300                          Tel: +44 1895 274000 ext 2763
  Fax: +81 3 54942309                          Fax:  + 44 1895 258728
  E-mail: enami@strl.nhk.or.jp                 E-mail:Argy.Krikelis@aspex.co.uk
                                                     Argy.Krikelis@brunel.ac.uk
  
                                Prof. Todd R. Reed
                 Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering
                           University of California
                               Davis, CA 95616
                                    USA
                            Tel:+1 (916) 7524720
                            Fax:+1 (916) 7528428 
                         E-mail:trreed@ucdavis.edu

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

From: Mike King <mk@wco.com>
Subject: What You See Is Who You Get
Date: Thu, 13 Jun 1996 17:24:15 PDT


Forwarded to the Digest FYI:

  Date: Thu, 13 Jun 1996 08:35:24 -0700
  Reply-To: NEWS-LIST@list.pactel.com
  From: sqlgate@list.pactel.com
  Subject: NEWS:  What You See . . . Is Who You Get


FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Beverly Butler
(415) 542-9468

What You See . . . Is Who You Get

Pacific Bell Gives Sneak Preview of Caller ID

SAN FRANCISCO -- At a sneak preview June 13, Pacific Bell and Caller
ID display equipment vendors showcased various Caller ID devices,
including adjunct boxes that attach to a phone, telephone equipment
with built-in displays and a product specially designed for the sight
and mobility impaired that has a voice announce feature that can be
customized by the user. Pacific Bell has requested approval from the
California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) to offer Caller ID
service to customers on June 15.

Caller ID functions enables people to see the number of the person
calling before they answer the call. In order to see the caller's
number, consumers need to subscribe to the Caller ID service and
purchase either a telephone with a built-in display device or an
electronic display device designed to connect to an existing phone.

"Most Californians will find Caller ID a useful tool. If there is an
emergency and you need to know who's calling, you can receive that
number in advance with Caller ID," said Joan Mataraci, Caller ID
product manager, Pacific Bell.

Caller ID may also be used to ensure when home alone, children or
baby-sitters only answer calls from family members; traveling family
members' calls are answered no matter which time zone they are calling
from; and long distance calls are recognized as they come in -- so the
conversation is on someone else's dime instead of your own.
Additionally, business customers will be able to manage their time
more productively and prepare for calls by referring to customer
records prior to answering the phone.

Caller ID service from Pacific Bell is $6.50 per month for residential
customers and $7.50 per month for business customers. There is a $5.00
installation fee for residential customers and $6.00 installation fee
for business customers.

Prices vary greatly, beginning at $40 for a basic adjunct box to $270
for a telephone-answering machine with built-in display and voice
announce feature that can be customized by the user.

Pacific Bell has developed agreements with the leading Caller ID
equipment manufacturers, including CIDCO, Inc., Colonial Data
Technologies Corp., Nortel and AASTRA TELECOM, to distribute Pacific
Bell-branded equipment. Pacific Bell Caller ID equipment is available
directly from Pacific Bell through two different fulfillment centers.
Once service is available, customers can call Pacific Bell at 1-800
983-9050 to order Caller ID service and be transferred to an equipment
representative. Representatives for second-language customers will be
available.

Customers will be able to charge equipment to their Pacific Bell phone
bill, and interest-free installment billing will be available. Residence
customers also will be able to rent a basic adjunct box for $4.00 per
month.

Pacific Bell Caller ID equipment will be available at several retail
outlets throughout the state, including Albertson's California, Dow
Stereo, Fry's Electronics, Longs Drugs, Sam's Clubs and The Good Guys.
Pacific Bell has plans to distribute Pacific Bell-branded equipment to
more than 1,500 retail locations, including major department stores,
better discount stores, electronic specialty outlets, warehouse clubs
and drug store chains. Retail stores carrying the Pacific Bell brand
will have displays available to explain and demonstrate the features and
operation of Caller ID. Telephone companies in the other 49 states
already offering Caller ID have received overwhelmingly positive
responses to the service.

Pacific Bell is a subsidiary of Pacific Telesis Group, a diversified
communications corporation based in San Francisco.

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

     Mike King   *   Oakland, CA, USA   *   mk@wco.com

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

From: David E. Sorkin <7SORKIN@jmls.edu>
Date: Thu, 13 Jun 1996 14:53:53 CST
Subject: Call For Papers -- CYBER://CON.97


TELECOM Digest readers may be interested in submitting papers for
the following conference.

                         CALL FOR PAPERS
                         CYBER://CON.97
                      Rules for Cyberspace?:
                Governance, Standards and Control
 
                         June 4-7, 1997
                        Chicago, Illinois
 
The Center for Information Technology and Privacy Law of The John
Marshall Law School is pleased to issue a Call for Papers for
CYBER://CON.97, the first in a series of biennial conferences on
Cyberspace.  The '97 program will consider "Rules for Cyberspace?:
Governance, Standards and Control," to be held in Chicago, Illinois,
June 4-7, 1997.  Papers within the CYBER://CON.97 focus will be
considered for presentation as a major theme or as contributing
dialogue in a relevant conference session.

Whether, and how, to regulate national and international electronic
networks is a principal topic in current discussions regarding the
realm of Cyberspace.  Disputes regarding rights and responsibilities
in connection with Internet communications arise frequently, with
little consensus as to what rules or procedures should govern
communications or conduct in Cyberspace.  The conference focus will be
on proposals for standards and protocols defining the propriety of
Internet communications, and suggestions for national and
international mechanisms or forums to make and enforce rules, monitor
compliance and resolve disputes.

General topic areas contemplated for CYBER://CON.97 include the
following:

  -  The Roles of Governments and the Private Sector in
     National/International Internet Administration
  -  Regulation in Cyberspace:  Models for Standards and
     Compliance in Transborder Electronic Communications
  -  First Amendment Limitations on Cyberspace Regulation
  -  Dispute Resolution Models for Transborder Data Flow
  -  Jurisdiction and Choice-of-Law in a Borderless
     Electronic Environment
  -  Financing National and International Electronic
     Information Infrastructures and Access
  -  Protecting Human Rights and Privacy in Cyberspace
  -  Controlling Crime and Terrorism in Cyberspace
  -  Encryption Technology and Cyberspace Communication
  -  Status and Protection of Intellectual Property in
     Electronic Communications
  -  Electronic Commerce: Rules of Contract, Signature,
     Payment, Authenticity
  -  Protecting Children in Cyberspace
 
Written proposals of 600 words or less, describing the paper's topic,
presenters, and presentation format, must be submitted by July 15,
1996.  Acceptance or rejection of proposals will be communicated by
August 15, 1996.  Papers for accepted topics must be submitted in
final draft by December 15, 1996.  All communications should be
directed to:
 
     CYBER://CON.97
     Center for Information Technology
          and Privacy Law
     The John Marshall Law School
     315 South Plymouth Court
     Chicago, Illinois 60604
     Fax:  (312) 427-9974
     E-mail:  cyber97@jmls.edu
 
All proposals and papers will become the property of The John Marshall
Law School.  Papers may be selected for publication subsequent to the
Conference in the John Marshall Journal of Computer and Information
Law.
 
The preliminary announcement of CYBER://CON.97 program, site, and
registration information, will be released during September, 1996.
Inquiries may be addressed as above or by telephone to the Center,
(312) 987-1419.
 

David E. Sorkin    7sorkin@jmls.edu   http://www.mcs.net/~sorkin/
Ass't Prof. of Law & Assoc. Dir., Ctr. for Information Technology
  & Privacy Law, The John Marshall Law School - (312) 987-2387   

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

From: jcdowns@strategic-vision.com (Jorene Downs)
Subject: FCC Adopts Rules On Cellular 911
Date: Thu, 13 Jun 1996 19:17:13 GMT
Organization: Strategic Vision
Reply-To: jcdowns@strategic-vision.com


WASHINGTON (Reuter) - Regulators adopted rules to allow cellular phone
users to make 911 emergency calls from anywhere in the United States,
without a cellular company blocking a call if a person isn't a
subscriber to the system.

	 The Federal Communications Commission also took steps
Wednesday to make it easier for 911 and other emergency operators to
locate people -- such as a stranded driver -- who call for help over a
wireless phone but can't provide their exact location.

	 "This will really enhance public safety and it will save
lives," said FCC Commissioner Susan Ness during a public meeting at
which the agency adopted the new rules.
 
	 Nearly 50,000 calls a day are made from wireless phones to
911 and other emergency numbers, according to the Cellular Telephone
Industry Association (CTIA). Calls include people reporting a
carjacking or wanting help in a traffic accident.

	 Currently, however, cellular phone companies can block calls
made by people away from home. Areas where this can happen include
Chicago, Miami, and Nashville, Tenn.

	 The new rules bar a cellular company from blocking a 911  
emergency call if the caller is outside their usual calling 
area. But there are conditions. 

	 The caller's cellular phone must have an activated phone
number -- or Mobile Identification Number (MIN) -- to get immediate
access to 911 services.

	 For phones without MINs, police and other public-safety  
authorities can ask the cellular company to deliver the call.
 
	 The FCC is seeking comment on a requirement that phones  
without MINs also have guaranteed access to 911. 

	 In December 1994, a cellular company blocked the 911 call of
a California woman who was shot and seriously wounded.  After the
incident, most of California's cellular companies ended the practice
of blocking calls.

	 "The FCC has made the right call on cellular access to 911  
services," said Rep. Anna Eschoo, a California Democrat who 
introduced legislation calling for such rules. 

	 The FCC also outlined a plan to allow emergency operators and
other public safety officials to locate a cellular caller who can't
give their location because the call is disconnected or they don't
know exactly where they are.

	 The plan -- proposed by the CTIA and the nation's public
safety agencies -- calls for the phase in of increasingly sophisticated 
technology. The choice about whether to adopt it rests with local
governments operating 911 services.

	 Within a year, authorities would be able to locate the
calling area, or cell site, from which a person is phoning. In five
years, the specific location -- within about a 125-meter (yard) area
 -- would be provided in at least 67 percent of all cases.

	 Estimates vary on the cost of implementing such "enhanced"
911 features, ranging from $550 million to $7 billion over a five-year
period. The FCC left it up to state and local officials to determine
how to pay for the program.

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

Date: Thu, 13 Jun 1996 14:56:08 EDT
From: Joseph Bergstein <jbergste@nova.umuc.edu>
Subject: Tax on Cellphones in Maryland


Montgomery County MD county council approved a new tax on cellular
phone users whose billing address is within the county.  They become
one of many areas looking for new ways to raise revenue, and clearly
the business community which has bulk of cellphones is very unhappy
because of added costs.  The tax rate indicated is 92.5 cents per month
per phone or roughly an additional $11 a year, expected to raise in
this county nearly $2 million.  Tax is supposed to begin on July 1.
How can Bell Atlantic/NYNEX, Cellular One, and Sprint Spectrum be
expected to get their billing programs modified in such a short amount
of time?


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: They won't get it ready in time but
once they do have it ready they will backdate the taxes to when it
should have started in a retroactive way. That is, two or three months
 from now when the software is in place they will charge all the tax
which was due from July 1 onward to that date, then go monthly from
that point forward.

Thinking about the earlier message in this issue in which there will
be new 911 procedures in place for cell phones and the local governments
are 'to find ways to pay for it' I wonder if a tax on cellular phone
service will be the answer?  In the Chicago area there has been a tax
on phone bills to pay for 911 service for a few years now. They may
decide a tax on cellular service is the way to pay for whatever 911
enhancements are needed in this new plan.    PAT]

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

Date: Thu, 13 Jun 96 17:24:35 EST
From: Tom Zinn <zinnt@ncr.disa.mil>
Subject: Excel to Provide Discount Pager Service


Excel Telecommunications Inc. of Dallas, TX has announced that it has
signed a deal with PageMart, Inc. to sell discount pager services to
its approximately two million customers and seeks to expand its
customer base. Details are to be announced on or around August 1st.

For more information contact Tom Zinn at ExcelTZ@aol.com.

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

From: Ed Ellers <edellers@delphi.com>
Subject: Re: Pagers - 149 MHz vs. 800 MHz
Date: Thu, 13 Jun 96 00:29:56 -0500
Organization: Delphi (info@delphi.com email, 800-695-4005 voice)


TELECOM Digest Editor noted in response to Rick Catterson <rickc@ca.
newbridge.com>:
 
> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Personally I think 800 tends to
> penetrate a little better into steel buildings, basements and other
> hard to reach places while 149 tends to cover a larger geographical
> distance but falls short when it comes to rooting its way into
> computer rooms, for example. Each type of radio wave has different
> characteristics than other radio waves and the frequency selected for
> use is very much an applications thing. Also, the type of antenna
 
This may be both a matter of shorter wavelengths vs. the "apertures"
in an otherwise RF-resistant structure, and also that there is less
stray RF likely to be around in the higher band from computers and
such.
 
> I remember many years ago when police officers and firemen used to
> have radios at 27 megs and they drove around with those great big
> antennas on their vehicles. Then they all moved to the 150-155 megs
> area and had much better transmission, etc. Now many large urban 
> police forces have ditched that frequency and use 450-470 for all
> their transmissions with very good results. Generally, the higher
> the frequency, the better the overall results in transmission although
> I am not sure what all the technical reasons are.   PAT]
 
They were really at somewhat higher frequencies, above 30 MHz.  The
move to higher bands was more a matter of finding space for more
channels than of getting better coverage, and some state police
departments still use the low band to better cover the large areas
around police posts since the lower frequencies seem to follow terrain
to a greater extent.  (Much to the cops' sorrow in some cases, since
that band is also prone to sporadic-E skip propagation.  A Tennessee
state trooper told me in the 1970s, when they shared the same
frequency as the Indiana State Police, that he often heard Indiana
police communications on his radio, making life that much more
difficult for both departments.)
 
Another factor is that because of the shortage of channels, "repeater"
systems are almost unknown on the low band, so agencies on that band
often have to have the dispatcher repeat a message from an officer so
it can be heard by other officers; on the higher bands repeater
systems allow any transmission to be heard directly by the other units
(and by scanner listeners too).  Some state police departments even
have repeaters in the patrol cars, so that when the trooper talks on
his UHF handie-talkie he can contact the post through the more
powerful VHF radio in the car.

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

From: gws@cadcs.cb.att.com (Gary Sanders)
Subject: Re: Pagers - 149 MHz vs. 800 MHz
Date: 13 Jun 1996 13:06:55 GMT
Organization: AT&T Bell Labs, Columbus Ohio.
Reply-To: gary.w.sanders@att.com


I dont know of any public service band in the 27mhz band. Its been an
international broadcast band, 11 meter hamband and later CB in the US.
Police have been in the 30-50mhz VHF low band and still have pretty
big antennas.


Gary W. Sanders (N8EMR) gary.w.sanders@att.com	
AT&T Columbus,Ohio 614-860-5965

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

Date: Thu, 13 Jun 1996 13:33:13 EDT
From: Steve Bagdon <sbagdon.ford@e-mail.com>
Subject: Re: Pagers - 149 Mhz vs. 800 Mhz


You mean you actually expected the sales staff to *understand* the
technical aspects of the products that they were selling? :)

Speaking from personal experience only, 145mhz has longer range, but
not the 'penetration' of 800mhz. 800 gets into buildings better, but
145 works better in 'fringe area'.


Steve B.

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

From: kd1nr@anomaly.ideamation.com (Tony Pelliccio)
Subject: Re: Pagers - 149 MHz vs. 800 MHz
Date: 13 Jun 1996 15:51:22 -0400
Organization: Ideamation, Inc.


> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Personally I think 800 tends to
> penetrate a little better into steel buildings, basements and other
> hard to reach places while 149 tends to cover a larger geographical
> distance but falls short when it comes to rooting its way into
> computer rooms, for example. Each type of radio wave has different
> characteristics than other radio waves and the frequency selected for
> use is very much an applications thing. Also, the type of antenna
> needed for various frequencies is a consideration. The lower the
> frequency, the larger the antenna has to be, and this could be
> cumbersome at very low frequencies. The difference in size of antenna
> between 149 and 800 is not that much (as compared to say, 27 megs or
> 'ten meter' and 'eleven meter' stuff) so that would not be a concern
> with pagers, but the propogation of the wave or the way the signal
> gets around would matter a lot for many people.

Actually I much prefer the 149MHz units. Why? I currently have a page
on 931MHz and it stinks. Propagation is god awful! When I had my
149MHz unit I got the page wherever I was, computer room or not. It
has to do with the wavelength of the signal. 800MHz and higher
frequencies tend to reflect more so than penetrate.


Tony Pelliccio, KD1NR
kd1nr@anomaly.ideamation.com

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
public service systems and networks including Compuserve and America
On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. 

Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:

                 * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu *

The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
Townson of Skokie, Illinois USA. You can reach us by postal mail, fax 
or phone at:
                      Post Office Box 4621
                     Skokie, IL USA   60076
                       Phone: 500-677-1616
                        Fax: 847-329-0572
  ** Article submission address: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu

Our archives are located at mirror.lcs.mit.edu and are available by using
anonymous ftp. The archives can also be accessed using our email
information service. For a copy of a helpful file explaining how to
use the information service, just ask.

*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from the              *
* International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in Geneva, Switzerland    * 
* under the aegis of its Telecom Information Exchange Services (TIES)   * 
* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
* ing views of the ITU.                                                 *
*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
yourself who provide funding in amounts deemed appropriate. Your help
is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of twenty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #288
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Tue Jun 18 13:13:10 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id NAA26833; Tue, 18 Jun 1996 13:13:10 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 13:13:10 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606181713.NAA26833@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #289

TELECOM Digest     Tue, 18 Jun 96 13:13:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 289

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    BellSouth Donates Children's Education Materials (Mike King)
    Pac Bell Caller ID SNAFU (Tad Cook)
    Pac*Bell Delays Caller-ID Yet Again (Nancy Gold)
    Positive Aspects of CallerID (Rubens Rahim)
    Book Review: "The Internet Kids Yellow Pages" by Polly (Rob Slade)
    Florida Callers Protest High Rates (Tad Cook)
    Sub-Contractors Needed For Telecom Information (Terje Myhre)
    911 Locator for Cellular Users (John Stahl)
    Nationwide PRI Shortage (Stephen Balbach)
    Time Warner Cable Modem Trial (spider@aol.com)
    Bell Canada will Charge for 555-1212 (Stan Salter)
    New Twist For 800 Number and Spammers (David F. Reynolds)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Mike King <mk@wco.com>
Subject: BellSouth Donates Children's Education Materials
Date: Mon, 17 Jun 1996 16:56:39 PDT


   ----- Forwarded Message -----

 Date: Mon, 17 Jun 1996 09:52:35 -0400
 From: BellSouth <press@www.bellsouth.com>
 Subject: BellSouth Donates Children's Education Materials
 Reply-To: press@www.bellsouth.com

BellSouth Donates Children's Education Materials to National Emergency
Number Association

DENVER-"Buzzy," the colorful mascot created by BellSouth as an aid in
educating children on 911 services, is taking his act nationwide. With
an interest in promoting proper use of 911 emergency services among
young children across the country, BellSouth has donated the use of
Buzzy and 8,500 copies of a learning book, "911: How It's Done," to
the National Emergency Number Association (NENA).

The donation was formalized this week at NENA's annual conference in
Denver. Based in Columbus, Ohio, NENA is an association whose mission
is to foster the technological advancement, availability and
implementation of a universal emergency telephone system. In carrying
out that mission, NENA promotes research, planning training and
education.

Developed by BellSouth on behalf of its ninestate region, Buzzy and
"911: How It's Done" are designed to help educators teach proper use
of the 911 emergency number to young, schoolaged children.

Used as a teacher's discussion guide, the booklet leads children from
kindergarten to thirdgrade in discussions on appropriate use of the
911 number in emergency situations, as well as suggestions on when
it's appropriate not to call. The guide also includes a narrative
cassette tape and provides instructions on basic 911 dialing
techniques with a practice telephone keypad.

The Buzzy cartoon character is featured throughout the discussion
guide in illustrations that appeal to young children. Buzzy is also
brought to life in two colorful, lifesized costumes developed by
BellSouth as an official mascot of its 911 program. The costumes are
part of the overall donation made by the company to the NENA
organization.

"BellSouth has enjoyed a longstanding commitment to 911, having
provided the nation's first Basic 911 system in our region in 1976,"
said Mike Lassiter, product manager for 911 services at BellSouth
Business Systems.  "We're hopeful the Buzzy character and learning
books will be effective on a much broader scale in teaching children
the proper use of the 911 emergency number."

Bob Cobb, education and training coordinator for NENA, said his
organization is developing a marketing program to make the book
available to schools, preschools, 911 centers and other institutions.
In addition, NENA will incorporate Buzzy into books, publications and
other training materials as appropriate.

"We're very excited about the opportunities BellSouth's Buzzy
character is providing, both to NENA and to the children who one day
may critically use 911 knowledge gained from Buzzy materials," Cobb
said.

BellSouth provides telecommunications services in nine Southeastern
states, including Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana,
Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennessee. With its
headquarters in Atlanta, BellSouth serves more than 21 million local
telephone lines and provides local exchange and intraLATA long
distance service over one of the most modern telecommunications
networks in the world.


For Information Contact:
David A. Storey 
BellSouth 
(205) 977-5001 

Bob Cobb 
NENA 
(614) 459-7707 

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

Mike King   *   Oakland, CA, USA   *   mk@wco.com

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

From: Tad Cook <tad@ssc.com>
Subject: Pac Bell Caller ID SNAFU
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 00:39:05 PDT


Pacific Bell Delays Start of Caller ID
By Julie Appleby, Contra Costa Times, Walnut Creek, Calif.

Knight-Ridder/Tribune Business News

Jun. 15--Pacific Bell abruptly halted the launch of its controversial
Caller ID program Friday after discovering a snafu that left some
customers who requested telephone number privacy unprotected.

The program had been set to start today, allowing customers who buy
the service to see the numbers of incoming phone calls before
answering.

The utility admitted it had failed to block the telephone numbers of
some customers who had requested privacy and sent letters to other
customers indicating their lines were not blocked when, in fact, they
were.

"We're sorry about the confusion," said PacBell spokeswoman Beverly
Butler.  "We've voluntarily pulled it back because we want to fix the
problem. This is a product we're not going to offer until it's right."

She said the utility does not know how the mistakes were made, how
many customers were affected or how it will resolve the problem. It
also won't make a guess on when the service will be launched.

"We just don't know," Butler said.

At least three million Californians requested blocking during an
extensive $33 million public education program that Pacific Bell was
required to offer, Mark Pitchford, a vice president with the phone
company, said last month. The utility services about 12 million
residential lines in California.

The utility is under pressure to get the program started before a July
1 deadline set by the Federal Communications Commission. California is
the last state to begin Caller ID.

The utility has already asked for delays in starting the program, the
most recent last month when it told the California Public Utilities
Commission it needed more time to process requests from customers who
sought to block their numbers.

Customers had been asked to notify the utility by mail or telephone if
they wanted either "complete" or "selective" blocking.

Complete blocking stops transmission of all calls, except those placed
to 800, 880 and 900 area codes. Selective blocking allows the customer
to decide which calls to block by hitting 67 before dialing. The 800,
880 and 900 lines are also exempt from selective blocking.

Although Caller ID at Pacific Bell won't go into effect today, other
local telephone companies in California, including GTE, will launch
the program, Butler said. "If you want to be sure your number isn't
passed, be sure to use 67 when dialing," Butler said.

Some consumer groups and the PUC had wanted customers to be
automatically protected from telephone number transmission, arguing in
court that Pacific Bell should be allowed to release only those
numbers where customers had specifically requested transmission. The
Supreme Court last month rejected that argument.

Once the program does begin, Pacific Bell plans to charge $6.50 a
month for residential customers and $7.50 for businesses who want the
service that will allow them access to the numbers of incoming calls.

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

From: Nancy Gold <nancyg@esd.sgi.com>
Subject: Pac*Bell Delays Caller-ID Yet Again
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 08:41:36 -0700
Organization: Bureau of Emulated Processors


In spite of press releases as late as Thursday stating that Caller-ID
service would be available today (June 15th), it's not.

There is yet another delay till an unknown date, supposedly due to the
continuing blocking/non-blocking issue. I wish I had more details.

The first delay was June 1st -> June 15th.

My Caller-ID box sits in wait, as it has since May 20th.


Nancy Evelyn Gold - Silicon Graphics, Inc., Mountain View, CA
Byker, Comic, Engineer, Actress - K1100LT (Chloe), DoD #1184
http://reality.sgi.com/nancyg            - (nancyg@sgi.com)
http://www.e-zines.com/people/nancy_gold - (nancyg@e-zines.com)

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

Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 00:50:48 EDT
From: Rubens Rahim <rrahim@novice.uwaterloo.ca>
Subject: Positive Aspects of CallerID


The following is from Telecom Update #39 (Angus Telemanagement).
CallerID is having a positive effect, contrary to what people claim.
Per-line blocking is not available to anyone except law enforcement,
domestic shelters, etc. BC Tel serves most of the province of British
Columbia Canada, pop 3.2 million.

                        ===============

NUISANCE CALLS CUT 56%: BC Tel reports that the introduction of Call
Display and *69 Return reduced reported nuisance calls last year by
56% compared with 1991, when these services were introduced. Obscene
calls dropped almost 75% over this period.

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

Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 10:19:40 EST
From: Rob Slade <roberts@decus.ca>
Subject: Book Review: "The Internet Kids Yellow Pages" by Polly


BKINKDYP.RVW   960428
 
"The Internet Kids Yellow Pages/Golden Directory", Jean Armour Polly, 1996,
0-07-882217-3, C$28.95/UK#13.95/A$39.95/NZ$49.95
%A   Jean Armour Polly feedback@pollywood.com
%C   300 Water Street, Whitby, Ontario   L1N 9B6
%D   1996
%G   0-07-882217-3
%I   McGraw-Hill Ryerson/Osborne
%O   C$28.95/UK#13.95/A$39.95/NZ$49.95 905-430-5000 fax: 905-430-5020
%P   355
%T   "The Internet Kids Yellow Pages/Golden Directory"
 
A great many of the child or educationally oriented books on the
Internet have lists of resources, but this compendium is a very
welcome addition.  As with others in the "yellow pages" ("Golden
Directory" outside of the US) series, the collection is a massive one,
even though it couldn't be exhaustive.  For kids, with incessant
demands for information on every topic under the sun, massive is what
you want.  (It even has a listing for Alta Vista, Digital's "mother of
all" search engines.)
 
The sites are well chosen.  There is a wide range of both topics and
levels.  (A helpful feature for a future edition might be the
inclusion of indicators for grade and age suitability.)  Occasionally
the descriptions contain erroneous or misleading "facts": this is
possibly due to taking the claims listed in those sites at face value
without checking.

 
copyright Robert M. Slade, 1996   BKINKDYP.RVW   960428. Distribution
permitted in nTELECOM Digest and associated publications. 


Vancouver          ROBERTS@decus.ca         | "Power users think
Institute for      rslade@vcn.bc.ca         |  'Your PC is now
Research into      rslade@vanisl.decus.ca   |  Stoned' is part of
User               Rob_Slade@mindlink.bc.ca |  the DOS copyright
Security           Canada V7K 2G6           |  line." R. Murnane

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

From: Tad Cook <tad@ssc.com>
Subject: Florida Callers Protest High Rates
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 03:53:40 PDT


Four Corners, Fla., Callers Protest High Telephone Rates
By Robert Sargent Jr., The Orlando Sentinel, Fla.

Knight-Ridder/Tribune Business News

Jun. 15--Susan Reininghaus used to think that the cellular phone in
her car was a luxury because the calls she made on it were so
expensive.

That was before she started working in Loughman -- one of the small
communities that make up the Four Corners area.

The employee of the Bridgewater Crossing residential development pays
78 cents for three minutes from her car. But at the office, close to
where Orange, Osceola, Polk and Lake counties meet, she said such a
call costs as much as $1.50.

"This is disgusting," she said. "If it was a movie, I would probably
laugh about it."

Reininghaus was among hundreds who showed up Friday for two Florida
Public Service Commission public hearings at the Polo Park East
residential community.  Residents complained about high phone bills
caused by the area's unusual setup.

Four Corners is divided among three different area codes and is served
by several phone companies including GTE Florida Inc., BellSouth and
Sprint.

Anyone calling between the area codes -- even if it's just across the
street -- is charged long-distance rates. Even the communities they
can call locally, within their area codes, are limited.

Commission members said they will use the information they collected
Friday to resolve the problems. A decision should be made by Sept. 3.

"Even if they give the green flag to any change, it could be a six- to
eight-month process before we get it set up," said GTE product manager
Dave Robinson.

The commission can mandate several options for rate relief such as an
extended local calling area in Four Corners. That would require the
residents to pay a bigger flat fee on their monthly phone bills.

Another option is to charge a 25-cent rate on any calls made outside
of the residents' calling exchange -- similar to plans adopted between
a couple of south Lake cities and Orlando.

Yet another is for a phone company to come into Four Corners and offer
its own local calling service.

Whatever is decided, it's not going to resolve the multitude of other
challenges facing the area's 5,000 residents including dealing with
four county governments, four law enforcement agencies and other
unusual problems.

"The circumstances for the residents living here are pretty bizarre,"
said PSC Commissioner Julia Johnson. "It's becoming more and more
common, though -- especially around Orlando -- to have the growth of
these pocket communities about 20 miles out."

                          --------

FOR ONLINE SERVICES:

Visit The Orlando Sentinel Online on America Online. Keyword: SENTINEL.


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: There is a situation something like
that on the far northwest side of Chicago where two independent villages
set next to each other mostly surrounded on all sides by the city of
Chicago and with a small area nearby which is not part of any town and
is an 'unincorporated' part of Cook County, Illinois. Driving a matter
of a few blocks causes you to leave the city of Chicago, go through
these towns and come back into Chicago for only a short distance until
you leave Chicago again and go into still another suburb. To complicate
things a bit more, there are two telephone companies and two area codes,
with each telco having exchanges in both area codes, but where phones
are concerned, calls between everyone in that area are all considered
local calls no matter which telco or area code is involved. All you
have to rememeber basically is which area code you are calling, and
the area code tends to change every block or two or three as you
bounce back and forth between city and suburb. I guess the inner city
of Los Angeles has a similar situation with GTE/Bell and various area
codes. PAT]
 
------------------------------

Date: Mon, 17 Jun 1996 11:53:07 +0100
From: Terje Myhre <Myhre@manasus.demon.co.uk>
Reply-To: Terje Myhre <myhre@manasus.demon.co.uk>
Subject: Sub-Contractors Needed For Telecom Information
Organization: Manasus Consulting AB


Hello, 

Im working as an independent consultant for marketing departments of
telecom service providers.  Sometimes, the projects involve literature
and field research, a task which is heavy to undertake for a single
consultant juggling with two or three projects simultaneously.

As a result, I'm looking for one or more sub-contractors in the
following fields:

Public information gathering:

The activities would consist telecom information gathering from general
business and industry magazines, from the public Web-space and calling
into specific operators and get public service information.  The results
would be delivered in raw form. 

Private information gathering:

The activities would consist of calling into functional managers of
telecom operators and go through short questionnaires.  The names of
the companies would be provided, and the function of the person to
interview, but the sub-contractor would need to track the name and
phone number of the person.  The results would be delivered in Word or
Excel format, dependent upon the type of questions.

Simple information tabulation:

The activities would consist of taking public and private information
and pull together simple overviews, tables, and matrixes of results
based on information and data provided to the sub-contractor.  The
parameters and the format and paging of the information to be presented
would be specified on beforehand.  

I would be interested in information about the potential sub-contractors,
potential references, the price models and levels on which you operate, 
average delivery times from order, and if there are other conditions 
of the business relationship which should be highlighted.

As I for a while am working abroad with a client, and are not tapping
the newsgroups regularly, I would appreciate if the responses could be
copied or sent me directly (see e-mail address below).


Regards, 

Terje Myhre
Manasus Consulting AB
London N1, UK

Priv. / evening  +44 171 833 2826
Mob. +46 70 512 7573
Fax / answ.mach. +44 171 713 5499
E-mail: myhre@manasus.demon.co.uk
WWW: http://www.netlink.co.uk/users/manasus

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

Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 16:01:52 GMT
From: John Stahl <aljon@worldnet.att.net>
Subject: 911 Locator for Cellular Users


In TELECOM Digest, V16, #288, the announcement of the FCC's decision for
cellular systems to identify 911 calls and to require: 

> "...Within a year, authorities would be able to locate the calling area, or
> cell site, from which a person is phoning. In five years, the specific
> location -- within about a 125-meter (yard) area -- would be provided in at
> least 67 percent of all cases.

> Estimates vary on the cost of implementing such "enhanced" 911 features,
> ranging from $550 million to $7 billion over a five-year period. The FCC
> left it up to state and local officials to determine how to pay for the
> program...";

I'm not sure if this isn't another of those wonderful 'dreams' from
our friendly government or this is actually something that can be
done. Right now, I pay something like 98 cents each month to my LEC
for enhanced 911 service on each line. I wonder what that amount will
be in five years (considering that most estimates made before actual
engineering is done are usually DRASTICALLY understated!) when this
new system is supposed to be operational?

Does anyone know what sort of system modification can be made to allow
this to happen? I would assume that the handsets (portable
phones/radios) can not be modified -- think how the circuitry is
packed into a flip-phone right now! -- due to the large numbers in
use. This would be tantamount to the change over from analog to
digital -- have a third system operational?

I can think of at least two scenarios: The tight cell packing of
hundreds of meters in diameter in a major metropolitan MSA (like NYC,
Chicago or LA) and the rural MSA's where a cell might be as much as 10
miles in diameter. In the former, there might be some way to
triangulate the signal from at least two antennas to achieve the 125
meter resolution but in the latter, there is sure to be MAJOR
technical difficulties! Am I wrong?

Input from someone?


John Stahl
Aljon Enterprises
Telecom/Data Consultants - Telecommunications/data systems design
email: aljon@worldnet.att.net

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

From: stephen@clark.net (Stephen Balbach)
Subject: Nationwide PRI Shortage
Date: 17 Jun 1996 18:05:55 GMT
Organization: Clark Internet Services, Balt/DC, mail all-info@clark.net


As an ISP in the MD/DC/VA areas we are expanding to offer dialup
service over PRI's (%100 digital V.34 and ISDN on same line).  After
placeing orders with Bell Atlantic it is becoming clear there is a
serious shortage of PRI equipment in Bell Atlantic. Orders take 2
months, then get knocked back another month. Some sites have no PRI
access for the foreseable future. Orders are so backloged that Bell
Atlantic has opened a special division just to handle the queue of
customers.

The reason for this apprently is the equipment manufactures (Nortel,
AT&T) have been caught with thier pants down and there is simply no
central switching equipment to provide the PRI's. We have been told by
Bell Atlantic there is a nationwide shortage of PRI's. CO's set for
upgrades get knocked back in favour of higher demand CO's with the
result being some CO's wont get upgrades for 6 months to a year or
possibly more. This has potentially dire consequences for the online
industry which is moving POTS lines over to PRI based solutions.

Is this true? Are PRI's really that hard to get in other parts of the
country? I look forward to hearing of others experiences, thanks.


Stephen Balbach  "Driving the Internet To Work"
VP, ClarkNet     due to the high volume of mail I receive please quote
info@clark.net   the full original message in your reply.

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

From: spider@aol.com (Spider)
Subject: Time Warner Cable Modem Trial
Date: 17 Jun 1996 19:11:41 -0400
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Reply-To: spider@aol.com (Spider)


Can anyone tell me more about the Time Warner Cable Modem Trial in Round
Rock, Texas near Austin, TX?

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

From: ab885@torfree.net (Stan Salter)
Subject: Bell Canada Will Charge for 555-1212
Organization: Toronto Free-Net
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 09:36:57 GMT


As of July 01, 1996 Bell Canada (Ontario, Quebec) will charge $0.85
for any 1-XXX-555-1212 call from a payphone.  This will include 1-800
and 1-888 calls.


stan.salter@ablelink.org or ab885@torfree.net

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

From: daver@teleport.com (David F. Reynolds)
Subject: New Twist For 800 Number and Spammers
Date: 18 Jun 1996 06:48:55 GMT
Organization: Teleport - Portland's Public Access (503) 220-1016


Thought you'all might get a kick out of this one -- this slimeball is
threatening to charge back (with surcharges yet!) nuisance calls to
his 800 number; I'm saving this number right next to Jeff's.


Received: from flood.xnet.com by relay2.UU.NET with ESMTP (peer crosschecked
          as: flood.xnet.com [198.147.221.35]) id QQaqpw07203; Tue, 21 May 1996
          03:04:13 -0400 (EDT)
NNTP-Posting-Host: monsoon.xnet.com
Message-ID:  <4nrpod$32g@flood.xnet.com>
Date:         Tue, 21 May 1996 07:01:33 GMT
From: Abram Rutman <heinkel@XNET.COM>
Organization: XNet - A Full Service Internet Provider - (708) 983-6064

<sleazy M I N O X I D I L spam deleted>
 ...

NEW YORK TIMES.  DOCTOR recommended.  For FREE information,
please call 1.800.555.8655

*PLEASE NOTE THAT ANY CALLS NOT PERTAINING TO INFORMATION REQUESTS
WILL BE AUTO-BILLED TO ORIGINATING NUMBER UTILIZING LONG DISTANCE
SURCHARGES.


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: This is a threat we are now seeing on
a regular basis from spammers on the net. Thanks to the vigorous and
challenging responses from netters to these fools, they have long since
lost -- as a practical matter -- any way of doing business via email.
No matter where their email account is located, the floods of mail to
them and the postmasters, etc has caused them to lose their account or
otherwise be unable to effectively sort through all the responses and
do business. And that is what spam is all about: doing business on the
net and making a profit at it. They have to be able to reach their
customers and so with email no longer being a viable option they have
turned to the phone. 

Now if they were to give a regular number and ask for people to call
them, the results would be very poor. They have to make it easy and
inexpensive for inquiries and orders to get through, thus the use of 
800 numbers. But here is the rub: now they are stuck with the charges
for *all* calls to their 800 number, whether or not it generates any
business for them, and most of them are finding out the hard way that
it is not making money. So where do they go from here? Remember, no
customer contact means no sales. No sales means the whole thing falls
apart. These guys are starting now to find out the wrath of a postmaster
who has received thousands of hate letters in 24 hours about them is
just child's play compared to the crisp and effecient processing of
their account by a telco which does not get paid for *thousands* of
dollars in charges via their 800 number. <smile>. They wish they
only had a postmaster and thousands of angry netters they could scorn
while ignoring their hate mail! Telco will not be scorned!

Thus the threat to charge back all the worthless calls they are getting
now from netters who have adapted to the new situation and changed
with the circumstances by trashing their 800 numbers the same way just
months ago was being done with their email accounts.  **And I feel
certain it is just a bluff -- just an idle threat.**  You who have
been in this business for years with many sophisticated contacts in
the industry would have to spend some time looking for a way to get
your billing tapes over to an agency for conversion to chargeback to
the caller. I've been around for years and I right now could not put
my finger on the exact process for getting this accomplished although
we all know it *can* be done, illegally of course.

Therefore I would not get too worried about the threat of having
those calls charged back; as a worst case scenario you know your own
telco would probably remove them anyway. Still, if it matters, make
sure the ANI delivered is basically worthless to these idiots by
using payphones, cell phones and looparounds, etc to make your calls
of inquiry about their products and services. Just as with the help
of the net things got to the point where these birds no longer can get
internet service from anyone -- or very few places -- we need to
fix things now so they get such a bad reputation with write offs and
administrative grief for the telcos that none of telcos will extend
them credit either. 

Reports are reaching me from various quarters that netters have 
'made their pledge' to Jeff Boy for this month <g> and loaded him with
calls. Remember, the community goal is a hundred thousand dollars in
worthless 800 charges to Jeff's long distance carrier during June. 
We want them to drop him like a hot potato when he can't pay the bill.
That goal only requires that all netters make two or three calls each
to inquire about his products. Those who make the largest pledges will
probably get an award and recognition from Jeff <g>. 
 
Now it appears that 800.555.8655 also needs to be worked over. It is
another Internet Business Man who is going to have to learn the hard
way. If you can devote some time to it in the next few days, I'm
sure the community will appreciate your sacrifice. Show them that even
though advertising on the net is cheap (can you say free?) the final
results can be horribly expensive and put them out of business
entirely, at least in this mode of operation. Don't worry about their
bluffs to charge you for the calls. It is unlikely. At the same time,
** do not harass them via phone **. That is illegal. Simple calls of
inquiry to discuss their service will be fine.    PAT]

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
public service systems and networks including Compuserve and America
On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. 

Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:

                 * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu *

The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
Townson of Skokie, Illinois USA. You can reach us by postal mail, fax 
or phone at:
                      Post Office Box 4621
                     Skokie, IL USA   60076
                       Phone: 847-329-0570
                        Fax: 847-329-0572
  ** Article submission address: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu

Our archives are located at mirror.lcs.mit.edu and are available by using
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*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from the              *
* International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in Geneva, Switzerland    * 
* under the aegis of its Telecom Information Exchange Services (TIES)   * 
* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
* ing views of the ITU.                                                 *
*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
yourself who provide funding in amounts deemed appropriate. Your help
is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of twenty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #289
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Tue Jun 18 17:54:11 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id RAA26538; Tue, 18 Jun 1996 17:54:11 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 17:54:11 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606182154.RAA26538@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #290

TELECOM Digest     Tue, 18 Jun 96 17:54:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 290

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    FTC's Online Watchdog (Tad Cook)
    Controversy Surrounds Video-Telephone Venture (Tad Cook)
    Pacific Bell Delays Caller ID Launch (Mike King)
    Modem For Use in Greenland (Ian Leonard)
    LATA Sorting Application (Scott De Toffol)
    New GTE Long Distance Rates (Van Heffner)
    Ameritech Restarts 'Callpack' Plans (TELECOM Digest Editor)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Tad Cook <tad@ssc.com>
Subject: FTC's Online Watchdog
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 00:45:58 PDT


INTERVIEW: FTC's Online Watchdog Wants Long Leash on Rules
By Rory J. O'Connor, San Jose Mercury News, Calif.

Knight-Ridder/Tribune Business News

SAN JOSE, Calif.--Jun. 17--A onetime grand marshal of the St.
Patrick's Day parade in her childhood home of Syracuse, N.Y.,
Christine Varney now wants to be another sort of marshal: this time,
in cyberspace.

Varney, 40, is the youngest of the nation's five members of the
Federal Trade Commission, perhaps a fitting distinction for her chosen
role as the consumer's on-line watchdog. She hopes the government can
figure out how to deal with consumer fraud, rip-offs and individual
privacy on the Internet, without regulating the medium to death.

A lawyer by training, Varney served as chief counsel to the 1992
Clinton election campaign and, later, as secretary to the Cabinet.
That job gave her an inkling of how much the government had to learn
about cyberspace when she attempted to install what her colleagues
said would be impossible: an interagency e-mail system between Cabinet
officials and the White House.

Varney, whose term expires later this year, discussed the FTC's role
on the Internet in her Pennsylvania Avenue office with Mercury News
Washington Correspondent Rory J. O'Connor. This is an excerpt from
that interview:

Q: Why your strong interest in the Internet? It's not long associated
with the FTC. ( http://www.ftc.gov/ )

A: When I came here I thought one of the first things I wanted to do
was explore the intersection between what the Federal Trade Commission
does and what the Internet is. There were several issues that came to
our attention.

One is fraud, fraud on the Net, and our jurisdiction is to police the
Net for fraud, which we've been doing. A second one was on-line
commerce and the security of financial data. We administer the Fair
Credit Reporting Act, which led to a more general discussion of
privacy.

It became clear to me that privacy was a very important issue on the
Net ... and that there really are no rules of the road here. And, it
would be useful, helpful and appropriate for government to assist in
the process of creating some rules of the road without really
resorting to the heavy hand of regulation.

Q: Give me an idea of the current level of fraud and crime on the Internet.

A: We see the garden variety scams that we see in every other medium.
We see the get-rich-quick schemes, that are variations on Ponzi
schemes and others.  There's fraudulent sweepstakes, there is
fraudulent business opportunity stuff.  There's fraudulent credit
repairs. I mean all the fraud you see on the telephone or sometimes on
late-night television or in the newspaper, you see it on-line.  We
prosecute it. We've brought dozens of cases, and we're able to move
very quickly.

As a matter of fact we just did one, Fortuna (Alliance), a company
that was running a pyramid scheme. As part of our court order ... we
got permission from the court to put a big message on the Fortuna Web
site http://www.pacificrim.net/fortuna/ saying the FTC has recently
gotten a preliminary injunction. So when you go to the site, there's
this big, flashing FTC red warning, and you can click on it and then
it takes you to our Web page http://www.ftc.gov/ro/fortuna.htm.

Q: What are the worst sort of offenses that are going on? You called
some of this garden variety. Is there anything particular to the Net
that may not be happening in other media?

A: I have this whole concept that government has a responsibility to
protect vulnerable populations: children, the elderly, maybe
non-English speakers in some circumstances. And, there's a particular
vulnerable population of terminally ill people, or people who have
loved ones terminally ill.

What you see a lot of is these chat rooms where people are talking
about all these cures that mainstream medicine would find rather
outlandish. Some of them I'm sure are perfectly legitimate, heartfelt
people getting on the Net and sharing their experiences.

But what's out there also is ... chat room discussion going on about
(miracle cures abroad), and the person (on-line) is happy to share
with you the arrangements of how to get there and where to stay and
what the doctor's name is and all that. But you never know that in
fact this person ... is the one who's running the whole travel
operation and ... charging for the tree bark. I think that is
incredibly fraudulent. And my suspicion, as yet unproven, is that
there's a fair amount of that kind of fraud going on.

The way you stop it, or the way you make a dent in it, is you take two
or three blockbuster cases and you bust them up.

Q: You talked earlier about wanting the industry to develop some
self-policing.  To what degree do you think we eventually ought to
rely on that vs. putting some kinds of regulations in place?

A: I think you start with industry self-regulation, backed up by
strong law enforcement, so we're going after people who are deceptive
or abusive on-line.  And my guess is that after two years, you'll have
industry back at the table saying, here are the holes, here's where we
do need to regulate. We've seen what works, from self-regulation and
we now know what doesn't work.

So I think in the long run, we will need some regulation, we may need
some legislation, it's just too early right now. We're on the front
end of this.

Q: Are you pleased with the way that industries have self-regulated in
the past when it comes to things like fraud or privacy?

A: I think that self-regulation works for responsible industry players.

When 900-number technology emerged, people thought it was the most
fabulous marketing tool since the invention of the telephone. Well,
that technology went south in about 20 seconds flat because it got
taken over by fraudsters. And it still hasn't rehabilitated itself.

People in the Web world see so clearly what happened in the 900-number
business that they are anxious to make sure that this medium doesn't
get taken over by the bad actors.

Q: The Electronic Privacy Information Center -- http://www/epic.org/
 -- (a pro-privacy consumer group) has been critical of the FTC, saying
you're moving too slowly and have adopted a "see-no-evil,
hear-no-evil" approach to on-line privacy. Is that fair criticism?

A: I do a lot with (EPIC executive director) Marc (Rotenberg). I think
Marc serves an incredibly important function to make us aware of the
problem and to keep pushing us to do something about it. I think the
"something" is where we differ in degree.

I am not ready to concede that the market will fail and that we must
regulate out of the box. I think the industry is too embryonic. I
think anything we impose at this point could be more cumbersome than
helpful, could impede solutions rather than provide them. The
government is not extremely well-known for its ability to solve
problems in emerging industries.

Q: What are the rules now for privacy on the Net? And what do you
think they ought to be?

A: A consumer currently has rights under the Fair Credit Reporting
Act, they currently have rights for the protection of medical data.
There are a couple of statutes that give consumers rights and access
to their information. My view is those laws apply in cyberspace as
well as anywhere else.

But absent those few, narrow statutes governing specific industry
sector activity, I don't think consumers have any rights about what
information is collected on them and what use it's put to. It just
doesn't exist.

What we need to do is encourage a regime to develop where it turns on
individual consent, where the companies willingly seek affirmatively
to attain the consent of individuals to gather and use information
about them, and individuals willingly give or withhold consent for
their information to be used.

Q: There is legislation on the Hill that would ban the (collection and
sale) of information collected from children. What do you think of
that and should that apply in cyberspace as well?

A: I think there is a difference when it comes to kids. I think that
there is no such thing as meaningful consent from a 6-year-old.

If a reputable company is running a (game) site, and if (a child) can
get to the game without going through any survey, if (the survey) is
totally voluntary, and if they strip all personally identifiable
information and they're truly doing product development, maybe that's
OK.

But if they're taking information that's personally identifiable,
like: "Does your mommy work? Does your daddy work? Where do your
brothers and sisters go to school? How often do you go to church?"

I mean, they're taking all that kind of information, they're then
selling it, target marketing households off that -- that's a problem.
That's a serious problem, in my opinion, if they're doing this without
parental consent.

Q: What do you do yourself with relation to your kids and on-line?

A: My kids do not have Internet access at their home computers. They
have Internet access on my portable computer and my husband's portable
computer. Our boxes at home in the kids' rooms don't have hard drives.
So they can't go to the Net unless we're there.

But my kids are 6 and 9, and I'm still able to exert a tremendous
amount of control over where they go on the Net.

Q: What do you worry about with respect to your kids on-line?

A: Nothing very much with my 6-year-old. He can get on the Net, and he
can fool around, but he cannot read very well. He couldn't get into
much trouble.

My 9-year-old, he's very sensible, he's just started walking home from
school by himself, which is a big privilege, we're building up his
responsibility. But kids can get tricked on the Net pretty easily. And
I want my kids not to be in places that they don't need to be in. I
want to be careful about where they're going and who's tracking them.

I'm not worried about pornography. My kids think naked women are
disgusting.

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

FOR ONLINE SERVICES:

Visit Mercury Center on America Online (keyword: MERCURY) or Mercury
Center Web, the World Wide Web site of the San Jose (Calif.) Mercury
News. Point your browser to http://www.sjmercury.com

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

From: Tad Cook <tad@ssc.com>
Subject: Controversy Surrounds Video-Telephone Venture
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 08:11:07 PDT


Controversy Surrounds Video-Telephone Venture Home Link Corp.
By James McNair, The Miami Herald

Knight-Ridder/Tribune Business News

Jun. 17--Marlan "Matt" Matson put one company in bankruptcy in Los
Angeles, shut down another under a barrage of complaints and moved to
Las Vegas to start a computer gambling venture that went nowhere.

Now, he's in Fort Lauderdale, looking for 180 people to fork over $25
million apiece to help him create a nationwide video-telephone
network.

"We are the new platform in telecommunications and information
services, coming available to mass domestic America," Matson crowed.

So far, no one has seized the chance to buy into Matson's Home Link
Corp., but bargain-hunters are hopping all over the company's stock.
What was an 85 cent stock on May 22 soared to $23 on June 6. Not even
Netscape, the Internet wonder that went public last year, shot into
the stratosphere so fast.

If you're looking for the latest quote, forget it. Last week the
Securities and Exchange Commission suspended the trading of Home Link
shares for 10 days. Why?  The SEC said there is a "lack of current and
accurate information" put out by Home Link, including the number of
shares outstanding, the company's capitalization and its future
business prospects.

"Any dealer who makes a market in that stock should be on an enhanced
watch," said Charles Senatore, the SEC's regional director in Miami.
He wouldn't say what else might come of the SEC's attention.

Instead of ranting about government interference, Matson, 58, is
actually reveling in the publicity generated by the SEC action. One
West Palm Beach TV station has already done an on-air piece on Home
Link. Matson is clanging the bell for other stations and magazines to
drop in and poke around his 20-employee computer center.

"You can see we're real," said Matson, who splits his time between
Vegas and Lauderdale. "The system's running. The shop is under
construction. We're not just off the turnip truck."

So what truck did Matson coming riding in on? People at the center of
telecommunications industry circles have never heard of him. Newspaper
clippings from California and Nevada depict Matson as an entrepreneur
at best and, at worst, a scam artist.

There's one thing for sure: Matson doesn't stay in one place very
long. In and around L.A. during the '70s and '80s, Matson went from
selling snacks to providing a nursing employment verification service
before entering the computer industry with Unique Integrated
Applications.

Unique went bankrupt in 1988. Matson blamed it on an embezzling
employee, but an investigation by Costa Mesa police and the Drug
Enforcement Administration concluded his claims were "all
fabrication," according to a 1990 article in Communications Daily.

Matson's next -- and most ambitious -- venture in California, though, was 
Data-Tel Video Text.

Data-Tel was to be a worldwide computer network where information
would be exchanged between "providers" and subscribers, much like
America Online and the Internet do today. To finance its growth,
Matson charged six-figure sums for territorial rights. Those "master"
dealers then sold rights, for five-figure sums, to markets within the
territory. Finally, those licensees put providers on the network for
four-figure amounts.

Although the system did achieve some degree of content and access,
licensees and providers accused Matson of delivering outdated
equipment, exaggerating the size and prospects of the subscriber base
and committing fraud. Lawsuits and consumer complaints were filed.
Kevin Hammond, who owned the Data-Tel rights in San Diego, filed a
breach-of-contract lawsuit against Data-Tel in 1991. Matson didn't
fight the suit. Hammond was awarded $500,000, but never collected a
dime.

"The company ceased operation when Matson humped out of here for Las
Vegas," said Hammond's lawyer, William Bowen.

Even former employees said Matson overstated Data-Tel's ability to
deliver.

"His promises were great, but when it came to materialize, none of
them ever came close," Steve Kohlenberger, Data-Tel's program
developer, told {The Orange County Business Journal} in 1990.

Matson dismissed the Data-Tel affair as "way, way, way, way back." He
said Data-Tel closed its doors because of licensees' financial
shortcomings and the legal pressures they applied.

"The cost of the lawsuits and the problems and the price of
maintaining the system evaporated the revenue stream," he said.

Matson has managed to keep a lower profile in Las Vegas, but a
gambling venture proposed by his Sports Link Inc. -- a system to let
people buy lottery tickets across state lines -- did draw a red flag
from Florida Attorney General Bob Butterworth last year. Butterworth
obtained a restraining order. Matson let it die.

In his leased office on Cypress Creek Road, Matson places a video
telephone call to his office in Las Vegas. He and a woman named
Phyllis, whose live image appears on Matson's 17-inch PC screen,
engage in a short conversation.

"You can do a conference call with seven different family members and
you can have a complete family image going," Matson beams.

Matson likens his company to MCI, the long-distance carrier, before
anyone heard of MCI. He said he is talking to regional telephone
companies about modifying their central switches to accommodate Home
Link's high-bandwidth video signals.  He said he has ordered 10,000
computers from Digital Equipment to rent to subscribers.

Ultimately, Matson said, subscribers will be able to place
long-distance video calls for 25 cents, regardless of their duration.
People who already have a PC will pay $50 a month for the privilege,
$125 a month if they rent one of Home Link's DECs. All customers would
be able to access -- for a fee -- any of 10 content areas proposed by
the company, like job listings and personals.

"We're totally up and operational," Matson said. "I would guess we
have a dozen subscribers and 3,500 applications or requests to
install. The interest has gone up dramatically since the SEC has made
the public aware of who we are."

Yet people in his own industry remain unaware of Home Link. Jeffrey
Kagan, an industry consultant in Atlanta, wonders how Home Link can
deliver what most established telephone companies still don't.

"It seems like an awfully tall order for a company that size," Kagan
said.  "Even the big guys take shots in the dark and miss, but it
looks like someone's trying to take advantage of the hype and the
opportunities in the marketplace."

Mark Rockwell, who writes about wide-area networks for Communications
Week, also expressed skepticism.

"This sounds very similar to what happened after the FCC opened up the
pay-telephone market: A lot of entrepreneurs getting into it without a
lot of capital and making a big splash."

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

ON THE INTERNET:

Visit Herald Link, the World Wide Web site of The Miami Herald. Point your 
browser to http://www.herald.com

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

From: Mike King <mk@wco.com>
Subject: Pacific Bell Delays Caller ID Launch
Date: Mon, 17 Jun 1996 16:57:21 PDT


Forwarded to the Digest, FYI:

 Date: Mon, 17 Jun 1996 08:16:55 -0700
 Reply-To: NEWS-LIST@list.pactel.com
 From: sqlgate@list.pactel.com
 Subject: NEWS:  Pacific Bell Delays Caller ID Launch

FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Rebecca Perata
415 394-3701

Pacific Bell Delays Caller ID Launch

SAN FRANCISCO -- Pacific Bell is delaying launch of its Caller ID
service, which had been scheduled for Saturday, June 15. The company
has discovered internal problems with the process used to take
blocking orders and said it will not launch the service until the
problems are fixed.

"We do not intend to launch Caller ID service until we are certain our
customers' blocking requests have been correctly registered," said
Mark Pitchford, vice president - consumer marketing. "We have received
calls from customers who are concerned, and that concerns us. Our
customers come first."

"Pacific Bell is working to determine the cause and extent of the
problem and is committed to a solution," said Pitchford.

Caller ID enables people to see the number of the person calling before
they answer the phone. In California, phone customers are able to chose
between two blocking options - Complete Blocking and Selective Blocking.


     
     Complete Blocking -- Automatically blocks a caller's number
     from being passed on all calls except those to 800, 888 and
     900 numbers. A caller with Complete Blocking can dial *82
     (1182 on rotary phones) before placing the call, to deliver
     the number on that specific call.
     
     Selective Blocking -- The caller's number is passed on all
     calls, unless the caller dials *67 (1167 on rotary phones) to
     block their number from being delivered on that specific call.

Since some California local telephone companies will be offering Caller
ID service before Pacific Bell, Pacific Bell customers who do not want
their numbers passed on calls to those areas should dial *67, unless
they have verification from Pacific Bell that they have Complete
Blocking.

Customers who selected Complete Blocking and are concerned whether
Pacific Bell has registered their designation, should call:
     
     1 800 386-0000
     Pre-recorded message that will confirm if Complete Blocking
     has been assigned to the telephone number the person is
     calling from.
     
     1 800 298-5000
     24-hour live operator to take requests for Complete Blocking
     (Customers who prefer Selective Blocking need not call since
     Selective Blocking is the automatic blocking option given to
     those who have not actively made a selection.)

Pacific Bell is a subsidiary of Pacific Telesis Group, a diversified
telecommunications corporation based in San Francisco.

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

Mike King   *   Oakland, CA, USA   *   mk@wco.com

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

From: Ian Leonard <ian@eonsw.demon.co.uk>
Subject: Modem For Use in Greenland
Organization: EON Software, Oxford, UK
Date: Mon, 17 Jun 1996 07:33:45 GMT


Greetings,


I am looking for a modem suitable for use in Greenland.

I understand that this is the same spec as in Greenland and is V27.

The real problem is that it must go in a rack (it cannot be a PC
internal) and there is only 48 volts available.

Recommendations appreciated.


Ian Leonard     eMail: ian@eonsw.demon.co.uk
EON Software    Phone and Fax: +44 (0)1865 741452

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

From: Scott De Toffol <detoffols@comdisconet.com>
Subject: LATA Sorting Application
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 10:07:04 -0500
Organization: Comdisco Network Services


I'm looking for an applic ation to sort sites by LATA using NPA/NXX,
Zips or other.

I'm also looking for any other telecom (data) applications to help
sort and map frame relay/private line/ISDN based WANs.

Any response is appreciated.  You can reply to this posting or email me at
detoffols@comdisconet.com.

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

Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 10:33:54 -0700
From: vantek@northcoast.com (VANTEK COMMUNICATIONS)
Subject: New GTE Long Distance Rates


Dallas, TX, June 14, 1996 (DLD DIGEST) -- According to recent news
reports, and confirmed by customer service representatives at GTE, the
company is now offering a 50% discount off their base rates to new GTE
long distance customers for the first six months.

But 50% off of WHAT, you might ask? GTE's tariffed rates in most
states (they serve) are currently $.20 per minute for primetime calls,
and $.10 per minute for calls placed between 7 p.m. and 7 a.m. local
time (interstate).

With a 50% discount, this would bring a GTE long distance customer's
effective rate down to $.10 per minute peak, and $.05 per minute off-
peak on all interstate calls. This would be the lowest rate for
residential service of any major telecommunications carrier.

The 50% discount will apply to customers spending more than $25 each
month on their long distance usage. Lower volume users receive a
lesser discount, but will not pay more than the standard tariffed
rates mentioned above. Billing is likely in full-minute increments.

After the introductory six month discount period, GTE Long Distance
customers will receive 25% off of their standard rates if their usage
is $25 or greater, and 10% off if their usage is $10 or greater.
 
There are no monthly minimums, and no monthly service charges
were mentioned. The offer is only available where GTE is currently
tariffed to sell long distance. These states currently include Florida,
Texas and Virginia. Other states are being added this month.

GTE is a local exchange carrier that operates in over 20 U.S. states.
Long distance services for GTE are actually provided by the
LDDS/WorldCom long distance network, which recently signed a
multi-million dollar resale deal with GTE. For more info on GTE long
distance services you may contact them at 1-800-PICK-GTE.


Van Hefner - Editor
Discount Long Distance Digest
On The Web: http://www.webcom.com/longdist/

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

Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 14:11:37 EDT
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Subject: Ameritech Restarts 'Callpack' Plans


After a hiatus of several years in which Illinois Bell/Ameritech
offered no type of calling plan other than 'pay as you use it', last
week they announced a new group of calling plans which allow calls of
unlimited length over their entire LATA for a single monthly rate.

Years ago and up until the middle 1980's we could 'pay as we used it'
but there were also 'call-pack' plans which allowed for the pre-purchase
of a given number of 'units' each month at a discounted rate. These
could be used for calling all over northern Illinois. There were also
three unlimited call-pack plans at fixed monthly rates. One was for an
'inner-met' area, one was for 'outer-met' and a third was for extended
service anywhere Illinois Bell went at a flat monthly rate. One day it
all disappeared and Illinois Bell said it was due to the need to get
ready for competition ... way back in the middle 1980's, about the
time of divestiture.

Now all of a sudden out of the blue, this past week the call packs are
back, but in a new and improved format. This appears to be Illinois
Bell/Ameritech's response to AT&T's plan for 'local-toll' service;
that is, calls more than fifteen miles away but still within the LATA.

Under the old plan where we were charged 'units' for calls at various
prices depending on how many units we agreed to purchase in advance,
the new plan only deals with entire calls. This new plan only applies
to residence customers as well, so business customers are not able to
use it.

Without purchasing one of the new callpack plans from Ameritech, resi-
dential customers get billed like this: 

 Calls within 8 miles (A Band) are five cents or less each, and
 are untimed. In quantity the cost goes down to 3.5 cents each.
 There are also discounts based on time of day/day of week.

 Calls 8-15 miles away (B Band), calls 15-22 miles away (C Band) and
 calls more than 22 miles away (D Band) are billed at a certain
 price per minute. Discounts based on volume, time of day and day of
 week still apply. 

Under the new callpack plans starting this month, which are optional
and set up with no charge, residential subscribers can have the
following:

      100 calls to anywhere in the northern Illinois LATA, of
      any length of time, $10 per month.

      250 calls to anywhere in the LATA of any length of time, 
      $20 per month. 

      400 calls to anywhere in the LATA of any length of time, 
      $30 per month. 

Calls may not be spread over various lines on the same billing
account. You need a callpack plan on each line on which you wish
to use it. Any lines in your home not under a callpack plan will
continue to be billed by the ABCD band arrangement. 

Whether or not you wish to use the new plan or the old and on 
which lines you wish to install it will depend on your ratio of
A Band (untimed) calls to BCD Band (timed by minute) calls. On my
modem line for example, I have less than a hundred calls per month
but usually thousands of minutes, all to A points. The total cost
is a few dollars. On my other line, I have ten to fifteen dollars
in calls to more distant points billed by the minute, but typically
fewer than a hundred such calls per month. 

Any lines which are put on the new callpack plan which have calls
in excess of the number pre-purchased then pay ten cents *per call
regardless of length* on the excess over the number purchased. There
is no reversion back to ABCD on the excess calls.

Obviously if your calls are all or mostly A points then this plan
is not a good one, however if you tend to make few calls to distant
(but still within LATA) points and talk a long time on each, then 
the plan is very good. 

Readers served by Ameritech in northern Illinois may wish to inquire
about this new callpack plan. Telco will do a free analysis of your
usage ov er the past three months to help detirmine which of the
available volume purchase arrangements would suit you best, and
which of your lines -- if you have more than one in your home --
should be equipped and which should not. 

AT&T's plan to 'compete' with Ameritech for 'local-toll' in the LATA
apparently is to continue charging by the minute and although under
some circumstances their per-minute rate is less than Ameritech's
on CD band calls (other times, the Ameritech discounts kick in and
make Ameritech a little cheaper) it would appear they are going to
come nowhere close to the pricing Ameritech is giving on the new
callpack arrangment provided overall the subscriber makes enough 
BCD Band calls to warrant paying $10-30 per month for up to 400 
such calls of unlimited length.


PAT

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
public service systems and networks including Compuserve and America
On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. 

Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:

                 * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu *

The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
Townson of Skokie, Illinois USA. You can reach us by postal mail, fax 
or phone at:
                      Post Office Box 4621
                     Skokie, IL USA   60076
                       Phone: 847-329-0571
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*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from the              *
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* under the aegis of its Telecom Information Exchange Services (TIES)   * 
* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
* ing views of the ITU.                                                 *
*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
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is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of twenty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #290
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Tue Jun 18 18:39:51 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id SAA01110; Tue, 18 Jun 1996 18:39:51 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 18:39:51 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606182239.SAA01110@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #291

TELECOM Digest     Tue, 18 Jun 96 18:39:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 291

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Wireless Word 6/17/96 (Tara Tai Pierson-Dunning)
    Book Review: "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Electronic Highway" (Rob Slade)
    Technology Takes Writer Walter Mosley On Virtual Book Tour (Mike King)
    Buyer's Guide to Frame Relay Services (Adam Gaffin)
    Norstar System Available (Rich Tatum)
    Norstar For Sale (Michael Muderick)
    911 Call From my Phone Number (Ed Kleinhample)
    CDPD in Scottsdale, AZ (Blair Shellenberg)
    Free Callback Software (Al Niven)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Mon, 17 Jun 1996 16:45:42 -0400
From: taratai@knight-hub.com (Tara Tai Pierson-Dunning)
Subject: Wireless Word 6/17/96


NOTE TO TELECOM DIGEST READERS:

       Following is the 6/17/96 release of the Wireless Word, the free
e-zine published by Advanced Radio Telecom, also available at the ART
web site <http://artcorporation.com>. Please remember that, despite
its name, the Wireless Word does not cover developments affecting
mobile services such as cellular, specialized mobile radio, personal
communications or paging services. The Wireless Word is limited to
fixed local distribution services.

        We encourage you to contact ART with your comments,
constructive criticisms as well as requests for further information.
If there is something we have failed to address or characterized in a
way with which you disagree, we want to know.  You may email us at
<artcorp@artcorporation.com>, or call our Seattle headquarters at
206-688-8700 or our Eastern region headquarters in Washington, DC at
202-466-5ART. We hope you find the Wireless Word informative.

        If you would like to subscribe to the Wireless Word, please do
so by requesting "subscribe <email address> <name>" to
<artcorp@artcorporation.com>. Thank you.

***********************************************************************

WIRELESS WORD 6/17/96 EDITION. Copywright Advanced Radio Telecom, 1996.


        Previous installments of the Wireless Word focused on key
sections of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 (the Act), and how the
law's changes would affect the provision of wireless
telecommunications services and competition within local exchange
markets.  We will now shift the column's perspective to examine the
efforts made by state utility commissions nationwide to revise their
regulations to foster greater competition in local exchange markets.
This edition of the Wireless Word will focus on the body of
regulations issued by the Colorado Public Utility Commission (CPUC or
Commission) that strive to achieve the above-mentioned goal.
Specifically, it will look at changes in interconnection and
unbundling, local service resale, number portability, and the
collection and disclosure of personal information obtained by public
utilities.

        The Colorado Public Utility Commission recently became the first
state utility agency to adopt an extensive set of regulations that
incorporate elements of the Telecommunications Act of 1996.  Deriving
authority from the Colorado state legislature's House Bill 1335, the
Commission's responsibility was: (1) to establish standards for basic
telephone service; (2) to establish mechanisms to advance the goal of
universal service (the provision of basic telephone service to all at just
and reasonable rates); (3) to consider the necessity for specific
mechanisms related to universal access to advanced telecommunications
services; and, (4) to resolve other issues related to the implementation of
competition in Colorado's local exchange market.  To accomplish its task,
the Commission established several working groups in the Fall of 1995 to
preside over the revision of the new laws, which are now being finalized.


PRIVACY RULES:

        Docket number 95R-610, adopted on March 29, 1996, is referred to as
the Collection and Disclosure of Personal Information Obtained by Public
Utilities, or the "Privacy Rules."  The docket addresses issues concerning
the disclosure of information related to per line and per call blocking.
These services enable a customer to control the disclosure of his or her
name and telephone number to a subscriber of Caller Identification by
temporarily changing the public or private status indicator of the
telephone number.  Per line and per call blocking must be offered free of
charge for the first request of each customer, while domestic violence
programs and law enforcement agencies shall be offered per line blocking at
no charge.

        In offering per line and per call blocking services, the CPUC
listed Caller Identification, last call return, call trace, and Automatic
Number Identification (ANI) as standard services that must be provided by
local exchange service providers.  Local telecommunications service
providers are required to educate their customers on privacy issues, the
functions of those services and their importance to the customer.
Moreover, services will be offered at no charge to the calling party.
Tariffs must be filed with the CPUC for it to verify that all telephone
service providers comply with the above-noted rules.


NUMBER PORTABILITY:

        The CPUC's goal with regard to number portability, as addressed in
Docket 95R-554T, was to establish cost-effective number portability and a
level playing field for its application.  The CPUC recognized the
unwillingness of end-users to switch telephone service providers, even if
the changes would result in better services and lower prices, once the end
users learn that their original telephone numbers would not be retained in
the change. This possibility threatens the intent of the new laws whose
purpose it is to foster a competitive local exchange telecommunications
market.

        The lack of effective technology to implement number portability
limits its application.  Nonetheless, the new regulation mandates the
future development of a network database to accomplish the goal of this
service.  Until such a system is established, however, local exchange
providers must file tariffs with the Commission that provide for interim
local portability through the use of Remote Call Forwarding (RCF) and/or
Direct Inward Dialing (DID).  Once the database becomes operable, the
Commission plans to designate a neutral third party to administer telephone
numbering plans and their assignment, and the architecture of the database.
Due to the lack of a number portability administrator, as well as a
database, the new law purposely does not establish a system for recovering
costs from local telecommunication service providers for the CPUC sponsored
services.

        Lastly, the Commission established regulations which state that
local exchange providers may not directly charge each other for changes to
switch routing software required by the creation, assignment, or
reassignment of central office NX codes.


COLORADO HIGH COST FUND:

        According to House Bill 1335 and Docket 95R-558T, a universal
service fund similar in function to the one established by the Act, will be
established under the name Colorado High Cost Fund (CHCF, or the Fund).
The CHCF is charged with ensuring that basic local exchange services be
made available and affordable throughout the State.  The Fund shall be
equitable, competitively neutral and non-discriminating in its funding,
distribution and administration.  Providers will be reimbursed for
reasonable costs incurred in providing basic telecommunications services to
customers within a rural or high-cost geographic support area.

        Telecommunications service providers will subsidize the CHCF
through an assessment fee equal to an undecided percentage of the total
CHCF.  This amount will be equal to the providers' percentage of total
intrastate retail revenue, which is based on an audited accounting of the
retail revenues from the previous calendar year.

        The CHCF will be administered either by the CPUC or some other
designee.  The CHCF's administrator will determine through a proxy cost
model which geographic areas will be serviced by the Fund.  This proxy cost
model may be updated to alter the number and location of areas to be
serviced, as necessary.  Similarly, specific services and features
supported by the Fund will be updated to account for advances in
telecommunications, technology, and services.

        Eligible providers will receive monthly support from the CHCF based
on an equation derived from the number of access lines that a provider
services in high cost geographic support areas, multiplied by the
difference between the per line proxy cost and the price received for
providing basic local exchange service.  However, the Commission reserves
the right to determine whether a separate benchmark price should be
substituted.

        In the spirit of universal service, eligible providers are
prohibited from gaining a competitive advantage from the support obtained
from the Fund.  A provider may not receive support from the CHCF for
serving customers through resale services; rather, only facilities-based
providers are eligible to receive financial support from the Fund.  In
order to foster competition for the provision of CHCF services,
Fund-provided financial support will be portable between any provider
chosen by the end-user.


INTERCONNECTION:

        The Rules on Interconnection and Unbundling, contained in Docket
95R-556T, demonstrate the CPUC's intent to coordinate its policies with
those in the Act, specifically Section 251.  Decision No. C96-448 mandates
that all telecommunications providers provide: interconnection with the
facilities and equipment of any requesting telecommunications provider;
interconnection at any technically viable point in a provider's network;
and, services that are at least equal in quality to those furnished by the
provider.  The CPUC also requires physical collocation in all possible
cases, and virtual collocation whenever the former is not feasible.

        Interconnection shall be provided at "just, reasonable, and
nondiscriminatory" rates, terms, and conditions, in accord with the prices
established by the provider's contract, tariff or arbitration.  A local
service provider that terminates a call originating in another network
exchange is permitted to charge the originating provider a termination fee.
Moreover, the rules allow both parties to establish mutual bill and keep
agreements.

        Like the Act, the CPUC's regulations state that all
telecommunications providers shall provide access to poles, ducts, conduits
and rights-of-way when feasible and deemed necessary for another provider
to offer its services.  The CPUC will evaluate situations where a provider
refuses to provide such access, and will issue a determination taking into
account issues of valuation, space and capacity constraints, and
compensation of access.

        Other interconnection agreements between service providers deal
with: (1) the protection of each others' Customer Proprietary Network
Information (CPNI); (2) implementing repair service referrals; (3)
operational support so that a provider's services are equal to those of the
interconnector; (4) signaling protocols used to route local and
interexchange traffic; and, (5) interoperability of non-optional operator
services between networks.

        Each telecommunications service provider certified prior to
February 8, 1996 (the date the Act was signed) must provide the necessary
information for the publishing of a "White Pages" telephone directory.
Moreover, each "White Pages" provider shall furnish space in the directory
to competitors so that end-users may contact them for services and repairs.



UNBUNDLING:

        An incumbent telecommunications provider must provide essential
facilities or functions on an unbundled basis, so that the requesting party
may combine them to furnish its own services.  The CPUC believes that loop,
local switching, common transport links, dedicated transport links, local
and toll tandem switching, operator systems, signaling links, signal
transfer points, and access to service control points via signal transfer
points are all essential.  However, an incumbent telecommunications
provider is not required to unbundle an element that it does not offer to
its customers as part of a bundled service, nor is it required to offer a
particular  element through its purchase and resale from another provider.

        The CPUC, in an effort to maintain vigilance and control over the
deregulation of its local telecommunications industry, requires both
incumbent and recently certified telecommunications providers to file
tariffs with the Commission listing the prices for all of the above-listed
services.   The Commission will review tariffs on a case-by-case basis for
the following characteristics: cost; just and reasonable prices that
include a reasonable profit; nondiscriminatory and competitively neutral
services.

RESALE:

        The CPUC's decision in Docket 95R-557T is geared toward fostering a
competitive, open market for resold services.  Resale, like interconnection
and unbundling, is directly influenced by the Telecommunications Act of
1996.  In this case, however, the CPUC decision actually quotes the federal
law; specifically, Section 251 (b) (1), which prohibits all LECs from
placing discriminatory conditions on resale services, and Section 251 (d)
(3), which permits state commissions to enforce regulations, orders, or
policies including the resale of local exchange carriers' services.

        A facilities-based telecommunications provider (FBTP) is not
required by the CPUC to modify its Commission-established calling areas to
accommodate a reseller.  But a FBTP must provide, through a contract or a
Commission-approved tariff, the operational support required for the
reseller to provide the same quality of services as the FBTP.  In this
manner, the reseller is considered a customer of a FBTP, and as such may be
required to provide a deposit for the services acquired.

        Consistent with the Act's prohibition of RBOCs joint marketing of
local and interexchange services for three years after the law's signing,
the CPUC prohibits telecommunications providers that serve more than 5% of
the nation's presubscribed access lines, from jointly marketing their
services until either US WEST is authorized to provide interLATA services
in Colorado, or February 8, 1999, whichever comes first.

        Nothing in the CPUC regulations prevents two parties from reaching
a negotiated, mediated or arbitrated agreement, provided that such service
is consistent with the rates, terms, and conditions, of the
providing-party's effective tariff.


CONCLUSION:

        Four months after the signing of the Act, we are beginning to see
how states will comply with the federal law.  In the case of Texas, a
contest of wills continues between potential out-of region competitors and
the State Utility Commission.  In Colorado, the regulations established by
the Colorado Public Utility Commission stand out as the first post-Act
regulatory regime that establishes a competitive local exchange.

        Regulations regarding customers' proprietary information are
intended to protect end-users from misuse of such information by public
utilities, and also to provide end-users with the capacity to utilize
services such as ANI, Caller ID, last call return and trace.  This step
demonstrates the CPUC's efforts to shield its constituents from being
subjected to wrongful business practices, and situations where they may be
targeted by malicious persons and entities, as in the case of domestic
violence.

        The CPUC demonstrates its compliance with the Act by establishing
the Colorado High Cost Fund, a universal service fund whose mission is to
ensure that basic telephone service is provided to all at just and
reasonable rates.  The CHCF will provide financial reimbursement to
telephone service providers serving high-cost geographic areas. The process
of implementing the CHCF will be arduous as so many diverse interest groups
will be affected by its presence. While the Fund proposes competition in
high-cost areas, there is little proof that such an atmosphere will attract
service providers.

        The development of cost-effective and efficient number portability
via a central, network database is a long-term project.  In the interim,
the CPUC has established mechanisms for the portability to become a
reality. Unfortunately for consumers and competition, RCF and DID do not
compare with the promise of a technologically advanced computer database.

        The CPUC's rules on interconnection, unbundling and resale
demonstrate the importance of the Act in developing effective local
competition.  In order for Colorado to foster a competitive local exchange,
all three elements must work in tandem.  All service providers must provide
interconnection so that competitors may fully develop their capacity to
provide competitive services.  Upon interconnection, a competitor must have
access to unbundled elements that can be combined, marketed and provided to
the public.  Finally, given the high costs involved in rolling out physical
infrastructure necessary to become a CAP or CLEC, many entrants into
Colorado's exchange market will choose to become either facilities-based or
switchless resellers.  For this to occur, resellers must be provided with
the same quality of services as the underlying carrier provides its
end-users.

            *************************************************

Tara Tai Pierson-Dunning
New Vision Marketing Communications
Voice:  202-686-5968
Fax:  202-237-8599
Email:  taratai@knight-hub.com or taratai@aol.com

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

Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 15:22:19 EST
From: Rob Slade <roberts@decus.ca>
Subject: Book Review: "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Electronic Highway"


BKHHGTEH.RVW   960501
 
"The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Electronic Highway", Pamela Kane, 1994,
1-55828-352-8, U$21.95/C$28.95
%A   Pamela Kane rkxv82a@prodigy.com panda81898@aol.com author@well.sf.ca.us
%A   pskane@dockmaster.ncsc.mil 74010.1312@compuserve.com lingling@delphi.com
%A   p.kane2@genie.geis.com 3607284@mcimail.com panda@ssenet.com
%C   115 West 18th Street, New York, NY   10011-4195
%D   1994
%G   1-55828-352-8
%I   MIS Press
%O   U$21.95/C$28.95 +1-212-886-9378 fax: +1-212-633-0748, +1-212-807-6654
%O   76712.2644@compuserve.com http://www.mispress.com fburke@fsb.superlink.net
%P   366
%T   "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Electronic Highway"
 
Nope, not the Internet (at least, not *much* Internet), but an
overview of the major commercial online services.  There are
relatively few books done in a similar vein, but most of those are
either ads for the services or extremely limited bit of documentation.
("In order to send mail, select "Mail" from the menu!")
 
Kane's book takes a broader look at the available services.  Her
instructions for use are much more helpful, and the comparative format
is much more effective in providing a clear understanding of the
options.  The reader has a much better idea of the functionality of
different systems.
 
The book is starting to show some signs of dating, particularly with
the recent drive, by *all* online services, to Internet access and the
use of Internet tools to access "subscriber only" information and
services.  Still the job is well done, so there are a few signs of
life yet.
 
copyright Robert M. Slade, 1996   BKHHGTEH.RVW   960501. Distribution
permitted in TELECOM Digest and associated publications. 


DECUS Canada Communications, Desktop, Education and Security group newsletters
roberts@decus.ca    slade@freenet.victoria.bc.ca    Rob_Slade@mindlink.bc.ca
Author "Robert Slade's Guide to Computer Viruses" 0-387-94663-2 (800-SPRINGER)

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

From: Mike King <mk@wco.com>
Subject: Technology Takes Writer Walter Mosley On Virtual Book Tour
Date: Mon, 17 Jun 1996 16:58:25 PDT


Forwareded to the Digest FYI:

  Date: Mon, 17 Jun 1996 08:33:49 -0700
  Reply-To: NEWS-LIST@list.pactel.com
  From: sqlgate@list.pactel.com
  To: NEWS-LIST@list.pactel.com
  Subject: NEWS:  Technology Takes Writer Walter Mosley On Virtual Book Tour


FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Rebecca Weill
(415) 542-4640

Technology Takes Writer Walter Mosley On Virtual Book Tour

Author of Devil in a Blue Dress to Use Videoconferencing in Libraries
to Promote New Book

[Note to Editors: Mosley will be available via videoconferencing for
interviews by local media in Sacramento and Compton/Long Beach from 6:30
- 7:15 p.m. June 19.]

PASADENA, Calif. -- Authors with new books to promote could soon be
touring the nation via the information superhighway if a
videoconference scheduled for June 19 is successful in luring book
fans.

The event, the first of its kind, will originate from the Pasadena
Public Library from 7:30-9 p.m. Walter Mosley, an acclaimed African
American mystery writer, will read selections from his new novel, A
Little Yellow Dog , and answer questions from the audience. The
presentation will be videocast live to the Sacramento Public Library,
the Malcolm X Public Library in San Diego, and the Blue Line
TeleVillage in Compton, a public telecommunications center open to
members of the community.

Through the interactive videoconferencing connection, the attendees at
the remote sites will share the same experience with Mosley as the
audience in Pasadena. They'll see and hear the author's presentation
and engage in the question-and-answer session. There also will be
autographed copies of Mosley's books at the remote sites for sale.

The event is a cooperative venture among the participating viewing
sites, local book retailers, and Pacific Bell, which has equipped the
libraries and the TeleVillage with high-speed telecommunications lines
as part of its Education First initiative.

Mosley, who is currently on a national tour, is the first author to add
sites to a promotional itinerary through the use of videoconferencing.
He has written four popular mystery novels starring the character Easy
Rawlins, the first of which, Devil in a Blue Dress , was made into a
Tri-Star film with Denzel Washington and Jennifer Beals in 1995.

His latest novel, published by W.W. Norton & Co., brings back his
street-smart hero to solve a mystery set in the Watts neighborhood of
Los Angeles in 1963. Mosley is past president of the Mystery Writers
of America and a member of the executive board of the National Book
Awards.  A native of Los Angeles, Mosley now lives in New York City.

Traditionally, publishers send authors on national tours to drum up
sales for new books, just like a musical group that goes on tour to
support a new album. Along the way, authors incur hefty travel
expenses for airfare, meals, and transportation, not to mention the
disruption of their work schedules.

"Videoconferencing gives book publishers, book sellers and the authors
themselves a much more efficient way to do book tours," said Dan
Theobald, Community Applications Manager, Pacific Bell. "By using
technology, publishers can eliminate the travel expenses associated
with a tour. Authors also can visit more cities, 'meet' more people,
and sell more books."

Videoconferencing not only could open up vast new audiences for
authors who find it too costly to travel to more than a handful of
major cities, but also might appeal to reclusive writers, those who
dislike travel, or controversial figures like Salman Rushdie, whose
The Satanic Verses caused Islamic religious leaders to issue him a
death sentence and forced him into hiding.

Eventually book tours may become obsolete. An author might simply go
to a local videoconference site and do the entire tour via
telecommunications, using multipoint bridging technology such as
Pacific Bell Group Video to connect with up to 30 sites at one time.

If this application of videoconferencing is successful, publishers and
book sellers could collaborate with libraries to develop
videoconferencing sites where video author tours and other public
programs could take place. Ultimately, it might prove cost-effective
for the book industry to help fund the placement of videoconferencing
equipment in libraries by contributing to the capital expense of the
equipment or by paying a rental fee for use of the library facilities.

All four viewing sites for the June 19 event are participants in
Pacific Bell's Education First program, a $100-million program to help
provide every school and library in California with a digital on-ramp
to the information superhighway by 2000. The program offers free
installation and one year of free service of Integrated Services
Digital Network (ISDN) for Internet access and videoconferencing,
along with technology workshops for teachers and librarians,
assistance with applications development and discounts on equipment.

To date, Education First has wired more than 1,200 schools and
libraries with high-speed digital lines. That number will reach 3,000
by the end of 1996.

Pacific Bell is a subsidiary of Pacific Telesis Group, a diversified
communications company based in San Francisco.

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

Mike King   *   Oakland, CA, USA   *   mk@wco.com

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

From: agaffin@nww.com (Adam Gaffin)
Subject: Buyer's Guide to Frame Relay Services
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 21:21:19 GMT
Organization: Network World Fusion


{Network World} this week has a buyer's guide to frame relay services.
Our experts, Liza Henderson and Tom Jenkins of TeleChoice, take an
in-depth look at everything from what the different carriers offer to
what to ask for.

You can get their complete article, along with downloadable charts
comparing the offerings, on Network World Fusion
(http://www.nwfusion.com).

 From the main menu, select NetRef, Buyer's Guides and Reviews then
Frame Relay Services. If you haven't used the site before, you'll have
to register first, but it's free.


Adam Gaffin
Online Editor, Network World
agaffin@nww.com / (508) 820-7433

"So, in 1996, CD-ROMs through Federal Express will emerge as the
information superhighway." - Bob Metcalfe

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

From: rtatum@psyber.com (Rich Tatum)
Subject: Norstar System Available
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 21:58:24 GMT
Organization: Miller-SQA Inc


My company just closed a small off campus office and has decided that
the phone system is no longer needed. I am not the phone guy (but I
have the Net account), so please excuse any misused terms.

The system includes the following:

Qty	Model		Description
1	NT7B53FA9	Modular ICS KSU /power supply
1	NTB83AA93	Modular ICS Ris 1/T1 Software
1	006-193		Line Conditioner
1	NT8B80AB	Remote Access Device
1	NT8B60CA	Station Aux Power Supply
1	NT8B56AA	Power Bar
1	NT8B14AB0	M7100 1-Button Basic Phone (blk)
10	NT8B30AD0	M7208 8-Button Speakerphone w/ 1 Line Display
4	NT8B20AE0	M7310 10-Button Speakerphone w/2 Line Display
1	NT8B40AB0	M7324 24-Button Speakerphone 2/2 Line Display
1	NT8B41FA0	Key Lamp Module for M7324 Reception Phone
9	NT7B75GA9	LS/DS Analog Trunk Cartridge
1	NTBB06GA9	Modular ICS 6-port Fiber Expansion Cartridge
1	NTBB20FB9	Modular ICS Fiber Trunk Module
1	NT8B70DN	StarTalk Model "B" Voicemail System
1	006-172		ONEAC Line Conditioner for Voicemail
1	CT-PR200 	Prelude ACD for Norstar
1			Norlink

The system was purchased new early 1995 and is located in the
Sacramento Ca area. We would prefer to sell as a unit. For more
information reply by e-mail to the address below.


Thanks,

Rich Tatum
rtatum@psyber.com
Miller-SQA Inc
333 Sunset Blvd
Rocklin Ca 95765

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

From: am004d@netaxs.com (Michael Muderick)
Subject: Norstar For Sale
Date: 18 Jun 1996 13:32:54 GMT
Organization: Philadelphia's Complete Internet Provider


8-7208's
1-7310

Best offer over $800.  Respond via e-mail or 610-449-6970-late nite.


Thanks.

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

From: edhample@sprynet.com
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 11:49:26 -0700
Subject: 911 Call From my Phone Number


Tuesday afternoon when I returned to my home from work, my voice mail
contained a number of 'blank' messages (10 seconds of silence) all
about 5 minutes apart, followed by a message from the Pasco County 911
operator stating that they had received a call from *my* telephone
number. He continued to state that the call was completely silent, and
that if no one picked up the phone, he would be forced to dispatch a
Sheriff to investigate.

My neighbor confirmed that a Sheriff's deputy had been wandering
around the house looking around, and knocked on her door to inquire if
anyone was home at my house during the day.

I called the Sheriff's Office, and the 911 office's non-emergency
number (I was surprised that they have one) to collect more
information about this, and was only able to confirm the time against
the time stamp on my voice mail.

The point is: No one was at my house during the day on tuesday to have
made the call.

Can anyone shed some light on what may have happened? Both and 911
operator and the GTE customer service would love to place the blame on
my cordless phone (a Tropez 900DL), but I am skeptical of this -- the
phone is several years old, and has never given any trouble in the
past.


Ed Kleinhample
Consultant - Land O' Lakes, FL.


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I think I will place the blame on your
cordless phone also, and suggest that you get rid of it or at the very
least see about new batteries and an overhaul for it. We had something
on this once before, a few years ago. It seems the cordless phone was
malfunctioning; its batteries were bad or the phone was off frequency
and responding to spurious radio signals in the area or something like
that and as a result the base unit was from  time to time going off
hook and 'dialing' things. Sometimes it would just go off hook and
flash a few seconds and hang back up, etc. I seem to remember having
a cordless phone like this myself back about 1969-70 when cordless
phones were still a new deal and the phone itself looked like a 500
type set except for the big antenna sticking out of the back of it. 
One day the thing got in really miserable condition (I think some
fool had opened it up and had been screwing [around/with/on] some of
the trim-pots in the phone itself trying to increase the range. You
know how *some people* are when they get thier hands on a screwdriver!).
I refuse to say who that fool was because my foolish answer may tend
to incriminate me.  :) Anyway, for a couple hours my phone was off-
hook unbenownst to me because the base unit kept going off hook when
the phone would tell it to. The guy down the street would key up his
CB radio and drive the cordless phone into conniptions with the base
relay chattering constantly. I am sure now-days that sort of problem
could result in 'dialing' 9-1-1. 

Then one time, did not we have an article here about someone who came
home to find that water had dripped on the base unit and caused it
to start making random calls?  Personally Ed, yeah I would say look
long and hard at that old cordless phone as the culprit.    PAT]

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

From: blair@instep.bc.ca
Subject: CDPD in Scottsdale, AZ
Reply-To: blair@instep.bc.ca
Organization: InStep Mobile Communications Inc.
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 18:44:33 GMT


Hi there,

I previously saw that there was coverage in Scottsdale, AZ. Can anyone tell  
me who the service provider is?


Sincerely,

InStep Mobile Communications Inc.
Blair Shellenberg <blair@instep.bc.ca>

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

From: Al Niven <alniven@earthlink.net>
Subject: Free Callback Software
Date: 18 Jun 1996 17:41:34 GMT
Organization: Video, Voice, and Data, Inc.


We will provide software for TRANSPARENT CALLBACK and DEBIT CARD FREE
if you provide the hardware for the node.  The hardware must be
equipped to support our other IVR program and there is a nominal cost
for this other software. We don't care which callback provider you use
as long as we are cut in for a piece; likewise we have one or two
providers we can recommend.


Al Niven
Video, Voice, and Data, Inc.
292 Fifth Avenue, #201
NY NY 10001
212-714-3531 voice
212-714-3510 fax

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
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On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
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Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:

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The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
Townson of Skokie, Illinois USA. You can reach us by postal mail, fax 
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*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
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     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
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All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
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should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #291
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Tue Jun 18 19:11:04 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id TAA04443; Tue, 18 Jun 1996 19:11:04 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 19:11:04 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606182311.TAA04443@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #292

TELECOM Digest     Tue, 18 Jun 96 17:11:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 292

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Call For Participation: Smart Card Conference CARDIS 1996 (Pieter Hartel)
    Pacific Bell Internet, LA Times Offer Customized Internet (Mike King)
    Summary of New Telco Video Rules (d3smith@aol.com)
    AT&T Callback Service in Europe (Earle Robinson)
    Telecom Archives CD-ROM Ordering Details (TELECOM Digest Editor)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: pieter@fwi.uva.nl (Pieter Hartel)
Subject: Call For Participation: Smart Card Conference CARDIS 1996
Date: 18 Jun 1996 11:44:25 +0200
Organization: FWI, University of Amsterdam


Preliminary Call for Participation:

    SECOND SMART CARD RESEARCH AND ADVANCED APPLICATION CONFERENCE
                   SEPTEMBER 18-20, 1996
             CWI, AMSTERDAM, THE NETHERLANDS

Aims and Goals

Smart cards, or IC cards, offer a huge potential for information
processing purposes. The portability and processing power of IC cards
allow for highly secure conditional access and reliable distributed
information systems.  There are IC cards available that can perform
highly sophisticated cryptographic computations. The applicability of
IC cards is currently limited mainly by our imagination; the
information processing power that can be gained by using IC cards
remains as yet mostly untapped and is not well understood. Here lies a
vast uncovered research area which we are only beginning to assess,
and which will have a great impact on the eventual success of the
technology. The research challenges range from electrical engineering
on the hardware side to tailor-made cryptographic applications on the
software side, and their synergies.

Many currently existing events are mainly devoted to commercial and
application aspects of IC cards. In contrast, the CARDIS conferences
aim to bring together researchers who are active in all aspects of the
design of IC cards and related devices and environments, such as to
stimulate synergy between different research communities and to offer a
platform for presenting the latest research advances.

CARDIS 1994, sponsored by the International Federation for Information
Processing (IFIP) and held in November 1994 in Lille, France,
successfully brought together representatives from leading IC research
centers from all over the world. CARDIS 1996 will be the second
occasion for the IC card community in this permanent activity. CARDIS
1996 will be organized jointly by the Centre for Mathematics and
Computer Science at Amsterdam (CWI) and the Department of Logic and
Computer Science of the University of Amsterdam (UvA).

The conference is being organised in cooperation with the IFIP Special
Group 16, the International Association for Cryptologic Research (IACR)
and the Association Francaise des Sciences et Technologies de
l'Information et des Systemes (AFCET).

Organization

     General Chair

	o Pieter Hartel (Southampton, UK and Amsterdam, The
	                 Netherlands)

     Program Chair

        o Pierre Paradinas (Rd2p/Gemplus, France)
        o Jean-Jacques Quisquater (Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium)

     Program Committee

        o Stefan Brands (CWI, Amsterdam)
        o Andre Gamache (Quebec, Canada)
        o Louis Guillou (CCETT, France)
	o Josep Domingo-Ferrer (Univ. Rovira i Virgili, Tarragona,
	  			Spain)
        o Pieter Hartel (Southampton, UK and Amsterdam, 
				The Netherlands)
        o Hans-Joachim Knobloch (Karlsruhe, Germany)
        o Pierre Paradinas (Rd2p/Gemplus, France)
        o Reinhard Posch (Graz, Austria)
        o Jean-Jacques Quisquater (Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium)
        o Matt Robshaw (RSA Laboratories, USA)
        o Bruno Struif (GMD, Germany)
        o Doug Tygar (Carnegie-Mellon, USA)

     Steering Committee Chair

        o Vincent Cordonnier (Rd2p, Lille, France)

     Local Organization

        o Pieter Hartel (Southampton, UK and Amsterdam, 
			 The Netherlands)
        o Stefan Brands (CWI, The Netherlands)
        o Eduard de Jong (QC Technology, The Netherlands)

Programme


Wednesday September 18, 1996, CWI Z011

12:30-13:30 Lunch and registration

13:30-13:45 Introduction to CARDIS 1996

            Pieter Hartel, Jean-Jacques Quisquater

13:45-15:15 Session 1: Authentication

--          On the Design of a Stream Cipher and a Hash
	    Function Suitable to Smart Card Applications, Yongdae Kim,
	    Sangjin Lee, Choonsik Park, Electronics and
	    Telecommunications Research Institute, Taejon, Korea

--          Authenticating Outputs of Computer Software
	    Using a Cryptographic Coprocessor, Bruce Schneier, John
	    Kelsey, Counterpane Systems, Minneapolis, USA

--          Biometrics on Smartcards: An Approach to
	    Keyboard Behavioral Signature, Thomas J. Alexandre Carnegie
	    Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, USA

15:15-15:45 Coffee

15:45-16:30 Session 2: Invited speaker

            To be announced

16:30-17:30 Session 3: Panel

            Electronic commerce, panelists to be announced

17:30-19:00 Borrel

Thursday September 19, 1996, CWI Z011

08:45-09:15 Coffee

09:15-10:45 Session 3: Architecture

 --         Arithmetic co-processors for public-key cryptography:
	    The state of the art, David Naccache, David M'Raihi,
	    Gemplus PSI, Sarcelles, France

 --         FAME: A 3rd Generation Coprocessor for Optimising Public
	    Key Cryptosystems in Smart Card Applications, Ronald
	    Ferreira, Ralf Malzahn, Peter Marissen, Jean Jacques
	    Quisquater, Thomas Wille, Philips Smart Cards and Systems,
	    Paris, France; Philips Semiconductors, Hamburg, Germany;
	    Math RiZK, Rhode-Saint-Genese, Belgium

  --        Efficient Compression Algorithms for Smart Cards,
            Renaud Lecat, Jean-Jacques Quisquater, Univ.
            Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium

10:45-11:15 Coffee

11:15-12:00 Session 4: Invited speaker

            To be announced

12:00-13:00 Lunch

13:00-14:30 Session 5: Methods

 --         Structuring and Visualising an IC-card Security Standard,
	    Hugh Glaser, Pieter H. Hartel, Eduard K. de Jong Frz, Univ.
	    of Southampton, England; QC Technology, Zaandam, The
	    Netherlands

 --         Using formal methods to cultivate trust in
	    Smart Card Operating Systems, Marjan I. Alberda, Pieter H.
	    Hartel, Eduard K. de Jong Frz Univ. of Amsterdam, The
	    Netherlands; Integrity Arts Inc, San Mateo, USA

 --         Protection of Software Algorithms Executed on
            Secure Microprocessors,
            H.D.L. Hollmann, J.P.M.G. Linnartz, J.H. v. Lint, C.P.M.J.
            Baggen, Philips Research Laboratories, Eindhoven, The
            Netherlands.

14:30-15:00 Coffee

15:00-16:00 Session 6: Panel

            Tampering and resistance, panelists to be announced

16:00-late  Excursion and conference dinner

Friday September 20, 1996, CWI Z011

08:45-09:15 Coffee

09:15-10:45 Session 7: Distributed computing

 --         Multi-Application Smart Cards and Encrypted Data
	    Processing, Josep Domingo-Ferrer, Univ. Rovira i Virgili,
	    Tarragona, Catalonia, Spain

 --         Agent and Smart Card based System for User's Mobility,
            David Carlier, Sylvain Lecomte, Patrick Trane,
            RD2P, Univ. de Lille, France; Tokyo Institute of
            Technology, Japan

 --         How Smart Cards Can Take Benefits from Object-Oriented
            Technologies?
            Patrick Biget, Patrick George, Jean-Jacques Vandewalle,
            RD2P, Univ. de Lille, France

10:45-11:15 Coffee

11:15-12:15 Session 8: Panel

            Architecture, panelists to be announced

12:15-12:30 Final remarks and close

12:30-13:30 Lunch

Excursion and Dinner

To be announced.

Venue, transport

Amsterdam is a historic city of outstanding beauty. It is the capital
of the Netherlands and home to over 700,000 people. The Netherlands has
a temperate climate. The average rainfall in September is 74mm, and the
average day temperature is 14.3 degrees centigrade.

The Amsterdam Schiphol airport serves hundreds of destinations daily
from all over the world. From the airport it is a short train journey
to the centre of the city, with trains running day and night.

The railway and road networks in the Netherlands provide for easy
routes from neighbouring countries (Germany and Belgium) as well as the
rest of continental Europe. There are daily ferry services to the
United Kingdom.

Public transport in Amsterdam is frequent and reliable.

The host institutes are located in the Amsterdam Science Park, which is
the largest concentration of research institutes in science and
mathematics in the Netherlands.

The Science Park offers excellent libraries in many of the exact
sciences.  Remote login access via the Internet is open to visitors.

The conference will be held in the main auditorium of the Science Park
(capacity of 150). All conferencing facilities are provided.

Host institutes

The center for mathematics and computer science (CWI) is a part of the
Mathematical Centre Foundation, aiming to foster mathematics and
computer science research in the Netherlands. Special attention is paid
to the applicability of the results of fundamental research; part of
CWI's mission is to transfer new knowledge to society in general and
trade and industry in particular. The Cryptology group of CWI is a
separate division, and was founded in its present format in 1984. It
has since established itself as the main cryptology research center in
the Netherlands, and is probably best known for its research activities
in electronic cash. More generally, the research activities of the
Cryptology group are focused on public-key cryptographic protocols.
Particular areas of interest, besides electronic cash, are
special-purpose digital signatures, zero-knowledge proofs, and
correctness verification of cryptographic protocols by means of formal
methods.

The Department of Computer Systems of the University of Amsterdam
performs research in advanced computer systems. The department has a
leading national role in the areas of high performance computing and
image processing. The department has a strong architecture group, with
interests ranging from VLSI design to high level formal specification
of complex systems. The work on IC card operating systems design is an
important part of the department's research portfolio.

Registration

All participants, including speakers, should register. Early
registration is recommended. Fees are to be paid in advance. A
reduction applies to registration forms and payments made prior to
August 1, 1996.

All registrations will be confirmed. Use more forms or photocopies if
you want to register more than one person.

The information/registration desk at the conference center will be open
on:

Wednesday 18 September   12:00 - 17:00
Thursday  19 September   08:30 - 12:00


Registration Fee

All prices are quoted in Dutch Guilders (NLG).
Early Registration (before August 1, 1996) fee 500 NLG
Late Registration (after August 1, 1996) fee 600 NLG

Conference Registration fee covers:

   * Admission to all conference sessions
   * A copy of the conference proceedings
   * Refreshments and lunches during breaks
   * Reception on Wednesday, September 18
   * Conference dinner on Thursday, September 19

Payments

Payments are to be made in advance in Dutch Guilders (NLG), without
charges to the organisers by:

   * Bank transfer to account number 31.35.57.977 of "Stichting
     Wiskunde en Informatica Conferenties" at the RABO-Bank, Middenweg
     88, Amsterdam, The Netherlands (postal giro of bank is 187744).

   * A certified bank cheque, to be enclosed with your completed
     registration form. Note that personal cheques will not be accepted.

   * Credit card payment. Please fill out the appropriate section on
     the registration form. Whichever method of payment is used, make
     sure you mention the name of the participant.

Cancellation

Refund of the registration fee, less a 25% administrative charge, may
be applied for in writing until September 1, 1996. For cancellations
received after this date, no refund can be made. Refunds are settled
after the conference.

Special requirements

For participants who have special requirements with respect to diet or
other matters, arrangements can be made, provided that applications
have been received by the secretary before September 1, 1996.

Hotel reservations

Hotel accommodation can be reserved in the conference hotel, Tulip Inn
Oosterpark. All rooms have en suite facilities. A special conference
roomrate of NLG 125 (single room)/NLG 150 (double room) incl.
breakfast, is offered to CARDIS delegates. To book a room, complete the
hotel reservations section on the registration form. Please note that
room availability cannot be guaranteed after the early registration
date of August 1, 1996.

If the hotel is fully booked we will try to book a room in a hotel in
the same price range.


CARDIS 1996 REGISTRATION AND HOTEL

RESERVATION FORM

[] Mr [] Ms

First name                      :

Surname                         :

Company/Organisation            :

Address                         :

                                :

City                            :

Postal Code                     :

Country                         :

Telephone                       :

Fax                             :

Email address                   :

[] Accompanying person          :

[] Mr [] Ms Surname             :

First name                      :

[] 500 Early Registration

[] 600 Late Registration

[] 150 Dinner for accompanying person

Total to be paid:

[] HOTEL RESERVATION:
(Not guaranteed after 1 Aug.)   :

Arrival date                    :

Departure date                  :

Number of nights                :

[]  Single Room

[]  Double Room

PAYMENT

Payment of conference fee effected by:

[] Bank transfer to account #31.35.57.977 of
  "Stichting Wiskunde en Informatica
   Conferenties" at the RABO-Bank,
   Middenweg 88, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
  (postal giro of bank is 187744)

[] A certified cheque, enclosed with this
  form. Note that personal cheques will not
  be accepted.

[] Credit card payment

   [] American Express

   [] Visa

   [] Eurocard/Mastercard

In the name of          :

  Company name          :

  Card number           :

  Expire date           :

Address of card holder          :

Authorization: I authorize Stichting Wiskunde en
Informatica Conferenties to charge my creditcard
the above amount.

Date                    :

Signature               :

Please mention participants name with payment. Payments are to be made
without charges to the organisers.

Note that for credit card payments we need the original signature, so
always send a copy by post after faxing or emailing this form. Any
cancellation of registration and hotel reservation must be made in
writing to the conference secretary.

Forward this form to:

CARDIS II
Ms. Simone Panka
CWI
P.O. Box 94079
1090 GB Amsterdam
Netherlands

Fax: +31.20.5924199
Email: simone@cwi.nl

For further information please direct your web browser at:
  http://www.cwi.nl/~brands/

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

From: Mike King <mk@wco.com>
Subject: Pacific Bell Internet, LA Times Offer Customized Internet
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 16:54:21 PDT


Forwarded to the Digest FYI:

  Date: Tue, 04 Jun 1996 11:47:42 -0700
  Reply-To: NEWS-LIST@list.pactel.com
  From: sqlgate@list.pactel.com
  Subject: NEWS:  Pacific Bell Internet, Los Angeles Times Join Forces
  to Offer First-Ever Customized Internet Access Service for Southern 
  California

RELATED DOCUMENTS:
   * Related news story from the Los Angeles Times
   * More information about the service on the Pacific Bell Internet
     Site

FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Dave Miller, Pacific Bell Internet Services
916-972-2811
dnmille@legal.pactel.com
Laura Morgan, Los Angeles Times
213-237-4715
laura.morgan@latimes.com


Pacific Bell Internet, Los Angeles Times Join Forces to Offer First-Ever
Customized Internet Access Service for Southern California

New Dial Up Internet Access Service Provides Fast, Easy Access to The
Times' Web Site and Other Southern California Content

LOS ANGELES -- In the first alliance of its kind between a major
telecommunications firm and one of the nation's leading newspapers,
Pacific Bell Internet Services and the Los Angeles Times today announced
the availability of a customized dial up Internet access service
featuring the newspaper's extensive site on the World Wide Web.

The San Francisco-based Internet services company and the nation's
second-largest newspaper have created a Los Angeles Times version of its
new Pacific Bell Internet dial up Internet access service that the two
companies are jointly marketing and distributing in Southern California.

The Times and Pacific Bell Internet Services formed the joint marketing
and distribution alliance to attract new Internet users and drive
traffic to the newspaper's World Wide Web site -- the most comprehensive
source of online information for and about Southern California available
on the Internet.

The co-branded service, which is available immediately, includes a
customized version of the industry-leading Netscape Navigator (tm)
Personal Edition 2.0 client software created especially for a Southern
California audience. Browser buttons link users to The Times' Web site,
Pacific Bell Internet's site and SoCal Excite, the regional Internet
search engine jointly developed by The Times and Architext Software,
Inc. The service will enable users to quickly locate Southern
California-related information on the Internet.

Pacific Bell Internet's customized service for the Los Angeles Times
offers local dial up access at speeds up to 28.8 Kbps (Kilobits per
second) from every point in the network. Prices range from $9.95 a month
for 10 hours of access time up to $19.95 a month for unlimited access.
All connection fees, including those for the interconnected Global
Service Providers, are included in the aforementioned pricing options.
Unlike other Internet service providers, Pacific Bell Internet users are
not required to purchase telephone service from Pacific Bell. High speed
digital ISDN access -- up to six times fast than most dial up analog
modems -- will be available in early July.

Features of the Los Angeles Times version of Pacific Bell Internet
access service:

   * Built-in bookmarks featuring Web sites of particular use and
     interest to Southern California, including sections of the Times
     Web site.

   * Easy, one-button access to The Times' Web site, home of its free
     custom news service, Hunter, which automatically retrieves news and
     features from both The Times and AP Online and presents them in a
     personalized online newspaper format.

   * Direct Internet access to SoCal Excite, a first-of-its-kind
     regional Internet directory that allows users to search the entire
     Internet to find services, Web sites and news groups with a special
     focus on Southern California.

   * Internet access throughout California.

   * Special customer service phone number.

   * Billing options - by credit card or Pacific Bell monthly bill.

Times' Web Site Already One Of Most Popular Web Sites; Features
Extensive Content

Since its April 8 launch, the Times Web site has averaged over 500,000
hits a day. More than 1,000 people a day have registered for Hunter,
the site's free custom news service. The site includes content from
the daily newspaper, archives of articles published since 1990,
information from other content providers and links to other sites such
as Hollywood Online. Access to more of the site's content is free to
users.  Registration is required to access AP Online and Hunter, which
are also free services. Access to The Times' archives is currently
free; in the future, users will be charged $1.50 per story to view or
download articles.

"We're combining the strengths of both companies -- fast, reliable and
affordable high performance Internet access with superior regional and
national content -- to create the premiere online experience for
Southern Californians," said Rick Hronicek, president of Pacific Bell
Internet Services. "Both companies are committed to making access to
value added regional and local content easy and convenient for
California consumers."

"This alliance with Pacific Bell Internet fits perfectly into our
overall Internet strategy," said Bob Brisco, The Times senior vice
president of marketing and new business development. "Our Web site is a
centerpiece of this strategy, but we are also in the business of
building the Internet audience by making it more accessible to
consumers. This alliance, with a company known for making technology
easy, enables us to give people the tools they need to access the
rapidly expanding online world."

Prospective customers can download the customized Los Angeles Times Web
client software directly from the Web at http://www.pacbell.net/latimes
or by calling toll-free 1-800-213-9999.

With the announcement, both companies are aiming to tap into the
explosive growth of the Internet market in Southern California, which
features the nation's top market for computer hardware and software
sales (over $1 billion a year); over 4.4 million computer users and one
of the fastest-growing areas in personal computer use with 1.2 million
new PCs purchased in 1995.

Pacific Bell Internet Services is a full service Internet service
provider serving business and residential customers in California. The
company offers a broad range of Internet access services that feature
simple, affordable ways for reaching the estimated 30 million users on
the world's largest and most powerful computer network.

The company is a wholly owned subsidiary of Pacific Bell, the largest
unit of parent company Pacific Telesis Group, a San Francisco-based
diversified telecommunications corporation.

The Los Angeles Times is the second-largest metropolitan daily
newspaper in the country. The winner of 20 Pulitzer Prizes, The Times
publishes four daily regional editions covering the Los Angeles
metropolitan area, the San Fernando Valley, Orange and Ventura
counties. The Times Web site can be found on the Internet at
http://www.latimes.com .

The Times is owned by Times Mirror, a Los Angeles-based news and
information company that, in addition to The Times, also publishes
Newsday, the Baltimore Sun and other newspapers, a wide array of books,
information and educational products for professional markets and
national and trade magazines.

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

Mike King   *   Oakland, CA, USA   *   mk@wco.com

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

From: d3smith@aol.com (D3SMITH)
Subject: Summary of New Telco Video Rules
Date: 18 Jun 1996 16:53:40 -0400
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Reply-To: d3smith@aol.com (D3SMITH)


A free three-page summary of the FCC's recent Open Video Systems
report is available (along with a link to the full 250+ page FCC
report) on the Information Provider Newsletter website:
"www.vipconsult.com."  Open Video Systems (OVS) is the set of
regulations designed to replace Video Dialtone and allow US telcos an
alternative route into the video market.

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

Date: 18 Jun 96 08:19:06 EDT
From: earle robinson <76004.1762@compuserve.com>
Subject: AT&T Callback Service in Europe


Interesting to note that AT&T is now widely advertising a new calling
card here in Europe which is effectively a callback scheme.  A little
more expensive than others, 44 cents per minute from Europe to the
states, this seems to give full legitimacy to the callback concept.
There is even a toll free option for calls, more expensive at 61 cents
a minute, but obviously useful for people calling from hotels.  There
is a $10 per month fee.  One uses a standard credit card, Amex, Visa
or Mastercard.

It is also interesting to note that Americans with their AT&T calling
cards will not get these lower rates.


er

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

Subject: Telecom Archives CDROM Ordering Details
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 18:42:16 -0700
From: TELECOM Digest Editor <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>


People have been asking how to order the Telecom Archives CDROM by
mail order. Not everyone has been able to find it in a store as of
yet. If you can find it in a store, you will save on the shipping
charges, however it might simply be easier for you to order it
direct from the publisher, so details are given below.

The Telecom Archives is a fifteen year collection of the stuff which
has appeared in TELECOM Digest since 1981 along with a few hundred
other files of telecom related material. There are a lot of technical
files, historical files, etc. Everything that was there through the
end of 1995 is included. The cost is $39.95.

Please buy a copy, as the royalties will help me a lot. Also, if sales
are good, there will be an update with the 1996 material on it at
some future point. 

============================================================================
shipping information:
============================================================================

Shipping is $5 in the USA, Canada, and Mexico for First Class.  Overseas is
$9 PER ORDER.  There is an additional $3 COD charge (USA Only).  UPS Blue
Label (2nd day) [USA Only] is $10 PER ORDER, UPS Red Label (next day) [USA
Only] is $15 PER ORDER.  Federal Express (next day) [USA Only] is $20 PER
ORDER.  For overseas courier rates, please email us.


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You can order by sending a check or money order to

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 California residents please add sales tax.

Shipping and handling is $5 (per ORDER, not per disc) for US, Canada, and 
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                       --------------------

Therefore, unless you want next day delivery by FedEx which would make
it quite expensive you would send $39.95 plus $5 to Walnut Creek at
thier address above, or authorize them to charge your credit card, etc.
As noted also, customers outside the USA need to pay additional 
shipping costs. Write to Walnut Creek at the addresses above.

If you can find it in a retail outlet then you save shipping and
handling charges. In any event, please buy one today!


PAT

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

The Telecom Archives remains a free resource for the Internet and
is available using anonymous ftp massis.lcs.mit.edu.

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
public service systems and networks including Compuserve and America
On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. 

Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:

                 * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu *

The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
Townson of Skokie, Illinois USA. You can reach us by postal mail, fax 
or phone at:
                      Post Office Box 4621
                     Skokie, IL USA   60076
                       Phone: 847-329-0571
                        Fax: 847-329-0572
  ** Article submission address: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu

Our archives are located at mirror.lcs.mit.edu and are available by using
anonymous ftp. The archives can also be accessed using our email
information service. For a copy of a helpful file explaining how to
use the information service, just ask.

*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from the              *
* International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in Geneva, Switzerland    * 
* under the aegis of its Telecom Information Exchange Services (TIES)   * 
* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
* ing views of the ITU.                                                 *
*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
yourself who provide funding in amounts deemed appropriate. Your help
is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of twenty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #292
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Tue Jun 18 20:31:35 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id UAA11519; Tue, 18 Jun 1996 20:31:35 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 20:31:35 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606190031.UAA11519@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #293

TELECOM Digest     Tue, 18 Jun 96 20:31:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 293

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    LD Companies Vie for Customers (Tad Cook)
    Re: Sprint Fridays Were Free (Brett Frankenberger)
    Re: Sprint Fridays Were Free (Ed Ellers)
    Sprint is Still Offering "Fridays Free"! (Linc Madison)
    Re: New Area Codes in California, etc. (Linc Madison)
    Re: Wireless Ethernet Transceivers (Thaddeus Cox)
    Re: Yellowstone Park Begins Cellular Service (Steve Bagdon)
    Re: Caller-ID *Only* Line (John Fricks)
    Re: Caller-ID *Only* Line (Hillary Gorman)
    Re: International 800 Numbers (John R. Levine)
    Re: International 800 Numbers (Linc Madison)
    Re: International 800 Numbers (Bob Goudreau)
    Re: International 800 Numbers (Mark Brader)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Tad Cook <tad@ssc.com>
Subject: LD Companies Vie for Customers
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 00:41:38 PDT


Long Distance Phone Companies Vie for Customers; It Pays to Review the Plans

By John Finotti, The Florida Times-Union, Jacksonville
Knight-Ridder/Tribune Business News

Stop.

Don't pick up that phone -- not just yet anyway.

Before you take another call at home and run the risk of being
ambushed with yet another offer to switch long-distance phone service,
do yourself a favor: review your present long-distance plan to make
sure you've got what you want.

Even you dyed-in-the-wool AT&T customers-for-life may be able to save
money by reviewing your phone usage and matching it with the AT&T plan
that best suits your calling needs.

Thanks to increased competition among phone companies, there now is a
wide variety of long-distance rates and plans available.

And there is certainly a switching frenzy going on.

In 1994, some 19 million Americans changed long-distance plans,
according to the Federal Communications Commission.

In response to the switching craze that has been sweeping the country
over the past few years, Sprint offered the first "commitment plan."

Under the plan, called "Sprint Sense with Cash Back," customers who've
been with Sprint for 12 months get a cash rebate of 10 percent of
their long-distance bills.

The first thing you need to know is that a calling plan -- any calling
plan -- will save you money.

Customers not currently in a plan are paying basic rates, and wasting
money, said Jill Straus, a spokeswoman for the Telecommunications
Research & Action Center, a non-profit group based in Washington, D.C.
"It's the same as walking into a car dealer and paying the sticker
price for a car," Straus said.

Moreover, basic rates are continuing to rise.

They're up about 17 percent over the past two years, according to
Consumer Reports.

Still, an estimated 60 percent of all residential long-distance
customers continue to pay the basic rate.

Selecting a plan but selecting the right calling plan isn't easy,
since the plans do vary widely.

"Things are changing so fast we recommend heavy users review their calling 
plans every three months," Straus said.

Calling plans offer discounts of 10 percent to 30 percent off a phone
company's basic rates.

Flat rate plans, for example, are lower than basic rates because they
are calculated at a flat rate per minute, regardless of the distance
of the call.

Rates also may vary based on the time of day you call.

For example, most carriers offer two times to call -- peak and off-peak.

Some plans offer discounts based on how often you make long-distance calls.

With these plans, customers receive discounts from a phone company's
basic rate based on the volume of calls.

If you make most of your calls to the same people or area, there are calling 
plans designed just for you.

You can get discounts on calls made to the certain area codes you have
selected.

There are plans based on what time of the day or what day of the week
you call.

Most companies offer lower per-minute rates on calls made during designated 
times.

Additionally, the so-called Big Three -- AT&T, MCI and Sprint -- each
offer a programs that provide extra discounts to customers in the form
of reward "points" based on the amount of usage.

The programs are called AT&T True Rewards, MCI Friends and Family
Extras and Sprint Rewards.

The Big Three control about 83 percent of the long-distance market,
according to the FCC.

The balance is made up of hundreds of smaller carriers who buy phone
time from the Big Three at deep discounts and resell it to consumers.

Competition among long-distance providers is mostly on price, said
Judy Reed Smith, chief executive officer of Atlantic-ACM Inc., a
telecommunications strategy and research firm in Boston.

Consumer Reports notes there is no significant difference in sound
quality when it comes to long-distance service.

There are about 375 long-distance companies certified to do business
in Florida.

However, not all of the companies may serve your area.

LCI is one of the many small long-distance companies trying to make
selection simple by offering only one calling plan.

LCI offers flat rates according to the time of day you call and uses
6-second billing, which measures the time of a call in 6-second
increments rather than rounding up to the next minute.

Industry analysts say 6-second billing can reduce the number of minutes 
consumers are billed each month by up to 10 percent.

LCI also gives customers 30 minutes of interstate calling for 1 cent
per minute on eight holidays per year.

Long Distance Wholesale Club doesn't require customers to switch to it
as an exclusive carrier.

Instead, you dial a five-digit access code before dialing 1 and then the 
long-distance phone number.

While this service offers lower rates, some consumers may not want to be 
bothered with having to dial the extra access code.

There are other resellers, known as "affinity" phone companies, that
give some of their phone revenue to various charities.

Working Assets, for example, gives 1 percent of its customers' phone
charges to non-profit causes such as the environment, human rights and
peace.

Working Assets' 240,000 customers decide where the money will go.

The group's rates are competitive with the Big Three.

Because long-distance companies are constantly changing their calling
plans, it pays to review your calling patterns.

"You should examine at least three typical bills to help you compare
phone companies every three months," Straus said.

Look at when you make most of your calls and how long they last.

Look for any patterns.

If you're like most people, most of your long-distance calls are to a
handful of friends and relatives who most likely live in the same area
and share the same area code.

You also can save money by paying closer attention to how you use the
phone.

Most phone companies offer different rates, depending on what time of day you 
call.

Before switching long-distance service, particularly to a company that
isn't a household name, you should call your state public service
commission to make sure the company is certified and see if there have
been any complaints filed against it, said Melinda Pace, a spokeswoman
at the Florida Public Service Commission.

The Florida PSC's toll-free number is (800) 342-3552.

The Georgia Public Service Commission's in-state toll-free number is
(800) 282-5813.

The Telecommunications Research & Action Center compares many calling
plans in its biannual newsletter, Tele-Tips, and evaluates them
according to different calling patterns.

(For a copy of the most recent issue, send $3 and a self-addressed,
stamped envelope to TRAC, P.O. Box 27279, Washington, D.C. 20005.) If
you do switch long-distance companies, consumer advocates say you
should be sure to ask what incentives the company is offering.

For example, some companies have been offering as much as $75 to
customers who switch, Straus said.

Also, make sure that by signing up for any bonuses, you are not
precluded from joining the calling plan of your choice.

One thing you can count on: your phone probably will be ringing off
the hook as long-distance companies try to get your business.

Particularly as more and more people hook into services that include
pagers, voice mail, cellular phones and Internet services.

"The competition in long-distance will heat up within the next year," 
Atlantic-ACM's Smith said.

                                -----

ON THE INTERNET:

Visit ConnecT-U, the World Wide Web site of The Florida Times-Union.
Point your browser to http://www.times-union.com

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

From: brettf@netcom.com (Brett Frankenberger)
Subject: Re: Sprint Fridays Were Free
Organization: NETCOM On-line Communication Services (408 261-4700 guest)
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 23:25:40 GMT


In article <telecom16.276.15@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Poll Dubh
<singular@oort.ap.sissa.it> wrote:

> What amazes me is that you didn't see this coming, i.e. that you
> thought Sprint's offer worthy of credit in the first place. After all,
> giving out free calls in the US only costs Sprint extra load on its
> network. 

The extra load was almost certainly insignifigant.

> but free overseas calls mean actual payments to the phone
> companies at the other end and so have a direct impact on cash flow.
> Do you also buy into pyramid schemes? 

Yes, Sprint would lose money on the international calls.  No doubt.
So what.  Suppose I owned a business that did a lot of LD calling, and
AT&T was my carrier.  Suppose the Sprint Rep came out and took me out
to lunch to talk to me about why I should switch to Sprint.  Should I
immediately assume that Sprint is completely full of sh*t, because
they are losing money at that particular moment (i.e. they have to
make a direct cash payment to the resturant for my lunch, and I'm not
giving them anything right them,)?  Certainly not.  What Sprint would
be doing is losing money (buy buying me lunch) in hopes of making
money later (if I decide to switch to Sprint).  This is extremely
common.  Grocery stores will place some items on sale at less than
they pay for them (i.e. a "loss leader"), knowing that the money they
lose on that will (at least hopefully) be offset by the profits they
make on other things when people are lured in by the loss leader.

That's what Free Fridays were.  A gamble by Sprint that the money lost
on Fridays would be more than offset by the Money gained on other
days.  They may have made a bad bet, considering the fact that they
backed out of the deal.  I fully expected them to honor their
agreement.  (And am also a little disappointed that there hasn't been
a class action lawsuit for specific performance (is there such a
thing?) yet).

> And when you go on vacation, do
> you always look for the absolute cheapest fares, on chartered flights
> by obscure airlines, the kind that goes bankrupt before your return
> trip?  Not without first assessing the risks, I hope.

That's an invalid comparison.  No one was looking for the cheapest
rates on obscure Long Distance carriers.  They were assuming that the
third largest LD carrier in the nation would honor it's contract.
That seemed like a pretty safe bet (although in retrospect it turned
out to be a losing bet).

If a major airline offered a really cheap price to wherever I wanted to
go on vacation, yes, I'd take them up on the offer.

> I can readily believe that the unexpected change is making you lose
> money. I'm less convinced that Sprint is "getting money" in this
> affair; it's more likely that they are trying to cut their own losses.

They are almost certainly "getting money", in the sense that some
people almost certainly switched to sprint for this offer and then
didn't switch back when Sprint decided not to honor their agreement.


Brett  (brettf@netcom.com)

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

From: Ed Ellers <edellers@delphi.com>
Subject: Re: Sprint Fridays Were Free
Date: Tue, 11 Jun 96 13:30:20 -0500
Organization: Delphi (info@delphi.com email, 800-695-4005 voice)


Poll Dubh <singular@oort.ap.sissa.it> writes:
 
> Do you also buy into pyramid schemes? And when you go on vacation, do
> you always look for the absolute cheapest fares, on chartered flights
> by obscure airlines, the kind that goes bankrupt before your return
> trip?  Not without first assessing the risks, I hope.
  
Last time I looked, Sprint was a well-known, established company.
They're hardly in the same class with pyramid promoters and crooked
charter operators.


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Being 'well known and established' does
automatically preclude devising fraudulent and/or 'bait and switch'
schemes. Does anyone remember that major insurance company several
years ago that went down when it was discovered that about half the
policy holders listed on its computer were non-existent?   PAT]

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

Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 01:16:02 -0700
From: Telecom@Eureka.vip.best.com (Linc Madison)
Subject: Sprint is Still Offering "Fridays Free"!


I was using one of the search engines on the Web to look for some info
that was telecom-related, and the ad at the top of the page was for
Sprint "Fridays are Free," so I followed the link.  They're trying a
little harder to tighten the restrictions -- you are now required to
give the business name, and they talk about a term contract and
penalties and other things designed to scare people off, but it still
is the same basic offer.

So much for the theory that they learned their lesson and went home!
They still have the same $1000 maximum free calls per month with $50
minimum billing.

You can find out all about it at
<http://www.sprintbiz.com/cgi-bin/qfridays.cgi>

I should also mention that the web page has a space for comments about
their offerings.


Linc Madison  *  San Francisco, California  *  Telecom@Eureka.vip.best.com


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Well of course they are going to
continue  to offer it as long as they are permitted to do so. It is a
great money making scam for them. Sign the customer up for free calls
on Friday; let the customer do it for a month and then send the
customer a letter saying the terms have changed and that they (Sprint)
have the right to dishonor their contracts or change the terms any time
they want. To add a little further insult to it, then charge the
customer at some later time for all the 'free' calls you originally
said they could have, claiming it was all a mistake and they were not
really entitled to those free calls.  Blame it all on customer service
representatives who were 'not correctly trained'. <smile> Let the poor
reps take all the heat; as it is they buffer the huge number of phone
calls coming in each day so that people like Robin Loyed don't have
to have their virgin ears offended or be forced to think about the
consequences of their actions. By the way, has anyone ever gotten
through to him on the phone? I have to wonder if he gets any personal
calls at the office from his wife or kids or other friends; if so
they must have to go through a lot of screening to make sure it is
not just some customer calling that he would get stuck talking to
instead.  

Just because a company is 'large and well established' does not mean
they cannot craft some schemes which verge on fraud if in fact it
is not legally fraud.    PAT] 

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

Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 00:26:01 -0700
From: Telecom@Eureka.vip.best.com (Linc Madison)
Subject: Re: New Area Codes in California, etc.


At 2:17 PM 6/10/96, Carl Moore wrote:

> Where is this 1-561-xxx-x being dialed?  If in San Francisco, I do not
> remember reading about it ever having PUBLISHED 1 + seven digits dialing
> instructions.  415 used to have 7D for calls anywhere within it, with
> NPA+7D for calls to other area codes; when it had to prepare for N0X/N1X
> prefixes, the NPA+7D had a 1 put in front of it.

> What date do you have for area code 757 kicking in in southeastern Virginia?

I was dialing from San Francisco.  (For a while, dialing 1-561
resulted in an immediate intercept.  Then, I started getting an
intercept at the point of 1-561-xxx-x, as if I had tried to dial a
HNPA toll call.  The call now completes correctly.)

You are correct that San Francisco never published 1 + 7D for HNPA toll
calls, although it was permitted in most of the area (excepting some CO's
where the [ir]responsible technician decided that the locally published
instructions should *exclude* the nationally published instructions) up
until interchangeable CO codes came into use.

Area code 415 still has 7D dialing for all calls within it, with optional
1+415+7D; 1+NPA+7D is mandatory for all FNPA calls, including local, and,
of course, 1+7D is prohibited for all calls.

As for 757 in Virginia, it goes permissive 7/1/96 and mandatory 2/1/97.
The test number is 1-757-627-1615.  The Norfolk LATA will move to 757,
with the Lynchburg, Richmond, and Charlottesville service areas retaining
804.  As of 6/10/96, dialing "1-757" from San Francisco routes to
immediate intercept.  Hopefully that will change on or before 7/1/96.


Linc Madison  *  San Francisco, California  *  Telecom@Eureka.vip.best.com

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

From: Thaddeus Cox <coxt@mail.oit.osshe.edu>
Subject: Re: Wireless Ethernet Transceivers
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 21:07:32 -0700
Organization: Oregon State System of Higher Education


On Sat, 8 Jun 1996, John R Levine wrote:

> One thought: how's the building heated?  If it's forced air of any sort,
> you might be able to run plenum-rated ethernet cable in the heating ducts.

Nope, hot-water heated, and we are already using the (very small) holes 
which the pipes go through to route thinnet ethernet cable. 


Finger for standard disclaimer  Thaddeus Cox - coxt@mail.oit.osshe.edu
Oregon Institute of Technology  (541)885-0212 voice (503)497-7050 pgr/vm

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

Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 13:31:04 EDT
From: Steve Bagdon <sbagdon.ford@e-mail.com>
Subject: Re: Yellowstone Park Begins Cellular Service


> "What's next, cable?" Chad Snopek of Los Angeles asked after
> returning from a few nights in the park. "It takes away from what you
> come here to get away from."

Can't this guy tell the difference between wire service and wireless
service. Does he have a problem with people in RVs having DSS dishes
on their RVs? Or how about people coming in with InMarsat M 'briefcases'?

> Under the phone service, which won't be ready until later this
> summer, the park receives $500 a year plus 70 phones and 5,000 free
> minutes a month. Unlimited free service would be provided if there was
> a disaster like the fires of 1988.

Sounds like a good plan for the park service. A little money, lots of
phones, and plenty of free service. But I wonder if a better deal
could have been struck -- such as a percentage of the total revenue
from local and toll use. Government *is* a business, and if you want
to use a phone in a park, shouldn't the usage *pay* for the park?

> Jensen said no environmental damage will occur because the
> transmitters will be installed on existing antennae at Old Faithful,
> Grant Village and on top of Mt. Washburn, one of the park's tallest
> peaks.

Sounds like a good plan to me -- no envirnmental impact, and cellular
service for natural disasters and personal emergencies. What took so
long?


Regards,

Steve Bagdon  

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

Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 22:35:07 GMT
From: John_Fricks@nt.com
Subject: Re: Caller-ID *Only* Line 
Organization: Nortel 


Pat wrote:

>> 1) Exactly WHAT did they hear when off hook attempting to make a call?
>> Was it dead silence or mostly dead silence with an occassional click
>> or 'pop' in their ear? Did they hear side-tone or noise like the line
>> was alive but just not ever getting around to dial tone?

And Hillary answered: 

> Well, I heard it myself. It was a live line with no dial tone, I think. It
> made that hissing sound.

Pat asked:

>> 2) What did the *people who called them* during that two weeks get as
>> a result?

Hillary answered:

> It would ring four times and then go to voicemail. Even if you picked
> up the phone on the first ring, you would simply hear silent hissing,
> while the caller would get four rings, and then the voicemail.

Pat asked:

> Anyone else have any ideas on this?  PAT]

Yea!

The telco's subscriber line equipment failed to detect (or report)
loop current whenever the subscriber went off hook. On call
origination, no off-hook detection, hence no dial tone. On in-coming
calls, no off-hook detection, hence continued ringing (until rollover
to voice mail).

Telco could have done a metallic line test at the central office to
isolate this problem. Sounds like the metallic line test equipment was
out of order or the trouble ticket didn't get through the system.


John Fricks
Email: John_Fricks@nt.com
Nortel Inc.

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

From: hillary@netaxs.com (Hillary Gorman)
Subject: Re: Caller-ID *Only* Line
Date: 18 Jun 1996 21:24:46 GMT
Organization: Philadelphia's Complete Internet Provider


Pat wrote:

> rings it went to voicemail. There may have been 'immediate call 
> forwarding' installed on the line which (I guess) would have sent him
> the Caller-ID but forced the call itself to a (apparently very slow
> answering) voicemail. Was it *his* voicemail that it went to? Do you
> know if he ordered a voicemail option on that line?  I would say that

Yes, he had ordered "answer call" which is Bell Atlantic's voicemail
system. It is supposed to answer on four rings if nobody picks up, and
to answer immediately if the line is busy. Callers would get the
voicemail after the fourth ring, so it was being treated as if no one
was answering -- even though someone WOULD in fact pick up the phone.


hillary gorman   hillary@netaxs.com

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

Date: Tue, 18 Jun 96 12:32 EDT
From: johnl@iecc.com (John R Levine)
Subject: Re: International 800 Numbers
Organization: I.E.C.C., Trumansburg, N.Y.


> To make life easier for users of international toll-free numbers, the
> ITU has mandated a new numbering structure of 0800, followed by eight
> digits, rather than the five, six or seven digit structure that is
> seen on existing toll-free numbers around the world.

Hmmn.  I wonder how they'll be dialed in North America.  In fact,
0-800 isn't used*, since 800 calls can't be charged to a calling card
or the like.  But 0-800 plus 8 digits would be an extremely ugly wart
on the side of the increasingly unbeautiful NANP and would require
reprogramming every CO switch in the continent, so I expect 011-800-
xxxx-xxxx.

I guess it's time to call Judith Oppenheimer and find out how to reserve
my favorite hundred or so digit combinations, just in case.

* - Well, I've seen a few non-RBOC payphones that require that you
dial 0-800-NXX-XXXX, but they'll have to get with the program sooner
or later anyway.


Regards,

John R. Levine, IECC, POB 640 Trumansburg NY 14886 +1 607 387 6869
johnl@iecc.com

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

From: Telecom@Eureka.vip.best.com (Linc Madison)
Subject: Re: International 800 Numbers
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 09:13:38 -0700
Organization: Best Internet Communications


There's one nit to pick here -- a small one, but important.

In article <telecom16.279.6@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Jorene Downs
<jcdowns@strategic-vision.com> wrote:

> GENEVA, SWITZERLAND, 1996 JUN 7 (NB) -- The International
> Telecommunications Union (ITU), a division of the United Nations, has
> announced plans to allow country-specific telecoms companies to
> support international toll-free numbers.

> To make life easier for users of international toll-free numbers, the
> ITU has mandated a new numbering structure of 0800, followed by eight
> digits, rather than the five, six or seven digit structure that is
> seen on existing toll-free numbers around the world.

It isn't 0800, it's +800.  The 0800 numbering structure is used for
national toll-free numbers within some countries.  From most
countries, the new numbers will be reached as 00-800-xxxx-xxxx.  From
the U.S. and Canada, they will be reached as 011-800-xxxx-xxxx.

The confusion promulgated by referring to the new numbers as 0800 is
precisely what the ITU is trying to avoid by emphasizing the point
that these are international toll-free numbers.

The other question is, what will happen in some other countries (e.g.,
Greece) that have used +800 as a local hack for such calls -- for
example, the numbers for AT&T USADirect and MCI and Sprint's similar
services from Greece are all 00-800-xxx-xxx, at least when last I was
there.


Linc Madison  *  San Francisco, Calif. *  Telecom@Eureka.vip.best.com

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

Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 17:52:49 -0400
From: goudreau@dg-rtp.dg.com (Bob Goudreau)
Subject: Re: International 800 Numbers


Jorene Downs <jcdowns@strategic-vision.com> quotes a news release
about international free-phone numbers:

> To make life easier for users of international toll-free numbers, the
> ITU has mandated a new numbering structure of 0800, followed by eight
> digits, rather than the five, six or seven digit structure that is
> seen on existing toll-free numbers around the world. The ITU has
> recommended that companies offering 0800-xxxx-xxxx numbers clearly
> indicate them as "international freephone service" numbers with a
> special logo.

Gee, I thought that the "new numbering structure" for international
free-phone numbers was going to be +800-xxxx-xxxx, not 0800-xxxx-xxxx.
For most countries, "+" (the international escape code) is "00", not
"0" (and in the NANP, "+" is "011).  It's a shame to see this sort of
confusing misinformation disseminated, since it's going to be hard
enough as it is to explain to most end-users how to dial +800 numbers.


Bob Goudreau			Data General Corporation
goudreau@dg-rtp.dg.com		62 Alexander Drive	
+1 919 248 6231			Research Triangle Park, NC  27709, USA

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

From: msb@sq.com (Mark Brader)
Subject: Re: International 800 Numbers
Organization: SoftQuad Inc., Toronto, Canada
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 22:59:14 GMT


> To make life easier for users of international toll-free numbers, the
> ITU has mandated a new numbering structure of 0800, followed by eight
> digits, rather than the five, six or seven digit structure that is
> seen on existing toll-free numbers around the world. The ITU has
> recommended that companies offering 0800-xxxx-xxxx numbers clearly
> indicate them as "international freephone service" numbers with a
> special logo.

It's quite possible that I've missed something here, but all prior
discussion that I remember seeing has discussed international toll-free
numbers as being +800 numbers -- that is, using 800 as a pseudo country
code.  So from North America we would dial 011-800 plus the number.

Should we assume that 0800 above is a mistake for 00-800, the way the
calls would be dialed in countries using 00 for the international access
code, or is it actually intended to use 0800 as the psuedo country code,
or are both of these interpretations wrong?

The second thing I find surprising in the article is that, although North
America alone has already exhausted a 7-digit number space of toll-free
numbers, they think that an 8-digit space will suffice worldwide for a
reasonable length of time.


Mark Brader, msb@sq.com, SoftQuad Inc., Toronto


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Well, the 800 number space in the USA
lasted for about thirty years without exhaustion didn't it? The first
800 numbers I remember came in about 1965-66 and now in 1996 the 888
space had to be opened.  Of course I am not saying 888 will last nearly
as long before it runs out and things are moving at a faster clip than
ever in the past ... ah! if we could only have imagined in the 1960's
the state of telephony thirty years hence! ... Still though, I don't
really anticipate the world squandering their number supply at nearly
the same pace has become common here in North America. Who among us
does not have multiple 800 numbers when one or none would serve just
as well?  I cannot see for example a big grab of international toll-
free numbers from most parts of the world, meaning most of the 0800
or +800 or whatever will be consumed right here in the USA like 
everything else phone-related. I think they'll get a decade or more
at least with this new block of numbers.    PAT]

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

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #293
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Wed Jun 19 09:51:07 1996
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Date: Wed, 19 Jun 1996 09:51:07 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
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To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #294

TELECOM Digest     Wed, 19 Jun 96 09:51:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 294

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    New NPA For Pittsburgh (Tad Cook)
    Cell-Fraud Detection Products (Tad Cook)
    The 800-555 Plague (Chris J. Cartwright)
    $250 Deposit for LD Service! (Stanley Cline)
    Has Lucent Lost It? (Tony Pelliccio)
    Excel and Frontier Restructure Long Distance Agreement (Ken Leonard)
    Screen Phone Sessions at ISA's Annual Meeting (isa@isa.net)
    Future of X.25 Networks vs Internet (Jean-Francois Mezei)
    Re: Stentor, Bell Canada, Independents (Mark J. Cuccia)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Tad Cook <tad@ssc.com>
Subject: New NPA For Pittsburgh
Date: Wed, 19 Jun 1996 00:19:58 PDT


Pittsburgh to Get New Telephone Area Codes; Panel to Announce Specifics

By Steve Creedy, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Knight-Ridder/Tribune Business News

Jun. 19--The state Public Utility Commission is expected tomorrow to
settle the sticky question of how to provide southwestern Pennsylvania
with millions of badly needed new telephone numbers.

At issue is whether to create an overlay, or separate area code
number, for all new phones in the 412 area or to break the region in
two, leaving part with the familiar 412 area code and part with a new
area code.

Bell Atlantic likes the overlay option, which would require customers
to use 10 digits for every call, but smaller independent phone
companies like the second option. Substantial costs and confusion
accompany each, and it's not clear which way the PUC will go.

The Murphy administration has thrown its support behind the overlay
option. A letter from the mayor to the PUC earlier this month said an
overlay would "minimize the fragmentation in existing communities as
well as eliminate the disruptions associated with changes to area
codes."

"An overlay is preferable to a geographic split and represents the
best interests of all telephone customers presently served by the 412
area code," the letter said.

Opponents of overlay counter by pointing to the inconvenience of
dialing 10 digits. Local telephone companies and long distance
carriers also claim that overlay leaves them at a competitive
disadvantage.

The difficult choice is being forced upon metropolitan communities
because new technology and the demand for faxes, modems and other
equipment have fueled an explosive growth in the demand for new phone
lines and depleted the supply of local numbers.

Demand for phone numbers in the 412 area had been running at about
140,000 requests a year, but last year it soared to 820,000. At that
rate, 412 numbers will run out in the middle of next year.

The PUC says changes in dialing codes as part of a geographic split
would begin in January and become mandatory by next May. Mandatory
dialing for the overlay option would take effect in June.

The experience in other states has been mixed.

Maryland opted for an overlay, adding two new area codes -- 443 and
240 -- to its existing 410 and 301 area codes. New telephone customers
are being issued the new area codes, and everyone in the state will
have to start dialing 10 digits for in-state calls in May 1997.

Maryland's Public Service Commission voted 4-1 for the overlay
proposal, noting that no existing subscribers would be forced to
change their numbers and that the decision would have no effect on
what constitutes a local call and a toll call.

Maryland PSC spokeswoman Chris Wilson said the commission considered a
number of factors in its decision, including the higher implementation
costs of a geographic split, the costs for end users and competitive
factors.

So far, Wilson said, the decision hasn't generated an avalanche of
complaints.

But it's a different story in Texas, where the state Public Utility
Commission appears to be under siege no matter which way it goes.

A public outcry in Houston about having to dial 10 digits prompted the
Texas PUC to reject a Southwestern Bell plan to introduce an overlay
system and instead to split the city into two area codes.

The opposite is happening in Dallas, where the Texas PUC is being sued
by the city to keep from being partitioned into two area codes.
Opponents in Dallas claim a geographic split would be burdensome to
small businesses and would hinder efforts to unify parts of the city.

Still, the geographic split seems the more common of the two options.
Opponents of overlay note that regulators in California, Florida,
Georgia, Missouri and Illinois recently favored the split, saying it
favors competition and is better for consumers.

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

From: Tad Cook <tad@ssc.com>
Subject: Cell-Fraud Detection Products
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 19:18:45 PDT


Lightbridge introduces the first complete subscription fraud package

WALTHAM, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--June 17, 1996--Lightbridge Inc.
Monday announced the availability of a complete subscription fraud
management line of products titled Fraud Sentinel, which is composed
of three sentries: Postalpro, Fraud Detect and ProFile.

This new product line will arm wireless carriers with an effective
tool to curb the increasing problem of subscription fraud.

`Subscription fraud is the oldest form of cellular fraud, and the most
persistent as other types of fraud become too technically difficult to
execute,' said Phillip Redman, an analyst with the Yankee Group, a
Boston-based consultancy.

`In 1995, subscription fraud generated losses to the industry of over
1 percent, or approximately $180 million,' said Redman, `and could
grow to $500 million by the year 2000 if left unchecked. These tools
developed by Lightbridge are an effective method for stopping cellular
fraud today.'

The first line of defense, Postalpro, applies U.S. Postal Service
standards at the point of sale to identify potentially fraudulent
addresses. Postalpro provides the point of sale with the ability to
verify the validity of an address prior to completing the application
process.

Studies with Postalpro have shown that an average of 10 percent of
returned mail had addresses unknown to the U.S. Postal Service. This
tool not only identifies potentially fraudulent subscribers, but also
provides significant savings in mailing costs by identifying incorrect
and unknown addresses.

Lightbridge has partnered with TRANS UNION to provide Fraud Detect,
the second level of defense. Fraud Detect, a fraudulent data detection
tool, utilizes algorithms to determine the legitimacy of the personal
data provided by an applicant. The social security number is checked
against the death master file and matched with the date of birth.
Fraud Detect will then identify those issued within the last seven
years and will flag numbers issued for pocket book use only.

Fraud Detect will also analyze the phone number to automatically
verify the area code and exchange, and will alert if a pager or
cellular number is given in place of a land line. The zip code check
will flag if the zip code provided is from a prison or military base.
The distance between the phone number and the zip code is also
calculated to ensure the phone number can exist in that zip code
range.

Finally, Fraud Detect will verify driver's license format, cross check
with date of birth, perform last name soundex match, and report eye
color and gender.

ProFile, the final line of defense for subscription fraud, is an
on-line intercarrier negative file database that uses unique matching
logic to identify individuals who have a negative history with
carriers, either from a write-off or shut-off. ProFile has been
established as the largest intercarrier negative file database over
the last three years and currently houses substantial amounts of data
from various carriers.

This tool acts as a risk management and collection tool for carriers
by acting as a pre-activation screening for high-risk subscribers and
by flagging subscribers that may have had a write-off from another
previous carrier. When a subscriber is identified that has been
written off, a notice goes to the originating write-off carrier. This
carrier may then choose to pursue collection of the debt.

The full line of Fraud Sentinel products provides a complete line of
defense and offers real-time business solutions that will allow
carriers to be proactive in fighting the war on subscription fraud.

Lightbridge, an entrepreneurial company located in Waltham,
specializes in innovative solutions for customer acquisition and
retention in the wireless industry. Solutions offered by Lightbridge
include fully automated and integrated qualification and activation
services; channel-specific distribution systems; billing system
interfaces; and Fraud Sentinel, a line of subscription fraud products.

The company also provides a wide range of decision support and data
warehouse services, as well as business process consulting. 

NOTE: Postalpro is a trademark of Lightbridge Inc. ProFile is a
registered trademark of Lightbridge Inc. Fraud Detect is a trademark
of TRANS UNION.

CONTACT: Lightbridge Inc.
Kate Strong, 617/672-4852

or

Miller/Shandwick Technologies
Kris Hoover, 214/233-0876
khoover@millerwest.com

http://www.businesswire.com

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

Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 23:15:06 EDT
From: Chris J. Cartwright <dsc3cjc@imc220.med.navy.mil>
Subject: The 800-555 Plague


Pat,

It seems that there is some "magic" to the 800-555-XXXX numbers.
After reading one or two posts over the last few days about "charging
you for the 800 call if you call and don't give me money", I ran
across this classified ad.  This is from the June 1996 edition of the
{Washington Senior Beacon}, a free paper, targeted at retiree's.

PG 47 Classifieds  (all typo's are mine)
              -----------------------------------
YES! THERE REALLY IS A MONEY TREE -- Let me show you how to receive a 
1500% net return on your money.  That's right! 1500%.  It's legal.  It's 
moral.  It's ethical.  And it's sweeping the nation.  Don't be left out.  
NAC has the vehicle to transport you to financial security.  Let us put 
you in the drivers seat.  For an appointment to find out all about the 
NAC story, call (800) 555-9205 and enter box #1635.
              -----------------------------------

Now I don't want to be left out <g> so first thing in the morning I'm
going to my local payphone and give this thing a try!  Of course I'll
be very careful not to dial another box number <wink, wink>.  I have
no real reason to be suspicious other than the amount of the return,
the fact that it's sweeping the nation, and I have to use some "box
number" to use this "companies" 800 number.

Anyone out there have any idea why 800-555 seems to now attract the
telesleaze?


Christopher Cartwright, Tech. Engineer 
Voice 301.295.0809      N3XRV          
Mail  dsc3cjc@imc220.med.navy.mil      
      ccart@erols.com                  


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I don't think there is anything special
about 800-555 except that it was about the last of the prefixes still
available on 800 to be assigned. If you are really scraping to find a
new 800 number these days instead of an 888 number, it is possible you
might be able to get one on 555. The other thing I have noticed is 
that there seems to be a lot of voicemail on that prefix so it would
not surprise me if some company specializing in voicemail and providing 
outgoing announcement services had a large number of lines there. If
you are asking can it do anything that other 800 numbers cannot (usually)
do, my answer would be no. Any other suggestions?    PAT]

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

Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 20:44:49 EDT
From: Stanley Cline <scline@usit.net>
Subject: $250 Deposit for LD Service!


My parents, foolish as they are, have had AT&T for quite a while
(after having LCI, then cashing one of those AT&T rebate checks.)
Anyway, after some discussion, I steered them toward DeltaCom, a
regional LD carrier (based in Alabama.)

Their rates were somewhat competitive (similar to LCI, lower in-state
rates) -- in addition, they offer an 800 number (no PIN necessary,
which is what they WANTED) for $3/month.  They sent some paperwork for
them to fill out (which I thought a bit unusual, since most telcos do
all "paperwork" by PHONE) and I completed it and sent it back (with
Dad signing the form, of course.) They advised us to call BellSouth
and have them PICed to DeltaCom.  That was Friday ...

Come today, a DeltaCom rep calls and says they will not "activate" the
account (Note: my parents HAVE been able to place calls since the PIC
change) without -- get this -- a *$250* deposit!  When I heard this, I
was stunned -- I have never heard of any LD carrier requiring a
deposit, much less one this large.  Even CellularOne doesn't require
deposits THAT large (they offer prepaid cellular); I have heard of
BellSouth Mobility requiring $500 and up deposits, but that's
cellular, NOT LD.

*I* called DeltaCom back in wonder; another rep said that they had run
a *credit check* (the TRW/Equifax/Trans Union type) on them, and that
since their "credit score" was rejected (they are in Chapter 13
bankruptcy, no fault of their own) they would require this deposit.
To me, this sounded sleazy (wanting so much money up front) and
bizarre; Mom came on the phone and requested they cancel the service
order.  She pressured for more details, but the rep simply said that
"MR. Cline" would have to call -- he is OUT OF TOWN.  They wouldn't
talk to MRS. Cline (or me, either.  I have a very high voice ...)

Never mind they have an "excellent" credit record with BellSouth and LCI, 
etc.

Needless to say, they went back to LCI (where they should have gone in
the first place) ... they welcomed them back with open arms (reinstating
their old calling card and 800 number PINs, offering MORE free calls, and
more.)

I should have known something like this would have happened --
DeltaCom is owned by the same company that owns InterCel, the cellular
company that gouges Atlanta BellSouth Mobility customers -- in their
LOCAL CALLING AREA.  (The MindSpring ISP is also owned by these
people.  Guess why I don't have MindSpring?! <g>)

The ITC companies (DeltaCom, InterCel, MindSpring, etc.) are nearly as
bad as US Cellular.  Maybe MindSpring is OK, but the rest of the
company is arrogant as hell.


Stanley Cline  **  Roamer1 on IRC (see why?)
         mailto:scline@usit.net
    http://www.usit.net/public/scline/
       CIS 74212,44 ** MSN WSCline1

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

From: kd1nr@anomaly.ideamation.com (Tony Pelliccio)
Subject: Has Lucent Lost It?
Date: 18 Jun 1996 22:32:07 -0400
Organization: Ideamation, Inc.


Ok -- so we ordered nearly $20,000 worth of gear from Lucent Technol-
ogies.  You know, stuff like Digital Line cards, 7406, 7410 etc sets,
speakerphones and displays for the 7405's we have.

The stuff comes in, minus the displays and the speakers. I get voicemail
today from someone at Lucent saying that that speakers are on backorder
until sometime in September or October. Of course the one hand doesn't
know what the other is doing since we've already told Lucent to take 
all of it back and we'll order it through STL or some such. 

So is there anyone out here from Lucent that might want to comment?
If there isn't, I don't expect a very bright future for Lucent, at
least not as far as I'm concerned.


Tony Pelliccio, KD1NR 
kd1nr@anomaly.ideamation.com

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

From: ken@kaiwan009.kaiwan.com (Ken Leonard)
Subject: Excel and Frontier Restructure Long Distance Agreement
Date: 18 Jun 1996 18:24:08 -0700
Organization: KAIWAN Internet (310-527-4279,818-756-0180,909-785-9712)


DALLAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--June 18, 1996--Excel Communications, Inc.,
and Frontier Corporation announced today a restructuring of their
agreement for the provisioning of EXCEL long distance services on the
Frontier network.

EXCEL has previously announced an interest in developing alternative
carriers for its 1+ traffic which has grown more than 300 percent in
the past year.

The restructured agreement provides EXCEL the ability to diversify its
1+ service providers to accommodate its growth, in return for an
expanded commitment to Frontier for the provision of enhanced services
to EXCEL customers.

Under the new contract, Frontier will eliminate the existing minimum
monthly commitment for 1+ service, in exchange for an extension of the
exclusivity for Frontier to carry enhanced services, which include
calling card services and 800/PIN services.  The current exclusivity
covering enhanced services expiring April 30, 1998 will be extended
until April 30, 1999 for existing customers as of the April 30, 1998
date.  EXCEL will be free after April 30, 1998 to put new enhanced
service customers on its own network or to use the networks of other
carriers.

The announcement was made in a joint press release by EXCEL Executive
Vice President and Chief Financial Officer John J. McLaine and
Frontier Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Louis L.
Massaro.

McLaine said, "This agreement gives EXCEL the flexibility it needs to
diversify its network carriers and to expand on the positive
relationship we have enjoyed with Frontier."  McLaine indicated that
EXCEL intended to migrate 1+ traffic beginning within 60 days and to
be completed by November of 1996.

Massaro also praised the new agreement as "a good business decision
for both companies."  The new agreement, Massaro said, "gives EXCEL
the flexibility it needs to meet its sensational growth and will
continue to position Frontier as the provider of choice for their
enhanced services."

Excel Communications, Inc., (NYSE: ECI) is one of the fastest growing
providers of long distance telecommunications services in the United
States.  The company offers its subscribers a variety of long distance
telecommunications services and products under the EXCEL branded name,
which include residential service, commercial service, 800 service,
international service, and calling cards.  The company's services are
marketed nationwide exclusively through a network of independent
representatives.

Frontier Corporation (NYSE: FRO) is the parent company whose long
distance, local telephone and wireless communications subsidiaries
provide a range of integrated services to customers.  It was chartered
in 1920 as Rochester Telephone Corporation.  Frontier employs
approximately 8,500 people and maintains offices in nearly 150 cities
in the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom.  With 2.1
billion in annual revenues, the corporation provided a total return to
shareowners of 46 percent in 1995.  The combined long distance
revenues of Frontier's subsidiaries rank them fifth among long
distance companies.

CONTACT:  

Excel Communications, Inc. 

Mary Bell, 214/863-8730 (investor relations) 

John J. McLaine, 214/863-8749 (CFO) 

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

From: Interactive Services Association <isa@isa.net>
Subject: Screen Phone Sessions at ISA's Annual Conference
Date: Fri, 14 Jun 1996 13:15:23 +0100
Organization: Capital Area Internet Service info@cais.com 703-448-4470


Attention Screen Phone Developer, Marketers and other Interested Parties:

The Interactive Services Association's Screen Telephone Council has
worked hard to bring you excellent screen phone content and material
at the 11th Annual Conference and Alliance Exposition to be held in
San Diego this July. Two sessions in particular, "1996: The Year of
the Screen Phone" and "Platform Shift-From Audiotex to Screen Phone to
Online, and Back Again," have speakers like Gerrit Schipper, president
& CEO of Philips Home Services, Scott Corzine, vice president of US
Order and Ronnie Potter, vice president og Global ADSI Solutions.
These speakers and more combined with the exhibitors, screen phone
industry awards and the largest meeting of the ISA's Screen Telephone
Council, open for the first time to non-members, could make this event
the most important screen phone event of the year.

To find out more about the conference or to register, visit the ISA's
web site at http://www.isa.net/conference/annual.html.  See you there!


Interactive Services Association        
8403 Colesville Road, Suite 865         
Silver Spring, MD 20910                 
Phone: 301-495-4955                     
Fax: 301-495-4959                       
E-mail: ISA@isa.net                     
URL: http://www.isa.net

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

From: Jean-Francois Mezei <jfmezei@istar.ca>
Subject: Future of X.25 Networks vs Internet
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 23:52:27 +0000
Organization: Vaxination Informatique
Reply-To: jfmezei@istar.ca


I would like opinions on what will happen to worldwide X.25 networks
such as TYMNET, SPRINTNET and national X.25 nets connected via X.75
with the Internet becoming so popular.

Will X.25 nets be reduced to carrying bank transactions? (ATMs, EFTpos 
etc.)

Will these private providers use their infrastructure to provide
private TCP networks? (I know that most are planning it, but I am
unsure if they would provide public dial-up ports (PPP/SLIP)).

Or will corporations simply go with the actual Internet and concentrate 
on encryption of the data?

(I am concerned about world-wide network applications).

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

Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 15:22:36 -0700
From: Mark J. Cuccia <mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu>
Subject: Re: Stentor, Bell Canada, Independents


I have a few corrections and clarifications to my recent report for this
Digest regarding the history of the Canadian telecom entities.

I had referred to Saskatchewan Telecommunications as "Saskatel".
                                                          ^
Its actual name is "Sasktel", without the /a/. While preparing the
report, I was "thinking out loud", and I kept saying to myself
'SASK-a-tel', which to me seems *easier* to pronounce than does
'SASK-tel'. IMO, that extra vowel sound syllable seems like it
'should' be there, following a syllable ending in the consonants /s/
and /k/ and before a syllable starting with the consonant /t/.

Also, Sasktel is still owned by the Saskatchewan provincial
government, while Alberta's government has privatized AGT (Alberta
Government Telephones) a few years ago into the holding company Telus,
and Manitoba's government still holds MTS (Manitoba Telephone System)
but they are currently considering privatization.

I also mentioned that the Federal CRTC has assumed regulatory
jurisdiction over *all* of Canada's telcos, many of which had been
provincially regulated. The CRTC has regulated Bell Canada, (GTE's) BC
Tel in British Columbia, and CN (CNCP now Unitel) for decades. The
CRTC and Industry Canada also have regulatory jurisdiction or
oversight over many of the more recent competitive telecom entities
(MicroCell, fONOROLA, Sprint Canada, ACC, etc). And while the CRTC has
assumed regulatory jurisdiction over virtually all of the various
traditional telcos (independent as well as Stentor local/toll
provincially based telcos), for the present time the Saskatchewan
provincial government *still* has regulatory jurisdiction over
Sasktel, as well as holding it.

Telesat Canada, the domestic satellite carrier incorporated in 1969,
is held by Alouette Telecommunications, and does maintain an
association with Stentor. Alouette Telecommunications is owned by:

- most of the individual Stentor member companies or their holding
   companies [approx. 86.9%]
- SPAR Aerospace Ltd. [approx. 10%]
- others [remaining approx. 3.1%]

BCE (Bell Canada's holding company) holds 58.5% of Alouette, which
includes amounts held directly by BCE and by the four Atlantic area
province telcos in which BCE has an interest, however BCE itself only
votes about 25% of Alouette.

As a carrier, Telesat Canada provides domestic satellite services to
the Stentor member telcos, and also other customers, such as radio and
TV broadcasting networks and cable services, as well as the more
recent alternative and competitive telecom carriers. Telesat Canada
also holds Telesat Mobile Inc. (TMI), which provides mobile satellite
telephone services and terminals (MSAT's). I understand that the
Canada-only Special Area Code 600 (prior to October 1993, the old 610
SAC for TWX in Canada, which began to be used in the 1980's for
Datalink and ISDN services by Stentor and now others) will also be
used by TMI for MSAT's, and even "caller-pays" cellular services by
Mobility Canada and its member cellular companies, the "B-side"
cellular carriers, which are subsidiaries of the regular wireline
telcos. Other companies which are or will be using NXX codes in
Canada's Special Area Code 600 include MicroCell 1-2-1, Telezone,
Teleglobe, Unitel, Rogers Cantel.

As for Teleglobe Canada, the international carrier once government
owned (a Crown Corporation), changed its original 1950 name from the
Canadian Overseas Telecommunications Corporation to Teleglobe in 1975.
The Canadian government privatized Teleglobe in 1987, and gave it a
five-year period of exclusivety. This legal exclusivety was reviewed
and renewed for another five-years, in 1992. I understand that
Teleglobe will lose this legal monopoly status in 1997, and there will
most likely be competition for Canada's international carrier
services.

Teleglobe Inc. holds:

- Teleglobe Canada Inc. (the international and overseas carrier)
- Teleglobe International Inc. (has operating units Teleglobe USA and
   Teleglobe UK; based in Washington DC and has offices in major cities
   around the world)
- Teleglobe Insurance Systems (software)
- Teleglobe World Mobility (satellite PCS, data, etc).
- Teleglobe Enterprises, which holds:
   Teleglobe Cable Systems (undersea cables)
   Teleglobe Marine Inc. (cable laying ships)
   Teleglobe Media Enterprises (multimedia services)

Teleglobe Canada provides international carrier services to the
Stentor member telcos as well as the more recent telecom competitors,
although Stentor remains by far the largest customer.

Teleglobe Inc. is held by:

- BCE [21.9%]
- Telesysteme National Ltee., a private company of Charles Sirois,
   Teleglobe's President and CEO [19.9%]
- La Caisse de Depot et Placement du Quebec, a pension fund [16.3%]
- Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement Board [18.3%]
- and the remainder is widely held by the general public at-large [33.6%]

Rogers Communications used to hold approximately 4% of Teleglobe Inc,
but that was sold last year and is now part of the 'widely held by the
public' portion.

Finally, I wish to thank those who emailed me with these additional
details, corrections and clarifications.


MARK J. CUCCIA   PHONE/WRITE/WIRE:     HOME:  (USA)    Tel: CHestnut 1-2497
WORK: mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu |4710 Wright Road| (+1-504-241-2497)
Tel:UNiversity 5-5954(+1-504-865-5954)|New Orleans 28  |fwds on no-answr to
Fax:UNiversity 5-5917(+1-504-865-5917)|Louisiana(70128)|cellular/voicemail

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
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Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
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The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
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     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
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All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
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should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #294
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Wed Jun 19 11:17:23 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id LAA10206; Wed, 19 Jun 1996 11:17:23 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Wed, 19 Jun 1996 11:17:23 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606191517.LAA10206@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #295

TELECOM Digest     Wed, 19 Jun 96 11:17:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 295

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Re: Nationwide PRI Shortage (David G. Lewis)
    Re: Nationwide PRI Shortage (Paul J. Zawada)
    Re: 911 Locator for Cellular Users (Bruce A. Pennypacker)
    Re: 911 Locator for Cellular Users (Ben Levitan)
    Re: What You See Is Who You Get (Ralph Doncaster)
    Re: New Twist For 800 Number and Spammers (Matthew B. Landry)
    Re: New Twist For 800 Number and Spammers (Clarence Dold)
    Re: Telco: Service or Business (Jock Mackirdy)
    Re: Telco: Service or Business (Joel M. Hoffman)
    Privacy Isn't Free (A. Padgett Peterson)
    Re: Questions About Ringing (Ray Hazel)
    Re: Tax on Cellphones in Maryland (tmitariffs@aol.com)
    Re: Tax on Cellphones in Maryland (Richard Harris)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: dlewis@hogpc.ho.att.com (David G. Lewis)
Subject: Re: Nationwide PRI Shortage
Date: 19 Jun 1996 12:59:18 GMT
Organization: AT&T


In article <telecom16.289.9@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Stephen Balbach
<stephen@clark.net> wrote:

> As an ISP in the MD/DC/VA areas we are expanding to offer dialup
> service over PRI's (%100 digital V.34 and ISDN on same line).  After
> placing orders with Bell Atlantic it is becoming clear there is a
> serious shortage of PRI equipment in Bell Atlantic. Orders take 2
> months, then get knocked back another month. Some sites have no PRI
> access for the foreseable future. Orders are so backlogged that Bell
> Atlantic has opened a special division just to handle the queue of
> customers.

> The reason for this apprently is the equipment manufactures (Nortel,
> AT&T) have been caught with thier pants down and there is simply no
> central switching equipment to provide the PRI's. 

Of course, it's always easier to blame the vendor than to admit to
problems of your own.

Let's look closely at the claim that there is "no central switching
equipment to provide the PRIs".

(Disclaimer 1: I know a little bit about 5ESS(R) switch architecture,
but nothing about DMS-100(TM) switch architecture, so I'll limit
discussion to the 5ESS.)

(Disclaimer 2: I really do work for AT&T, not Lucent, so aside from
the few shares of Lucent stock I'm going to get this fall, I really
don't have any vested interest in making Lucent look good ... )

To provide a PRI on a 5ESS switch, you need:

1. A Digital Facility Interface (DFI), which is a DS1 interface;

2. in a Loaded (ISDN-capable) switch module;

3. with sufficient Protocol Handler capacity to handle the signaling load.

For there to be "no central switching equipment to provide the PRIs",
one of these three things would have to be unavailable from the
manufacturer.

Well, if there were no DFIs available for installation, then there
would be no new trunks being built on any end office switches
nationwide.  Highly unlikely.

A Loaded SM is defined by the software installed, so there can't be a
shortage of that.

Protocol Handlers are required for every ISDN SM, and the same PH is
used for handling BRI and PRI, so if there was a shortage of them,
then you wouldn't be able to install any ISDN.

Given that I haven't heard of any nationwide crisis in installing
trunks or BRI, ISTM that the more likely scenario is one of the
following:

a. Bell Atlantic got caught with *their* pants down, didn't engineer
things to meet the demand, doesn't have sufficient DFIs or PHs in
*their* switches, and is looking to shift the blame; or

b. BAtl just doesn't want to install PRIs.


David G Lewis		AT&T Network & Computing Services
david.g.lewis@att.com  or    Network Services Planning
 deej@taz.att.com	Call Processing Systems Engineering
          The Future:	It's a long distance from long distance.

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

Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 13:03:15 -0500
From: Paul J. Zawada <zawada@ncsa.uiuc.edu>
Organization: Nat'l Center for Supercomputing Applications
Subject: Re: Nationwide PRI Shortage


Stephen Balbach wrote:

> {Stephen relates his expirence with the lack of PRI availabilty in 
>  Bell Atlantic Territory }

> The reason for this apprently is the equipment manufactures (Nortel,
> AT&T) have been caught with thier pants down and there is simply no
> central switching equipment to provide the PRI's. We have been told by
> Bell Atlantic there is a nationwide shortage of PRI's. CO's set for
> upgrades get knocked back in favour of higher demand CO's with the
> result being some CO's wont get upgrades for 6 months to a year or
> possibly more. This has potentially dire consequences for the online
> industry which is moving POTS lines over to PRI based solutions.

> Is this true? Are PRI's really that hard to get in other parts of the
> country? I look forward to hearing of others experiences, thanks.

I had a related experience with Ameritech.  When they went to turn up
a PRI I had installed just short of a year ago, the port they
connected my DS1 to appeared to be bad.  It took them days to locate a
spare board.  (This was on a DMS-100) I don't know what their
equipment situation is like these days, but I keep my fingers crossed
and hope I don't have a PRI failure.

I would expect that this situation would be "temporary".  (Don't ask
me how long temporary lasts. :-) After all, Lucent and Nortel are in
the business to make money and they'll go where the money is.  If they
see a high demand in a particular area of their business, you can be
sure they'll adjust their manufacturing to address that demand.  It
may take months for them to make the adjustment (which doesn't help
you if you're waiting for a PRI installation _today_) but in the long
run I don't see the situation particularly devistating to the on-line
industry as a whole.


Paul J. Zawada           | Senior Network Engineer
zawada@ncsa.uiuc.edu     | National Center for Supercomputing Applications
+1 217 244 4728          | http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/People/zawada

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

From: Bruce A. Pennypacker <brucep@stylus.com>
Subject: Re: 911 Locator for Cellular Users
Date: 19 Jun 1996 12:30:22 GMT
Organization: Stylus Products Group, Artisoft Inc.


In article telecom16.289.8@massis.lcs.mit.edu, John Stahl
<aljon@worldnet.att.net> said:

> I'm not sure if this isn't another of those wonderful 'dreams' from
> our friendly government or this is actually something that can be
> done. Right now, I pay something like 98 cents each month to my LEC
> for enhanced 911 service on each line. I wonder what that amount
> will be in five years (considering that most estimates made before actual
> engineering is done are usually DRASTICALLY understated!) when this
> new system is supposed to be operational?

> Does anyone know what sort of system modification can be made to allow
> this to happen? I would assume that the handsets (portable
> phones/radios) can not be modified -- think how the circuitry is
> packed into a flip-phone right now! -- due to the large numbers in
> use. This would be tantamount to the change over from analog to
> digital -- have a third system operational?

> I can think of at least two scenarios: The tight cell packing of
> hundreds of meters in diameter in a major metropolitan MSA (like
> NYC, Chicago or LA) and the rural MSA's where a cell might be as
> much as ten miles in diameter. In the former, there might be some
> way to triangulate the signal from at least two antennas to achieve 
> the 125 meter resolution but in the latter, there is sure to be MAJOR
> technical difficulties! Am I wrong?

I can't offer any specifics, but I do know that in the northeast the
FCC has been working closely with the US Coast Guard in setting up and
testing a system that will allow the Coast Guard to locate boaters who
are in trouble and called for help via cellular phones.  In the past
most boaters used VHF or CB radios, which the Coast Guard could easily
triangulate on.  But now that more and more boaters are using cellular
phones (including Coast Guard boats) and you can dial *CG in many
coastal areas to contact the Coast Guard, they're getting more and
more interested in tracking down distressed cellular callers.

The last I heard on the testing up here they said they expect to have
the system in place and fully operational in another year or two.  So
it sounds like the ability to triangulate on a cellular phone is
pretty near (and won't require any modifications to the phones
themselves).


Bruce Pennypacker   |  Stylus Products Group  |  Phone: +1 617 621 9545
Software Engineer   |     Artisoft, Inc.      |  Fax:   +1 617 621 7862
Resident TAPI guru  |      201 Broadway       |  http://www.stylus.com
brucep@stylus.com   |   Cambridge, MA 02139   |  sales: sales@stylus.com

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

From: benlev@aol.com (BenLev)
Subject: Re: 911 Locator for Cellular Users
Date: 19 Jun 1996 09:36:09 -0400
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Reply-To: benlev@aol.com (BenLev)


It is difficult but not as bad as it seems.  Cellular already does
measurement prior to handoff and compares the signal of your
connection with available connections around you and then depending on
the availability of circuits it makes a decision when to hand you off.
(This is called RSSI measurement).  Given those measurements put into
a simple program it would be fairly easy (but it will take work) to
locate someone.  The key is that measurements are already being done.


Ben Levitan
ALCATEL Cellular

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

From: Ralph Doncaster <ralph@dci.synapse.net>
Subject: Re: What You See Is Who You Get
Organization: Doncaster Consulting Inc
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 17:36:34 GMT


Mike King wrote:

> Caller ID service from Pacific Bell is $6.50 per month for residential
> customers and $7.50 per month for business customers. There is a $5.00
> installation fee for residential customers and $6.00 installation fee
> for business customers.

I guess we aren't getting ripped off so bad here in Ontario, Canada:

                     Bell Call Answer service
                     $5 per month or less (residential)

                     Extension Call Answer option
                     $2 per month for the option

                            Voice Mail option
                     $2 per month for the option

They also have a pager notification (which I use ) for $3 extra/month.
Current exchange rate is about US73c = $1CDN

Does anyone know if PacBell is using Octel's voicemail?  That's what
Bell Canada uses here.


Ralph

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

Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 15:43:48 -0400 (EDT)
From: Matthew B Landry <mbl@conch.aa.msen.com>
Subject: Re: New Twist For 800 Number and Spammers
Organization: Flunkies for the Mike Conspiracy


In article <telecom16.289.12@massis.lcs.mit.edu> you wrote:

> ** do not harass them via phone **. That is illegal. 

	So is billing 800 callers through the telco billing system. (It 
was stuck into the telecom act to thwart sleaze-vendors who sell 900-type 
services through 800 numbers and surprise people with a bill for them at 
the end of the month. But it'll work just as well here.)

	So even in the (highly unlikely, I agree) circumstance that one of 
these losers got hold of the necessary data from the telco, they couldn't 
use it for the purpose they're claiming.


Matthew Landry
Well, yeah. Actually I do sometimes speak 
for Msen. But not from THIS account.   O-

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

From: Clarence Dold <dold@rahul.net>
Subject: Re: New Twist For 800 Number and Spammers
Date: 19 Jun 1996 00:46:51 GMT
Organization: a2i network


David F. Reynolds (daver@teleport.com) wrote:

> Thought you'all might get a kick out of this one -- this slimeball is
> threatening to charge back (with surcharges yet!) nuisance calls to
> his 800 number; I'm saving this number right next to Jeff's.

> *PLEASE NOTE THAT ANY CALLS NOT PERTAINING TO INFORMATION REQUESTS
> WILL BE AUTO-BILLED TO ORIGINATING NUMBER UTILIZING LONG DISTANCE
> SURCHARGES.

Hmmm.

I don't believe that I, as an IXC, would be interested in helping charge
back those calls.

On the other hand, I have heard of spam being sent with forged return
headers, or from an idle terminal, causing grief for the legitimate, and
unwitting owner of the email address.

Here we could have some poor guy with nothing whatsoever to do with this
spam having his 800 bill racked up.

I think PAT should call the number, and relate the truth of its
application in this spam.

I am all for convincing spammists that I don't enjoy their methods,
but I am not one of the Freemen, filing false liens against someone's
800 number ;-)


Clarence A Dold - dold@rahul.net
                - Pope Valley & Napa CA.


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: If it makes you feel better, you do get
the spam in question at the phone number given. To me it is a stretch
of the imagination to think of some person trying to sell his product
on the internet not only providing false mail headers but a deliberatly
wrong phone number as well. What would be the point? The false mail
headers would be a way to keep the Internet posse from locating the
fool of an ISP who gave him an account to spam with, but a false phone
number would render the entire thing futile. How would customers reach
him? 

Now on the other hand suppose someone was *not* selling the product in
question. Suppose they just wanted to keep the Internet in an uproar
all the time the way it is now so as a 'joke' they found some piece
of totally worthless advertising for some completely junk product --
something so transparently bogus anyone with an IQ above 80 could see
through it and they fed it to the news stream with bogus mail headers
and bogus phone numbers, etc. Then they sat back and watched the fire-
works as the netters found and examined this junk and clucked their
tongues about it for days on end and on the other end of the line some
legitimate and innocent third party 800 subscriber was caught in the 
crossfire as netters everywhere gave him a piece of their mind. ("When
you call my 800 number be sure and mention that you saw my advertisement 
on the internet, and what news group you saw it in.")

I don't think though, Clarence, that there is much of this. The header
information can usually be expected to be wrong; the phone number will
very seldom if ever be wrong unless the spammer got a typographical
error in it and did not even both to proofread his masterpiece before
releasing it.   PAT]

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

From: Jock Mackirdy <jockm@basluton.demon.co.uk>
Subject: Re: Telco: Service or Business
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 21:46:19 GMT


joel@exc.com (Joel M. Hoffman) wrote:

>> The bottom line is that the phone network is not supposed to be a
>> money-making endeavor.  It's supposed to be a service to citizens.
>> And America isn't providing that service.

>> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Now wait a minute! *Who says* that
>> telecom is not supposed to be a money-making endeavor? Perhaps that
>> is the case in some countries, but here in the USA telephone companies
>> have stockholders and pay dividends to those stockholders. Do you
>> think the investors put money in just for the sake of being good guys
>> to the rest of the nation?  PAT]

> It's all a matter of how you look at it.  Certainly a company, with
> investors and so forth, wants to make money.  But the question is
> this: if it comes down to telco's making money or people having better
> phone service, which is to be preferred?

> Universal residential service is a money-losing endeavor.  Maybe we
> should just get rid of that, because no one's making money on it?

Look at the UK situation. The most heavily regulated telecom
environment in the world. BT has a universal service obligation and
has a price list which is totally independent of the location of the
customer. Yet is still makes a good profit for its stock-holders
despite having the lowest prices (overall) in the world. It is in
direct competition with 150 other licensed operators (none of these
has a universal service obligation and most are chrry-picking market
niches).


Jock Mackirdy
Business Advisory Services, Luton (UK)
E-mail:  jockm@basluton.demon.co.uk
Tel/fax: +44 (0)1582 597878
Independent telecomms. and business advice

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

Date: Tue, 18 Jun 96 22:46:00 EDT
From: joel@exc.com (Joel M. Hoffman)
Subject: Re: Telco: Service or Business
Organization: Excelsior Computer Services


> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I do not think making money and providing
> good customer service are mutually exclusive goals. I think they go hand
> in hand. After all, when did telco make the vast majority of its billions
> of dollars in reserves? They did it back in the earlier years of this
> century when prompt installation/repair/customer service were paramount
> features. Granted, they were the only game in town, and you either got

Agreed.  And, in fact, most successful companies are successful because 
they offer good service.  But when a company has to demonstrate quarter 
by quarter profits, the first thing to go is good service.  People,
even investers, tend to be very short-sighted.

Almost all of the steps that made the old AT&T great are impossible in
today's business climate.  Their guaranteed monopoly gave them the
freedom to take a long-term approach to running the phone business,
and it helped us all.  We all paid slightly more, but also got more
for our money.

The way things are going now, we're never going to have good service
in telcos again.

> We are at a crossroads, just like we were in the '50s when the
> decision was taken to build the interstate highway system.  If you
> believe that highway decision accelerated the collapse of our cities,
> imagine what universal immdeiate access to highbandwidth networks will
> do.

Ease the congested highways? :-)

Actually, it's a good point.  I don't think the problem will be
collapsing cities, but more along the lines of a nation of hermits.
(Look at how many people already are dying to chat with strangers on
AOL -- why do they want to do this?)


Joel    (joel@exc.com)


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: There could be (and perhaps have been)
several lengthy treatises on the subject 'Why do people use computer
chat services?' I've thought about writing a paper on it myself and
in fact have commented on the phenomenon here from time to time. The
commonly accepted belief is that the people who patronize the chats
are the people who in real life are unable to get 'any'. I'll leave
it to your imagination to decide what the 'any' is that they are
unable to get. If chats were operated like newsgroups then there
would be a 'chat room' for a meta-discussion on the topic 'why do
people use chat to discuss such personal things about themselves?'
So far no one has started such a room or channel.   PAT]
 
------------------------------

Date: Wed, 19 Jun 1996 09:49:57 EDT
From: A. Padgett Peterson <PADGETT@hobbes.orl.mmc.com>
Subject: Privacy Isn't Free


> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: But of course! Why shouldn't we have
> the unfettered right to spy on our neighbors and snoop on their phone
> calls if we want to?  You don't mind it when people unkown to you
> listen in on your calls do you?    PAT]

Pat: 

I rarely disagree with you but this is one place we differ. Privacy
is not a right, freedom from unreasonable search and seizure is. Privacy
is something that we are each and individually responsible for and if
we want some, we have to perform an overt act to guarentee it.

To me, unencrypted E-Mail has no more protection than a postcard
because nothing has been done to show that privacy is expected. (Am
not talking about in a court of law - all that is done there is to
determine how much you will lose and does nothing to prevent the
loss). For that matter the strength of the encryption is irrelvant to
the expectation. LOASDR is sufficient to demonstrate intent though PGP
is much more effective.

My point is that anyone who speaks into a phone, sends E-Mail, or
shouts from the rooftops has done the same thing effectively - anyone
who wants to listen, can. Has nothing to do with laws or ethics, just
capability.

Thus it is not a "right" (am somewhat pessimistic on that subject),
just individual responsibility.
	

Warmly,

Padgett

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

From: razel@net.com (Ray Hazel)
Subject: Re: Questions About Ringing
Date: 19 Jun 1996 02:52:15 GMT
Organization: N. E. T., Inc.


In article <telecom16.286.5@massis.lcs.mit.edu> Mark J. Cuccia
<mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu> writes:

> Reading Pat's comments to Apollo Shyong's post brought to mind a few
> things:

[Some text deleted]

> One thing that *IRKS* me is how "Hollywood" handles ringing the called
> phone and ringing indication to the calling party, when a telephone
> call is used in fiction (TV, Radio, Motion Pictures). They are *not*
> always consistant with the above patterns. Sometimes, they have used
> North American ringing patterns when the TV/Radio program or movie
> takes place in Europe, which has its own distinct ringing patterns.
> But for movies and TV/Radio programs which take place in North
> America, "Hollywood" has at times used *extra-long* rings with a *very
> short* pause between the ringing.

I'm amazed just how badly "Hollywood" was with communications ...

I'm also intrigued at how someone could tell the difference in the
gongs of various telephones and how they resonated.  That was an
interesting detail on the different phones and bells, Mr. Cuccia.  What
I've noticed is that dialtone is returned immediately when the far end
disconnects, which may be Hollywood's way of speeding up the dialog but
has always irked me.  Also, when a pager goes off, it's almost always
the alert tone when the pager is powered up, not one of the various
"paging" alerts pagers give when actually paged.  Next, they'll use a
modem (probably 1200 baud) tone for an incoming fax to a fax machine.
(What does a "technical" director do, then?)  


Ray razel@net.com

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

From: tmitariffs@aol.com (TMITARIFFS)
Subject: Re: Tax on Cellphones in Maryland
Date: 18 Jun 1996 22:42:48 -0400
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Reply-To: tmitariffs@aol.com (TMITARIFFS)


Is this tax based on usage?  Given that a large number of cell calls would
cross county boundaries, a high percentage of  call dollars would be
untaxable by Montgomery County.  Beyond that, what if the transmitting
cell is in another county? 

I'm still in a major battle with a large RBOC in a state where they
have a great bit of municipal taxation on phone service.  My problem
concerns private line services which cross these boundaries. The RBOC
taxes bills according to The A Term for the whole mileage portion.
If the A Term has a 6 % tax rate and the Z does not, guess which one
the RBOC bills?

The other problem is consistency. One man' s Z is another man' A. Two
identical services wind up being billed different amounts.

The tax is actually a use of streets tax, billed directly by the
municipality to the RBOC. The "tax" appearing on the bill, is more
correctly, a reimbusement fee.

The scheme is highly problematic since a circuit will traverse the
city streets of several municipalities as it makes its way to the
terminating end.  The municipalites in between get no percentage of
the tases.  And, as everybody is aware ... PL service is rarely
provisioned the way it is billed. The Circuit could go through
Timbuktu on its way to the Z term.

The point is that the Montgomery Co. tax could be invalidated by a
variety of differnt tariffing problems.

Comments would be appreciated.

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

From: NMKL79A@prodigy.com (Richard Harris)
Subject: Re: Tax on Cellphones in Maryland
Date: 18 Jun 1996 15:57:51 GMT
Organization: Prodigy Services Company  1-800-PRODIGY


I would add that many service bureaus are already capable of adding
taxes on federal, state and local levels on a transaction by
transaction basis.  When a similar tax was enacted in Phioladelphia,
the service bureau was able to implement the tax within a month for
the non wireline carrier. In addition, there is usually some amount of
lead time in the enactment of a tax.


Rich Harris    Harris & Associates

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
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------------------------------

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #295
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Wed Jun 19 18:21:08 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id SAA23801; Wed, 19 Jun 1996 18:21:08 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Wed, 19 Jun 1996 18:21:08 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606192221.SAA23801@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #296

TELECOM Digest     Wed, 19 Jun 96 18:21:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 296

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Book Review: "The NetWare 3.12 Administrator's Handbook" (Rob Slade)
    Question Concerning Protocols (Naima Benmansour)
    VMUIF Specification - Where to Find it? (Larry D. Weiner)
    Seeking Telecommunications Consultant/Expert (rolo@webspan.net)
    Caller ID With Pre-Paid Calling Card (eert@aol.com)
    Phone History Question (Jon Parro)
    Studies on Internet Reliability (Fred Atkinson)
    The Green Brain (Where to Get a Copy?) (James D. Murray)
    New Twist on Old Scam (Matt Simpson)
    Phone/Internet Service To/From Bosnia (Robert M. Anderson)
    Sprint's Automatic Call-Return Service (Jeff Blum)
    Re: 911 Call From my Phone Number (Jean-Francois Mezei)
    Re: Arrogant Internet Providers (Brian Mulvaney)
    Re: Cellular vs. PCS Mix-up (Thomas Peters)
    Re: International 800 Numbers (Ben Levitan)
    Re: International 800 Numbers (John R. Levine)
    Re: France Telecom Introduces Voice Mail For Residential Users (R. Irvine)
    Re: Customer Care in Telecom (Tim Zickus)
    Re: AT&T Wireless Tells Cellular Roamers: Don't Call NJ Police (R Schwartz)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Wed, 19 Jun 1996 11:50:48 EST
From: Rob Slade <roberts@decus.ca>
Subject: Book Review: "The NetWare 3.12 Administrator's Handbook" 


BKNWADHB.RVW   960523
 
"The NetWare 3.12 Administrator's Handbook", Kelly J. P. Lindberg, 1996, 0-
7821-1905-0, U$24.99
%A   Kelly J. P. Lindberg
%C   2021 Challenger Drive, Alameda, CA   94501
%D   1996
%G   0-7821-1905-0
%I   Sybex Computer Books
%O   U$24.99 510-523-8233 800-227-2346 Fax: 510-523-2373 jjigarjian@sybex.com
%P   326
%S   Network Press
%T   "The NetWare 3.12 Administrator's Handbook"
 
For basic administration of a small network, this book brings together
the normal operations you need.  The organization is good, and it's a
lot faster than rifling through multiple volumes of NetWare
documentation to find a dimly remembered command or a function which
"must be there".
 
However, once you go beyond the basics, you will want something else.
The section on login scripts does not warn you of some of the common
vagaries, the chapter on security lists rights but not combinations,
and the troubleshooting of printer problems seems to assume that you
haven't plugged it in.
 
For the part time manager of a school or small business LAN this will
likely be *the* reference.  Those with more responsibility will likely
use it as a first stop before going on to the full documentation.

 
copyright Robert M. Slade, 1996   BKNWADHB.RVW   960523. Distribution
permitted in TELECOM Digest and associated publications. 
 

Vancouver        roberts@decus.ca         | "If a train station
Institute for    rslade@vanisl.decus.ca   |  is where a train
Research into    rslade@vcn.bc.ca         |  stops, what happens
User             Rob_Slade@mindlink.bc.ca |  at a workstation?"
Security         Canada V7K 2G6           | Frederick Wheeler

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

Date: Wed, 19 Jun 1996 12:50:00 BST
From: Naima Benmansour <nb100@mailer.york.ac.uk>
Subject: Question Concerning Protocols


I would be very grateful if you could tell me what is the difference
between X.21 and V.35 telecommunication interfaces. Does the V.35
protocol offer more transmission security than X.21?

Thank you very much for your collaboration.


N.Benmansour
University of York
England.

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

From: lweiner@gte.net (Larry D. Weiner)
Subject: VMUIF Specification - Where to Find it?
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 02:43:51 GMT
Organization: GTE Intelligent Network Services, GTE INS


Can someone give me a pointer on where to find the VMUIF
specification?  

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

From: rolo@webspan.net
Subject: Seeking Telecommunications Consultant/Expert
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 05:59:47 GMT
Organization: Three Bubbas InnaNet.


New company in New Jersey, dealing in International Telecommunications, 
is seeking a Telecommunications consultant for:

A - Consultation on project design and development. 
B - Physical implementation. 

Experience needed in: 

  System/ Network/ Product architecture design
  Switching equipment
  Voice compression equipment
  Software planning and development
  Vendor/Tool selection, and prototype environment
  System and network administration
  Product testing

Please fax resume to 908-886-6419.

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

From: eert@aol.com (Eert)
Subject: Caller ID with Pre-Paid Calling Card?
Date: 19 Jun 1996 16:04:32 -0400
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Reply-To: eert@aol.com (Eert)


If you call a 800 number for one of the companies that offer a
Pre-Paid Calling Card what number displays on a Caller ID box once
your call is put through? Does it matter who the company is that
carries the call?


Thanks,

Eert

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

From: Jon Parro <jparro@hsc.usc.edu>
Subject: Phone History Question
Date: 17 Jun 1996 19:35:35 GMT
Organization: University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA


Does anyone know when they stopped hardwiring phones and started 
installing phone jacks (in Southern California, particularly)?


Jon Parro    jparro@hsc.usc.edu


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: The first two phones I had in my own
name (1961 through 1965 I think) were hardwired. The first one was
'installed in place' having been there from a previous subscriber.
My parents phones were hardwired. I honestly cannot remember but I
think my third phone in 1967 was modular. I know the ones I had in
the early 1970's were modular. It was quite common to see older
installations that were hardwired around the same time, but it was
also common to see 302 type phones from the 1940's still around also
in older installations. My best guess would be the change in standards
probably was about 1965-68. Other ideas or facts on this?    PAT]

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

From: Fred_Atkinson/SkyTel_at_SkyTelNotesPO@mtel.com
Date: Wed, 19 Jun 96 09:53:00 CST
Subject: Studies on Internet Reliability


I am presently taking a graduate course towards my masters in
telecommunications management'.  I am looking for any studies that
have been done regarding the reliability of Internet email or other
measures of Internet reliability.  One of the types of data might be
if a thousand messages were sent, what per cent arrived within one
minute, within ten minutes, within an hour, within a day, were not
received, etc.  Any other measures of reliability would be helpful as
well.

If anyone knows of any data like this, I'd be grateful if they could
email me at: 'fatkinson@mtel.com'.

Thanks in advance for your assistance.


Fred


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I can tell you from my own experience
with the Digest mailing list which has about five thousand names at
any given time I get back 150-200 mail daemons from each issue (if
I do five issues that day that means about a thousand daemons) which
indicate trouble was encountered in delivery. Deducting the 'user
unknown' daemons which are the only ones I can do anything about (I
remove those names from the list after two or three such returns on
any given name, and there are usually two or three such removals
daily), I still get a good number of daemons which complain about
delivery problems. Typically the problem will be 'host unknown' or
'host not receiving mail, will keep trying' or 'cannot resolve host
name'. Sometimes the name resolvers are hosed; that is they got a
bit scrambled up and for the time being don't know where to go to
find (or seek resolution for) a given domain or site, etc. 

A dozen or so daemons each time say 'timed out during user open with
site.name' and this generally means when the delivering site went
calling on the receiving site it got there and 'knocked on the window'
(connected to the appropriate socket) and the receiving site 'opened
the window' alright, but got impatient and slammed the window shut
before delivery was completed. Or so the sending site thought ... or
maybe the delivering site stood there for the longest time waiting for
the receiving site to accept the mail and finally gave up and went
away leaving the recieving site still waiting for more mail, etc.
Maybe the item of mail did not terminate to the satisfaction of the
receiving site, etc. In all probability the mail did get delivered
just as it gets delivered eventually to places where initially the
report was 'host unknown'.

Typically an issue of this Digest takes about 18 hours for complete
delivery to all names on the list, and I have the list sorted from
the '@' sign to the right so that all users at a given site get
serviced at the same time, which sendmail would do anyway but by
sorting it in advance sendmail does not have to 'work so hard' to
find everything going to the same place; that sorting seems to cut a
couple hours off the total time. At any given time around the clock
usually I have four or five instantiations of sendmail running; if
I start them sooner than about an hour apart (like say two within
thirty minutes of each other) they will 'race each other' as they
each benefit from the hostname lookups the other one is doing and
this causes some people to get a later issue of the Digest a few
minutes before they get an earlier issue (i.e. one does a lookup
and has it in the place where those things are stored; another
sendmail comes along looking and finds the information the first one
had squirreled away and uses it also). Typically the mailqueue
has ten to twelve thousand names waiting for delivery when I am
working on several issues in a day's time. I just now did a 
check on it with the command 'mailq | wc' (meaning just count
the lines, don't send me the whole %$$#* stdout) and the response
was 8708 deliveries pending. Sometimes I forget the '| wc' part
of that request then I sit here and cuss while screen after 
screen is dumped at me. <grin>  I encourage everyone to learn about
sendmail and how it works. The documentation is only about two
thousand pages long or the size of an Ayn Rand novel and good
for reading before bedtime.  <more grin>     PAT]

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

From: jdm@netcom.com (James D. Murray)
Subject: The Green Brain (where to get a copy?)
Organization: O'Reilly & Associates, Inc.
Date: Wed, 19 Jun 1996 16:59:53 GMT


Does anybody know where I can get a copy or reprint of "The Green Brain"?
It's a telco telephony manual dating from the late 30's or early 40's.
The actual title was something like "Manual of Basic Telephony".


James D. Murray  POB 70			Tel: +1.714.288.0141
jdm@netcom.com   Orange, CA 92856 USA	Fax: +1.714.832.9924

Maintainer of the Graphics File Formats FAQ on comp.graphics.misc and
coauthor of the O'Reilly book "Encyclopedia of Graphics File Formats".

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

From: msimpson@service1.uky.edu (Matt Simpson)
Subject: New Twist on Old Scam
Date: Wed, 19 Jun 1996 12:21:51 -0400
Organization: University of Kentucky Computing Center


The local (Lexington KY) newspaper had an article about a scam that
was recently run here. The scammer called someone and said he was the
local chief of police, investigating bank fraud. He asked the person
to withdraw a large sum of money from his bank account. This kind of
thing is pretty old, but this one had a new twist. To verify his
identity, the "chief" told the victim to hang up, then call 911.

According to the article, the scammer had "tapped the phone" and
intercepted the 911 call. He then set up a phony "conference call"
with a bank officer.  I was wondering about the technique used to
"tap" the phone, and I thought it might be very simple. It might have
been as simple as the scammer staying on the line, to keep the
connection from being broken when the victim hung up. He could then
play back a recorded dial tone for the victim to hear when he tried to
call 911. When the scammer heard the 911 tones, he could turn off the
dial tone and "answer" the call. Does this make sense?


Matt Simpson  ---  Lead Systems Programmer, MVS
University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY
msimpson@pop.uky.edu    http://rivendell.cc.uky.edu
A programmer is a machine for turning beer into code


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: That makes very good sense and I would
say it is quite likely what happened.   PAT]

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

Date: Wed, 18 Jun 96 11:10:47 PDT
From: robert@manta.nosc.mil (Robert M. Anderson)
Subject: Phone/Internet Service To/From Bosnia


Pat,

Sorry to bother you but don't know who can answer these questions.  If
you cannot, perhaps you can point me somewhere else.  Trying to help
my daughter find a cheap way to communicate from TX with her husband
now in Bosnia.

What is cheapest phone service from US to Bosnia (MCI quotes
introductory rate of less than .60 per minute but only to numbers that
are pre-registered with MCI, and I don't know if that is going to be
feasible).

Is there an Internet provider that service Sarajevo or anywhere else
in Bosnia (if so, they can talk by email).


Thanks for any help,

Bob Anderson   robert@nosc.mil


[TELECOM Dgiest Editor's Note: It is not a bother at all. Let's see
what the incoming mail brings. Readers, please respond direct to the
writer if you wish, so he will get a faster answer.    PAT]

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

From: Jeff Blum <Jeff.Blum@MCI.Com>
Date: Wed, 19 Jun 1996 10:31:03 -0700
Subject: Sprint's Automatic Call-Return Service


Has this happened to anyone else ? 


Jeff    jeff.blum@mci.com

By Fred A. Schneyer, Tallahassee Democrat, Fla. 
Knight-Ridder/Tribune Business News 

Jun. 19--The extra $20 to $25 on Peter Piper's office phone bill
earlier this year got his attention. Quickly.  Piper, Tallahassee
representative for Olsten Staffing Services, a temporary-employee
firm, was hot when he discovered what the charges were for Sprint's
automatic call-return service, billed at 75 cents per call. He didn't
order the service, which identifies the most recent caller. He didn't
even remember reading about it.


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Too bad you did not send us the
complete story instead of just the first paragraph.  Maybe he does not
remember reading about it -- as if what he remembers or does not
remember reading should have any relevance to anything; imagine how
nice it would be if we could all get out our obligations to pay our
bills by not being able to remember what we read -- but obviously one
or more of his employees remembers reading about it and maxed it
out for him. All the telcos have been talking about it for some time
now, so I don't know what pile of sand he had his head buried in.
One does not order the service, any more than if one wants to make
a phone call one puts in a special 'order' for it with telco. One
simply dials the phone and pays for whatever service one uses as a
result. Automatic call-return has been tariffed for awhile now by
all telcos and 75 cents per use is the typical rate. If he cannot
trust his employees not to run his phone bill up then he should fire
them all and get new help; or very possibly he himself used this
service and somehow thought it was a gift from Sprint although he
claims he had never heard of the service. Don't they all? 

If we had seen the rest of the newspaper article, the paper most
likely treated it as a 'poor consumer cheated by unresponsive
large corporation' situation with Sprint falling down and slobbering
all over themselves apologizing for the terrible inconvenience he
had gone through in getting it straightened out.  Don't they all?
Don't you get as tired as I do some days of reading stories in 
the papers like this? I found some 75 cent automatic callback 
charges on my phone bill a couple months ago. Instead of whining
to the {Skokie Review} and Ameritech about it however, I went 
upstairs and gathered my deadbeat family members around and told 
them the next time Uncle Pat (I pay all the bills here anyway) found
such a thing on his phone bill he would physically maim whoever did
it and then move the whole bunch of them to a welfare shelter for
poor families somewhere. Maybe Mr. Piper should put all his employees
on the unemployment line.   PAT]




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

From: Jean-Francois Mezei <jfmezei@istar.ca>
Subject: Re: 911 Call From my Phone Number
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 23:44:44 +0000
Organization: Vaxination Informatique
Reply-To: jfmezei@istar.ca


edhample@sprynet.com wrote:

> Tuesday afternoon when I returned to my home from work, my voice mail
> contained a number of 'blank' messages (10 seconds of silence) all
> about 5 minutes apart, followed by a message from the Pasco County 911
> operator stating that they had received a call from *my* telephone
> number. He continued to state that the call was completely silent, and
> that if no one picked up the phone, he would be forced to dispatch a
> Sheriff to investigate.

I had the same happen to me last summer. I was in the alone in the house 
and the call was supposedly made from a phone line upstairs. The police 
searched the house completely to ensure that I wasn't a rapist hiding 
the victim :-) :-) They were doing their job I guess. 

They also said that the remote phone might be the culprit. I do wonder 
how often these incidents do happen.

I do find it VERY odd that a deffective phone would generate the actual 
tones for 911 and not some other tones. If it generates these random 
tones often enough to eventually hit that 911, I would tend to think 
that owner would notice it.


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: It is not making tones, it is making 
pulses. Remember, touch tone lines work just fine with pulse dialing
also. If the base unit is defective, the relay which opens and closes
the phone line could be doing so rapidly enough to simulate pulse
dialing and randomly enough to occassionally produce nine pulses 
followed by two single pulses a second or so apart.  That gets you
your 9-1-1.   PAT]

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

Date: Wed, 19 Jun 1996 10:14:42 -0700
From: Brian Mulvaney <brianm@rain.com>
Subject: Re: Arrogant Internet Providers


I think it still quite possible to get competent service from an ISP.
Perhaps the key is to find a local ISP that is more focused on network
reliability than on boundless subscriber growth.  I've had tremendous
success over the past few years with RAINet, a regional wholesale/retail 
IP provider in Oregon and Washington.  You can tell a lot about their
orientation by browsing the home page <http://www.rain.net>.  From the
"Job Openings" section, for example:

> We have the following positions available at this time: 

>     Support Engineer
>          net problem diagnosis 
>          telco diagnosis 
>          immunity to telco blamecasting 
>          abhorrence of downtime 
>          customer orientation 

Clearly, this is a "run the trains on schedule" kind of outfit.

In contrast to the three week turnaround email support time at Netcom
related by Ross Oliver, I've never waited more than a few hours for a
response to a support request.  If anything, the service seems to be
getting better.  This past week I emailed a request to convert my dial
up service from SLIP to PPP.  I sent the request about 10:00PM.
Within ten minutes I received a response indicating that a new account
had been created for me to test.  I tested the new connection and was
up and running with the reconfigured service within thirty minutes of
the initial request.

The only downside that I can see to dealing with a reliable local
provider (versus a disfunctional national one) is that I have to dial
long distance to retrieve email while travelling.  It is very easy to
rationalize the long distance charges as a "quality of service
premium" for dealing with a dependable internet provider.


Brian Mulvaney    brianm@rain.com

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

From: tpeters@hns.com (Thomas Peters)
Subject: Re: Cellular vs. PCS Mix-up
Date: 19 Jun 1996 17:17:23 GMT
Organization: Hughes Network Systems Inc.


> There are two different and distinct syatems here being mixed together
> by Russell. Cellular which is separate and totally different from PCS.
> Firstly, Cellular frequencies are in the 800 to 900 Mhz. range and
> have specific usage as originated by (The) Bell System back in the
> early 1970's and licensed by the FCC in the 1980's.

By that logic most non-North American system such as GSM aren't cellular
either. Frequencies don't determine whether a system is cellular. Common
sense says you can't build two cellular systems in the same part of the
spectrum, so it is hardly surprising the new systems are someplace else.
While many people seem to think the existing A & B carriers use the same
spectrum, they actually use adjacent regions of spectrum.

> PCS (Personal Communication System) was devised many years later for
> use in homes and business' to be operated similar to 'wireless phones'
> but with system supplier owned (as opposed to user owned) miniature
> transponders (transceivers) maintaining the communications path to the

I don't believe many people would agree that the definition of "cellular"
has anything to do with who owns the phones.

> usage; the units will presumably be programmed for the particular
> service provider's coverage area only. Cellular is national and PCS is
> local.

The PCS providers are already engaged in a giant game of Monopoly(TM),
maneuvering to create nationwide roaming networks for their customers.
When PCS is up and running it will be just as national as the existing
cellular bands.

The key attributes of cellular telephone systems are:

1. They provide wireless mobile telephone service, including mobility
during calls.

2. They subdivide the geographic coverage area into smaller zones
called cells with a base station in each cell serving the mobiles
while they are in that cell.

3. Geographic reuse of frequencies in multiple cells accomplished by
limiting the power of base stations and mobiles so that neighboring
cells don't interfere with each other.


Tom Peters

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

From: benlev@aol.com (BenLev)
Subject: Re: International 800 Numbers
Date: 19 Jun 1996 09:32:53 -0400
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Reply-To: benlev@aol.com (BenLev)


In either case you all see how confusing this is. What is remarkable
is that 800 service has expanded from regional to statewide to
national to North American but when it was finally going international,  
all of a sudden AT&T and MCI do nothing to help people who currently
have 800 numbers keep those numbers.  You now run the risk that
someone else will get your 800 number for international use.  For some
reason they would rather have a whole new numbering plan for interna-
tional 800.

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

From: johnl@iecc.com
Date: Wed, 19 Jun 96 10:30 EDT
Subject: Re: International 800 Numbers
Organization: I.E.C.C., Trumansburg, N.Y.


> The second thing I find surprising in the article is that, although North
> America alone has already exhausted a 7-digit number space of toll-free
> numbers, they think that an 8-digit space will suffice worldwide for a
> reasonable length of time.

Remember, this is for international 800 numbers, in addition to
whatever national toll-free plan exists.  There's certainly a market
for international 800 numbers, but it's unlikely to be anywhere as big
as that for national 800 numbers, because the calls will cost a lot
more.  I have three 800 numbers (all of which I actually use, by the
way), but I'm not planning to get any international 800 numbers unless
they're a lot cheaper than I expect them to be.

On the other hand, the 800 number I use the most is the one that rings
on my home line (it spells my wife's name) which I use to call home
when travelling.  If I travel outside the U.S. much, it might be worth
getting an international 800 number to avoid the complicated and
pricey "home direct" and other services.


John R. Levine, IECC, POB 640 Trumansburg NY 14886 +1 607 387 6869
johnl@iecc.com "Space aliens are stealing American jobs." - Stanford econ prof

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

From: robert.irvine@gecm.com (Robbie Irvine)
Subject: Re: France Telecom Introduces Voice Mail For Residential Users
Date: Wed, 19 Jun 1996 09:14:09 GMT
Organization: Gec Marconi Sensors Ltd
Reply-To: robert.irvine@gecm.com, robbie@arakeen.demon.co.uk


tholome@francenet.fr (Eric Tholome) wrote:

> Retrieving messages is free from home, standard call rate from anywhere
> else.

Same with BT, also it's pin numbered from elsewhere.

> For an additional 5FF (US$1.00) per month, the voice mail system will
> call you at predefined times to notify you of new messages. No real
> notification system is available (what do BT and American Telcos offer
> for notification?  Modified dial tone? Message waiting light?)

This is free with BT, they pulse the carrier if it has answered while the
phone was unattended, and dials you back to say it has received a message
while you were on the line.  

The fee's for BT Call Minder/II are 5ukp per quarter so they work out
a lot cheaper than a decent answer machine.

> Anyway, the idea of having a voice mail system taking my calls while
> I'm on the phone sounds nice to me, but I don't think I'll give up my
> answering machine so easily, at least not until they offer a decent
> notification system and cut down the monthly fee.

It's very handy especially for the heavy modem user with only one line.


Robert Irvine, GEC MARCONI Sensors Ltd, (44)1268 887486
at work - robert.irvine@gecm.com    at home - robbie@arakeen.demon.co.uk

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

From: zickus@ssnet.com (Tim Zickus)
Subject: Re: Customer Care in Telecom
Date: 19 Jun 1996 14:28:44 -0400
Organization: SSNet, Inc.  Public Internet Access in DE (302) 378-1386


In article <telecom16.281.8@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, <lmoran@planet.net>
wrote:

> Customer Care in Telecom

> July 31 & August 1, 1996
> Washington, DC

> Increase brand image and potential profit;
> Effective customer satisfaction, support and retention measurers.

> [etc.]

> For more information call:  800-882-8684 or e-mail info@iqpc.com
> Visit our homepage for a complete conference agenda:  http://www.iqpc.com

I attended one of these IQPC sessions not too long ago, and was 
extremely dissapointed with the quality of the speakers and the
amount of useful information presented.  Two solid days of rehashing
the same ground ... over and over and over.

Then they had the gall to try and recruit me to talk at a future IQPC
conference!


Tim Zickus                              "Heaven and Earth and I came into 
zickus@ssnet.com / tez@infosponge.com    existence together, and all things 
http://www.ssnet.com/~zickus             with me are one."     - Chuang-Tzu


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Well if the other speakers were of such
poor quality and so boring maybe you *should* have taken their offer
and been a speaker. I am sure you would have given a more interesting,
timely and factual presentation.  PAT]

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

From: merlyn@stonehenge.com (Randal L. Schwartz)
Subject: Re: AT&T Wireless Tells Cellular Roamers: Don't call NJ Police
Date: 19 Jun 1996 10:13:31 -0700
Organization: Stonehenge Consulting Services; Portland, Oregon, USA
Reply-To: merlyn@stonehenge.com


Mark" == Mark Smith <msmith@pluto.njcc.com> writes:

> In article <telecom16.271.4@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, <paul@TDR.COM> write:

>> - All gasoline sold in New Jersey is both mandatory Full Service, it
>> is at least 15 to 40c per gallon cheaper than any gas, even self
>> service, in New York City, Delaware or Washington, DC.

> Been that way a long time -- it was a safety issue when it became law
> and every time they try to repeal the safety question stops it.  I
> work in PA and always buy gas at home.

Yup.  Same thing in Oregon.  How I wish Oregon didn't share something
unique with New Jersey, but that's life. :-)

Just another Oregon Native,


Name: Randal L. Schwartz / Stonehenge Consulting Services (503)777-0095
Keywords: Perl training, UNIX[tm] consulting, video production, skiing, flying
Email: <merlyn@stonehenge.com> Snail: (Call) PGP-Key: (finger merlyn@ora.com)
Web: <A HREF="http://www.teleport.com/~merlyn/">My Home Page!</A>
Quote: "I'm telling you, if I could have five lines in my .sig, I would!" -- me

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
public service systems and networks including Compuserve and America
On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. 

Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:

                 * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu *

The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
Townson of Skokie, Illinois USA. You can reach us by postal mail, fax 
or phone at:
                      Post Office Box 4621
                     Skokie, IL USA   60076
                       Phone: 847-329-0571
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*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from the              *
* International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in Geneva, Switzerland    * 
* under the aegis of its Telecom Information Exchange Services (TIES)   * 
* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
* ing views of the ITU.                                                 *
*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
yourself who provide funding in amounts deemed appropriate. Your help
is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of twenty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #296
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Wed Jun 19 19:54:00 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id TAA02851; Wed, 19 Jun 1996 19:54:00 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Wed, 19 Jun 1996 19:54:00 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606192354.TAA02851@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #297

TELECOM Digest     Wed, 19 Jun 96 19:53:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 297

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Re: Future of X.25 Networks vs Internet (lr@access2.digex.net)
    Re: Future of X.25 Networks vs Internet (Albert Pang)
    Re: Nationwide PRI Shortage (Holly King)
    Re: Nationwide PRI Shortage (Kevin Paul Herbert)
    Re: Sprint Fridays Were Free (Alan Lange)
    Re: Sprint is Still Offering "Fridays Free"! (Ron Schnell)
    Re: CDA Fallout: Internet Rating System Waits in the Wings (Wolf Paul)
    Re: Modems in Spain (Charly Epley)
    Re: Talking to PBXs (Lars Poulsen)
    Re: Talking to PBXs (Ed Kleinhample)
    Re: Arrogant Internet Providers (Robert McMillin)
    Re: Tax on Cellphones in Maryland (Steven Lichter)
    Re: Questions About Ringing (Andrew C. Green)
    Re: 911 Locator for Cellular Users (Bradley J. Bittorf)
    For Sale: DID to POTS Interface For Voice Boards (Robert Schwartz)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: lr@access2.digex.net (Sir Topham Hatt)
Subject: Re: Future of X.25 Networks vs Internet
Date: 19 Jun 1996 15:58:53 GMT


Jean-Francois Mezei (jfmezei@istar.ca) wrote:

> I would like opinions on what will happen to worldwide X.25 networks
> such as TYMNET, SPRINTNET and national X.25 nets connected via X.75
> with the Internet becoming so popular.

> Will X.25 nets be reduced to carrying bank transactions? (ATMs, EFTpos 
> etc.)

If they're lucky to retain even that.  Frankly they were never really
well defined in the US.  Having to use TYMNET and TELENET pads to get
into several services back in the old NCP networking days, I can tell
you it was really the last choice.  We replaced these hookups with an
800 number and just connected directly and increased the service level
and decreased the cost.

More recently, we were wooed and signed up by NJ Bell (Bell Atlantic)
to make heavy use of their X.25 PDN.  We also used to bring down the
entire NNJ PDN on a regular basis trying to run UUCP through it.


Ron

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

Date: Wed, 19 Jun 1996 19:51:13 +0000 
From: albert pang <albertp@nortel.ca>
Subject: Re: Future of X.25 Networks vs Internet 
Organization: Magellan Networks, Nortel, Ottawa, Canada. 


In article <telecom16.294.8@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Jean-Francois Mezei
<jfmezei@istar.ca> wrote:

> I would like opinions on what will happen to worldwide X.25 networks
> such as TYMNET, SPRINTNET and national X.25 nets connected via X.75
> with the Internet becoming so popular.

One of the advantages of X.25 over TCP/IP is the inherent capability
for accounting since each X.25 connection (call setup and call clear)
is tracked.  These events are recorded by most switches and can be
reported for billing purpose.  Included in the billing record is the
number of packets (or segments as it is called in the X.25 world)
transmitted and received.  As a result, X.25 carriers can bill
subscribers by usage.  Another advantage of X.25 is its security and
reliability.  You have more options (eg. CUG, call options,
facilities, NUI) in implementing access control in an X.25 network.

Therefore, I don't think the Internet will be replacing public X.25
network entirely (although, some corporation will migrate some of
their data traffic to the Internet).  However, what will happen is
that you will see applications who used X.25 networks are migrating to
public Frame Relay or eventually to ATM networks.

> Will X.25 nets be reduced to carrying bank transactions? (ATMs, EFTpos 
> etc.)

> Will these private providers use their infrastructure to provide
> private TCP networks? (I know that most are planning it, but I am
> unsure if they would provide public dial-up ports (PPP/SLIP)).

 From a carrier's point of view, eventually, it really doesn't make
any different if a subscriber access their network using the X.25
protocol or Frame Relay on ATM.  Internally within these private
networks, traffic is likely to be transported in proprietary
protocols.  Or, better yet, individual switches are connected via ATM
NNI.

> Or will corporations simply go with the actual Internet and concentrate 
> on encryption of the data?

It really depend the size of the corporation and how critical the
network applications are.

> (I am concerned about world-wide network applications).

You can contact me directly if you have other product/network specific
questions.


Albert Pang    	  | Global Support Processes 	| Voice +1 613 723 4204
albertp@nortel.ca | Magellan Networks		| Fax   +1 613 723 4508
	       	  | Northern Telecom		| ESN	364 4204

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

From: h-king@nwu.edu (Holly King)
Subject: Re: Nationwide PRI Shortage
Date: 19 Jun 1996 14:33:47 GMT
Organization: Northwestern University, Evanston, IL.   USA


I believe this is more a question of Bell Atlantic incorrectly
forecasting the future growth rate of PRIs and therefore, not
budgeting for such growth ... we have had Nortel's PRI equipment
(DTCIs) installed and working for four years ... they are interfacing
with both DMS100's and a 5ESS in the Ameritech cloud.


Holly King    h-king@nwu.edu
Northwestern University, Evanston, IL.   USA

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

From: kph@cisco.com (Kevin Paul Herbert)
Subject: Re: Nationwide PRI Shortage
Date: Wed, 19 Jun 1996 12:35:22 -0700
Organization: cisco Systems, Inc., Ashland, OR, USA


In article <telecom16.289.9@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, stephen@clark.net
(Stephen Balbach) wrote:

> Is this true? Are PRI's really that hard to get in other parts of the
> country? I look forward to hearing of others experiences, thanks.

My Sprint salesrep told me that there is an industry-wide shortage of
PRI interfaces for the DMS250. I have no information on other switches, 
however.


Kevin

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

Date: Tue, 18 Jun 1996 22:02:57 EDT
From: Alan Lange <lang0251@mstr.hgc.edu>
Subject: Re: Sprint Fridays Were Free


> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Being 'well known and established' does
> automatically preclude devising fraudulent and/or 'bait and switch'
> schemes. Does anyone remember that major insurance company several
> years ago that went down when it was discovered that about half the
> policy holders listed on its computer were non-existent?   PAT]

Equity Funding Corporation of America filed Chapter X Bankruptcy in
1973 after that discovery.  The company that emerged from the
bankruptcy reorganization in 1976 has been very successful in its 20
years.  Orion Captial Corporation (NYSE symbol OC) is engaged in the
specialty property and casualty insurance business through wholly
owned subsidiaries which include EBI Companies, DPIC Companies,
Connecticut Specialty Insurance Group, SecurityRe Companies and Wm. E.
McGee & Co. Inc., as well as through its 49.5% ownership interest in
Guaranty National Corporation.

Now, if they could only get the PBX in the home office to recognize SAC 
888, and handle the area code split here in CT ...


Alan Lange <lang0251@hgc.edu>
PGP keyID: bea6e65d
Finger Print: 9edb0db4 d9acf05d b2067981 20b42201


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Was it limited to a bqankruptcy filing
for Equity? I seem to remember that a couple of the corporate officers
also went to prison for their part in the scam. The deal was Equity
needed to show what a prosperous and rich company it was so it made
up a few million customers who did not exist and gave them accounts
on its computer with all sorts of ficticious balances due, etc. The
shareholders all thought the company was in wonderful condition.  PAT]

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

From: ronnie@twitch.mit.edu (Ron Schnell)
Subject: Re: Sprint is Still Offering "Fridays Free"!
Date: 19 Jun 1996 14:32:29 GMT
Organization: MIT


In article <telecom16.293.4@massis.lcs.mit.edu> Telecom@Eureka.vip.best.
com (Linc Madison) writes:

> I was using one of the search engines on the Web to look for some info
> that was telecom-related, and the ad at the top of the page was for
> Sprint "Fridays are Free," so I followed the link.  They're trying a
> little harder to tighten the restrictions -- you are now required to
> give the business name, and they talk about a term contract and
> penalties and other things designed to scare people off, but it still
> is the same basic offer.

Yes, when I noticed this web page still there, I tried to post an
article to this Digest, but it never got printed.  I wanted to ask
if anyone thought it was a bad idea for me to sign up, considering:

1. I do have a business.
2. I rarely make overseas calls.
3. I have a spare line I can use to become my "Free Fridays-Only Line"

In any case, I decided to sign up for it about five weeks ago, knowing
what could conceivably happen (Sprint could dishonor their contract at
any time).  My experience so far has been good.  I like the fact that
they made me commit to a year.  By doing so, I have something in
writing that I can take to court should it become necessary.  I made
them put the entire plan in writing.  It took several levels of
supervisor to get it, but I eventually got it.  

The only thing that was not in writing was the fact that their calling
card (including surcharge!) is included in the plan.  I expect that
any day it will stop working, even though the sales rep promised me it
will not.  I got my first bill.  It was for $1.88, with only around
$100 in free calls.  My free call volume was low because I didn't
believe the calling card would really be free, since it wasn't in
writing.  Now that I know it might actually work, I will be making
free Friday calls from everywhere.

The moral of the story is, if one is careful, and expects the worst,
one might still be able to take advantage of this deal.


Ron   ronnie@space.mit.edu

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

From: wolf.paul@aut.alcatel.at (Wolf Paul)
Subject: Re: CDA Fallout: Internet Rating System Waits in the Wings
Date: 19 Jun 1996 09:01:26 GMT
Organization: Alcatel Austria AG


In article <telecom16.287.10@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, dr@ripco.com (David
Richards) writes:

> Logistics aside, Ripco's (and I suspect many other provider's)
> position is that if we are required to rate content originating on our
> system we will gladly do so ...

> But since we can't possibly review every message and page, Ripco will
> apply a blanket rating of 'X (under 21 forbidden)' across the board.

> X-CDA-RATING: X/21-over
> X-CDA-OFFENSIVENESS: sex,violence,libertarianism,angst,...

> If (when) every site that turned their pages black, sets their rating
> to X (just as 'blackpage' scripts were widely distributed, so can
> 'rate-X' programs make it possible for the most technically illiterate
> to set their ratings), the censors won't have to worry about children
> getting to smut, but neither will children get to any of the other
> educational and instructive resources that the backers of censorship
> cite as reasons to 'make the internet safe for children'.

I suspect that this would be highly counter-productive because it gives at
least some semblance of justification to the claim which I am sure will be
made:

	Hypocrisy exposed:  The opponents of the CDA are not at all
	concerned with the free flow of information: what they really
	want is the free flow of smut, and if they can't have that
	they'll block genuine information also.

And then there will be more calls for more regulation, the rating will
be turned over to a government agency, and ISP's will simply be taxed
to pay for it, etc.

In fact, in the wake of recent raids on French ISPs, some of them are
already calling for a government agency to be set up to do the rating;
but in times of budget consolidation the only way of funding this
would be a new tax to be paid by ISPs and their customers.

Is that really what we want?


W. N. Paul/KSRU * Alcatel Austria AG * Scheydgasse 41 * A-1210 Vienna, Austria 
wnp@aut.alcatel.at * +43-1-277-22 x2523 (voice)/x118 (fax) * +43-1-774-1947 (h)

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

From: Charly Epley <charly@ionet.net>
Subject: Re: Modems in Spain
Date: Wed, 15 Jun 1996 11:12:54 -0500
Organization: etiGATE


Kris Nelson wrote:

> (1) Can I actually use my U.S. modem (a Hayes Accura 288) on Spanish
> phone lines? (Legally?)

> (2) What kind of physical phone jacks are in use in Spain? Radio Shack
> only has adapters for the U.K., Germany, and France (all different,
> interestingly). If Spain differs from these three, where can I get an
> adapter?

Send Email to 'info@scsinet.es' and ask them.  They are an ISP in
Spain and should be willing to tell you what bring over or purchase in
Granada.


Charly Epley - etiGATE Tel/Fax: +1 405 752 1497 / 752 9894
Email: charly@ionet.net ULR: http://www.ionet.net/~bob/
Personal ULR: http://www.ionet.net/~charly/
PO Box 20126 Oklahoma City, OK 73156-0126

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

From: lars@anchor.RNS.COM (Lars Poulsen)
Subject: Re: Talking to PBXs
Date: 19 Jun 1996 23:38:57 -0700
Organization: RNS / Meret Communications


In article <telecom16.281.5@massis.lcs.mit.edu> bookworm@execpc.com writes:

> after agreeing to design a synthetic speech product for my employer
> that can dial up a number on the PSTN, annunciate a message, and hang up.
> Originally I understood I would only be dealing with the PSTN and have
> been gathering data on it, but yesterday another engineer claimed we
> also had to be able to dial out of a PBX.  In all the years I have
> worked with modems I have never seen one that didn't require you to
> have a dedicated line to answer or originate calls, and I figure there
> has to be a good reason for this.

In all the years I have worked with modems, I have never seen one that
required a dedicated line to answer or originate calls. <grin>

Of course there are many types of PBXs, but most of them have the
ability to support a standard telephone, and on such lines, a normal
modem will work as well. In fact, it should be a lot less expensive to
build a device that attaches behind a PBX, because you won't need to
have the device certified for compliance with FCC part 68.


Lars Poulsen			Internet E-mail: lars@RNS.COM
RNS / Meret Communications	Phone:        +1-805-562-3158
7402 Hollister Avenue 		Telefax:      +1-805-968-8256
Santa Barbara, CA 93117		Internets: designed and built while you wait

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

From: edhample@sprynet.com
Date: Wed, 19 Jun 1996 05:35:05 -0700
Subject: Re: Talking to PBXs


In V16, #281, bookworm@execpc.com writes:

> Originally I understood I would only be dealing with the PSTN and have
> been gathering data on it, but yesterday another engineer claimed we
> also had to be able to dial out of a PBX.  In all the years I have
> worked with modems I have never seen one that didn't require you to
> have a dedicated line to answer or originate calls, and I figure there
> has to be a good reason for this.

Using a modem on a PBX is not really all that difficult. The problem is
that very few (if any) off-the-shelf modems are capable of interfacing
to the propriatary digital protocols used by PBX systems to communicate
with their terminal equipment (phones).

The bright side is that most all PBX systems are capable of providing a
standard analog (500, 2500, or B1-grade) circuit. This type of a circuit
is still an extension of the PBX switch, but looks and acts identical to
an analog subscriber line provided by telco.

Most PBXs allow this type of circuit to access many of the PBX features
via hookflashes amd combinations of touch-tone codes, rather than
through the multiple control buttons of the more typical digital phones.
This type of circuit can often be associated with a DID (Direct Inward
Dialing) trunk in order to appear to have a direct outside dialable
number (i.e. if your analog line is ext 1234, then someone from the
outside can dial it as npa-nxx-1234).


Ed Kleinhample    edhample@sprynet.com

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

Date: Wed, 19 Jun 1996 07:34:14 -0700
From: rlm@netcom.com (Robert McMillin)
Subject: Re: Arrogant Internet Providers


On 12 Jun 1996 13:53:21 PDT, reo@crl.com (Ross Oliver) said:

> I have had a Netcom shell account on and off for about four years.  In
> that time, I have come to view their service as "you pays your money
> and you takes your chances" meaning if it works, great, if not, forget
> about getting any help.  As far as I know, no direct telephone support
> is available at all.

This is just plain wrong.  There *is* direct telephone support
available; but it's got a tremendous wait time (20 minutes is by no
means unusual).

> I have dealt with quite a few ISPs, both for my own personal use, and
> on behalf of clients.  I have yet to find one that offers what I
> consider an acceptable level of reliability and customer service.
> Competition among ISPs has forced prices into the basement, which
> doesn't leave much money left over for a quality tech support staff.
> I would be willing to pay a premium for quality service, but I have
> yet to find an ISP willing to offer it.

Don't worry -- it's coming.  The brighter of the ISPs have figured out
that the $19.95/mo deal is a deathtrap, and are now focusing their
efforts on providing more reliable service for business.  While it may
be the case that the Internet is made valuable by the number of surfers
out there, the problems with the complexity of the Internet make it
expensive to support for the vast numbers of the technically unwashed.


Robert L. McMillin  | rlm@helen.surfcty.com | Netcom: rlm@netcom.com

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

From: slichte@cello.gina.calstate.edu (Steven Lichter)
Subject: Re: Tax on Cellphones in Maryland
Date: 19 Jun 1996 09:06:23 -0700
Organization: GINA and CORE+ Services of The California State University


Joseph Bergstein <jbergste@nova.umuc.edu> writes:

> Montgomery County MD county council approved a new tax on cellular
> phone users whose billing address is within the county.  They become
> one of many areas looking for new ways to raise revenue, and clearly
> the business community which has bulk of cellphones is very unhappy
> because of added costs.  The tax rate indicated is 92.5 cents per month
> per phone or roughly an additional $11 a year, expected to raise in
> this county nearly $2 million.  Tax is supposed to begin on July 1.

The City of Riverside, Calif was thinking about it a couple of months
ago, when it was pointed out that many people have mailing address
within the city don't use their phone in the city they took the matter
off.  The idea was to tax the monthly charge plus calls made in the
city. That would be a little hard to do since it would require a lot
of changes be made by the companies in the area. It seems they still
have not realized that they work for the people not us for them. The
City of Moreno Valley had its utility tax voted out after they wanted
to increase it. The government had better learn of to live on lower
tax since many people are tired of paying for the fat government plans
that have no place other then to make the pockets of the government
fat.


SysOp Apple Elite II and OggNet Hub (909)359-5338 2400/14.4 24 hours,
Home of GBBS/LLUCE Support for the Apple II and Macintoch computers.
slichte@cello.gina.calstate.edu

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

Date: Wed, 19 Jun 1996 08:00:02 -0500
From: Andrew C. Green <acg@frame.com>
Subject: Re: Questions About Ringing


Mark J. Cuccia <mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu> writes:

> One thing that *IRKS* me is how "Hollywood" handles ringing the called
> phone and ringing indication to the calling party, when a telephone
> call is used in fiction (TV, Radio, Motion Pictures).

You can probably blame a lazy sound-effects editor for that, since it's
a pain in the neck to wire up a phone to ring on cue, mike it, etc.,
during the filming of the scene, when all you really need to do is have
the sound editor select the proper ringing sound from the library.

My favorites cliches are the instant dial tone from the handset to let 
you know that the other party has hung up on our hero in a fit of pique,
followed by the offended party diddling the switchhook repeatedly and 
barking, "Hello? Hello! Operator! I've been cut off!"

I suppose the latter has some basis in fact on older systems? Repeated
switchhook signalling would either get the operator's attention or
even dial him/her directly via the on/offhook pulses? PAT?


Andrew C. Green
Datalogics, Inc.
441 W. Huron               Internet: acg@frame.com
Chicago, IL  60610-3498


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: On the older manual phone systems what
we now refer to as call supervision was done by operators who with
their own eyes supervised the connections. Persons going off hook (or
back on hook after a call was completed) caused a small light signal
to illuminate on the switchboard. Rapid flashing of the hook would
cause the light signal to flash rapidly also which was intended to
tell the operator the call was very urgent.  PAT]

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

From: bjb@petrel.cle.ab.com (Bradley J. Bittorf)
Subject: Re: 911 Locator for Cellular Users
Date: 19 Jun 1996 17:30:33 GMT
Organization: Allen-Bradley Company, Inc.


In article <telecom16.295.4@massis.lcs.mit.edu> benlev@aol.com (Ben
Levitan) writes:

> It is difficult but not as bad as it seems.  Cellular already does
> measurement prior to handoff and compares the signal of your
> connection with available connections around you and then depending on
> the availability of circuits it makes a decision when to hand you off.
> (This is called RSSI measurement).  Given those measurements put into
> a simple program it would be fairly easy (but it will take work) to
> locate someone.  The key is that measurements are already being done.

RSSI is the acronym for Received Signal Strength Indication, BTW.

Another possible locating mechanism may exist. The AMPS phones
included a provision for sending back a carrier tone/signal with a
wavelength adjustment so that it would be matched to peak positive
amplitude.  In other words, the cell sends you a tone, but you get it
with the wave shifted with respect to some synchronizing event, based
on your distance from the cell (and the wavelength of the tone).  You
adjust it ("fix it") and send it back -- the cell should now get it with
the same "amplitude displacement" as you did, since the distance is
the same (more or less) going back.  If the cell knows the wavelength,
something about your distance, and maybe a little about Doppler
effect, it could theoretically use the wave shift to refine your
distance, if not position.

This was a over a decade ago; the newer phones may have abandoned
this.  Plus, the accuracy would be subject to the precision of the
phone and its synchronizing and shifting hardware -- and the
understanding of the concept by your software person ;-).  I would
hate to have to rely on the RF-control software I wrote to find me in
a fog or on a lake.

I am a former cellular phone call processing software engineer.


Bradley J. Bittorf     O-                          Phone:  216.646.4629 
Allen-Bradley Company/Rockwell Automation          FAX:    216.646.3124
1 Allen-Bradley Drive, Mayfield Heights, OH  44124 bradley.bittorf@ab.com

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

From: Robert <cor3@magmacom.com>
Subject: For Sale: DID to POTS Interface For Voice Boards
Date: Wed, 19 Jun 1996 16:18:32 -0400
Organization: Magma Communications Ltd., Ottawa, Ont., Canada


Hark SS-650 DID to Voice Processing Interface is used to interface DID
trunks with Voice Processing input (POTS) lines, through conventional
telephone line interconnect equipment.  Great for small voice mail
service provider applications.  This unit allows you to hook in one DID
trunk and one POTS line to a VP board port.  Allow for both inbound and
outbound calls on the same port.  The unit is rack mountable and can
be expanded to accomodate four trunks.  (The rack is populated with cards
for one port currently.  Additional cards can be purchased from Hark
Systems.)

Price $600.00 or best offer.

Please email me if interested.


Thanks,

Robert Schwartz
cor3@magmacom.com

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
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On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
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Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
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The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
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*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
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     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
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All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
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should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #297
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Thu Jun 20 12:08:06 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id MAA11528; Thu, 20 Jun 1996 12:08:06 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 1996 12:08:06 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606201608.MAA11528@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #298

TELECOM Digest     Thu, 20 Jun 96 12:08:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 298

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    New Nevada Area Code (Tad Cook)
    Routing on ISDN With Windows NT (Gill Ruidant)
    Employment Opportunity: San Francisco Site Editor Wanted (Judy Chin)
    Re: Phone History Question (turner7@pacsibm.org)
    Re: Phone History Question (Travis Russell)
    Re: Phone History Question (Guy J. Sherr)
    Re: 911 Call From my Phone Number (Bruce A. Pennypacker)
    Re: 911 Call From my Phone Number (Danny Burstein)
    Re: Future of X.25 Networks vs Internet (Craig Morton)
    Re: Future of X.25 Networks vs Internet (Jean-Francois Mezei)
    Re: Nationwide PRI Shortage (Fred R. Goldstein)
    Re: Talking to PBXs (Mike Luckham)
    How "Mini" Are PCS Sites? (John Hall)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Tad Cook <tad@ssc.com>
Subject: New Nevada Area Code
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 1996 01:22:13 PDT


Nevada Expected to Have New Area Code Within Five Years

RENO, Nev. (AP) -- People who are just getting used to dialing 702 to
make in-state long distance calls will have to start thinking about
three new numbers. Nevada will have a second area code within the next
five years.

The state can handle about eight million telephone lines, but the
growing use of cellular telephones, fax machines and computers using
modems will require the new area code by the year 2001, according to
Nick Facque, a senior engineer at Nevada Bell.

Nevada Bell will oversee the split because it was part of the former
AT&T empire before divestiture, the Reno Gazette-Journal reported on
Wednesday.

The division is likely to be along geographic lines, possibly dividing
the north and the south and almost certainly will trigger a pitched
battle over who retains the 702 area code. The losers will be throwing
away outdated business cards, stationery and advertisements.

In addition, Facque said automated dialers for computers and business
telephone systems will have to be reprogrammed. In some cases, they
will need to be replaced.

"A lot of the older equipment is not adaptable," said Kris Richards,
manager of major accounts at Pacific States Communications in Reno.

Until a few years ago, the second digit of all area codes was "0" or
"1."  But when all the possible combinations were used up and phone
companies began using other digits and some systems built more than a
decade ago don't recognize an area code with a middle number other
than 0 or 1.

This would be particularly worrisome to hotels, at which an outdated
system could thwart guests calling to one of the newer area codes.

Because of the potential impact on people in the new area and because
Nevada Bell does not serve all of Nevada, public hearings on the
change likely will be overseen by somebody from outside the state, the
Gazette-Journal reported.

They are expected to begin some time next year.

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

From: Gill.Ruidant@gate71.be
Subject: Routing on ISDN With Windows NT
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 1996 11:24:42 GMT
Organization: Interpac Belgium SA/NV


I'm searching a solution to replace an access router (CISCO 2511 for
example) by a software solution on Windows NT. It is possible with a
com port card with eight ports, a terminal adapter and a software ...
but wich software? Can somebody give me more informations on this
subject?


Thanks,

Gill

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

From: Judy Chin <judy_chin@ccmail.turner.com>
Subject: Employment Opportunity: San Francisco Site Editor Wanted
Date: 19 Jun 1996 22:59:48 GMT
Organization: Turner New Media


Site Editor

Major entertainment company seeks Online Site Editor. Work with
Producer and Business Development to develop and maintain kids online
sites.  Responsibilities include: project coordination, site updates
and original content development.  Position requires college degree, 2
years of commercial online and internet experience and the ability to
handle multiple projects.  Knowledge of HTML, multimedia applications,
pop culture and cartoons necessary.  Creativity a must as well as a
willingness to work with all kinds of "colorful" personalities.
Please FAX RESUME to "Online Site Editor Position" at 415.283.3335.

PLEASE NO EMAIL.

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

From: turner7@pacsibm.org (TUrner-7)
Subject: Re: Phone History Question
Date: 19 Jun 1996 23:22:04 GMT
Organization: PACS IBM SIG BBS


In the Philadelphia metropolitan area ...

In 1972, we moved to a new house and the phones were hard wired,
except in one location where we requested a "portable" phone and
jacks.  The jacks were the old style four prong type.

In 1976 I added a second line which was installed hard wired.

In 1979 I changed jobs.  All phones at my new employer were modular.
Around that time you could buy your phone in place, and they had phone
center stores.

My guess is around 1977-78.  Probably phased in in different parts of
the country.

BTW, in the utility closet at work, in a new office building, there is
a bank of the old style four prong jacks.  I assume they are for some
sort of test equipment use, not regular service.  CAn't find anyone
who knows what they are.

Also, on that second line installed at home in 1976: because it gets
very little use (mostly as a guest phone and backup now), I converted
it to party line last year.  Although I had to explain what a party
line was to the service rep, it was granted since it was existing
service.  No physical modifications were made in the house to the
phone (still a plain hard wired 500 set.)  I doubt anyone else shares
the party line.  I save a few bucks each month.

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

From: trussell@interpath.com (Travis Russell)
Subject: Re: Phone History Question
Date: 20 Jun 1996 02:49:19 GMT
Organization: Telecom Consultants Group


In article <telecom16.296.6@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, Jon Parro
<jparro@hsc.usc.edu> wrote:

> Does anyone know when they stopped hardwiring phones and started 
> installing phone jacks (in Southern California, particularly)?

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: The first two phones I had in my own
> name (1961 through 1965 I think) were hardwired. The first one was
> 'installed in place' having been there from a previous subscriber.
> My parents phones were hardwired. I honestly cannot remember but I
> think my third phone in 1967 was modular. I know the ones I had in
> the early 1970's were modular. It was quite common to see older
> installations that were hardwired around the same time, but it was
> also common to see 302 type phones from the 1940's still around also
> in older installations. My best guess would be the change in standards
> probably was about 1965-68. Other ideas or facts on this?    PAT]

The Careterfone decision was the driver for modularization, requiring a
standard interface for all manufacturers devices. I believe (working from
memory here) that was in 1968. 

The registered jack program was mandated by the FCC, and requires all
manufacturers of telephony devices to register their equipment with the
FCC, who determines the RJ type to be used. If I am not mistaken (and
again I am relying on memory) the FCC got involved because the telephone
company was charging huge fees for "interconnection" equipment, which they
claimed was necessary to protect the network. In reality, it was just
another way for the telephone company to reap profits for nothing.


Travis Russell
Author, "Signaling System #7"
Co-Author, "Cellular Digital Packet Data"

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

Date: Thu, 20 Jun 96 09:26 EST
From: Guy J. Sherr <0004322955@mcimail.com>
Subject: Re: Phone History Question


I used to live in an apartment building in Washington, DC where the
internal wiring was considered to be on the Bell side of the demarc.
In fact, a second line I had installed there was FREE because the NIB
was inside my apartment.

The NIB was a wooden buss with screws.  The screws had markings of
course, the only one of which I recognized was GND.  There was a 2500
type deskset attached to direct wires on four buss terminals (two for
the phone line, and two for the intercom); this phone had in the upper
left corner of the dial pad a two position switch so that the intercom
or the line would be used when offhook.  Inside the phone, that switch
was a throw type, and boy did it make contact (nice and tight, I think
it would have worked even if the phone was under water and badly
corroded).  The only trouble this phone had was the bell clapper.  The
travel period was wrong, so the clapper could not back far enough way
to let it ring.  But you could hear it anyway.  No melody, but
definitely there was function.  The receiver was a real live WECO job.
You know the kind, it doubles as a personal defensive weapon.  Or a
dumbell.

Anyway, that phone was still in place about eight months ago.  The PBX
in the lobby is still operating, and it still provides talk battery to
the intercom.  In case you wondered, the second phone line was hooked
up not quite correctly.  The line he installed turned out to be a PBX
lobby extension too. The tech told me that the house wiring was
installed in 1956, I think.


Regards,

guy

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

From: Bruce A. Pennypacker <brucep@stylus.com>
Subject: Re: 911 Call From my Phone Number
Date: 20 Jun 1996 13:20:40 GMT
Organization: Stylus Products Group, Artisoft Inc.


With older phones I suppose it could also be pranksters with a similar
handset wandering around the neighborhood trying to see if they can get
a dialtone through somebody elses base station.  Newer phones have codes
that prevent this sort of thing, but older ones didn't.


Bruce Pennypacker   |  Stylus Products Group  |  Phone: +1 617 621 9545
Software Engineer   |     Artisoft, Inc.      |  Fax:   +1 617 621 7862
Resident TAPI guru  |      201 Broadway       |  http://www.stylus.com
brucep@stylus.com   |   Cambridge, MA 02139   |  sales: sales@stylus.com

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

From: dannyb@panix.com (danny burstein)
Subject: Re: 911 Call From my Phone Number
Date: 19 Jun 1996 21:22:09 -0400
Organization: mostly unorganized


In <telecom16.296.12@massis.lcs.mit.edu> Jean-Francois Mezei
<jfmezei@istar.ca> writes:

> They also said that the remote phone might be the culprit. I do wonder 
> how often these incidents do happen.

> I do find it VERY odd that a deffective phone would generate the actual 
> tones for 911 and not some other tones. If it generates these random 
> tones often enough to eventually hit that 911, I would tend to think 
> that owner would notice it.

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: It is not making tones, it is making 
> pulses. Remember, touch tone lines work just fine with pulse dialing
> also. If the base unit is defective, the relay which opens and closes
> the phone line could be doing so rapidly enough to simulate pulse
> dialing and randomly enough to occassionally produce nine pulses 
> followed by two single pulses a second or so apart.  That gets you
> your 9-1-1.   PAT]

Or even more likely: Many (most?) phones these days, including
cordless, have an 'emergency' setting which is pre-programmed to dial
out to, you guessed it, 911. So all that is needed is for something to
activate that 'button'. It can be a cat walking over it, a wierd
electrical thing, or even a coke bottle hanging from a windowshade(*)
and bumping into it.

(* two brownie points to whoever first catches the literary reference ...)


dannyb@panix.com 

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

From: Craig Morton <cmorton@ozemail.com.au>
Subject: Re: Future of X.25 Networks vs Internet
Date: Wed, 19 Jun 1996 21:12:07 -0700
Organization: Communications Engineer / Consultant
Reply-To: cmorton@ozemail.com.au


Jean-Francois Mezei wrote:

> I would like opinions on what will happen to worldwide X.25 networks
> such as TYMNET, SPRINTNET and national X.25 nets connected via X.75
> with the Internet becoming so popular.

> Will X.25 nets be reduced to carrying bank transactions? (ATMs, EFTpos
> etc.)

> Will these private providers use their infrastructure to provide
> private TCP networks? (I know that most are planning it, but I am
> unsure if they would provide public dial-up ports (PPP/SLIP)).

> Or will corporations simply go with the actual Internet and concentrate
> on encryption of the data?

> (I am concerned about world-wide network applications).

I think there is a danger with corporations using tcp/ip networks 
(internet or private) as a shared service as the service is outside of 
the corporate control and non-deterministic.

Urgent (production as distinct from non-urgent e.g e-mail) data is
more likely to be carried by a frame-relay service where levels of
service can be guaranteed.


Craig Morton
Communications Engineer
Australia

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

From: Jean-Francois Mezei <jfmezei@istar.ca>
Subject: Re: Future of X.25 Networks vs Internet
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 1996 00:08:21 GMT
Organization: Vaxination Informatique
Reply-To: jfmezei@istar.ca


albert pang wrote:

> One of the advantages of X.25 over TCP/IP is the inherent capability
> for accounting since each X.25 connection (call setup and call clear)
> is tracked.  

Yes, X.25 may be cost effective for ABM type (banking machine) of
applications where a single transaction may cost you a couple of
packets/segments. But for today's office applications where the
transfer of megabytes is not uncommon, this "billing" ability is quite
a hindrance and makes FAX more cost effective than e-mail over such
x.25 nets. (However, at least TYMNET and perhasp others do have usage
costs option solely on connect time and not volume).

> subscribers by usage.  Another advantage of X.25 is its security and
> reliability.  You have more options (eg. CUG, call options,
> facilities, NUI) in implementing access control in an X.25 network.

Could this not be implemented in a TCP environment? Isn't the NUI not
comparable to an authorisation from ASYNC to PPP to TCP phases?

While X.25 may have these goodies now, most of the new software is
really based on TCP and stuff like netscape with some authentication
and security is making me wonder if the Internet may not come to be
viewed as a secure public network (well, as secure as a public net can
get :-).

Will X.25 remain the only option for world-wide dial-up networks with
reliable throughput? Or will there me other options on the way?

Right now I am running a project with direct dial from overseas and
from north america wthout problems and at very low minimum cost. But I
do have to wonder what the future will bring as an option or if direct
dial will become the "de-facto" standard for business applications
that need good throughput and some security.

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

From: fgoldstein@bbn.com (Fred R. Goldstein)
Subject: Re: Nationwide PRI Shortage
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 1996 11:24:55 EST
Organization: BBN Corp.


In article <telecom16.289.9@massis.lcs.mit.edu> stephen@clark.net
(Stephen Balbach) writes:

> As an ISP in the MD/DC/VA areas we are expanding to offer dialup
> service over PRI's (%100 digital V.34 and ISDN on same line).  After
> placeing orders with Bell Atlantic it is becoming clear there is a
> serious shortage of PRI equipment in Bell Atlantic. ...
> The reason for this apprently is the equipment manufactures (Nortel,
> AT&T) have been caught with thier pants down and there is simply no
> central switching equipment to provide the PRI's. We have been told by
> Bell Atlantic there is a nationwide shortage of PRI's.
> Is this true? Are PRI's really that hard to get in other parts of the
> country? I look forward to hearing of others experiences, thanks.

 From what I've seen, there really is a shortage.  While my instinct,
based on experience, is to discount anything BA says, I've had
trustworthy people at other RBOCs tell me the same story.

Lucent and NorTel went for years with very few orders for PRI.  After
all, the RBOCs wouldn't provide it -- they tend to view PRI (rightly)
as a very good PBX trunk, and they'd rather make PBXs work badly and
be a maintenance headache, since they can then turn around and try to
sell Centrex.  So the manufacturers probably had one part-time
assembler on a prototype line doing all their PRI, in between other
tasks.  (On the DMS, it needs a standard T1 trunk interface plus a
channel on a packet handler, but BRI multiplexes that channel a lot of
ways.  On 5E, it takes the right kind of T1 trunk port plus some
packet handler resources.)

But come 1994 or so, and the ISPs started ordering PRI big time.  Now
telcos tend to do their forecasting on a 5-10 year basis, and Lucent
and Nortel are plugged into that model, so when demand skyrocketed in
a year's time, they were caught with their pants down.  The past two
year's Internet boom is unprecedented.  And even if the CO vendors
were able to ramp up quickly (doubtful, given the culture), the telcos
ordering processes are very slow.  PacBell's done some amazing
improvements to reduce the CO upgrade interval to around six months,
but that is dependent on getting the hardware.  The other Bells appear
to be even slower.

Remember, the RBOCs (especially BA) do not WANT the ISP business.


Fred R. Goldstein   k1io    fgoldstein@bbn.com
BBN Corp., Cambridge MA  USA         +1 617 873 3850
Opinions are mine alone; sharing requires permission.

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

From: Mike Luckham <luckham@rad.net.id>
Subject: Re: Talking to PBXs
Date: Wed, 19 Jun 1996 20:51:11 -1700
Organization: Michael Luckham System Design


bookworm@execpc.com wrote:

> I am just getting my ears wet (mixed metaphor intended) in this domain
> after agreeing to design a synthetic speech product for my employer
> that can dial up a number on the PSTN, annunciate a message, and hang
> up.

> Originally I understood I would only be dealing with the PSTN and have
> been gathering data on it, but yesterday another engineer claimed we
> also had to be able to dial out of a PBX.  In all the years I have
> worked with modems I have never seen one that didn't require you to
> have a dedicated line to answer or originate calls, and I figure there
> has to be a good reason for this.

If you mean that your equipment must be connected to a PABX for
dialing out, then you just dial "9" first (usually), wait a second or
three for the outside dial tone, then dial the outside number.  Some
PABX's also let you dial directly...check with the building's PABX
operator.

If you want to call INTO a PABX, then it depends on the destination
PABX whether it supports "Direct Inward Dial (DID)" or some other
signalling type that lets you call directly to an extension.  That
isn't in your (as the caller) control.

As far as your question about modems goes, many (not all) PABXs use four
wires and something called E&M (Ear and Mouth) signalling to connect
to the phone sets, so that all the fancy buttons (call hold, transfer,
etc) will work.  Your standard household phone uses two wires and does
not use E&M signalling.  You might try looking at 
http://www.analysys.co.uk/vlib_all.htm which is a good source of
information.

You can probably find a four-wire E&M to two-wire adaptor, or request
a special "data line" be installed between the PABX in your building
to your modem.  I don't think there is such a thing as a four-wire E&M
modem, but might be wrong.

A second reason that modems might not work behind a PABX is that
(rather than E&M signalling) DIGITAL signalling is used rather than
the standard ANALOG (voltage) signalling used for your house phone.
Digital telephone sets are usually provided by the vendor of the PABX.
Again, in such a case, ask for a special analog line to be run from
the PABX to your modem.

Now that I've said all that ... WHY ARE YOU ASKING ABOUT MODEMS
ANYWAY?  If you are just sending voice, use something like a Dialogic
voice card (you can get a version that connects to E&M).


Mike
                                        
Software Contractor's Guild website     
http://www.scguild.com/usr/1165I.html   

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

From: John Hall <john@kodak.com>
Subject: How "Mini" Are PCS Sites?
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 1996 11:15:01 -0400
Organization: Eastman Kodak Company


Here in the Rochester NY area, there have been recent cases where
suburban and rural residents have opposed the building of tall,
"unsightly" cellular antenna towers in their neighborhoods.

Now PCS is often described as having "mini-cells", compared to
existing cellular services.  That would mean more antennas would need
to be built, but they would each cover a smaller area and so might not
be so intrusive.

Could someone who has seen a PCS site describe it?  Does it have a
"mini" antenna?  Would you want one in your back yard?


John Hall   john@kodak.com

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

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #298
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Thu Jun 20 16:30:09 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id QAA07693; Thu, 20 Jun 1996 16:30:09 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 1996 16:30:09 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606202030.QAA07693@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #299

TELECOM Digest     Thu, 20 Jun 96 16:30:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 299

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    "It Ain't Like it Used to Be" (Mark J. Cuccia)
    Book Review: "CGI Programming on the World Wide Web" (Rob Slade)
    Informal PRE - RFD  comp.dcom.gsm or alt.cellular.gsm (Vittorio Gorrini)
    Spam Takes a Nasty Turn (Christopher Ambler)
    Sending Faxes as Attachment to E-Mail (Marone Giuseppe)
    Full Text of Story on Peter Piper (Steve Samler)
    Re: Phone History Question (Michael N. Marcus)
    Two Line Voice/Fax Monitoring (sbsmith@megahits.com)
    Please Explain 'iky pic' (Tom Graham)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Thu, 20 Jun 1996 12:17:33 -0700
From: Mark J. Cuccia <mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu>
Subject: "It Ain't Like it Used to Be"


While competition in the telecom industry over the past fifteen to
twenty years has brought us many benefits, the former "Bell System"
did supply us with IMO the *best* customer service and attempts at
resolving problems in competing a call over the telephone network.

I recently mentioned in this Digest that an AT&T operator told me that
I would get the customer card rate, rather than the more expensive
operator assisted or operator handled rate when I came in to an AT&T
OSPS operator directly when I had the LEC (BellSouth) Intra-LATA
'only' operator dial 800-CALL-ATT (800-225-5288) for me, as there was
no ANI passed through the LEC operator connecting me with the 800
number. The AT&T part of the network had '504-000-5555' or something
like that for the ANI, and an AT&T operator had to intercept in to get
the calling number I was at.

It turns out that AT&T operator assisted calls *still* are *NOT*
giving the customer the cheaper 1+ rate, nor even the customer card
rate when an AT&T Operator is called upon to assist in completing the
call in a problem situation. If you come into the AT&T OSPS Operator
on a "0-" which includes 00 from presubscribed lines, 10-288/101-0288+0(0/#) 
or the 800 access numbers (800-CALL-ATT, 800-3210-ATT) and ask the
operator to *dial* the called number, you are billed operator handled
rate, even if you explain that you have a *real problem* in completing
the call when you've tried to dial it yourself. The only time you can
get an operator assisted rate is if you've dialed
(10-288/101-0288)+0/01+number (full domestic or full international)
for collect or third party, or used the 800 access numbers and then
DTMF in the destination number yourself, and then 'timing-out' to an
operator. You can only get the cheaper customer card rates the same
way. You *must* enter in the destination number in one way or another.
The operator can still 'key-in' the card number which you quote to
her, such as when calling from a rotary phone, and I think you still
get customer card rate, but the customer has to enter in the full
destination number. This has been the situation for about three years
now!

Last night, I was trying to call someone in northern New Jersey, 201
area code. It is a local Bell Atlantic (formerly New Jersey Bell)
number, served by a digital switch. I don't know if the 201-NNX is a
WECO#5ESS or a Nortern DMS, however. I was trying to bill it to a
card. I dialed 0-201-NNX-XXXX from a presubscribed line to AT&T, heard
the bong & jingle for AT&T, entered in my card number, heard the AT&T
'thank you', and then crackling and screeching. I entered the '#'
button to do a sequence call.  I was prompted okay, and re-entered the
201-NNX-XXXX number. Again I heard the AT&T 'thank you' message, and
then *ONE* ring, followed by silence.  When I tried asking 'Hello', it
echoed back to me. I tried to enter the '#' button to disconnect and
do a sequence call, but all I heard was the frequency of the '#'
echoing back. I don't know if the far-end 'supervised' or not, as I
couldn't 'disconnect' a far-end with the '#' button.

I hung up, and dialed an AT&T Operator, 00. I explained the situation
to get credit, just in case the far-end did supervise. I tried calling
back to the 201 NJ number, via my AT&T Calling Card, and still got
either 'screeching' and 'scratching' and 'crackling' tones (it was
*NOT* a modem or a fax machine, but really a 'bad connection'), or a
single ring followed by silence (with echo) on subsequent attempts.
Sometimes I could '#' a disconnect, sometimes I couldn't.

I called up AT&T Long Distance Repair (800-222-3000), ran through a
touchtone menu prompt, and waited on hold for ten minutes. Finally I
hung up and called back to the Operator (00) and asked for a
supervisor. She told me that unless she had a formal report from AT&T
higher-ups in network management, she couldn't give me the cheaper
rates (customer card in my case) for her to dial the 201 number. Just
my complaint that I had problems wouldn't get me the cheaper customer
card rates. If the call were intraLATA or local, BellSouth LEC
operators still give you the cheapest rates *if you indicate* to her
that you've tried it yourself and had a trouble condition, if they
dial the destination number on their TOPS or OSPS board.

I called back to AT&T Long Distance Repair, waited fifteen minutes on
hold, and finally spoke with a rep. She was polite, but you could tell
that she did NOT like the present situations at AT&T. She put me on
hold and tried to dial the 201-NNX-XXXX number. She came back and
asked me if I was trying "a good number", as she couldn't get through
properly. I said that I've called that number many times before, and
everything usually worked okay. I also told her that I had no way of
knowing if the problem was AT&T, Bell Atlantic or the wiring or CPE of
the party I was trying to reach. The AT&T Repair rep asked me if I
knew who the number was listed under. I told her and she said that she
would put me on hold and check with "Jersey Bell"!  (note that she
referred to the far-end LEC as "Jersey Bell" rather than Bell
Atlantic). She came back and told me that "Jersey Bell" repair service
told her that there was a trouble condition on the line which the
customer had reported. They were going to try to correct the problem
on Thursday.

Now ... why didn't Bell Atlantic (or "Jersey Bell") put an intercept
on the line, such as "The number you have reached, 201-NNX-XXXX, is
being checked for trouble". I know I get recordings like that from my
LEC, BellSouth, when I've dialed a local or intraLATA toll call via
the BellSouth network where there has been trouble on the line. Could
it be that calls from outside of that Bell Atlantic northern NJ LATA
won't connect to those intercept type recordings? Why couldn't "Jersey
Bell" just return a busy or re-order signal?

And why in the HECK can't AT&T still give the customer the cheaper
rate bracket when the customer HAS INDICATED to the AT&T OSPS operator
that they've attempted dialing everything themself, but they are
encountering a trouble condition.

The funny thing about it ... the party in New Jersey whom I was
attempting to reach is a Bell System retiree, who was with Bell Labs
for *DECADES* and involved in the development of DDD and many aspects
of computer technology.

Prior to about three years ago, if I would have told the AT&T operator
that I was having a 'bad connection' in trying the call myself, she
would have dialed it and given me the cheaper rate for the type of
billing I requested.  If she also heard a 'bad connection', she would
have tried to get an AT&T or New Jersey Bell inward (Kp+201+121+St)
operator in the New Jersey area, who might have had some details on
why the call didn't go through properly, and would have been able to
make a 'local' type call to that number for me and the originating
AT&T operator I had reached. And why didn't I get a 'busy' or
'reorder', or better yet an 'intercept' recording indicating that the
desired number was experiencing a 'trouble condition'?!

BTW, I did ask the AT&T Repair rep why couldn't the AT&T 00 Operator
attempt placing the call for me or getting an inward operator in New
Jersey to assist and still give me the cheaper customer card rate,
since there *WAS INDEED* a trouble condition which I indicated, just
like they *used* to do it up until a few years ago. The repair rep
told me that this is 1996 and not 1976 nor even 1986.

It ain't like it used to be! :-(


MARK J. CUCCIA   PHONE/WRITE/WIRE:     HOME:  (USA)    Tel: CHestnut 1-2497
WORK: mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu |4710 Wright Road| (+1-504-241-2497)
Tel:UNiversity 5-5954(+1-504-865-5954)|New Orleans 28  |fwds on no-answr to
Fax:UNiversity 5-5917(+1-504-865-5917)|Louisiana(70128)|cellular/voicemail


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I'll tell you another interesting development
with AT&T. Everyone by now knows they are trying to get into local service
all over the United States. Here in the Chicago area they have been putting
large ads in newspapers recruting customers for their 'local-toll' thing, 
where calls to points more than 15 miles distant but still within the LATA
can be carried by AT&T instead of Illinois Bell/Ameritech if desired. 
Their rates for those calls are not that competitive at all with Ameritech
and as you might suspect there are tricky ways of phrasing things and 
billing things which make them seem cheap to start with when actually 
they are quite expensive in the long term. Ameritech's advertising has
been quick to point out the flaws in AT&T's method of billing for
those calls and how Ameritech still remains less expensive. 

Recently AT&T has been running ads saying they will give the first
three months of 'local-toll' calls absolutely free if you sign up. Use
it as much as you want. Today in their ad all of a sudden, the terms
changed slightly, but you would not know it unless you read the very 
small print at the bottom of the full page ad. Now, calls must begin
and terminate in Ameritech or Centel service areas (GTE has a couple
of small service area within this LATA apparently no longer eligible
because they are quite far away) and furthermore, and in my opinion
the real kicker: ** Calls between computers are not included in this
offer. ** The exact wording went like this: Applies to calls in
Ameritech and Centel areas only. For customers subscribed to AT&T
only. Reach Out Illinois customers and calls to online network
services are excluded. **              ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 
Ameritech retaliated this past week by starting up their callpack 
plans again that they used to have back in the old days but now far
more liberal that they ever were before.  We can switch our lines from
the ABCD zone plan (A calls are five cents or less each untimed, and
BCD calls are timed at about three to five cents per minute) to the
new plan where ten dollars per month gets you a hundred calls per month
untimed, talk as long as you want to anywhere in the LATA. Twenty 
dollars gets you 250 calls I think. No exclusions on any type of
call. If you make mostly A calls it is no big deal, but if you do a
lot of BCD zone calling and tend to talk long periods of time it is 
a great deal. I left my modem line on zones (since all I make are 
A calls to the local dialup for hours and days at a time) and I put
my voice line on the new plan. Each line requires its own plan; no
more getting one plan and spreading it over all your lines as in the
past. 

I do not think AT&T is going to do very well in the local market here
if they are going to start it off as they are doing with this current
effort.   PAT]
 
------------------------------

Date: Thu, 20 Jun 1996 13:18:04 EST
From: Rob Slade <roberts@decus.ca>
Subject: Book Review: "CGI Programming on the World Wide Web"


BKCGIPW3.RVW   960523
 
"CGI Programming on the World Wide Web", Shishir Gundavaram, 1996,
1-56592-168- 2, U$29.95/C$42.95
%A   Shishir Gundavaram shishir@bu.edu
%C   103 Morris Street, Suite A, Sebastopol, CA   95472
%D   1996
%G   1-56592-168-2
%I   O'Reilly & Associates, Inc.
%O   U$29.95/C$42.95 800-998-9938 707-829-0515 fax: 707-829-0104 nuts@ora.com
%P   433
%S   Nutshell Handbook
%T   "CGI Programming on the World Wide Web"
 
The author has put together very comprehensive coverage of CGI (Common
Gateway Interface) programming, touching on basic forms, server and
CGI includes, graphics and multimedia, advanced and multiple forms,
gateways, and database queries.  In addition, while the bulk of the
examples are in Perl, there are comparative samples of C, Visual
Basic, and Applescript sources.
 
Unfortunately, Gundavaram does not handle the basics as well as the
fancy stuff.  He relies too heavily on the code itself, while his
explanations and comments are unclear and unhelpful.  The "how" seems
to be left behind in the hurry to do something interesting.  The Perl
wizard will likely find it easy enough to follow the code, but the
beginning CGI programmer, however experienced in other areas, is going
to find the book very difficult.

 
copyright Robert M. Slade, 1996   BKCGIPW3.RVW   960523. Distribution
permitted in TELECOM Digest and associated publications. 


roberts@decus.ca         rslade@vcn.bc.ca         slade@freenet.victoria.bc.ca
"We are all agreed that your theory is crazy.  The question which divides us is
whether it is crazy enough to have a chance of being correct.  My own feeling
is that it is not crazy enough."       -- Niels Bohr
Author "Robert Slade's Guide to Computer Viruses" 0-387-94663-2 (800-SPRINGER)

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

Date: Thu, 20 Jun 1996 18:53:20 +0200
From: Vittorio Gorrini <gorrini@ulb.ac.be>
Organization: IRIDIA ULB
Subject: Informal PRE - RFD  comp.dcom.gsm or alt.cellular.gsm 


Hi all, 

Sometimes there are threads proposing a new GSM group; people seems
interested, but the thread dies before any decision (maybe there are no
enough people really interested, that's the purpose of this Informal
PRE - RFD).

Before posting an official RFD in related groups or a proposal in
alt.config I would like to have some feedback about:

1) The real interest for such group,
2) Should be in alt.* or in comp.* ?


Please note that the *real* discussion about the purpose of the group
will be done (maybe) in news.announce.newgroups or alt.config. This
Informal PRE - RFD should be limited to the feasibility  and the name.

If someone more competent in the field that me (and with better
English ...), is interested in being proponent (and helping in
writing RFD) I'll bw glad to cooperate with him. 

Waiting for your feedback .....


Vittorio Gorrini
IRIDIA - Universite Libre de Bruxelles


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I do not mean this to sound self-serving
and I certainly do not need the additional messages here in this 
newsgroup but I think it is often times better for the telecom area
to be a little less splintered in categories, especially where some
of the more 'minor' areas of interest are concerned. Usenet does not 
still more newsgroups and I believe readers do not need the hassle
of an additional newsgroup where one will find occassional messages if
the topic is not all that popular. I think you would be better off
staying in the existing categories until/unless you can show there are
at least a few hundred people interested in reading/participating 
on a daily basis.   PAT]

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

From: chris@kosh.punk.net (Christopher Ambler)
Subject: Spam Takes a Nasty Turn
Date: 20 Jun 1996 05:41:12 GMT
Organization: Punknet Secret Headquarters and Day Care Centre


First off, I'll preface this by saying I did a stupid thing. With that
said ...

You all saw the "buy stocks low" spam that went around a couple of
weeks ago. One of them showed up in the box where I moderate a
regional for-sale newsgroup. I rejected it, and got the expected
bounce from the invalid email address. Since I was bored (here comes
the stupid thing), I called the 800 number and gave them a false name
and my fax number to get more information. They faxed it, so I now
know the business who spammed. My workload got heavy about that point
and I put it aside. Real work comes first.

After receiving additional faxes from these guys, I called them and told
them that I did not request additional faxes, just the one informational
one, and please remove me from their fax list. They compiled, grumpilly.

Today, I got an unsolicited fax from an unrelated company. I called them
and asked them why it was sent, and they told me that someone at my fax
number had requested to be put on their list. I assured them that nothing
of the sort had been done. The gentleman on the other end insisted that
I was wrong, and offered to fax me a copy of the request. Upon receiving
the request, I immediatley understood the situation.

The request said, "Please send me more information on your offerings, and
add me to your regular fax list," and was signed with the false name that
I had given the original spamming firm. The identifier on the sending
machine had been taken off and my fax number hand-written on the request.

I have never used this false name in the past.

I called back the second company and explained the situation. The person
at their end wasn't amused.

The spamming firm is in Canada, so I doubt there's anything I can do here.
I'm even unsure if I'm going to call them and tell them that I know it was
they who sent out the forged request, since I have no desire to elevate 
this any farther than it is. Should it happen in the future, perhaps.

So, to summarize:

1. I did a stupid thing in giving them my fax number;
2. They did a dirty thing in spamming in the first place, and sending
  a forged request in the second place;

and finally,

3. Watch out. Someone really wants to make your life miserable, they can
  give your fax number to fax spammers, and since there was a request,
  USC 47 probably doesn't apply (due diligence and all that, IANAL).


(C) Copyright, 1996 Christopher Ambler, Director, Punknet Internet Cooperative
chris@punk.net                <- Preferred Email Address
http://www.punk.net/~chris    <- Home Page (everyone's got one)
http://www.rhps.org           <- Zen Room Presents the RHPS.ORG web site!

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

Date: Thu, 20 Jun 1996 09:18:00 GMT
From: Marone Giuseppe <Giuseppe.Marone@CSELT.STET.IT>
Subject: Sending Faxes as Attachment to E-Mail


Hello,

I wonder if there is any products (hardware /software) to use a
standard fax machine as a scanner connected to a PC; the application
would be to get files in proper formats (.TIF, .GIF, .JMP or whatever)
to be sent as e-mail attachment out of plain paper documents; the fax
machine, anyway, should also be connected to PSTN to be able to send
and receive standard faxes.  Does anybody know of some trick to do
that?


Thanks a lot,

Giuseppe 

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

Date: Thu, 20 Jun 1996 10:19:49 EDT
From: Steve Samler <steve@individual.com>
Subject: Full Text of Story on Peter Piper


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: This is the complete text of the 
story which started out here yesterday about the amazing saga of
Peter Piper, the poor innocent and put-upon consumer whose life
was made hell when he got charged 75 cents each for several 
automatic call-returns charged to his phone bill by a faceless,
nameless, uncaring, unresponsive giant corporation and how much
of a hassle it caused him since he knew right from the beginning it
was the fault of the big corporation entirely because they had 
never told him that when you dial things on the phone which involve
special services you have to pay extra. Oooooh was he angry when
he found out how they had deliberatly left him -- and no doubt
thousands or even millions of other subscribers -- in blissful 
ignorance while they ran up his phone bill twenty dollars. This
summarizes where we left off yesterday; now let us continue with
the story.    PAT]

Too Much Return Call Service Puts Shock in Phone Bill for Sprint Customer 

Tallahassee Democrat via Knight-Ridder/Tribune: 
By Fred A. Schneyer Knight-Ridder/Tribune Business News

Jun. 19--The extra $20 to $25 on Peter Piper's office phone bill
earlier this year got his attention. Quickly.

Piper, Tallahassee representative for Olsten Staffing Services, a
temporary-employee firm, was hot when he discovered what the charges
were for Sprint's automatic call-return service, billed at 75 cents
per call.  He didn't order the service, which identifies the most
recent caller. He didn't even remember reading about it.

"All of a sudden it was just there," said Piper, who had the charges
on two consecutive bills. "I don't like that coming from any vendor.
Let me pick and choose. Don't just slap something on there and say
'Seventy-five cents per call.'"

Sprint officials say they alerted customers, in inserts in their
monthly statements, that the return-call feature was available to all
customers unless they called and canceled it. They also noted that the
charges -- 75 cents per use or a flat rate of $3 a month -- only get
tacked on when you use the service by dialing 69. When you dial 69,
the service tells you the phone number of the last person to call your
line.  The service, however, does not identify calls made from
cellular phones and only sometimes identifies calls from long-distance
numbers.  Phone-company officials say they thought they were doing
customers a favor when they got permission in December from the state
Public Service Commission to offer the service to everyone on a
call-by-call basis. That way, the phone company said, customers could
try it or only use it occasionally.

It turns out that children are often using the service without the
knowledge of their parents, who often did not read the inserts. Some
Leon County parents have complained that it gets pricey for home
accounts when their youngsters use return-call to keep up with their
friends at 75 cents a pop.  

In Piper's case, a customer-service representative was the culprit,
using the service when she was tied up on one line and missed callers
on another. Piper was surprised by the extra $20 to $25 added to his
bill and told the employee not to use the service except in an
emergency.  But Sprint officials caution customers not to get too
upset if they notice their bill has suddenly skyrocketed with a long
list of 75-cent add-ons.  The phone company will cancel one month's
worth of return-call charges on request, said Sprint spokesman Tom
Flanigan. In exchange, customers must agree either to cancel the
service or accept the monthly rate.  

Flanigan declined to say how many customers already have sought
refunds and how many have opted for the service to be cut off.  "Most
telephone companies, including ours, have said: 'Look, we understand.
We'll take it off your bill,'" Flanigan said. "Because not everyone
got the word, they adopted this policy. This is a way to make them
aware of it and to give them options about how to deal with the
problem."  

ON THE INTERNET: Visit Tallahassee Democrat Online, the World Wide Web
site for the Tallahassee (Fla.)  Democrat. Point your browser to
http://www.tdo.com

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

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I never could understand why people do
not take a few seconds -- literally, that is all it takes -- to read
the little 'newsletter' which comes with all their utility bills 
each month. For instance, despite Ameritech talking about the new
areacode 847 for several months -- maybe even more than a year -- on 
a month by month basis in their bills and inserts, a large number of
people were taken by surprise when 847's transition period ended it
and you dialed it or did not reach it. In fairness to Sprint I would
suggest they should not have refunded anything to anyone in this case.
Obviously Peter Piper's employees knew about it as did lot's of other
people.  PAT]

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

Date: 19 Jun 96 22:23:39 EDT
From: michael n. marcus <74774.2166@CompuServe.COM>
Subject: Re: Phone History Question


> Does anyone know when they stopped hardwiring phones and started 
> installing phone jacks (in Southern California, particularly)?

Phone jacks -- of the four-hole type -- go back to the 1950s or
earlier, maybe much earlier.

I first saw miniature _modular_ jacks in use with temporary phones in
McCormick Place in Chicago during a visit to the Consumer Electronic
Show in Chicago, probably in 1971. They were not in use in NY at that
time, and I seem to recall that Illinois Bell was the test telco for
the Bell System, before nationwide conversion, as later happened with
cell phones.

In approximately 1972, I wrote an instruction manual for an early
answering machine, the BSR "Phone Butler," that was designed for
four-hole jacks. I can remember adapters that replaced the cover of a 42A
block and converted them into four-hole jacks.

I have a small paperback book, "How to Buy, Install and Maintain Your Own
Telephone Equipment," printed in 10/78, that shows 42A blocks and four-prong
connectors, and ignores modularization.

Another book, "Kiss Ma Bell Goodbye -- How to Install your Own Telephones,
Extensions & Accessories," is copyright 1983, and shows mod connections.

An AT&T paperback from 1986, called "The Telephone Book," implies that the
change to modular was in 1974. 


Michael N. Marcus
Able Communications
Scarsdale NY
Contributing Editor, Teleconnect mag.
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/mnmarcus


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: My first answering machine was the kind
that was not allowed to be wired directly into the phone line. It was
a sort of large box with metal 'fingers' you placed under the switch hook 
which would literally lift the receiver a quarter inch or so off hook.
You attached one of those little induction coil suction cups to the
part of the handset by the earpiece and a speaker embedded in sort of
a rubber cup like thing was slid up onto the mouthpiece end of the
receiver. The phone sat on top of this box with the little metal
piece which slid underneath the receiver when it was on hook. The loud
ringing noise from the phone bell -- actually, any loud nearby noise
such as a vacuum cleaner running next to it -- would cause this box
to go into action. The springs would release and the little metal
thing under the receiver would push up and lift the receiver enough 
off hook to allow the phone to be 'answered'. The mobious loop tape 
inside the machine would start moving and the outgoing message would
be played through the speaker which was held up against the phone's
mouthpiece with that little rubber sleeve. It literally talked into
the phone via the mouthpiece since direct connections were not yet
allowed. After the outgoing message played, the person talking to
the phone was 'heard' through the earpiece by the little induction
coil in the suction cup on that end. That was in turn plugged into 
any cassette player you wanted which had a remote control plug on
it since the larger answering machine unit would turn on or off the
littel cassette player by remote control. Once the loud noise acti-
vated the box (that is cause the fingers to jump and lift the receiver 
off hook and start the little tape inside running) it went for one
minute until the sensor foil on the tape came past and shut it off by
grounding the head when the foil touched it and ground at the same
time. You had to hope the loud noise was the phone bell and not some
other nearby sounds because the machine would start going anyway.
You had one minute and could make it all an outgoing message or you 
could stop talking at some point after 15-20 seconds and the other 
end could talk. Your cassette player recorded the whole thing 
including your outgoing message each time and whatever the caller
had to say. After a minute the little metal thing would drop back 
into its normal position and the receiver would drop back on the hook.

I had that in 1967-68, and sometime around 1970 got an answering
machine which was actually authorized to be plugged into the Bell
phone network itself, no longer requiring an induction coil suction
cup to be attached to the earpiece and a mechanical thing to lift
the receiver off hook.  It had a 'four-prong' type jack.   PAT]

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

From: sbsmith@megahits.com
Subject: Two Line Voice/Fax Monitoring
Date: 19 Jun 1996 19:47:36 -0700
Organization: Zippo


I'm struggling with trying to setup two internal modems to monitor two
separate phone lines both with voice/fax incomming.  I can't seem to
differentiate the IRQ for COM1 and 3 or COM2 and 4.  Someone has
suggested a DIGI board with external modems but I'm looking for the
cheapest functional soultion.  I have a Robotics 28.8 voice/fax
internal and a Motorola 14.4 voice/fax internal and I'm running Windows
95.  After I solve the hardware problems, then I have the software
issues.  I thought of running two different fax/voice monitoring
packages (Quicklink and WinFAX Pro) -- one for each modem.

Any other working ideas out there?

Thanks for your time.

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

From: Tom Graham <tgraham@internetmci.com>
Subject: Please Explain 'iky pic'
Date: 20 Jun 1996 05:39:01 GMT
Organization: InternetMCI


Hi -- I am trying to remember what "iky pic" is cable slang for.
"Pic" is "plastic insulated cable"?  And, "iky" is the jelly that
water proofs the cable?  Been too long since I worked for WE at the
Hawthorne Works; any of you Pioneers out there give me the real story
here?


Thanks,

Tom Graham tgraham@internetmci.com

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
public service systems and networks including Compuserve and America
On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. 

Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual
readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:

                 * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu *

The Digest is edited, published and compilation-copyrighted by Patrick
Townson of Skokie, Illinois USA. You can reach us by postal mail, fax 
or phone at:
                      Post Office Box 4621
                     Skokie, IL USA   60076
                       Phone: 847-329-0571
                        Fax: 847-329-0572
  ** Article submission address: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu

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*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from the              *
* International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in Geneva, Switzerland    * 
* under the aegis of its Telecom Information Exchange Services (TIES)   * 
* project.  Views expressed herein should not be construed as represent-*
* ing views of the ITU.                                                 *
*************************************************************************

     In addition, TELECOM Digest receives a grant from Microsoft
     to assist with publication expenses. Editorial content in 
     the Digest is totally independent, and does not necessarily
     represent the views of Microsoft. 
     ------------------------------------------------------------

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
yourself who provide funding in amounts deemed appropriate. Your help
is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of twenty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
should not be considered any official expression by the organization.

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

End of TELECOM Digest V16 #299
******************************
    
    
From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Thu Jun 20 18:57:07 1996
Return-Path: <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) 
	id SAA21673; Thu, 20 Jun 1996 18:57:07 -0400 (EDT)
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 1996 18:57:07 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (Patrick A. Townson)
Message-Id: <199606202257.SAA21673@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: TELECOM Digest V16 #300

TELECOM Digest     Thu, 20 Jun 96 18:57:00 EDT    Volume 16 : Issue 300

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Pacific Bell Conducts Extensive Call-ID Blocking Verification (Mike King)
    International Dialing 1960's Style (Mark J. Cuccia)
    BellSouth Executive Urges Consideration of Telemedicine Costs (Mike King)
    Calcutta Telephones (Ratnadeep R. Damle)
    Wanted: Information on SMDI (jstory@ibm.net)
    Ring No Answer - What's to Blame? (Bob Baxter)
    Nynex <-> Sprint Cross Usage Agreement (Danny Burstein)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Mike King <mk@wco.com>
Subject: Pacific Bell Conducts Extensive Call-ID Blocking Verification
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 1996 13:16:37 PDT


Forwarded to the Digest FYI:

  Date: Thu, 20 Jun 1996 08:15:09 -0700
  Reply-To: NEWS-LIST@list.pactel.com
  From: sqlgate@list.pactel.com
  Subject: Pacific Bell Conducts Extensive Caller Id Blocking Verification


FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Rebecca Perata
(415) 394-3701

Pacific Bell Conducts Extensive Caller Id Blocking Verification Tests

SAN FRANCISCO -- Pacific Bell today announced it is undergoing
intensive efforts to verify customers' Caller ID blocking requests.
The verification process began last week after the company received
calls from customers who had received the wrong blocking confirmation
letters, and announced a delay in offering Caller ID service until the
correct orders are processed and verified.

"We are in the process of conducting verification checks," explained
Mark Pitchford, vice president of consumer marketing for Pacific Bell.
"The process includes matching every customer order placed either
through our 1-800-298-5000 blocking request number, or through ballots
included in the March and April telephone bills, with our records of
their blocking choice."

Pacific Bell is also checking a sample of more than 1 million customer
telephone lines to ensure that in addition to being registered
correctly, blocking choices are being implemented correctly. With
millions of customers actively having made a blocking choice, Pacific
Bell expects the verification process to take several days.

Consumers had the option of requesting one of two blocking options.
Selective Blocking delivers the number of the caller unless the caller
dials *67 before placing the call. The second option, Complete Blocking,
blocks a caller's number from being delivered on all calls (except 911,
800, 888 and 900 calls) unless the caller dials *82 before placing that
call.

"We know some customers received letters confirming Selective Blocking
when they had ordered complete blocking," said Pitchford. "We are
trying to get to the bottom of that issue. Our first priority,
however, is to ensure that customer requests are processed, registered
and provisioned accurately. We will not launch Caller ID service until
we are confident that customers have received the blocking option they
requested."

"When you are processing millions of blocking requests -- many of
which were received by the company on, or after the May 20 cutoff date
for the preparation of the letters -- it is possible for the orders to
get delayed in the system, or for requests to be entered incorrectly.
We apologize to our customers for any confusion this may have caused,"
said Pitchford.

Pacific Bell says other reasons a customer may have received a letter
confirming Selective Blocking include:

   * The customer has more than one telephone line or an additional fax
     line or computer line. Unless the customer chose Complete Blocking
     on all lines, a Selective Blocking letter would have been sent to
     reflect the blocking status of the line or lines not designated as
     Complete Blocking.
     
   * Someone else in the household may have requested Selective
     Blocking. Pacific Bell has received multiple (either repeat or
     contradicting) blocking requests from about one million customers.
     The company registers the last request it receives.
     
   * Customers whose blocking requests were received after May 20, 1996,
     would not have had their current blocking status reflected in the
     letter.

Pacific Bell continues to advise customers who selected Complete
Blocking and are concerned whether Pacific Bell has received their
designation, to call:

     1 800 386-0000
     A pre-recorded message will confirm if Complete Blocking has
     been assigned to the telephone number the person is calling
     from
     
     1 800 298-5000
     24-hour live operators will take requests for Complete
     Blocking (Customers who prefer Selective Blocking need not
     call since Selective Blocking is the automatic blocking option
     given to those who have not actively made a selection.)


Pacific Bell is a subsidiary of Pacific Telesis Group a diversified
communications corporation based in San Francisco.


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

Mike King   *   Oakland, CA, USA   *   mk@wco.com


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I have never seen any telco go to such
extremes with this as PacBell is doing. Has anyone else?  When
Caller-ID started in ths part of the country Ameritech announced it
on several occassions and told people to use *67 to block it if they
did not want to be identified. Period, end of discussion. What other
telco has gone over and over its records so many times and made such
elaborate plans?  How come GTE and the other telcos in California did
in fact start passing Caller-ID last week and instead of passing the ID
it seems all PacBell is doing is passing the buck.    PAT]

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

Date: Thu, 20 Jun 1996 13:59:52 -0700
From: Mark J. Cuccia <mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu>
Subject: International Dialing 1960's Style


Many historical telco references I have mention that in 1967, about
eighty customers in Manhattan, all heavy users of overseas telephone
service, were allowed a four-month period of experimental
international dialing to London and Paris.

In the May 1970 issue of {Bell Laboratoris Record} magazine, there is
an article on international dialing which mentions the 1967 Manhattan
experiment. And also, "Switching Technology, 1925-1975" (edited by
Amos E.  Joel of Bell Labs) a volume in AT&T's book series "A History
of Engineering and Science in the Bell System" also mentions this 1967
experiment, and has a footnote to the article on international dialing
in the May 1970 issue of {Bell Labs Record} magazine. It is said that
"special area codes" were used for this experiment. And it is
mentioned that during 1970, several #5XB offices in New York City
would be arranged for customer international dialing to serveral
popular countries or cities overseas, using 011+ and 01+ as the access
codes, followed by the national number (city code and local number) in
the destination country, i.e. the present North American international
outbound dialing standard.

I have always been curious as to what these "special area codes" were
for the 1967 experiment, as there was a demonstation of international
or overseas dialing at an IEEE meeting in Philadelphia in June 1966.
In AT&T's historical chronology "Events in Telecommunications
History", it is mentioned that on 15 June 1966, Lowell Wingert of AT&T
Long Lines in Philadelphia dialed up a CCITT representative in Geneva
Switzerland by dialing the ten digit number, 200-223-3011.

I would assume that the originating local central office in
Philadelphia at that time was a #5XB which couldn't (yet) handle
011/01+ type codes, and '200' was a special 'patch' code, which indeed
it was. I also wondered what the "special area codes" were, mentioned
about the 1967 Manhattan international dialing experiment. Could those
special area codes have been other N00 format codes? Toll-Free Inward
WATS 800 was also coming into use around 1966/67, but why did AT&T
choose '800' and not '300' or '200'. The only TWX special area codes
in use at that time were 510, 610, 710, 810, 910. I wondered if
*temporarily* (until 011/01+ country code was available) the Bell
System intended on limited availability of International outbound DDD
using a special area code (N00, N10, N11) plus seven digits. Many
other N0X and N1X area codes weren't assigned in the 1966/67 period,
such as 718, 818, 804, 90-5 (temporarily assigned for Mexico City
access around 1969/70), 70-6 (replaced 903 for temporary access to
northwestern Mexico around 1980), 619, 409, etc. Could those have been
used for limited international dialing?

Well, I did some digging through microfilm back issues of the {New
York Times} and the {Wall Street Journal} of 1966 and 1967, and here
is what I came up with:

In March 1967, for four months, about eighty heavy users of
international telephone service in Manhattan were permitted
international dialing on an experimental basis. Some of these
customers included Time-Life, Newsweek, CBS, NBC, ABC, Mutual, AP,
UPI, several airlines, several tourism bureaus, and the like. They
were permitted dialing to London and Paris initially. I think that
they had one or two other specific cities added later on. I am also
unclear what happened at the end of the four month trial period. Did
AT&T/NYTelephone cut off dialing and force these customers back to
calling the operator? or did these eighty customers continue to have
dial access?  The dialing instructions were indicated in the newspaper
article.

For station to station (sent-paid) calls, use special *access* code 011+
For alternate billing (person, card, etc), use special access code 01+
Then dial the "special *area* code" for the city:
London, use 441+
Paris, use 331+
and then the seven digit number in the city is dialed.

These are the 'standard' North American international outbound dialing
procedures, even though they didn't refer to 'country code' and 'city
code' as such, but referred to those codes as mentioned above.

At that time, London's city code was simply '1'. In 1990 (or so),
London split '1' into '71' for inner London and '81' for outer London.
And then there was 'phONEday' which went into permissive dialing in
August 1994 and mandatory in April 1995, where most UK STD codes had a
'1' tacked onto the front. Inner London's city code became '171' and
outer London became '181'.

Also, Paris had seven digit numbers. I think it was in the late 1980's
when Paris added an eighth digit to their existing seven-digit
numbers. Their French city code still is '1', and I think it will
remain '1' under the new revisions to the French numbering plan.

I also checked microfilms of the newspaper for the June 1966
demonstration of international dialing. It was mentioned that Lowell
Wingert of AT&T Long Lines tapped out just ten digits for the
destination number, those mentioned above, using a white touchtone
telephone set. A loudspeaker was hooked up to the phone line so
observers could hear how the call was being placed, and
'call-progress' tones. The newspaper articles mentioned that
Mr.Wingert of AT&T first joked that he was happy that he didn't reach
a wrong number! He also said that "All Number Calling" should be
adopted as soon as possible, as there are many inconsistancies on
arrangement of letters on the dial in different countries, if there
are even letters at all! and that some countries use a different
alphabet for their dial's letters. The articles also mention that
later during the day, others placed calls to Brussels and London just
by dialing away. No additional numbers or codes were mentioned in the
newspaper articles. The Phialdelphia exchange which gave dialtone to
this phone was the LOcust exchange, and the calls were routed via the
Bell System international switch in New York. The LOcust exchange in
Philadelphia was specially wired to handle these demo international
calls earlier that day or on the day before, and it would be removed
later that day or on the next day. The question was asked if anyone
(everyone) in that neighberhood with the LOcust exchange could have
also directly dialed international themselves. Yes they could, if they
knew the codes (or accidently dialed them), but they would have been
charged $12.00 for the first three minutes!

The ten-digit number dialed by Lowell Wingert for the CCITT representative
in Geneva was indicated in the newspaper articles as: 200-2-23-30-11.

'200' was called an 'international access code'.
'2' was called the digit for Geneva Switzerland.
'23-30-11' was the six-digit Geneva number for the CCITT representative.

Geneva presently has seven-digit local numbers. I knew that they had
six-digit numbers back in the 1970's and 80's, and I've been told that
they had six-digit numbers going back into the 1950's! Switzerland's
city code for Geneva has been '22' for quite some time. I don't know
if it was '2' back in the 1960's. The country code '41' isn't
mentioned at all in the articles on this 1966 demo.

I don't know about Brussels local number length in the 1960's, and
nothing was mentioned in the newspaper articles as to which number (or
codes) was dialed for Brussels or London. Of course, since London has
been local seven-digits for decades, I would guess that a different
'N00' code would have been used for dialing those calls to London in
the 1966 Philadelphia demo.

Does anyone have any further numbering details on Brussels or Geneva as it
was in 1966? Is there anyone reading this who might now be retired from 
Bell or AT&T, who participated in this 1966 international dialing 
demonstration in Philadelphia some thirty years ago, or who might know what 
some of the additional *temporary* international dialing codes were?

By the way, articles in old Bell publications, magazines and journals
mention that Bell System international gateway operators were dialing
directly onto the international switch or trunk to call Paris, London
and other major European cities back in the early 1960's. These
operators were specially trained to dial those countries' numbering
plans at that time, and I would guess that the operator plugged into a
direct "London" trunk or "Paris" trunk and simply just dialed (keyed)
the local seven (or six) digit number at that time for that European
city.

Thanks in advance for any additional input!


MARK J. CUCCIA   PHONE/WRITE/WIRE:     HOME:  (USA)    Tel: CHestnut 1-2497
WORK: mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu |4710 Wright Road| (+1-504-241-2497)
Tel:UNiversity 5-5954(+1-504-865-5954)|New Orleans 28  |fwds on no-answr to
Fax:UNiversity 5-5917(+1-504-865-5917)|Louisiana(70128)|cellular/voicemail

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

From: Mike King <mk@wco.com>
Subject: BellSouth Executive Urges Consideration of Telemedicine Costs
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 1996 13:15:19 (PDT)


Forwarded to the Digest FYI:

 Date: Wed, 19 Jun 1996 16:15:31 -0400
 From: BellSouth <press@www.bellsouth.com>
 Subject: BellSouth Executive Urges Consideration of Telemedicine Costs
 Reply-To: press@www.bellsouth.com

BellSouth Executive Urges Careful Consideration of Telemedicine
Costs for Rural Health Care

BellSouth .......................................June 19, 1996

WASHINGTON-The benefits of telemedicine-the ability to use
telecommunications to link doctors and patients across long
distances-should not be overlooked as we enter a more competitive
environment, a BellSouth executive told a federal-state panel today.

William L. Smith, BellSouth vice president - advanced networking
division, told the panel of regulators that "Any viable competitor
will pursue locations where actual costs are below average costs,
leaving only high-cost sites for the carriers of last resort."

Under current pricing rules, BellSouth averages costs associated
with urban and rural health facilities. 

The Federal State Joint Board of federal and state telecommunications
regulators heard testimony on preserving universal service in the face
of blossoming competition in the telecommunications business.

Smith told the commissioners that BellSouth believes that the
basic platform for rural health care access to the benefits of
telemedicine should support transmission of basic data and images,
as well as other video applications.  In the telephone industry,
this sort of access is provided by a circuit designated as a T-1
which transmits at 1.544 Megabits per second, a speed that can
transmit full-motion video like that seen on a home TV set.

"As we move into a much more competitive environment, the
ability to average costs associated with urban and rural facilities
will no longer exist," Smith explained.

BellSouth believes that every rural hospital, clinic and physicians
office would need to have access to a T-1 circuit for all residents
to be able to benefit from the efficiencies of telemedicine.

Timely and accurate provision of vital health care information
to the appropriate care giver is becoming more and more important
in the delivery of cost-effective medical treatment.  With telemedicine,
facilitated by advanced telecommunications technologies, doctors
can have virtually instantaneous access to their most qualified
colleagues to share diagnostic and consultative information on
a patient, no matter where the patient or the medical specialist
is located.  

BellSouth helped develop a more timely and cost effective way for
Trident Regional Health System in Charleston, S.C., to transfer
radiology images between its Trident and Summerville sites.
Radiologists at one location and physicians at the other can jointly
study the images.  And the images -- which used to take up to an hour
to reach their destination -- now arrive in seconds.

The Medical College of Georgia in Augusta has implemented an interactive
video system that will allow specialists to examine patients at
rural Dodge County Hospital in Eastman, Ga.  The specialist can
see the patient and hear what the physician in Eastman hears through
a stethoscope, and can also study patient X-rays.  The Medical
College is also linked to seven correctional facilities so examinations
can be conducted without the inmates having to leave the penal
facility.

In North Carolina, BellSouth has been a sponsor of the VISTAnet
project since 1991 using advanced switching on a broadband network.
The project is being used to develop improved treatment plans
for cancer.  The network provides high resolution images (of malignant
tumors) and radiation dose patterns that enable specialists to
optimize radiation treatment plans (by exploring thousands of
possibilities) in real time, a process that otherwise takes several
days.

Also, BellSouth has partnered with the University of Alabama at
Birmingham (UAB) to develop a new pathology image system that
uses high-speed telephone lines to visually connect tissue samples
of patients at outlying hospitals with pathologists at UAB Medical
Center.  With the UAB-BellSouth Anatomic TelePathology Applications
Research Project, remote robotics and medicine are combined to
allow personnel at outlying hospitals to examine suspect tissue
on a slide that can be concurrently viewed by pathologists at
UAB.  

BellSouth is a $17.9 billion communications services company.
It provides telecommunications, wireless communications, directory
advertising and publishing, and information services to more than
25 million customers in 17 countries worldwide.
                          
                     ###

Internet users: For more information about BellSouth Corporation
visit the BellSouth Webpage http://www.bellsouth.com


For Information Contact:
Bill McCloskey (202)463-4129
Debbie Jordan (404)330-0187

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

Mike King   *   Oakland, CA, USA   *   mk@wco.com

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

Date: Thu, 20 Jun 1996 17:28:14 EDT
From: Ratnadeep R. Damle <rdamle@mil3.com>
Subject: Calcutta Telephones


Thought the following article may be of interest to some of your readers.

By Suman Ghosh - Calcutta - The Asian Age - 19th June 1996

There was a time when a Calcuttan would pull an exasperated face
whenever telephones became were the subject of conversation.  "Wrong
number and inflated bills, that's what telephones are all about here",
he would say and probably throw his hands up in disgust (despair?)

Times have changed.  Remarkable improvements have been registered over
the last two years by Calcutta Telephones, the largest telephone
district in India barring the Delhi and Bombay districts, which come
under the Mahanagar Telephone Nigam Limited (MTNL) under the
department of telecommunications.  The district covers an area of 2200
sq km, with a substantial 68 exchanges and a staggering 381231 direct
exchange lines.  The queue of aspiring telephone owners has come down
from 70281 to 52328 in 1995, a fact that is sure to set smiles alight
in a large number of faces.

The maintenance and set up of Calcutta telephones is decentralised into
six key areas:  Central, City, South, North, Howrah and long distance.
The Director System Strowager Exchanges that had been installed in the
fifties were replaced by electronic exchanges since March 31, 1995.  A few
outdated Penta Conta Crossbar (PC X Bar) exchanges have also been replaced
by modern electronic ones.  Out of the 68 exchanges, only 16 are X Bar
exchanges while the remaining 52 are electronic.

The main problem that the telephone industry like many other
industries, has to face in this city is a space crunch.  Cables have
to be laid under narrow footpaths and in places, as many as six cables
lie on top of each other because of the increasing number of
connections.  A total of 18,877 km of cable with 30, 98, 231 cable
pairs lie underground in the city.  As a result, any digging by any
other organisation often causes damage to telephone cables.  In
addition, waterlogging during the monsoon severely damages the
condition of cables, and, in addition, impedes repair work.

There are 200 incidents of cable damage reported every month, it is
learnt.  Sources in the telephone department said that theft of cables and
cable termination bones are rampant.  It is learnt that the telephone
authorities are taking measures to curb these malpractices.

Authorities are also of the opinion that owing to the increasing space
crunch, the best way out would be to start a network without cables,
specifically a wireless radio network.

There are two ways to the wireless net.  One, the direct wireless which
does not allow enough mobility as the movement must be restricted to a
certain range.  The other, somewhat costlier option, is the `mobile
wireless system' which gives the consumer total control over his
instrument.  Tenders for the fixed wireless scheme have been floated
already.

Also, considering the time lag between the switchover from one system to
another, fibre cables are being installed in place of copper and coaxial
cables, to improve the present state of affirs.  The additional advantage
of using optical fibre cables is that their resale value being quite low,
they are unlikely to be stolen.

The common complaint against Calcutta Telephones is that the list of
applicants is always too long to allow any changes of quick delivery.
Calcutta Telephones reserves 60 per cent of all applications for the OYT
(Own Your Telephone) category while 30 per cent are reserved for the
general category.

As a result, applications to the general category mount very fast; in
fact, in 1994 - 95, only 842 out of a total 52328 `waiting' applications
were under the OYT.

Calcutta Telephones has also started projects to help rehabilitate the
physically handicapped and public call booths operated by them have
been set up in different parts of the city. The Asian Age had, a few
weeks ago, carried a profile of Pritwish Gupta, a blind young man who
had fought against all odds in his pursuit of education, and now
operates a booth named Telelink is Shyambazar.

After what was arguably a period of recession, Calcutta Telephones is back
into business with a bang.  The new installations are obviously bearing
fruit.

The organisations cash registers are ringing once again as the revenue
from telephones alone has leaped a fantastic 146 per cent in the last
five years.  The performance of the organisation, in comparison with
the national scenario, is also looking up.  Calcutta Telephones is
looking forward to rosier days ahead; and not without reason.

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

From: jstory@ibm.net
Subject: Wanted: Information on SMDI
Date: 20 Jun 1996 21:28:21 GMT
Reply-To: jstory@ibm.net


We are beginning a project that will involve SMDI, but so far are
getting very little information about how to use it.

We would like to know where we can get more information on this
protocol. Is there an online source or a book we can order?

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

Date: Thu, 20 Jun 1996 12:36:45 EDT
From: Bob Baxter <bobbles@panix.com>
Subject: Ring No Answer - What's to Blame?


The following scenario is occuring at my job:

There are two incoming lines to a Data General computer.  On each line
is a Multitech modem.  Starting last week, the modem on line one was not
picking up calls.  The TD and RD lights would flicker, but the modem
would not pick up.

We placed the second modem on line one, and we were able to dial in
once.  Subsequent retries resulted in a ring/no answer.  I had NYNEX
in to check the quality of both lines, which passed with flying
colors.  The modem from line one was pulled off again, and
reprogrammed to pick up on the third ring.  Calls to the first line
were still not being picked up.

At this point, I'm not sure where the problem is.  A phone attached to
the modem line rings.  A third modem hooked up to line one does not
pick up.  Are there any conditions where a telephone line would test
okay, and sound fine, but still be incompatible with the modems?


Thanks,

Bob Baxter  (bobbles@panix.com)

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

From: danny burstein <dannyb@panix.com>
Subject: Nynex <-> Sprint Cross Usage Agreement
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 1996 14:42:36 -0400
Organization: PANIX Public Access Internet and Unix, NYC


Per the Nynex internal telephone newswire of 19-June, Nynex has now
made arrangements to have its calling cards intertwined with Sprint.

Calls made with a Nynex card, if inside a Nynex LATA, will be handled
by Nynex. If crossing a LATA, _or_ if in a non-Nynex area (i.e. if
you're using the card in Denver) will be handled via Sprint (which
will, I'm guessing, pay up something to the LEC).

These will also be usable for international calls at "competitive rates".

Fascinating news, especially as it comes only a few weeks after the big 
AT&T cancellation of its arrangements with LECs.

(Hmm, to bring in another thread, will CNID show your home number or 
where you're calling from?  Ooops. let's not start that again)


dannyb@panix.com 

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

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