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Subject: TELECOM Digest V23 #106

TELECOM Digest     Fri, 5 Mar 2004 18:46:00 EST    Volume 23 : Issue 106

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Report on Investigation Into Improper Access to Senate (Monty Solomon)
    TiVo Triples Subscription Additions and Reports Positive Cash (Solomon)
    EchoStar May Need Partner Down Road / Comcast-Disney Union (M. Solomon)
    Microsoft Gadget Keeps Record of Your Life (Monty Solomon)
    Firms Look to Limit Liability for Online Security Breaches (M.Solomon)
    Document Shows SCO Prepped Lawsuit Against B of A (Monty Solomon)
    Re: Vonage with Modem and Fax (Hank Karl)
    Re: Vonage with Modem and Fax (Ray Normandeau)
    Re: Flexion X300 PABX (Duncan Fisken)
    Re: Need to Block Outgoing Calls to Specific Numbers (Carl Navarro)
    Re: Need to Block Outgoing Calls to Specific Numbers (DevilsPGD)
    Re: Memories: Enterprise -vs- Zenith Numbers (Saint-P) (John R. Covert)
    Re: Verizon Wireless / Verizon Airfone Offer 10 Cents-a-Minute (Joseph)
    Avaya/Nortel  Users ATTN!!! (redG)
    Old Pay Phones Sold as Novelty Items (Joe Wineburgh)

All contents here are copyrighted by Patrick Townson and the
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               ===========================

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

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

Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2004 17:05:12 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Report on the Investigation Into Improper Access to the Senate


REPORT ON THE INVESTIGATION INTO IMPROPER ACCESS TO THE SENATE
JUDICIARY COMMITTEE'S COMPUTER SYSTEM

http://judiciary.senate.gov/testimony.cfm?id=1085&wit_id=2514
http://judiciary.senate.gov/testimony.cfm?id=1085&wit_id=3088

http://news.findlaw.com/hdocs/docs/senate/pickle30404rpt1.html
http://news.findlaw.com/hdocs/docs/senate/pickle30404rpt2.html

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

Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2004 17:36:24 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: TiVo Triples Subscription Additions and Reports Positive Cash


     TiVo Triples Subscription Additions and Reports Positive Cash
     Flow in Q4; Raises Annual Guidance to Reflect Doubling of
     Subscription Base
     - Mar 4, 2004 04:06 PM (PR Newswire)

     - Subscription base grew to more than 1.3 million; Revenues 85%
     - higher than Q4 of last year; $143 million cash position
     - strongest in 3 years; Announces $50 million plan that is
     - expected to result in a doubling of subscription base and
     - enables TiVo to achieve sustainable profitability by the end of
     - next year.

SAN JOSE, Calif., March 4 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- TiVo (Nasdaq:
TIVO), the creator of and a leader in television services for digital
video recorders (DVRs), reported today that it added a record 330,000
subscriptions in the fourth quarter, nearly triple the number added in
Q4 of last year. The Company's total subscription base more than
doubled during the fiscal year to over 1.3 million.

Net revenue for the quarter increased 85% to $42.6 million, compared
with $23.0 million for the three months ended January 31, 2003.  Net
loss for the quarter was ($12.4) million, or ($0.18) per share, an
improvement from a net loss of ($32.5) million, or ($0.56) per share,
for the three months ended January 31, 2003.  Excluding non-cash items
related to the conversion of Notes Payable during the periods, TiVo's
net loss for the quarter was ($7.9) million, or ($0.12) per share, an
improvement from a net loss of ($14.7) million, or ($0.25) per share,
for the three months ended January 31, 2003.  Cash Flow From
Operations during the quarter was a positive $13.4 million, compared
with $2.4 million in Q4 of last year. For the year ended January 31,
2004 net revenue was $141.1 million and net loss was ($32.0) million
or ($0.48) per share.  TiVo also reported its first full year of
positive Adjusted EBITDA.*

TiVo ended the quarter and its fiscal year with $143.2 million in
cash, compared to $44.2 million a year ago. This represents TiVo's
largest cash balance and strongest capital position in over three
years.

With retailers offering ten digital video recorder models powered by
TiVo this past quarter, TiVo enjoyed its most successful holiday
season ever. Of the 330,000 net new subscriptions added in the
quarter, approximately 200,000 resulted from TiVo's relationship with
DIRECTV, demonstrating 33% sequential growth, and five times the
number of new DIRECTV subscriptions added in Q4 of last year. The
remaining 130,000 net new subscription additions represented more than
double the growth in TiVo Service subscriptions experienced in the
previous quarter.

TiVo Announces $50 million Growth Plan That is Expected to Result in
Doubling of Subscription Base, 40% Higher Annual Subscription Adds
Than Prior Guidance, and Sustainable Profitability by the end of
Fiscal Year 2006.

     - http://finance.lycos.com/home/news/story.asp?story=40756085

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

Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2004 17:31:36 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: EchoStar May Need Partner Down Road / Comcast-Disney Union


Comcast-Disney union could compel change, Ergen says

By Kris Hudson
Denver Post Business Writer

WASHINGTON - EchoStar Communications Corp. chairman Charlie Ergen said
Thursday that his company may have no choice but to consider a merger
or acquisition if Comcast Corp. successfully engulfs the Walt Disney
Co.

http://www.denverpost.com/Stories/0,1413,36~33~1997143,00.html

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

Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2004 17:34:53 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Microsoft Gadget Keeps Record of Your Life


By ALLISON LINN AP Business Writer

REDMOND, Wash. (AP) -- SenseCam, touted as a visual diary of sorts by 
Microsoft Corp., is designed to be worn around the neck and take up 
to 2,000 images a 12-hour day automatically.

The prototype responds to changes such as bright lights and sudden 
movements and might one day even respond to other stimuli such as 
heart rate or skin temperature _ to track medical problems as easily 
as to record a Hawaiian vacation. And it could eventually link with 
other technology, such as face recognition to remind wearers when 
they've seen someone before.

      - http://finance.lycos.com/home/news/story.asp?story=40753831

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

Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2004 09:30:15 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Firms Look to Limit Liability for Online Security Breaches


By Jonathan Krim
Washington Post Staff Writer

In the face of ongoing attacks by computer hackers, some companies
that store their customers' personal data are adopting a new defensive
tactic: If your information is stolen, they're not legally
responsible.

Across the Internet, retailers and other service providers that handle
consumer transactions are requiring customers to agree to waive any
right to sue the companies if the businesses are hacked, regardless of
how secure their systems are.

The waivers are contained in lengthy terms-of-use agreements that
consumers often click to accept without reading closely.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A31874-2004Mar4.html


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: How odd ... so if a company does a real
schlocky job of maintaining their computer systems and the customer
database all leaks out, you cannot blame the company any longer.  PAT]

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

Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2004 09:54:30 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Document Shows SCO Prepped Lawsuit Against B of A


By Stephen Shankland and Scott Ard
Staff Writer, CNET News.com

The SCO Group filed lawsuits this week against DaimlerChrysler and
AutoZone, but the Unix seller's attorneys also had prepared a
complaint against Bank of America, according to a document.

A Microsoft Word document of SCO's suit against DaimlerChrysler, seen
by CNET News.com, originally identified Bank of America as the
defendant instead of the automaker. This revision and others in the
document can be seen through powerful but often forgotten features in
Microsoft Word known as invisible electronic ink.

A feature in the word-processing software tracks changes to documents,
who made those changes, and when they were made. These notations
typically are invisible to someone reading a Word document.  But as
some lawyers, businesspeople and politicians have learned the hard
way, Word can also display so-called metadata in the document -- 
including the original version and all subsequent changes.
This information is available by viewing the document under "original
showing markup" or "final showing markup."

The presence of hidden text in the SCO document is just the latest 
example of this workplace issue. According to a study by market 
research firm Vanson Bourne titled "The Cost of Sharing," 90 percent 
of documents in circulation began as something else, but 57 percent 
of respondents were not aware that metadata may still exist in the 
their document. Microsoft addresses the issue on its Web site but 
adds that its 2003 version of Office provides a feature that lets 
users "permanently remove" the hidden text from Word.

http://news.com.com/2100-7344-5170073.html

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

From: Hank Karl <notgiven@nothere.com>
Subject: Re: Vonage With Modem and Fax
Date: Fri, 05 Mar 2004 11:41:21 -0500
Organization: NETPLEX Internet Services - http://www.ntplx.net/


> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I tried this experiment as I promised I
> would do in the last issue. When I tried plugging a fax machine
> directly into the Vonage adapter, it worked fine. When I plugged in
> one of the (computer) modems directly to the Vonage adapter, it worked
> mostly okay at 300-1200 baud, or even 9600 baud. But it just would not
> do any better. So my suggestion would be to put Vonage on for your
> main line and also keep one telco line as an overflow for the Vonage
> and for your incoming dialup sessions.    PAT

Vonage uses several TAs.  You may have an older Cisco ATA 186 or a
newer Motorola VT1000.  The capabilities of the TA and how you set the
options make a major difference in the ability to send data. 

If you have a perfect line (no jitter, no packet loss, low end-to-end
delay) you should be able to get 28.8 and possibly more on G.711.
(Turn off packet loss concealment, or PLC).  

All codecs throw away parts of the signal, the hope is that it will
sound "good enough" to the user.  When sending data, you want to throw
away as little as possible, or have the TA demodulate the modem output
and have some other device on the other end remodulate it.

Another suggestion for the OP is to set up a VPN.

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

From: rayta@msn.com (Ray Normandeau)
Subject: Re: Vonage with Modem and Fax
Date:  5 Mar 2004 09:31:05 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: 

> instrument) and I can tell you that was pretty crappy at best. At 300
> baud it barely worked (in hyperterm, pecking on a few keys and
> auditing the output for accuracy) but not in a more controlled BBS

I am glad to see hyperterm mentioned.

In my WIN ME machine I have never used it.

On my DOS 386 machine I have Procomm Plus that I can set up as a mini
BBS.

Could I connect both computers with a null modem cable and transfer
data by using hyperterm to "call into" my DOS Procmm system?

MSN addy above is dead.


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I guess you could, but I would use Laplink
for that job instead. That is much faster if you do not have a LAN and
'Network Neighborhood' on both computers. Actually, if you have a null
modem cable you would have a network neighborhood, I think, as long as
you had the appropriate drivers on each end.

I am a little angry with hyperterm, maybe it is my fault. I needed to
induce the weather mechanicals on my roof to produce a database
display so that I could tell someone (the writer of the weather
station software) the protocol it was using. I thought I could use
hyperterm to do the job: tell hyperterm to talk to a given COM port to
which the weather station control box was attached. I did the proper
events to 'tickle it' into producing a line of output but it never
arrived. I went through a half-dozen baud rates, and parity settings
with no success. Then at some point I discovered that hyperterm had
caused the Windows 98 machine to freeze up. I never did succeed at
this project, although the weather station *is* up and running okay
with some other software for it (to do the FTP from me to the server),
at http://weatherforecast.n3.net  or http://weatherforecast.us.tf if
anyone is interested in the readings for Independence, KS  which I 
sort of doubt. A camera 'street scene' is even included during the
daytime hours.  PAT]

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

From: duncan.fisken@blueyonder.co.uk (Duncan Fisken)
Subject:  Re: Flexion X300 PABX
Date:  5 Mar 2004 04:38:43 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Check out www.voxent.com - they now own BusinessGuardian.

Duncan

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

From: Carl Navarro <cnavarro@wcnet.org>
Subject: Re: Need to Block Outgoing Calls to Specific Numbers
Date: Fri, 05 Mar 2004 07:32:39 -0500


On Thu, 04 Mar 2004 12:57:21 -0800, Sammy@nospam.biz wrote:

> The only way you can solve that problem is to pay for call rejection
> service for those three folks.  Then, they can set the list (usually a
> maximum of 10 numbers) to reject calls from your number.

Sigh,

I've got 5 or 6 Mitel Smar1 boxes in the warehouse that would do the
trick.  I might even have at least one 2 port (vs. 4 port) box.

Since they've been there awhile, I can let one go pretty reasonable.
I even have a full copy of the manual.

The original poster may e-mail me off line for particulars.

Carl Navarro

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

From: DevilsPGD <lalalaNOSPAM@crazyhat.net>
Subject: Re: Need to Block Outgoing Calls to Specific Numbers
Date: Fri, 05 Mar 2004 22:59:14 GMT


In message <<telecom23.105.2@telecom-digest.org>> Sammy@nospam.biz did
ramble:

> The only way you can solve that problem is to pay for call rejection
> service for those three folks.  Then, they can set the list (usually a
> maximum of 10 numbers) to reject calls from your number.

That's not "the only way", there are telcos out there that offer
flexible toll restriction, and include the ability to block specified
nontoll (including local) numbers.


Politicians, like diapers, have to be changed frequently,
and for the very same reason.

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

Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2004 12:08:11 EST
From: John R. Covert <nospam@covert.org>
Subject: Re: Memories: Enterprise -vs- Zenith Numbers (Saint-Pierre)


Linc Madison wrote:

> from the rest of the world, you dial +508 5 08 xx xx xx.

Nope.  Just +508 xx xx xx.   See http://www.st-pierre-et-miquelon.com/


/john

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

From: Joseph <JoeOfSeattle@yahoo.NONOcom>
Subject: Re: Verizon Wireless and Verizon Airfone Offer 10 Cents-a-Minute
Date: Fri, 05 Mar 2004 09:36:00 -0800
Organization: Posted via Supernews, http://www.supernews.com
Reply-To: JoeOfSeattle@yahoo.NONOcom


On Fri, 05 Mar 2004 03:30:24 GMT, Gary Novosielski
<gpn@suespammers.org> wrote:

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: So whatever happened to all the dire
> warnings about using your cell phone when in flight?   PAT]

You *still* can't use your mobile phone *in* flight.  It's assumed
that you will make arrangements for the transfer of your calls and
account setup whether the "a la carte" 69 cent plan or the frequent
traveler $10/month plan from your mobile phone to Airphone before the
flight leaves.  This is about Airphone and not about Verizon Wireless
in flight.

           remove NONO from .NONOcom to reply

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

From: dave@burr.net (redG)
Subject: Avaya/Nortel  Users ATTN!!!
Date:  5 Mar 2004 10:03:44 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


I have found this site very very useful for me. Just wanted to share.

http://www.pbxtech.info/index.php?referrerid=951

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

From: Joe Wineburgh <Joe_Wineburgh@cable.comcast.com>
Subject: Old Pay Phones Sold as Novelty Items
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2004 14:22:39 -0500 


  -----Original Message-----
 From: owner-ip@v2.listbox.com [mailto:owner-ip@v2.listbox.com]On
 Behalf Of Dave Farber
 Sent: Thursday, March 04, 2004 8:26 PM
 To: Ip
 Subject: [IP] : Old pay phones sold as novelty items

  -----Original Message-----
 From: Steve Barsh <steve@barsh.com>
 Date: Thu, 04 Mar 2004 19:57:04 
 To:dave@farber.net
 Cc:"'Kevin Werbach'" <Kevin@werbach.com>
 Subject: For [IP] if you wish: Old pay phones sold as novelty items

For IP if you think others would find it of interest ... I can't
remember the last time I actually used a payphone ...
 
 From http://www.cnn.com/2004/TECH/ptech/03/04/relic.phones.ap/index.html 
 
ATLANTA, Georgia (AP) -- Old pay phones are selling like they're going
out of style.
 
Collectors have made an online rush to buy BellSouth's boxy old pay
phones that have been refurbished for home use, after the
Atlanta-based company decided to pull out of a coin-operated phone
business that had withered in the wireless age.
 
"It's a novelty. You just don't usually see pay phones in people's
homes," said Hugh Bowen, a retired Atlanta police officer who bought
one of the 30-pound phones. "I thought it was so neat and I always
wanted one. When I saw this opportunity I jumped on it."
 
About 500 orders for the $135 phones were filled in the two months
they've been for sale, and now there's a waiting list of about 300
more people.
 
Cell phones have increasingly pushed aside the once-ubiquitous pay
phones.
 
More than six out of 10 Americans now own cell phones, said Patrick
Comack, an analyst with Guzman & Co. in Miami. Pay phones have lost so
much market share to wireless, it's no longer a moneymaking business,
he said.
 
So the big phones are going the way of rotary phones, crank phones and
early model brick-sized cell phones.
 
When BellSouth became the first major phone company to shutter its
languishing pay phone business two years ago, volunteers with the
phone company decided to refurbish the phones for home use and resell
them to raise money for charity. The phones were rewired so they can
plug into a wall outlet and to work without coins.
 
About $18,000 has been raised from the $35 in profit from each phone,
which will go toward groups like Habitat for Humanity and the American
Red Cross.
 
Other companies will continue to operate some pay phones, but their
numbers will continue to decrease. The total number of pay phones
nationwide has dropped 29.5 percent in the last five years, including
a 32.9 percent drop in pay phones operated by local phone companies,
according to the Federal Communications Commission.
 
"My grandchildren and great-grandchildren won't know what it is," said
Bill Ray, who bought one of the pay phones and keeps it atop a filing
cabinet in his Memphis, Tennessee, BellSouth office. "I thought I'd
get it for the nostalgia, and it will be a conversation piece for
years to come."
 
 
Thanks, 

Steve Barsh 
steve@barsh.com 
http://www.barsh.com 
610.668.8182 Office 
215.888.2101 Cell
610.668.8750 Fax 
 
Archives at: http://www.interesting-people.org/archives/interesting-people/

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

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End of TELECOM Digest V23 #106
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