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Subject: TELECOM Digest V23 #131

TELECOM Digest     Sat, 20 Mar 2004 03:36:00 EST    Volume 23 : Issue 131

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Lawsuit Regarding Excessive Prison Phone Charges (Danny Burstein)
    Telephone Switchbox (Will)
    BellSouth DSL Rate Increase (John McHarry)
    Lottery's Toll-Free Number Leads to Different Fantasies (E Friedebach)
    Strange Call (Michael Muderick)
    Re: New York City 911 Data - Anywhere? (Tony P.)
    Re: Power Lines Set to Carry Internet to Outlet Near You (John Bartley)
    Re: Seeking any Advice on 5.8 GHZ Phones (Clark W. Griswold, Jr.)
    VoicePulse Announces Major Expansion (From VOIP News)
    Telephone/Engineer Tool Kit For Sale (Rick)
    Re: Line Identifier (Herb Stein)
    Re: TV Changing Rapidly, Viewers Try to Adjust (Stan)
    TiVo Will Die (Monty Solomon)
    After TiVo, Radio Rewound (Monty Solomon)
    Listen, You'll Hear the Future (Monty Solomon)
    Akimbo Seeks Obscure Entertainment du jour (Monty Solomon)

All contents here are copyrighted by Patrick Townson and the
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and the name of our lawyer; other stuff of interest.  

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

From: Danny Burstein <dannyb@panix.com>
Subject: Lawsuit Regarding Excessive Prison Phone Charges
Date: Fri, 19 Mar 2004 21:27:25 -0500
Organization: PANIX Public Access Internet and UNIX, NYC


New York, NY --

A filing today (11-March-2004) with the Federal Communications
Commission (FCC) asks the agency to examine the harm caused by high
phone rates charged to people in prison, and criticizes the
relationships between prison administrators and commercial phone
companies that give rise to the unusually high rates.

"The filing asks the FCC to take two primary steps to remedy this
problem: One, require that private prisons replace exclusive telephone
service contracts with contracts allowing people in prison to select
one of several telephone companies to carry their long distance
calls. And two, require private prisons to allow the people they
incarcerate the option of making direct dial calls as an alternative
to the more expensive collect calls most currently require.

[ snippety snip, rest at (watch for line wrap) :

http://www.brennancenter.org/presscenter/releases_2004/
pressrelease_2004_0311.html

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

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

From: mlliw@joimail.com (Will)
Subject: Telephone Switchbox
Date: 19 Mar 2004 19:05:27 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Is there a box that when called to normally, it sends through, but
when a code such as #22, It brings the caller to a _dialtone_ on
another line? I have seen several boxes that do this (for
computer/fax/telephone) that when #22 is dialed, they send to a
separate place, but they don't give a _dialtone_ on a separate
line. Thanks!

mlliw

PS This would be for when my work has AreaPlus (More non-long distance
places) and when I call it and dial #22, I would be able to call a nearby
county for free.

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

From: John McHarry <jmcharry@comcast.net>
Subject: BellSouth DSL Rate Increase
Date: Fri, 19 Mar 2004 19:05:09 -0500


BellSouth has decided to impose a $2.97 "regulatory cost recovery
fee", actually a simple price increase on their DSL service. One of
the reasons they site is the federal universal service charge. I don't
think this is charged against DSL, or am I wrong?

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

From: friedebach@yahoo.com (Eric Friedebach)
Subject: Lottery's Toll-Free Number Leads to Different Kind of Fantasies
Date: 19 Mar 2004 16:44:16 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


March 19, 2004, Associated Press

BISMARCK, N.D. -- North Dakota lottery officials had to send new
stickers to merchants to cover up an embarrassing glitch - a toll-free
number on the new lottery's ticket terminals that directed callers to
a phone-sex line.

The number is for retailers who have lottery questions, and is not
intended for public use. Those who called it got a recording that gave
them a second number to call, which advertised 'live, one-on-one
fantasy talk.'

http://www.startribune.com/stories/484/4673576.html

[Note from Eric: This being Friday, I can almost guarantee there will
be no more news items like this for the remainder of the week.]

Eric Friedebach
/Tonight's Skywarn training cancelled due to... weather?/

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

From: Michael Muderick <michael.muderick@verizon.net>
Subject: Strange Call
Date: Fri, 19 Mar 2004 17:44:14 -0500


I got a call at my office today:

"I'm sorry, this call was intended for answer by an answering
machine."  Click.  Not worth *69. No caller ID.  Any ideas?

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

From: Tony P. <kd1s@nospamplease.verizon.reallynospam.net>
Subject: Re: New York City 911 Data - Anywhere?
Organization: ATCC
Date: Sat, 20 Mar 2004 01:11:10 GMT


In article <telecom23.130.5@telecom-digest.org>, cstabbert@yahoo.com 
says:

> Hi.  I've been trying to locate some specific information on 911 calls
> in New York over the last six months to a year.

> Ideally, I'd like to be able to get information calls dispatched to
> specific precincts broken down by incident type (domestic/assault/
> theft etc.), by time of day, and by day of the week.

> Googling around has led to NYPD's CompStat information, which provides
> precinct-level crime statistics, but isn't really what I'm looking
> for.

> It's a tall order, perhaps.  So far, calling the NYPD (both main
> information and specific precincts) and the New York mayor's office
> hasn't gotten me very far (the information doesn't exist, or isn't
> public, or would be released only under FOIA).  Anybody have a clue
> whether this information is out there, and if so, how I'd get it?

> If there's a better newsgroup to post this in, or some other forum
> that might provide leads, please let me know.

You should be able to pull the dispatch records. That is probably the
best indicator. I know we tracked both incident and dispatch. It was
rather interesting to see how long it took the officers to get on the
scene.

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

Date: Fri, 19 Mar 2004 14:32:55 PST
From: John Bartley or K7AAY@ARRL.NET <jhnbartley3@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: Power Lines Set to Carry Internet to Outlet Near You


On Thu, 18 Mar 2004 23:51:23 +1100, Colin Sutton
<colin@sutton.wow.aust.com> wrote:

> A unit of Cinergy Corp. today will become the nation's first electric
> utility to offer high-speed Internet service to customers via its
> power lines, turning every electrical outlet in homes or offices into
> a Web connection.

<snip>

That is, until an amateur radio operator, either in the neighborhood
or in a vehicle driving by, transmists with as little as one watt of
power on HF bands.

The Enrons pushing BPL are doing so under Part 15 of the
Communications Act, and have no license from the FCC to do so.  Where
hams have tested (Austria, Japan, and now here), they have found that
BPL interferes with amateur radio and shortwave reception.

Conversely, transmitting on licensed ham frequencies has been shown to
interfere with BPL, at power levels much lower than the maximum
permitted 1,500 watts.  It should be noted those frequency allocations
are a matter of law, as amateurs are the primary users of many HF
frequencies.  This is confirmed by international treaty.

Those HF frequencies are reliable at bouncing off the inner ionosphere,
and are the key to hams being able to reach far away locations without
satellite.  Other licensed users of HF, such as commercial shortwave
broadcasters and the Federal Emergency Management Agency, have also
noted the technical weaknesses of BPL.

Therefore, BPL may be offered, but its reliability is in question.


John E. Bartley, III  K7AAY telcom admin, PDX - Views mine. 
celdata cjb net - Handheld Cellular Data FAQ
*This post quad-ROT13 encrypted. Reading it violates the DMCA.*

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

From: Clark W. Griswold, Jr. <73115.1041@compuserve.com>
Subject: Re: Seeking any Advice on 5.8 GHZ Phones
Date: Fri, 19 Mar 2004 17:15:24 -0700
Organization: Posted via Supernews, http://www.supernews.com


burris <responder@bellsouth.net> wrote:

> Yes, all that I have seen, and I do beta testing for a few
> manufacturers of 5.8, use 2.4 from handset to base and 5.8 from base
> to handset.  Marketing??

I suspect a combination of cost and marketing. The higher the frequency,
the smaller the antenna length needs to be. In the handset, that
becomes a marketing factor as you can eliminate the antenna. The
perceived "betterness" of a higher number for frequency also comes
into play.

It doesn't matter in the base and there's no need to spend the money ...

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

Date: Fri, 19 Mar 2004 19:19:23 -0500
From: VOIP News
Subject: VoicePulse Announces Major Expansion


[Pat: Please conceal the "From:" e-mail address if you use this. -Jack]

http://www.voxilla.com/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=59&mode=nested&order=0&thold=0

Inching Westward 

VOXILLA.COM News Report 

New Jersey-based Voice over IP service provider VoicePulse will be
tripling the number of rate centers it serves throughout the United
States over the next two weeks.

The expansion effort, says VoicePulse CEO and President Ravi Sakaria,
is part of the company's goal to cover the 48 continental United
States by the end of 2004.

Today (Mar. 19), VoicePulse began offering service in California's
populous Los Angeles County, the first time the company has offered
service on the Pacific coast.

By early April, Sakaria said, VoicePulse will be adding service to
1,800 rate centers throughout the country. Before today, the company
served a total of 900 rate centers in 14 states, primarily on the East
Coast.

Full story at:
http://www.voxilla.com/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=59&mode=nested&order=0&thold=0

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

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
     http://groups.yahoo.com/group/VoIPnews/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
     VoIPnews-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
     http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

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

From: rixride@hotmail.com (Rick)
Subject: Telephone/Engineer Tool Kit For Sale
Date: 19 Mar 2004 19:04:28 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=3803843729

Used Engieering Tool Case for sale, Cheap! 

Thanks,

Rick

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

From: Herb Stein <herb@herbstein.com>
Subject: Re: Line Identifier
Date: Fri, 19 Mar 2004 21:55:15 -0600


Steve Griffin <steve@intelligenthometechnologies.com> wrote in message
news:telecom23.129.5@telecom-digest.org:

> I do residential structured wiring.  When I'm connecting to the NID,
> it's nice to know which line I'm connecting to.  In most areas around
> here (Maryland, DC, VA), 811 will get me a recording of the line I'm
> calling from.  In some areas, this won't work.  I was told there is a
> universal number that will work, but I don't now what it is.  Can
> anyone help?

Try 1 888 902-9998

Herb Stein
herb@herbstein.com

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

From: Stan <stanncno1spam@noispam.yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: TV Changing Rapidly, Viewers Try to Adjust
Date: Sat, 20 Mar 2004 04:28:50 GMT
Organization: RoadRunner - Carolina


The more things change, the more they stay the same. These days, 'The
Sopranos' is called a 'limited run' series because it only runs 13
weeks.

In the 50's and 60's, there were no VCRs and hardly any re-runs. You
watched a television show for 39 weeks from September to May. For the
other 13 weeks, there were 'Summer replacement series'.  Every year
there was a new batch of summer replacement series, usually low cost
musical/comedy/variety shows. 'Glen Campbell' and 'The Hudson
Brothers' come to mind as examples.

In the 21st Century, 'The Apprentice', 'Survivor', and other 'limited
run' series run approximately 13 episodes, often bloated by one or two
clip shows and a recap show (with 'lost' footage).

'The Sopranos' runs 13 weeks at a time, disappears for a year, and
comes back when there's a new story to tell. Sounds more like a Summer
Replacement to me.


-Stan

Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com> wrote in message
news:telecom23.122.1@telecom-digest.org:

> By DAVID BAUDER AP Television Writer

> NEW YORK (AP) -- The natural rhythms of television used to be as
> dependable as leaves sprouting in spring and falling in autumn.

> Broadcast networks would premiere new shows in mid-September, then
> replace failures when the weather turned cold. Summer was rerun
> season. Prime-time schedules rarely changed.
>
> Those days are long gone.

> Series pop up and disappear anytime, dispatched around the schedule
> like chess pieces. Some shows are rerun all the time, others never.
> You can't even count on a show to start at the top of an hour anymore.

> For ABC, CBS, NBC and Fox, plus upstarts WB and UPN, the landscape is
> changing rapidly. The reasons include viewers' lackluster response to
> the current season, cable continuing to grab viewers and awards, and
> the hyper-competitiveness of TV executives.

> For viewers, their trusted TV sets can be confusing. Here's a look at
> how things are changing and why:

> http://finance.lycos.com/qc/news/story.aspx?story=200403092003_APO_V0089

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

Date: Sat, 20 Mar 2004 02:09:14 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: TiVo Will Die


By Jim Louderback
March 18, 2004
PC Magazine

It's always hard to write an obituary, especially when the subject is
still alive. It's especially hard for me, because I love the little
guy like a brother. But, alas, TiVo will die.

I was one of the first reviewers to get my hands on an early TiVo 
box. I compared TiVo with ReplayTV, and although I really wanted to 
like ReplayTV, TiVo won my heart over.

It wasn't the cutesy mascot, although that helped. Rather, it was the 
drop-dead simplicity and ease of use that even the first version 
evinced. And to top everything off, TiVo came with the world's best 
remote control ever, even more astounding for such a fiendishly 
complex device. Shaped like a dog bone, it was simple to use, easy to 
understand, and a pleasure to hold.

The Wall Street Journal's arbiter of tech-Walt Mossberg-still thinks 
ReplayTV was better, and we've argued over the brilliance of the 
remote. But the acid test, for me, was when I plopped TiVo down in 
front of my computer-averse wife. She took to it like a duck to 
water. So much, in fact, that I soon purchased another one just so I 
could watch what I wanted to see.

But TiVo today has a problem-and it's not what you think. Most folks 
point to TiVo's inability to convince consumers just how cool the 
product is and why they need one. Yes, it's hard to describe why a 
personal video recorder (PVR) is better than a VCR-until you use one. 
Give a TiVo to your friends for a month and you'll have to pry the 
remote out of their cold, dead hands. ReplayTV faces the same 
challenge, but that's not where the real threat lies.

Instead, a convergence of three separate trends is conspiring 
to kill off TiVo.

http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1759,1550772,00.asp

TiVo Will Die
Posted by michael on Friday March 19, @01:13PM
 from the tivo-is-dying-etc.-etc. dept. 
http://slashdot.org/articles/04/03/19/1749233.shtml

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

Date: Sat, 20 Mar 2004 02:21:52 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: After TiVo, Radio Rewound


By DAVID POGUE

YOU'VE heard of occupational hazards like tennis elbow, runner's knee,
footballer's ankle. But those ailments pale next to the agony of the
TiVo twitch.

This recently diagnosed condition is exhibited by owners of digital 
video recorders like TiVo and ReplayTV. Having become addicted to the 
seven-second replay button -- an essential movie-watching tool in this 
era of special effects and mumbled dialogue -- TiVo twitch sufferers 
are often seen reflexively pressing a nonexistent seven-second replay 
button, even when they're not in front of the television. Their 
brains helplessly fire the deeply ingrained "Let me catch that again" 
command when they're listening to the car radio, enduring a flaky 
cellphone connection or savoring a hard-won apology from a spouse.

Truth is, you can't blame the brain for misfiring. It's bizarre that
five years into the digital video-recorder era, you still can't buy a
digital VCR for radio. Why has the electronics industry developed so
many machines that let us time-shift Dr. Phil and "Saturday Night
Live," but so few that do so for Dr. Joy Browne and "Science Friday"?

Actually, there is one such device. Radio YourWay (pogoproducts.com)
looks at first glance like a pocket-size (2.2 by 3.9 by 0.7 inches)
AM-FM transistor radio, which, in part, it is. But it also contains a
built-in timer, so that you can set up a schedule for recording radio
broadcasts. Programming it is exactly as easy -- or as difficult -- as
programming a VCR, except that it uses a military-style 24-hour clock
instead of AM and PM designations.

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/26/technology/circuits/26stat.html

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

Date: Sat, 20 Mar 2004 02:50:22 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Listen, You'll Hear the Future


Radio stations, receivers get in tune with digital age

By Peter J. Howe, Globe Staff, 3/1/2004

It's been 101 years since Guglielmo Marconi made this country's first 
trans-Atlantic radio broadcast from South Wellfleet on Cape Cod, but 
radio continues to be a vibrant focus of technological innovation.

After years of development, in recent months three Boston stations 
have begun broadcasting digital versions of their signals that can 
offer CD-quality music as well as streaming text information such as 
song titles and news and weather headlines to display screens on 
special digital receivers. Another 10 area stations plan to offer 
digital -- sometimes called ''high-definition radio" -- this year, 
joining nearly 300 stations nationwide that have licensed the 
technology.

Japanese radio maker Kenwood in mid-January rolled out the first 
digital radio receiver, a $350 unit that includes a display screen 
similar to the ''crawler" at the bottom of cable television news 
channels. JVC and Panasonic are expected to introduce digital car 
radios in the next 30 to 60 days. The sets would all pick up 
conventional broadcasts when digital versions are unavailable.

http://www.boston.com/business/markets/articles/2004/03/01/listen_youll_hear_the_future/

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

Date: Sat, 20 Mar 2004 02:14:29 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Akimbo Seeks Obscure Entertainment du jour


By Michael Kanellos
Staff Writer, CNET News.com

Ever have a desire to watch first-run movies from Nigeria, videos on 
fishing for Walleye Pike or see someone deliver the nightly news 
while naked? Akimbo might be for you.

The San Mateo, Calif.-based start-up will launch a set-top box and 
subscription service in May that will offer a chance for home viewers 
to obtain programs and entertainment that they otherwise might not 
see on cable TV channels or networks.

The programming, for instance, will include short films that have 
been nominated for awards at the Cannes Film Festival or the Oscars; 
features from the Billiard Club Network; music videos from India; 
extreme sports documentaries; and the Naked News, described as "the 
first Internet news program to present the news with nude 
newscasters, delivering international, national, sports and 
entertainment news together with health and fitness, movie reviews 
and in-the-street interviews."

In addition, Akimbo expects to deliver first-run films on a 
pay-per-view basis from studios such as Lions Gate Films, which made 
the recently released film "The Cooler." Akimbo CEO Josh Goldman and 
other company executives previously worked at MySimon, a shopping 
site owned by CNET Networks, publisher of News.com.

The idea behind Akimbo is to create a TiVo-like service that doesn't 
have to rely on the programming from media conglomerates, said Steve 
Shannon, the company's executive vice president of sales and 
marketing and an alumni of ReplayTV.

http://news.com.com/2100-1041-5176273.html

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

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End of TELECOM Digest V23 #131
******************************
