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Subject: TELECOM Digest V23 #144

TELECOM Digest     Fri, 26 Mar 2004 23:50:00 EST    Volume 23 : Issue 144

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    VOIP Mentioned on Fox News Tonight (TELECOM Digest Editor)
    Internet Phones: Clear Winners (VOIP News)
    VoIP Heads for the Mainstream (VOIP News)
    Norstar Voicemail Toll Fraud Using 1010 Dial Arounds (Marc Bequette)
    Re: Correcting 411/555-1212 Info; Unlisted Service (Nick Landsberg)
    Re: 110 V Cord and USB Cable Standards? (Gene S. Berkowitz)
    Re: 110 V Cord and USB Cable Standards? (John Levine)
    Mythtv PVRs For Sale (Monty Solomon)

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, 26 Mar 2004 23:22:16 EST
From: TELECOM Digest Editor <ptownson@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: VOIP Mentioned on Fox News Tonight


VOIP phones in general, but specifically Vonage, since they are the
leaders in that area at present, were the topic of discussion Friday
night news at 9 PM on KOKI, Channel 23, Fox in Tulsa. The Fox report
said that indeed, 'full phone service' (meaning all the bells ahd
whistles on local and long distance service) was much less expensive
on Vonage than SBC (the local telco of record in Tulsa) or various
other CLECs. They quoted a typical price for SBC 'full service' of $53
per month versus the $35 or so from Vonage.

But, they pointed out the one major (for many people) problem with
VOIP was that E-911 was unreliable or non-existent. They did admit that
'for those folks who rarely if ever travel out of the area or take their
computer along, this poses little or no problems, since the Safety
Point of Presence (?) system used by Vonage and other VOIPs is 
reasonably accurate.' Fox got their terms wrong a little bit, but the
idea is mostly accurate. For example, take my situation: I cannot 
percieve a time when I would travel somewhere and want to take along
the ATA box *and* need to use 911 at the distant location. So it
all works pretty well for me. However Fox had a demonstration of someone
making a 'test call' on their Vonage to the 911 center; something 
that Vonage strongly discourages doing. 

Fox also noted that 'as SBC continues to price itself out of the market
for so many Tulsa residents, Vonage begins looking more and more like 
a good alternative for many folks.'

To try a month of Vonage free, ask for an e-coupon and see if it works
well for you also. ptownson@telecom-digest.org


Patrick Townson

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

From: VOIP News
Date: Fri, 26 Mar 2004 21:02:38 -0500
Subject: Internet Phones: Clear Winners
Reply-To: VoIPnews@yahoogroups.com


http://www.pcworld.com/news/article/0,aid,115053,00.asp

With improved call quality and low rates, the best Net phone services
may finally be ready to replace your Baby Bell.

By Jeff Bertolucci
 From the May 2004 issue of PC World magazine

Internet phones have come a long way since the early days. A few years
ago, you had to use software and a PC microphone to initiate a call
from your PC to a regular phone. And you probably encountered some of
the most garbled, inaudible conversations since tin can met string.
  
Thanks to advanced technology, the call quality of Internet phones has
improved dramatically. The upsurge in affordable broadband service,
combined with a new breed of hardware adapters, has led to a slew of
Internet phone (aka Voice-over-Internet-Protocol, or VoIP) services
eager to woo you away from your phone company. The Internet phone
market includes telecommunications titans such as AT&T and Time Warner
Cable, Net phone veterans like Dialpad and Net2Phone, and upstarts
like VoicePulse and Vonage.

So is the Internet phone a viable alternative to your trusty landline?
To find out, we tested eight broadband-phone services (see the chart
"Internet-Phone Calling Plans: Choose Your Provider Carefully"). For
one month we made a series of local, long-distance, and international
calls, morning, noon, and night, and rated each service on its ease of
use, audio clarity, and value for the money. Our verdict: Net phones
vary considerably in price and performance, but the best--VoicePulse
and Vonage--offer near-landline dependability, as well as a host of
advanced features (voice mail, call forwarding, and so on) for much
less money. (And as of press time, Net-phone customers pay minimal
taxes and surcharges, in part because of the ongoing regulatory
debate.) Still, we did encounter some setup problems and choppy calls.

Full story at:
http://www.pcworld.com/news/article/0,aid,115053,00.asp 

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

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

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

From: VOIP News
Date: Fri, 26 Mar 2004 19:44:14 -0500
Subject: VoIP Heads for the Mainstream
Reply-To: VoIPnews@yahoogroups.com


http://crm-daily.newsfactor.com/story.xhtml?story_title=VoIP_Heads_for_the_Mainstream&story_id=23554&category=contact_centers


By Erika Morphy
Contact Center Today

"Once consumers realize how easy it can be to make calls on an
Internet broadband connection -- basically, all one has to do is
install an adapter to make calls on a regular phone -- adoption will
increase significantly," says Jon Arnold, telecommunications analyst
with Frost & Sullivan.

For the most part, VoIP has been a tool to help call-center managers
deploy agents more efficiently at lower cost. Some brave businesses
also have deployed this technology, but they are relatively few in
number. Now, though, that is set to change, as AT&T has announced
plans to accelerate and expand its VoIP rollout for business users.

Full story at:

http://crm-daily.newsfactor.com/story.xhtml?story_title=VoIP_Heads_for_the_Mainstream&story_id=23554&category=contact_centers

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: You know, Jack, recently you commented 
that you were among the first generation of Americans to have never
sent or recieved a 'telegram' and you suggest that the children of
today may well be among the first generation of Americans to have
never seen a wired, landlane phone. It really would be great if we
could, in our lifetime (well, maybe for some of you; I am such an
Olde Farte) see a total end to the tyranny of the telephone company.  PAT] 

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

From: ringding@comcast.net (Marc Bequette)
Subject: Norstar Voicemail Toll Fraud Using 1010 Dial Arounds
Date: 26 Mar 2004 13:49:29 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Is this a place I can ask for help? I work for a building of executive
office suites, and our Norstar was raped by intruders -- they were
calling into our system and then from the voicemail they could get
dialtone and were using 1010-nnn carriers to make international calls
(on our dime!).

I have tons of raw data form the CTA100 utilizing call accounting
software, but DISA was never enabled, and the RAD has been unplugged
for months ... yet someone still must have had some form of a "chinger"
that gave them dialtone.

They at first tried dialing 9-011 international calls, but when they
found that was blocked (via Norstar destination codes), they used
9-1010-nnn dialaround numbers to call HOURS AND HOURS of calls to
India, Pakistan, Phillipines, Kyrgyzstan and a few other countries. 
The intruders "spoofed" their caller IDs, of course.

I have TONS of documentation on this, as well as all the blocks and
restrictions we tried to use to stop the calls.  NOTHING WORKED!!
Blocking our voicemail line (internal extention 2000) from dialing
more than 7 digits finally seemed to stop the calls.  Or, they may
have coincidently stopped because the 1010 carriers wouldnt allow any
more calls (since they never received payment).  I have a HUMUNGOUS
"calls database" in raw format and in archived DB.

Our vendors all were baffeled -- about 5 diffrent techs tried to stop
these calls, all of them saying they couldn't tell me how it was being
done -- they had theories, but when I asked them to show me, they
couldn't do it.  These techs were Nortel certified.

I am wondering if anyone with a Norstar ICS system going over a PRI
(no csu/dsu) out there has heard of this happening, or knows who
should be held liable for this fraud.  Our Norstar/Voicemail system is
RENTED, and the vendor denies responsibility, as does the company that
we PAY to 'maintain and update' the system (maintnance contract
company).  Our Local/LD carrier claims that we owe them for
"INTERNATIONAL TERMINATION FEES" from these calls, and since they
claimed to not be able to block 1010-nnn calls from the CO, they want
us to pay them, and the worst thing is they want a HUGE amount of
money just to "terminate" the 1010 calls.

Please if you have heard of such a situation, or you know the
federal/state laws on toll fraud like this, or better yet, if you know
that Norstar systems have a "BUG" that allows this abuse and maybe
there is a class action out there on this, please please contact me.
Even if you know where I can inquire on this and get some official
answers, please let me know.  It would be greatly appreciated.

Please contact me at ringding@comcast.net if you can help.

Thanks,

Marc Bequette

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

From: Nick Landsberg <hukolau@NOSPAM.att.net>
Reply-To: hukolau@NOSPAM.att.net
Subject: Re: Correcting 411/555-1212 Info; Unlisted Service
Date: Sat, 27 Mar 2004 01:50:02 GMT
Organization: AT&T Worldnet


Lisa Hancock wrote:

> Charles Cryderman <Charles.Cryderman@globalcrossing.com> wrote 

>> the problem was with hitting the target his response was "I don't
>> know, they are leaving here 5 by 5.

> In a recent TV show, one of the characters, when asked how things
> were, replied "5 by 5" meaning ok.  The newgroup for that show was
> flooded with inquiries asking what that meant.  (The show was oriented
> toward young people).

Dern ... this brings back ancient memories.

I believe (but am not sure) that the "5 by 5" term cam from radio
DX'ers (folks who would try to pick up distant radio channels on their
AM radios.)  There was a code, which I recall as "SINPO".  I think the
"S" stood for signal strength, but don't remember what the rest stood
for.  If the station was coming in clear as a bell you would rate that
as all characteristics being a 5, thus the "five by five."  (Check a
ham-radio group for more info.)

As a kid, I would try to pick up AM stations from wherever, log what I
had heard, and send them a postcard about it using the SINPO rating.
Most folks at the stations were nice and would respond with a postcard
of their own with the stations logo and such.  I had my corkboard full
of these. I was in NYC at the time and picked up KFAX in San Francisco
once (but only once.)


"It is impossible to make anything foolproof
because fools are so ingenious"

  - A. Bloch

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

From: Gene S. Berkowitz <first.last@comcast.net>
Subject: Re: 110 V Cord and USB Cable Standards?
Date: Fri, 26 Mar 2004 21:10:15 -0500


In article <telecom23.142.9@telecom-digest.org>, benficus@hotmail.com 
says...

> Speaking of which ...

> Last time I was at Best Buy, they were telling me that I should buy
> the expensive "gold" USB connector for my printer ... the other cable
> will affect the quality of my prints.

> Any thoughts, opinions?

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Radio Shack *used to* (maybe still 
> does in some places) make that claim about the expensive gold-plated
> connectors in almost all applications, coax connectors, etc. I have
> never been able to figure out *why* the gold-plated versions of the
> various size/type connectors are supposed to be better. Our local
> Radio Shack store no longer makes that claim, however.  PAT]

Because gold doesn't oxidize, so the resistance of the connector
doesn't change with time.

 ... and, no, it won't makes a gnat's whisker difference in a print,
because the data is digital, and corruption of the signal would
likely cause it to not print at all, or print gibberish.

 ... as to the 110V plug, those are standardized also.  The figure-8
is sometimes squared off on one side to make it polarized.

--Gene 

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

Date: 27 Mar 2004 03:44:50 -0000
From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com>
Subject: Re: 110 V Cord and USB Cable Standards?
Organization: I.E.C.C., Trumansburg NY USA


> Last time I was at Best Buy, they were telling me that I should buy
> the expensive "gold" USB connector for my printer ... the other cable
> will affect the quality of my prints.

> Any thoughts, opinions?

USB is digital, not analog.  Even if gold contacts improve signal
quality, which is debatable, it doesn't matter.  Any cable will do.

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

Date: Fri, 26 Mar 2004 16:33:25 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Mythtv PVRs for sale


http://www.boingboing.net/2004/03/26/mythtv_pvrs_for_sale.html

posted by Cory Doctorow at 04:12:29 AM

An Aussie company is shipping prebuilt mythtv-based PVRs. These are
souped-up TiVo-like boxen built out of commodity hardware with all the
features that I want, not just the ones that make the Luddites who run
the movie studios comfortable. This analysis of the features
(including several features that the manufacturer lamely decided to
"hide") makes this box pretty drool-worthy indeed. Link (via /.)

http://www.boingboing.net/2004/03/26/mythtv_pvrs_for_sale.html

A quick analysis of d1.com.au's Home Media Center 'update iso'
http://miscname.com/public/HMC/

Home Media Centre
http://www.d1.com.au/hmc/

A Ready-Made MythTV Set-Top Box in Australia
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04/03/25/2222240

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

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