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Subject: TELECOM Digest V23 #275

TELECOM Digest     Fri, 4 Jun 2004 01:40:00 EDT    Volume 23 : Issue 275

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Can Prints Lie? Yes, Man Finds to His Dismay (Monty Solomon)
    Re: Data Mining: Federal Efforts Cover a Wide Range of Uses (Monty Solomon)
    Just Like High-Definition TV, but With Higher Definition (Monty Solomon)
    GILC Alert v8i4 (Monty Solomon)
    Re: How to Tell Which Cellular Company Owns Specific Prefix (J Kelly)
    Re: How to Tell Which Cellular Company Owns Specific Prefix (R. Greenberg)
    Re: How to Tell Which Cellular Company Owns Specific Prefix (Greg Monti)
    Re: How to Tell Which Cellular Company Owns Specific Prefix (Justin Time)
    Re: How to Tell Which Cellular Company Owns Specific Prefix (R Normandeau)
    Re: How to Tell Which Cellular Company Owns Specific Prefix (Joseph)
    Re: How to Tell Which Cellular Company Owns Specific Prefix (John Levine)
    Re: Spam on the Increase (David B. Horvath, CCP)
    Wireless Future (Mike)
    Re: Memories of Illinois Bell in Better Times (Jim Haynes)
    Re: WW II Britain-U.S. Telephone Links? (Dennis Ritchie)
    Hi All From a VOIP Reader (John Vo)
    Xten Launches Free NAT and Firewall Traversal Solution (VOIP News)
    Wireline Phone Service Isn't ALWAYS Best in Emergencies! (VOIP News)
    Stalemate in the Phone Fight (VOIP News)

All contents here are copyrighted by Patrick Townson and the
individual writers/correspondents. Articles may be used in other
journals or newsgroups, provided the writer's name and the Digest are
included in the fair use quote.  By using -any name or email address-
included herein for -any- reason other than responding to an article
herein, you agree to pay a hundred dollars to the recipients of the
email.

               ===========================

Addresses herein are not to be added to any mailing list, nor to be
sold or given away without explicit written consent.  Chain letters,
viruses, porn, spam, and miscellaneous junk are definitely unwelcome.

We must fight spam for the same reason we fight crime: not because we
are naive enough to believe that we will ever stamp it out, but because
we do not want the kind of world that results when no one stands
against crime.   Geoffrey Welsh

               ===========================

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

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

Date: Thu, 3 Jun 2004 19:29:06 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Can Prints Lie? Yes, Man Finds to His Dismay


By BENJAMIN WEISER

In front of the immigration judge, the tall, muscular man began to
weep. No, he had patiently tried to explain, he was not Leo Rosario,
a drug dealer and a prime candidate for deportation.

He was telling the truth. He was Rene Ramon Sanchez, an auto-body
worker and merengue singer from the Bronx who bore not even a passing
resemblance to Mr. Rosario, a complete stranger 12 years his junior
and a half-foot shorter.

"Why don't you get his photo then?" Mr. Sanchez cried out in Spanish,
pounding a fist into his palm. "And compare my fingerprints with his?"

The judge, Alan L. Page, had been told the prints were the same. "The
general rule is, the prints don't lie," Judge Page had said earlier.
"If you got the same prints that Leo Rosario has, you're Leo Rosario.
And there's nothing I can do about it."

So Mr. Sanchez, in late 2000, was sent back for another week in a grim
detention center in Lower Manhattan, severed from his family and
livelihood, because his fingerprints had been mistakenly placed on the
official record of another man.

Remarkably, this was not the first time Mr. Sanchez had paid for that
mistake. He had been arrested three times for Mr. Rosario's crimes,
and ultimately spent a total of two months in custody and was
threatened with deportation before the mistake was traced and resolved
in 2002.

Mr. Sanchez's ordeal, unearthed from court records and interviews,
amounts to a strange, sometimes absurd odyssey through a criminal
justice system that made a single error and then compounded it time
and again by failing to correct it.


http://www.nytimes.com/2004/05/31/nyregion/31IDEN.html?ex=1401336000&en=6fc3c22e435936e1&ei=5007

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

Date: Thu, 3 Jun 2004 19:13:10 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Re: Data Mining: Federal Efforts Cover a Wide Range of Uses


Excerpt from
	ACLU Online:  June 3, 2004

ACLU QUESTIONS GOVERNMENT ON DATA SURVEILLANCE OF AMERICANS

A new report released by the United States General Accounting Office
(GAO) just last week revealed that at least four programs used by the
Defense Intelligence Agency and the Department of Homeland Security
may be accessing and analyzing private-sector databases in ways that
approach the "data surveillance" of ordinary citizens.

"We always knew that the Pentagon's 'Total Information Awareness'
program was not the only data-surveillance program out there, but it
now appears possible that such activities are even more widespread
than we imagined," said Barry Steinhardt, Director of the ACLU's
Technology and Liberty Program.

The GAO's investigation uncovered 199 government uses of the
statistical analysis techniques known as data-mining, 54 of which use
private-sector data. Such information could include any data held in
corporate or other private hands, including credit-card records and
Internet logs.

The ACLU is conducting an immediate inquiry to find out whether these
programs are indeed threatening, or whether their use of information
is benign.

For the full text of the ACLU's press release on the GAO report, click
here: http://www.aclu.org/Privacy/Privacy.cfm?ID=15860&c=130

The GAO report isn't the only recent revelation related to the
government's use of "data-mining" of U.S. citizens. On May 20th, the
ACLU released documents containing disturbing new revelations about
the MATRIX (the Multistate Anti-TeRrorism Information eXchange)
database surveillance program, including the fact that it was under
the direct managerial control of the U.S. Department of Homeland
Security, and that Florida Governor Jeb Bush gave a personal briefing
on the program to Vice President Dick Cheney.

The MATRIX surveillance system combines information about individuals
from government databases and private-sector data companies, and makes
that data available for search by government officials to comb through
the millions of files in a search for "anomalies" that may be
indicative of terrorist or other criminal activity.

To view the ACLU's White Paper, "The MATRIX: Total Information
Awareness Reloaded," simply click on the link below:
http://www.aclu.org/Privacy/Privacy.cfm?ID=15830&c=130

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

Date: Thu, 3 Jun 2004 19:43:05 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Just Like High-Definition TV, but With Higher Definition


WHAT'S NEXT

By DOUGLAS HEINGARTNER

HIGH-DEFINITION television may be only just beginning to catch on, but
researchers at the Japanese national broadcaster NHK are already
working on a successor. The format, called Ultra High Definition
Video, or UHDV, has a resolution 16 times greater than plain-old HDTV,
and its stated goal is to achieve a level of sensory immersion that
approximates actually being there.

At a picture size of 7,680 by 4,320 pixels -- that works out to 32 
million pixels -- UHDV's resolution trounces even high-end digital 
still cameras. HDTV, by comparison, has about two million pixels, and 
normal TV about 200,000 (and only 480 lines of horizontal resolution 
versus 4,000 with UHDV).

Add to that UHDV's beefed-up refresh rate of 60 frames per second
(twice that of conventional video), projected onto a 450-inch diagonal
screen with more than 20 channels of audio, and you've got an
impressive home theater on your hands.

Of course, UHDV's current dimensions make it impractical for most
homes. The NHK researchers are investigating how to squeeze all those
pixels onto smaller screens.


http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/03/technology/circuits/03next.html

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

Date: Thu, 3 Jun 2004 18:42:19 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: GILC Alert v8i4


Welcome to the Global Internet Liberty Campaign Newsletter.

Welcome to GILC Alert, the newsletter of the Global Internet Liberty
Campaign. We are an international organization of groups working for
cyber-liberties, who are determined to preserve civil liberties and
human rights on the Internet.

We hope you find this newsletter interesting, and we very much hope
that you will avail yourselves of the action items in future issues.
If you are a part of an organization that would be interested in
joining GILC, please contact us at <gilc@gilc.org>.

If you are aware of threats to cyber-liberties that we may not know 
about, please contact the GILC members in your country, or contact 
GILC as a whole.

Please feel free to redistribute this newsletter to appropriate forums.

===============================================
Free expression
[1] Jailed Vietnamese Net dissident on hunger strike
[2] Controversial French digital economy bill in final phases
[3] Shanghai cybercafe users face further restrictions
[4] Net journalists detained in the Maldives
[5] RIAA launches a further round of file-sharer lawsuits
[6] Vietnam website blocking broader than previously thought
[7] New Canadian copyright proposal might stifle Net speech
[8] Google feature blocks many non-controversial websites
[9] Japanese gov't plans crippling of digital TV
[10] North Korean protestors start Internet radio service
[11] New joint initiative to defend cyberliberties

Privacy
[12] European Union considers new data retention plan
[13] Continued controversy over Google Gmail privacy flaws
[14] Spyware problems may lead more U.S. legislation
[15] Debate over U.S. spy-friendly Net tapping rules heats up
[16] Microsoft belatedly releases several new security patches
[17] Serious security flaw in vital Internet protocol system
[18] Studies indicate Internet privacy awareness lags
[19] U.S. Big Brother Awards for 2004 handed out
[20] EFF Pioneer Awards winners announced

http://www.gilc.org/alert/alert84.html

http://www.hrea.org/lists/huridocs-tech/markup/msg01130.html

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

From: J Kelly <jkelly@newsguy.com>
Subject: Re: How to Tell Which Cellular Company "Owns" Specific Prefix?
Date: Thu, 03 Jun 2004 17:47:55 -0500
Organization: http://newsguy.com
Reply-To: jkelly@newsguy.com


On 2 Jun 2004 23:14:19 -0700, tee_earls@hotmail.com (Tee) wrote:

> Does anyone know how to determine from a area code / prefix which
> cellular company owns it?  I realize with number portability now, this
> isn't 100% accurate, but I'm willing to take a chance.  I'm
> specifically looking for 850-637-xxxx.  The best I can find is that
> it's probably a cellular company in the Pensacola, FL area.

> Any ideas?

> Thanks.

http://www.telcodata.us

AT&T WIRELESS SERVICES, INC
Pensalcola, FL

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

From: richgr@panix.com (Rich Greenberg)
Subject: Re: How to Tell Which Cellular Company "Owns" Specific Prefix?
Date: 3 Jun 2004 19:16:44 -0400
Organization: Organized?  Me?


I use  http://www.telcodata.us/telcodata/telco for such queries.

For your exchange, it shows:

850-637 FL  AT&T WIRELESS SERVICES, INC. 6010 PENSACOLA PNSCFLBLCM6
00/00/0000 Prefix Type: WIRELESS
Switch Name: 
Switch Type: 
LATA: Pensacola FL (448)
Tandem: 
Detailed Switch Info|CO Info
 
(The cut/paste made a mess of the formatting.  Several of these items
are actually links to additional data.)


Rich Greenberg N6LRT Marietta, GA, USA richgr atsign panix.com + 1 770 321 6507
Eastern time zone.   I speak for myself & my dogs only.     VM'er since CP-67
Canines:Val, Red & Shasta (RIP),Red, husky                   Owner:Chinook-L
Atlanta Siberian Husky Rescue. www.panix.com/~richgr/   Asst Owner:Sibernet-L

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

From: Greg Monti <greg.monti@verizon.net>
Subject: Re: How to Tell Which Cellular Company "Owns" Specific Prefix?
Date: Thu, 3 Jun 2004 22:25:35 -0400


It's AT&T Wireless Services.  To find this, I went to

http://www.areacode-info.com  then clicked on the tab for Plans, then the
submenu for Local Calling Areas.

Another resource with similar data:

http://www.telcodata.us/  Click on Lookup by Areacode/Exchange.

You are right that local number portability is not reflected in either
of these databases.  Individual numbers can be ported to other
companies.  The carrier listed, in this case AT&T Wireless, is the
"incumbent" or "historical" owner of that prefix.

Greg Monti, New York, New York, USA
gmonti@mindspring.com

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

From: a_user2000@yahoo.com (Justin Time)
Subject: Re: How to Tell Which Cellular Company "Owns" Specific Prefix?
Date: 3 Jun 2004 13:03:22 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


850-637	AS 6010	AT&T WIRELESS SERVICES, INC.	PENSACOLA	PNSCFLBLCM6

Rodgers Platt

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

From: rayta@msn.com (Ray Normandeau)
Subject: Re: How to Tell Which Cellular Company "Owns" Specific Prefix?
Date: 3 Jun 2004 11:10:12 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


tee_earls@hotmail.com (Tee) wrote in message
news:<telecom23.274.8@telecom-digest.org>:

> Does anyone know how to determine from a area code / prefix which
> cellular company owns it?  I realize with number portability now, this
> isn't 100% accurate, but I'm willing to take a chance.  I'm
> specifically looking for 850-637-xxxx.  The best I can find is that
> it's probably a cellular company in the Pensacola, FL area.

> Any ideas?

> Thanks.

According to:
http://www.fonefinder.net/index.php

It's AT&T WIRELESS SERVICES, INC.

See  https://www.onesuite.com/
Long distance at MAXIMUM 2.9 Cents Per Minute for USA calls and to
Canada for 3.5CPM. If you don't use the 800# access, rate is even
cheaper! It is basically a prepaid phone card but you can do away with
the PIN for calls from home. Program it as a speed dial, you don't
even have to remember their #. No monthly fee or minimum. There is a
surchage for calls from payphones. If you use the promotion code
"034720367" we both get some free miniutes.

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

From: Joseph <JoeOfSeattle@yahoo.NONOcom>
Subject: Re: How to Tell Which Cellular Company "Owns" Specific Prefix?
Date: Thu, 03 Jun 2004 15:40:51 -0700
Organization: Posted via Supernews, http://www.supernews.com
Reply-To: JoeOfSeattle@yahoo.NONOcom


http://telcodata.us is one.  www.nanpa.com is another.

850-637

Pensacola, FL that NPA/prefix is assigned to AT&T Wireless

           remove NONO from .NONOcom to reply

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

Date: 4 Jun 2004 04:51:07 -0000
From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com>
Subject: Re: How to Tell Which Cellular Company "Owns" Specific Prefix?
Organization: I.E.C.C., Trumansburg NY USA


> Does anyone know how to determine from a area code / prefix which
> cellular company owns it?  I realize with number portability now, this
> isn't 100% accurate, but I'm willing to take a chance.  I'm
> specifically looking for 850-637-xxxx.  The best I can find is that
> it's probably a cellular company in the Pensacola, FL area.

NANPA has handy downloadable prefix files as plain text or Access MDB.

To save you the trouble, 850-637 is AT&T Wireless (soon to be Cingular)
in Pensacola.

Regards,

John Levine, johnl@iecc.com, Primary Perpetrator of "The Internet for Dummies",
Information Superhighwayman wanna-be, http://www.johnlevine.com, Mayor
"I dropped the toothpaste", said Tom, crestfallenly.

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

Date: Thu,  3 Jun 2004 10:51:06 -0400
Subject: Re: Possible_SPAM  Spam on the Increase
From: David B. Horvath, CCP <removed at users request>


Please remove my email address; you can leave my *name* though.

On Thu, 3 Jun 2004 09:26:51 EDT, our esteemed moderator wrote:

> Have any of you noticed how, since around mid-May, the spam 
> traffic has gotten worse than usual?  I have to wonder if they 
> are aiming for a nearly total-spam network?  

Well, I'm glad I'm not the only one with that problem!

> The Spam Assassin point score is presently set for
> three. It had been set for five; moving it down to 
> three sent a lot more to the spam box (where I only 
> check to see if I recognize the name before bashing it). 

My ISP has it set at 6.5 which catches most. Unfortunately, it also
catches a lot of important email like TELECOM!  I set up a rule that
acts as an exception to "move 'possible_spam' to spam mailbox' just
for TELECOM.

The following is from the latest digest:

> X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 2.61 (1.212.2.1-2003-12-09-exp) 
> on [DELETED]

> Content analysis details:   (13.3 points, 6.5 required)

>  pts rule name              description
> ---- ---------------------- ------------------------------------------
--------
>  0.3 NO_REAL_NAME           From: does not include a real name
>  0.1 OACYS_SINGLE           BODY: A single consonant surrounded by 
                                    whitespace, minus some of the obvious FP's
>  0.1 LG_4C_2V_3C            BODY: Gibberish found?
>  1.0 J_CHICKENPOX_12        BODY: {1}Letter - punctuation - {2}Letter
>  1.0 J_CHICKENPOX_27        BODY: {2}Letter - punctuation - {7}Letter
>  1.0 J_CHICKENPOX_42        BODY: {4}Letter - punctuation - {2}Letter
>  3.0 OACYS_DOT_OBFUSC       BODY: Obfuscating text using .'s (i.e. p.orn)
>  1.0 J_CHICKENPOX_81        BODY: {8}Letter - punctuation - {1}Letter
>  0.0 LINES_OF_YELLING       BODY: A WHOLE LINE OF YELLING DETECTED
>  0.0 MAILTO_TO_REMOVE       URI: Includes a 'remove' email address
>  1.0 FVGT_u_DOM_START_NUM   URI: FVGT - domain name starts with numbers
>  1.0 FVGT_u_DOM_END_NUM     URI: FVGT - domain name ends with numbers
>  2.4 FVGT_u_BZ_TLD          URI: FVGT - Contains a URL in the BZ, TC, 
                                          US or WS top-level domain
>  1.4 FVGT_u_BIZ_SITE        URI: FVGT - contains a URL in the BIZ top-
                                          level domain

Just thought you'd like to know.

- David

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

From: yared22311@yahoo.com (Mike)
Subject: Wireless Future
Date: 3 Jun 2004 12:36:59 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Fairfax resident Michael Kelley expects to be able to connect to the
Internet through completely portable and mobile broadband access in
one to two years.

http://www.washtimes.com/metro/20040602-094029-2609r.htm

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

Subject: Re: Memories of Illinois Bell in Better Times
Reply-To: jhaynes@alumni.uark.edu
Organization: University of Arkansas Alumni
From: haynes@alumni.uark.edu (Jim Haynes)
Date: Thu, 03 Jun 2004 21:15:13 GMT


In article <telecom23.271.9@telecom-digest.org>,
Lisa Hancock <hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com> wrote:

> TELECOM Digest Editor <ptownson@telecom-digest.org> wrote: 
>> How does the old song phrase it? "Things to painful to remember, we simply

>> Across the street and up a block from the c.o. was a Pixley
>> and Ehlers Cafeteria. In the 1960's there were as many Pixley and Ehlers

> Sounds just like the beloved Horn & Hardart restaurant chain in 
> Philadelphia and New York.  They were noted for the popular

At least the Philadelphia chain has been memorialized in music.
There's the song "Diamonds are a Girl's Best Friend" containing the
line "... won't pay the rental on your humble flat, or dinner at the
Automat ..."  And then there is the P.D.Q. Bach composition, "Concerto
for Horn and Hardart".  I don't believe Pixley & Ehlers has been so
honored.

I once did a study of cafeterias, using the Yellow Pages back when
libraries held a lot of phone books.  Cafeterias are big in Texas, or
at least they were, with Austin having probably nine of them, in
several chains and independents.  The only one I found in California
was in Bakersfield, which is a lot like Texas (hot and has oil).
Eventually I saw a statement in the business press by an official of a
cafeteria chain, to the effect that in the South the cafeteria is
viewed as a nice place to take the family after church on Sunday, but
in the North it is viewed as a gathering place for derelicts.  --

jhhaynes at earthlink dot net

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

From: Dennis Ritchie <dmr@bell-labs.com>
Subject: Re: WW II Britain-U.S. Telephone Links?
Date: Fri, 4 Jun 2004 02:37:00 -0000
Organization: Bell Labs


R. T. Wurth <rwurth@att.net> wrote in message
news:telecom23.274.9@telecom-digest.org:

> One radio circuit
> was regularly used between Roosevelt and Churchill, and Bell Labs
> developed an encryption system called "Green Hornet."  The name
> came about because the signals sounded like the theme song of the
> like-named radio show.  It was rather innovative.  They broke the
> voice into several frequency bands (ranges of tones), sampled the
> level in each band, and encoded the levels as digits (decimal, I
> think).  

> This is all from memory of old descriptions I've read, but I'm sure a
> look in some IEEE (or some pre-merger IRE/AIEE) literature or an old
> BSTJ comprehensive index for "Green Hornet" would have all the
> details.

A fairly complete account of this scheme (which was decidedly not open
to the public or the GIs) is to be found at
www.nsa.gov/publications/publi00019.cfm Wurth's memories seem correct.

Search for SIGSALY under the www.nsa.gov home page.  There are
accounts (referenced in the above link) to the IEEE publication and
other places.

Dennis

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

From: John Vo <wither_27@yahoo.com>
Date: Thu, 3 Jun 2004 18:58:48 PDT
Subject: Hi All From a VOIP News Reader
Reply-To: VoIPnews@yahoogroups.com


I am new to VOIP and new to this group. Hope to learn from you guys.
 
Take care.
 
John

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

From: VOIP News <voip news>
Date: Thu, 03 Jun 2004 11:50:32 -0400
Subject: Xten Launches Free NAT and Firewall Traversal Solution
Reply-To: VoIPnews@yahoogroups.com


http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/06-02-2004/0002186199&EDATE=

Xten Launches Free NAT and Firewall Traversal Solution for
Standards-based Voice and Video over IP.
 
    SANTA CLARA,  CA, June  2 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -  Xten Networks,
Inc.  (OTCBB:XNWK)  has announced today  the release of XTunnels  as a
free  NAT (Network  Address Translation),  Firewall and  Private Proxy
traversal solution for SIP  endpoints. VoIP softphones and hard phones
incorporating XTunnels  can now receive  voice and video  calls across
NAT-enabled firewalls  without adjusting or modifying  anything on the
private network, as is the case with Xten softphones today.

    "Our industry needed a solution to this problem for the benefit of
all who are interested in the rapid expansion of Voice and Video over
IP," said Erik Lagerway, co-founder and Chief Operating Officer of
Xten, "All Xten softphones support XTunnels, which allows Service
Provider, Carrier and MSO customers, interested in deploying Xten
softphones, to do so without the additional capital outlay of an
expensive NAT traversal solution."

    A very significant obstacle standing in the way of mainstream
deployment of Voice and Video over IP today concerns security issues
at the edge of the network. Prior to Xten's XTunnels solution,
companies wanting to deploy VoIP in a secure network interconnected to
an open network (the Internet) had to contemplate using solutions such
as SBCs (Session Border Controllers) to achieve this. SBCs sometimes
fail to solve the problem in scenarios where reverse UDP mapping is
not enabled or turned off, which is the case in most corporate
firewalls. Another solution would be to replace the local user
firewall, which is costly and cumbersome for the end user or corporate
network IT manager.

    XTunnels is the only free solution that solves almost all of the
NAT and Firewall traversal problems plaguing standards-based VoIP
today. For more information visit http://www.XTunnels.org

    About Xten Networks, Inc.

    Xten is a provider of award-winning, high-quality, carrier-grade
SIP- based VoIP software and softphones. Xten's goal is to be the
primary choice in SIP-based client-side audio and video IP
communications software for Telecoms, Cable Providers and Internet
Telephony Service Providers. Those who are interested in Xten products
should visit sales.xten.com On the Web: http://www.xten.com

    For more information, please contact:

        Mark Bruk, CEO
        408.876.4346 ext 4
        mark@xten.com

SOURCE Xten Networks Inc.

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 <voip news>
Date: Thu, 03 Jun 2004 23:32:43 -0400
Subject: Wireline Phone Service Isn't ALWAYS Best in Emergencies!
Reply-To: VoIPnews@yahoogroups.com


The next time you hear some regulator or other uninformed person
trying to get VoIP regulated out of existence because it doesn't yet
support "enhanced" 911 or some such thing, you might want to send them
a copy of this news from FastLine Mesh Networks, a wireless ISP in
Louisiana and Texas.  In some situations you really are better off
with the new technologies rather than the old (especially if you have
a good uninterruptable power supply).

http://www.fastlineinternet.com/news.html

June 2, 2004  

A violent storm front swept across the Ark-La-Tex this morning,
leaving a scene of devastation in it's wake. However, as a testimony
to the advantages of wireless broadband -- not a single client was
affected in Vivian, LA. According to Fastline representative Kenny
Bain, "We had trees uprooted and power lines down, but none of our
access points were affected. The lightning was so violent that it
shook my house every time it struck!"

Bain went on to say, "Of course, no one is immune to the effects of
bad weather, but we faired much better than the telephone and cable
companies did. There were poles that were snapped in two and wires all
over the place in some parts of town." Many businesses reported no
phone service and a few were still without electricity hours after the
storms swept through. However, Fastline clients were able to use VoIP
telephone service to send and receive calls as if nothing had
happened.

According to Bain, "This clearly demonstrates the advantages of the
wireless mesh. Even if we would have lost our backbone connection in
Vivian, we now have the option of pulling bandwidth from our sister
network in Linden, Texas which is 21 miles away."
 
The above text plus storm damage photos at:
http://www.fastlineinternet.com/news.html

Commentary (of sorts) on the above text here:
http://www.newswireless.net/articles/040603-tornado.html

Additional (slightly off-topic) comment: Many wireless Internet
providers do not price their services competitively.  This one, on the
other hand, has just about the most reasonable pricing I've seen in a
long time.  If other wireless broadband companies would price their
services in a similar manner, they'd have no shortage of customers AND
the VoIP companies would have another way to get to customers in areas
where neither cable broadband nor DSL are available.  Check out the
pricing here:

http://www.fastlineinternet.com/services.html

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 <voip news>
Date: Fri, 04 Jun 2004 00:01:52 -0400
Subject: Stalemate in the Phone Fight
Reply-To: VoIPnews@yahoogroups.com


http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/jun2004/tc2004064_7347_tc024.htm

By Catherine Yang

Long-distance carriers' inability to strike a local-access deal with
the Baby Bells could claim an unlikely victim: President Bush

While most Americans were grilling hot dogs over Memorial Day weekend,
the CEOs of the nation's largest phone companies were holed up at a
hotel in Washington. Convened by Federal Communications Commission
Chairman Michael Powell, the chiefs of Verizon, SBC Corp., BellSouth
Corp., and Qwest Communications faced off across the table with their
counterparts from long-distance giants AT&T and MCI. Their task: to
break a deadlock and reach agreements for the Baby Bells to lease
their networks to the long-distance guys, which want to build out
their own competitive local-calling business.

After arduous negotiations, the group produced just one deal between
the two weaker players of the bunch -- MCI and Qwest. "We're very
disappointed that the Memorial Day weekend negotiations failed," says
an AT&T spokesperson. "The only agreement that most of the Bell
monopolies seemed interested in striking was one that increased prices
substantially on consumers and small businesses immediately."

The Bells may not agree with that characterization. But one thing's
for sure: It's bad news for the Bush Administration, which during an
already difficult election year had hoped to avoid getting sucked into
one of the most intractable issues in telecom. The failure of the
weekend phone summit seemed to dim the outlook for further agreements
between the biggest Bells and the long-suffering long-distance
carriers.

TECH SOLUTIONS.  The long-distance carriers have struggled for nearly
a decade to make inroads in the local-calling market. Ironically,
before it's all over, technology -- not regulators, negotiations, or
court battles -- may be their best strategy for getting past the Baby
Bells, as Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) technologies gain
momentum, experts say.

Full story at:
http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/jun2004/tc2004064_7347_tc024.htm

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

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