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Subject: TELECOM Digest V23 #281

TELECOM Digest     Tue, 8 Jun 2004 01:43:00 EDT    Volume 23 : Issue 281

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Sonos Digital Music System (Monty Solomon)
    Verizon's New 'SuperPages On the Go' Gives Cell Users Quick (Monty Solomon)
    Supermarkets Look to Automated Checkout (Monty Solomon)
    California Group Sues Wireless Companiess Over 'Locked' Phones (M Solomon)
    Apple Unveils AirPort Express for Mac & PC Users (Monty Solomon)
    Rhino Retro Club (Monty Solomon)
    Re: Zombie PCs Spew Out 80% of Spam (Barry Margolin)
    Dialpad Experiences? (Dr. Joel M. Hoffman)
    Re: Declan McCullagh: Why the FCC Should Die (Fred Goldstein)
    Re: Public Copy Cost Unchanged (Tony P.)
    Re: Who Got the Message? There's a Way to Know (Tony P.)
    Re: Tapping Telephone Lines - 1970s (Tony P.)
    Usenet Frustration (Lisa Hancock)
    Free IP PBX Tutorials, Whitepapers, PDF's -- Get IP PBX (Sitekeeper)
    Last Laugh! Pompous Circumstances (TELECOM Digest Editor)

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: Mon, 7 Jun 2004 18:45:23 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Sonos Digital Music System


Multi-Zone Digital Music System Renders the Traditional Black Stereo 
Rack Obsolete

CARLSBAD, CALIF., June 7, 2004 - Digital music fans can now listen to
rock in the garden, punk in the playroom and fusion in the bedroom,
with the launch of the Sonos Digital Music System, which is previewing
this week at the "D2: All Things Digital" conference in Carlsbad,
Calif. The Sonos offering is the first and only multi-zone digital
music system with a wireless, full-color LCD screen controller that
lets consumers play all their digital music, all over their home,
while controlling it all from the palm of their hand.

The Sonos Digital Music System is comprised of two stylish components:
the Sonos ZonePlayer, a networked audio player that distributes, plays
and amplifies music in any "zone" in the home, and the Sonos
Controller, a wireless handheld device with a full-color screen which
allows the user to access, customize and control the music anywhere-
from the bedroom to the backyard.

The ZonePlayer delivers great sound in every room through a powerful
and compact 50 Watts/channel amplifier with component-quality audio
specifications. The ZonePlayer can access and play a wide variety of
music formats, including MP3, WMA, AAC (MPEG4) and WAV, stored on a
PC, Mac or Network Attached Storage (NAS), and comes bundled with
customizable Internet Radio stations. Built-in wired and wireless
capabilities provide the consumer flexibility of installation at no
extra cost.

The intuitive Controller, designed with a full-color LCD screen and
touch-sensitive scroll wheel, provides consumers with simplicity -
pick a zone, pick a song and hit play - unrestricted by line of
sight. Consumers can play the same song synchronously in every room or
play different songs in different rooms, queue-up favorites for the
evening or rediscover their collection via random play; the options
are virtually unlimited. The high resolution LCD shows what is playing
in any zone at any time, including album art when available.

Network set-up is simple as the system automatically configures a
secure wireless mesh network that seamlessly links the consumer's
existing digital music library to the ZonePlayers and Controllers.
The systems modular design allows the user to decide upon the number
of ZonePlayers and Controllers needed based upon lay-out of the home
and personal needs.

http://sonos.com/news_and_reviews/press_releases/2004/pr_0606_launch.htm

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

Date: Mon, 7 Jun 2004 21:58:52 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Verizon's New 'SuperPages On the Go' Gives Cell Users Quick Access


     Access to Driving Directions, Weather Reports, Movie Show-Times
     and Much More

SAN DIEGO, June 7 /PRNewswire/ -- Consumers can now quickly find the
latest hit movie, where it's playing and when it's showing just by
tapping a few keys on their mobile phones.  The newest generation of
Verizon's SuperPages On the Go finds everything from hot movies to
cool weather forecasts anywhere in the United States.  Maps and
driving directions, directory information -- even Mobil Travel Guide
restaurant and hotel reviews -- are available.

"It's nationwide information in your pocket," said Pat Marshall, vice
president -- marketing for Verizon Information Services.  "Today's
wireless users depend on their phone to be more than just a
communications device.  SuperPages On the Go revolutionizes the way
consumers use their cell phones."

Verizon unveiled its advanced version of SuperPages On the Go today at
the annual BREW Developers Conference in San Diego.  The new
application is available on Verizon Wireless LG6000, 4600 and 4500
phones.  Consumers can download Verizon SuperPages On the Go for $1.25
for daily use or $2.49 a month for unlimited usage -- about the cost
of two directory assistance calls.

Nationwide features include:

     -- White and yellow pages listings
     -- Reverse number lookup
     -- Weather reports and forecasts
     -- Mobil Travel Guide restaurant and hotel reviews
     -- Maps and driving directions
     -- Movie information, including show times, locations and feature
        highlights

     - http://finance.lycos.com/home/news/story.asp?story=41823970

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

Date: Mon, 7 Jun 2004 22:00:30 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Supermarkets Look to Automated Checkout


By IRA DREYFUSS Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Supermarket checkout clerks are going the way of
the bank teller _ available if you want one, avoidable if you don't.
Self-checkout machines, which let customers scan, bag and pay for
their own groceries, offer shoppers a chance to avoid the lines at the
checkout stands.

      - http://finance.lycos.com/home/news/story.asp?story=41820013

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

Date: Mon, 7 Jun 2004 22:02:34 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: California Group Sues Wireless Companies Over "Locked" Phones


LOS ANGELES, June 7 (Reuters) - Claiming cell phone users are being
unfairly denied the right to use existing handsets when they switch
carriers, a California consumer group sued three of the nation's
largest wireless companies on Monday.

In a suit filed in Los Angeles Superior Court, the Foundation for
Taxpayer and Consumer Rights said Cingular Wireless, AT&T Wireless
Services Inc. (NYSE:AWE) and T-Mobile USA were unfairly "locking"
phones so that even if a customer changed their phone number to a
different carrier, they could not continue to use the same phone.

A spokeswoman for Cingular, a joint venture of SBC Communications
Inc. (NYSE:SBC) and BellSouth Corp. (NYSE:BLS), said the company had
not reviewed the suit and could not comment.

A spokesman for AT&T Wireless was not immediately available to
comment. A spokesman for T-Mobile USA, a unit of Deutsche Telekom AG
(DE:DTEGn), said the company does not comment on litigation.

In the lawsuit, the foundation said that because the companies all use
the same wireless network standard, called GSM, customers should be
able to use the same phone across those carriers' networks just by
changing out an easily-replaced unit called a "SIM card" inside the
phone.

But the foundation said the carriers use techniques to lock the phones
so that customers can not carry them from one service to another,
except in certain circumstances.

     - http://finance.lycos.com/home/news/story.asp?story=41839422

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

Date: Mon, 7 Jun 2004 21:47:32 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Apple Unveils AirPort Express for Mac & PC Users


World's First 802.11g Mobile Base Station Features AirTunes Music Networking

CUPERTINO, Calif., June 7 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Apple(R) today
unveiled AirPort(R) Express, the world's first 802.11g mobile base
station that can be plugged directly into the wall for wireless
Internet connections and USB printing, or thrown into a laptop bag to
bring wireless freedom to hotel rooms with broadband connections. 
Airport Express also features analog and digital audio outputs that
can be connected to a stereo and AirTunes music networking software
which works seamlessly with iTunes(R), giving users a simple and
inexpensive way to wirelessly stream iTunes music on their Mac(R) or
PC to any room in the house. AirPort Express features a single piece
ultra- compact design weighing just 6.7 ounces, and will be available
to Mac and PC users starting in July for just $129.

     - http://finance.lycos.com/home/news/story.asp?story=41827585

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

Date: Mon, 7 Jun 2004 21:52:43 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Rhino Retro Club


     Rhino Records and Verizon Wireless Launch Rhino Retro Club

New Subscription Service Offers Verizon Wireless Get It Now Subscribers

Ringtones, Wallpaper and Content from Leading Catalog Music Label

SAN DIEGO and BEDMINSTER, N.J., June 7 /PRNewswire/ -- Rhino Records
and Verizon Wireless, the nation's leading wireless provider, today
announced the debut of the Rhino Retro Club, a new service available
exclusively to Verizon Wireless Get It Now(R) customers.  Verizon
Wireless customers with select Get It Now-enabled phones can now
download the Rhino Retro Club application and access ringtones,
wallpapers and other digital content from famous Rhino and Warner
Music Group artists.

Verizon Wireless customers of all ages now have access to their
favorite oldies-but-goodies by downloading Rhino Retro Club onto their
Get It Now- enabled wireless phones. Available through Verizon
Wireless' Get It Now virtual store, the Rhino Retro Club connects its
members to some of the greatest popular music of the past
half-century. With plenty of titles to choose from, Rhino Retro Club
offers customers the ability to browse through and choose songs from
their favorite artists including, Aretha Franklin, The Doors, The
B-52s, Echo & The Bunnymen, and Chicago.

     - http://finance.lycos.com/home/news/story.asp?story=41827639

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

From: Barry Margolin <barmar@alum.mit.edu>
Subject: Re: Zombie PCs Spew Out 80% of Spam
Organization: Looking for work
Date: Mon, 07 Jun 2004 21:46:48 -0400


In article <telecom23.279.8@telecom-digest.org>, John McHarry
<mcharryj@bellsouth.net> wrote:

> SELLCOM Tech support wrote:

>> Yes, when a spam site pops up in China, CUT CHINA!!!
>> Yes, when a spam site pops up in Russia, CUT RUSSIA!!

> It is a nice daydream, but it isn't just that it won't be done that
> way, it would be technically "very difficult". The Internet was
> designed to be self healing. True, it appears to hub and spoke out of
> the US at present, but there are all sorts of other paths. If an
> ISP's, or a country's path through the US is cut, its traffic will
> automatically reroute to whoever is still connected that has the best
> path.

If an ISP is filtering traffic, it doesn't matter what route it takes
 -- it should be filtered at all the borders.  Or they can put the
filter on their mail servers.

Also, the Internet isn't quite as self-healing as you think.  Most
ISPs prohibit transit traffic except from their paying customers.  The
only routes they advertise are for their customers' networks, not
networks that they can reach via another ISP.  In an emergency they
can adjust this (e.g. after 9/11, ISPs whose interconnects were still
up were providing transit service for those who lost theirs in the
attack), but normally this is how it works.

It would be possible for a country to force their traffic to reroute
manually, but if the ISP they're hijacking for this notices they'll
just cut them off, and probably notify other ISPs that this is
happening.


Barry Margolin, barmar@alum.mit.edu
Arlington, MA
*** PLEASE post questions in newsgroups, not directly to me ***

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

Date: Tue, 08 Jun 2004 01:55:48 GMT
From: joel@exc.com (Dr. Joel M. Hoffman)
Subject: Dialpad Experiences?
Organization: Excelsior Computer Services


I'll be overseas soon, and I was thinking how convenient it would be
to be able to make cheap phone calls back to the US over an Internet
connection, because I expect I'll have access to the Internet, but my
GSM phone won't always have service.  (It will also be much cheaper,
because even where I *do* have service, like at the airport, I'll be
paying exorbitant roaming fees.)

Well, not surprisingly, it turns out that a company already offers
this: Dialpad.

Has anyone here used Dialpad?

Anything I should know before signing up?  It looks great for what I
need.

Thanks.

-Joel

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

Date: Mon, 07 Jun 2004 21:59:21 -0400
From: Fred Goldstein <SeeSigForEmail@wn6.wn.net>
Subject: Re: Declan McCullagh: Why the FCC Should Die


Declan McCullagh wrote in CNET, quoted on the Digest,

> It's time to abolish the Federal Communications Commission.

> The reason is simple. The venerable FCC, created in 1934, is no longer
> necessary.

McCullagh's position is wrongheaded, and highly anticompetitive.  His
article actually cites Huber's book, which proposed converting
existing radio station licenses into property, so that the licensee of
an FM radio station instead ends up with chattel ownership of 200 kHz,
to do what they want with it.  It's a wingnut's fantasy, a huge
transfer of public wealth (the radio spectrum) to private interests
(licensees), with the current need to serve the "public interest"
replaced by a total obeisance to shareholders' interests, in the name
of doctrinaire laissez-faire capitalism.

But it's the telecom area that really needs countering.  Yes, the
current FCC is profoundly broken.  It's internally paralyzed, has a
new internal organizational model that is certainly no serious
improvement over the old one, and cannot express a thought clearly.
It regulates by indirection, picking winners and losers privately and
coming up with indirect ways to favor them.  Its main beneficiaries
are the lawyers who try to pick up after them.  So one might think
that the FCC's charter is broken, but that's not it at all.  It's
simply the leadership and the politics behind it; this FCC, much worse
than its predecessor, is clearly led by a celebrity princeling who
just doesn't get it.  A change in leadership is necessary, not
abolition.

The reason is simply that the telecommunications industry *is* highly
concentrated.  The Incumbent Local Exchange Carriers have monopoly
power.  In the European Union, IIRC, a company with a 25% market share
is suspected of having monopoly power, and scrutinized for abuses
thereof.  The USA is very, very loose on antitrust regulation, and the
ILEC monopolies were granted legally, so the antitrust laws only (per
the Trinko decision) apply to attempts to extend the monopolies into
new areas.  Demonopolization is entirely the province of the Telecom
Act, not antitrust.  And the Telecom Act puts the FCC in the lead.

Without regulation, a monopoly will simply squash competitors.  This
is particularly true in telecom for two reasons.  One is the "natural
monopoly".  This refers, properly (albeit not in popular use), to the
case where a given industry has positive economies of scale and a
dominant provider.  The unit cost of the dominant provider is lower
than that of a new competitor, so the economics of competition are
dismal.  Wireline local services, including cable, in particular are
subject to this.  Most of the cost is in passing homes, so a 10%
market-share player's cost will be several times higher than a 70%
market-share player's.  Overbuilders thus tend to "win" only in niche
markets where the incumbent's service is substandard and thus a new
competitor is clearly superior.

The other reason is the network effect: A network's value rises with
the number of users that it reaches.  Federal regulations, enforced by
the FCC, require *interconnection* between networks.  A CLEC with ten
customers can interconnect as a peer with the incumbent.  The
incumbent, of course, has no interest in allowing this.  The
incumbent, absent regulation, would shut off interconnection to its
competitors in a heartbeat.  This wouldn't occur if the incumbent's
market share were small, but it's necessary to force interconnection
*until* the monopoly is broken, and the ex-monopoly has a pecuniary
interest in retaining interconnection.

The Internet has no dominant player, so everyone willingly
interconnects.  Worldcom wasn't allowed to buy Sprint, largely for
that reason.  (Thank the EU's "SuperMario" Monti for leading the
opposition.)  In an FCC-less fully-deregulated world, Verizon and SBC
would not be so kind.  They might deign to permit competitors to
purchase access to their networks, as premium-priced customers rather
than peers, if they thought it was profitable enough. That's hardly a
way to get competition though.

Remember, the only reason the public Internet exists is because the
FCC, over the *strenuous* objections of the Bell System, overrode
restrictions on "sharing" of leased lines.  Before that,
non-common-carrier networks (like the Internet) could not be run
between customers.  Leased lines, necessary for high-speed data, were
limited to intra-company use.  And the FCC, over the *strenuous*
objections of ILECs nationwide, overrode restrictions on "foreign
attachments", devices like modems, answering machines, telephone sets,
and PBXs.  Before 1970, you had to rent your phone from the telco, and
if you had a dialup modem, it was $25/month to rent a 300-bps Model
103.  And they had little incentive to come up with better ones.

Competition in a formerly-monopolized industry is not the result of
*deregulation*.  It's the result of *reregulation* (a term more often
seen in Europe), a changed regulatory paradigm that focuses on
overcoming the impact of market dominance, and of making room for
competitors.  The current FCC does not seem to understand this very
clearly, but that's not a reason to abolish regulation altogether and
hand everything back to unregulated monopolies.

And if anyone is foolish to think that "VoIP will solve it", they
should note that without interconnection, it would have very few
people to talk to, and without regulation, the monopolists who own the
wires would have every right to take countermeasures to block its use.

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

From: Tony P. <kd1s@nospamplease.verizon.reallynospam.net>
Subject: Re: Public Copy Cost Unchanged
Organization: ATCC
Date: Tue, 08 Jun 2004 02:01:00 GMT


In article <telecom23.279.9@telecom-digest.org>, 
kd1s@nospamplease.verizon.reallynospam.net says:

> In the case of busses, look at the price of fuel. The diesel bus was a
> cruel joke perpetrated on many cities in the United States. The
> replacement of electric trolleys with those diesel behemoths meant
> transit companies were on the hook for both fuel and other consumables
> like tires, etc.

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: The Chicago Transit Atrocity -- err --
> Authority was sold quite a bill of goods by Detroit auto makers when
> they switched from streetcars and electric trolley busses to motorized
> busses fifty years ago. They were told every reason in the world why
> street cars and electric trollies were less effecient than the good
> old deisel gas fume, belching busses they wound up with. Pretty soon,
> they started believing those stories themselves, and began passing
> them on to the inquiring public. PAT]

Interestingly Rhode Island Public Transit Authority used to be a
complete joke pre-1997 or so. Then Beverly Scott took over as general
manger and things started to happen.

Busses that were past their 12 year prime were retired and new Nova and 
Orion busses were brought in. They were bought in 1998, 2000, 2001 and 
then nothing until this year as I'm starting to see 04xx busses on the 
roads now. 

And in 1999 they initiated the Providence Link trolleys. They run on CNG 
but other than the hours of about 6:30AM to 9:00AM and 3:00PM to 6:00PM 
they see very little ridership though now that they actually go to 
useful endpoints that's changing. 

But fuel costs are killing them. Meanwhile there are pictures all over 
Kennedy Plaza and downtown Providence showing the electric trolleys that 
used to run all over Providence and out to the then burbs (It was 1948 
after all, and what are the burbs now were farm land.) 

To keep this telecom related -- if you go out to the CO's in those 
expansion areas you will always see the add on brick blocks for the a/c 
and other gear needed for the digital switches. 

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

From: Tony P. <kd1s@nospamplease.verizon.reallynospam.net>
Subject: Re: Who Got the Message? There's a Way to Know
Organization: ATCC
Date: Tue, 08 Jun 2004 02:02:22 GMT


In article <telecom23.279.10@telecom-digest.org>, 
kd1s@nospamplease.verizon.reallynospam.net says:

> In article <telecom23.278.3@telecom-digest.org>, monty@roscom.com 
> says:

>> By MARK GLASSMAN

>> A NEW service promises to pull back the curtain on anyone hiding
>> behind the common white lie "I never got your e-mail." Users of the
>> service, DidTheyReadIt (didtheyreadit.com), can clandestinely track
>> when and where their e-mail is read.

>> The service, which has already drawn complaints from privacy
>> advocates, offers a new and quiet way to harvest behavioral
>> information about friends, colleagues and potential consumers.

>> "There's a type of covert surveillance here," said Marc Rotenberg, 
>> president of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, a nonprofit 
>> privacy advocacy group. "Just from a technology viewpoint, it's 
>> basically an evil service."

>> E-mail programs like Eudora and Outlook have long offered an optional 
>> return-receipt feature, which prompts the recipient of a message to 
>> inform the sender that they have opened the message, and another 
>> service, Msgtag (www.msgtag.com), notifies users by e-mail when their 
>> outgoing messages have been opened. But DidTheyReadIt is the first 
>> such service to keep itself a secret from the recipient, as well as 
>> the first to report on where the message was read.

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

> Easy enough to defeat. Just put a new rule on the firewall that
> doesn't let it get back. Who would have thought it, or prevent viewing
> HTML in Eudora or Outlook -- that can be done too.

To follow up -- you can also put a host entry that points
didtheyreadit.com to 127.0.0.1 -- that stops it too.


Tony

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

From: Tony P. <kd1s@nospamplease.verizon.reallynospam.net>
Subject: Re: Tapping Telephone Lines - 1970s
Organization: ATCC
Date: Tue, 08 Jun 2004 03:03:30 GMT


In article <telecom23.279.2@telecom-digest.org>, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com 
says:

> Someone was telling me that the 'authorities' (local or fed) were
> tapping their telephone line in the 1970s.  One spouse was active in
> the civil rights movement.

> She claimed she knew this because her phone line was frequently noisy
> and there was a phone co truck often parked outside their apt.

> It is my understanding that if "they" wanted to tap your phone line,
> they knew what they were doing and you wouldn't hear a thing.  I
> recall a visit to a phone co C.O. in the main dist frame there were
> numerous cords running to the ceiling spliced into leads.  The guide
> explained they were "test leads" and that they were used to test a
> phone line.  I was surprised there were so many.  I also presumed they
> could be used for wiretapping.  Basically, the authorities would order
> the phoneco to set up a tap on such-and-such a line, and the phoneco
> people would do it or permit it to be done.

> So, hearing clicks/wrong numbers on your phone doesn't mean at all
> your phone is tapped.  As to the phoneco truck outside, I suspect they
> were patronizing the deli underneath her apt for lunch.

> I also suspect the noise/wrong numbers she had was from being served
> by an old center city electro-mech switch and cabling, I know such
> switches were far from error free in those days and strange things
> happened from time to time.

Back then they wouldn't tap at the location but at the CO, same as they 
do today. And pen-registers were a big deal -- those were installed at 
the CO too. 

Many times they'd extend the pair to the entity doing the tapping at
their location. Made it easier to change tapes and what have you.

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com (Lisa Hancock)
Subject: Usenet Frustration
Date: 7 Jun 2004 20:22:23 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Using Usenet always takes a thick skin, a sense of humor, and a
grain of salt.  One must expect many posts will be "out there".

I am discouraged tonight after reading some of trash, despite adding
numerous names to my personal skip list.  

One thing disturbing is the vehement EXTREME political statements
that people make, that color a substantive issue under discussion.
People talking about photography manage to bring Bush into the
discussion and blame him for all the world's ills.

When Clinton was President, many discussions turned on him, and
people either hated him or loved him, and flame wars erupted.
Since I have a slow modem, it takes time even to skip headers.
Now with Bush Jr and the war, there is equally vehement posts
with filthy diatribes on both sides of the political aisle.

I guess what really got me tonight was all the hate posts about Reagan's
death.  Now I didn't particularly care for Reagan and never voted
for him, but having lost a member of my own family not too long ago,
the "glad he's dead" posts and the volume of them do disturb me.

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

From: sitekeeper@intersyncsolutions.com (sitekeeper)
Subject: Free IP PBX Tutorials, Whitepapers, PDFs -- Get IP PBX Smart Now
Date: 7 Jun 2004 21:22:42 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


All,

We have new and FREE resources on Internet Phone Technology.

http://www.intersyncsolutions.com

Become knowledgeable and familiar with IP Telephony.
ALL FREE KNOWLEDGE TUTORIALS

Great for:
-Technology Professionals, Business Managers, IT Managers.
-Businesses looking to implement IP Telephony Technology.

Tell a friend!

http://www.intersyncsolutions.com

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

Date: Tue, 8 Jun 2004 00:44:43 EDT
From: TELECOM Digest Editor <ptownson@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Last Laugh! Pompous Circumstances


A peculiar television commercial lately has come from America On Line, and a
program they have called 'UPromise'. To the strains of Sir Edward Elgar's
march, a young lady walks on to a stage, and is making a speech. Her 
speech says, "my parents always told me if I found some place to go
college, they would find some way to pay for it; so thanks, mom and
dad." The camera focuses on mom and dad in the audience, who are beaming
with pride. The audience applauds. "Oh, and thanks also to (name) and
(name)." More applause. A man in the audience cranes his neck and waves
his arm to get attention. The organist or whoever continues playing
the march; the young lady looks at the man craning his neck and waving
his arm and says "oh yes, you too, (name). Then her eyes fill with tears
and she says "but most of all, thank you, Buddy", and the little stick
figure AOL uses to promote its AOL Chat feature is shown with a big
smile on his (its?) face also. Then a voice cuts in to say that "UPromise
works with AOL and these other fine companies, (several are then named.)"
I have never heard of UPromise; does anyone know how it works or what
it does? 

I am aquainted with Edward Elgar's work however; my friend who is the
municipal organist here says he can play it in his sleep, after doing
it two or three times in one week, the past week; once for Independence 
High School, once for Independence College, and once for some other
school which contracts his services.  But who knows about UPromise?  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
networks such as Compuserve and America On Line, Yahoo Groups, and
other forums.  It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the
moderated newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'.

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*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from                  *
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All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the
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End of TELECOM Digest V23 #281
******************************
