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Subject: TELECOM Digest V23 #323

TELECOM Digest     Thu, 8 Jul 2004 17:07:00 EDT    Volume 23 : Issue 323

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    US FCC Wants Radio, TV to Keep Tapes of Shows (Monty Solomon)
    What TiVo Teaches Us (Monty Solomon)
    T-Mobile USA Views Highest Ranking in Customer Care; JD Power (Solomon)
    Verizon Wireless 'Beefs Up' Wireless Capacity Invests  $2M (M. Solomon)
    California Online Privacy Protection Act (Monty Solomon)
    Testing a New SMS Application - Need Some Messages! (Simon Luttrell)
    Western Electric Test Gear Information Needed (Eagler)
    BAS Equipment Price (slo)
    Phone Phishing? (Ben)
    Re: What Happens to Expired Wireless Numbers (ranck@vt.edu)
    Re: Internet Phone Service For Every Home Not Far Off (John R. Covert)
    Re: Internet Phone Service For Every Home Not Far Off (AES/newspost)
    Re: How Much Does Bill Gates Know About His Software? (Paul Vader)
    Re: How Much Does Bill Gates Know About His Software? (Fred Goldstein)
    Re: How Much Does Bill Gates Know About His Software? (Lisa Hancock)
    Last Laugh! What if This Was Your Daughter? (Lisa Minter)

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: Thu, 8 Jul 2004 01:11:10 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: US FCC Wants Radio, TV to Keep Tapes of Shows


WASHINGTON, July 7 (Reuters) - U.S. communications regulators proposed
on Wednesday that radio and television broadcasters keep recordings of
their programming for a period of time to help the agency enforce
federal indecency standards.

The Federal Communications Commission proposed that stations keep
recordings for shows that air between 6 a.m. and 10 p.m. and asked for
comment on how long they should be required to retain them, possibly
two to three months.

The FCC has been cracking down on indecent antics on television and
radio but one of the problems is filed complaints do not always
include a transcript or tape of the show in question, making an
investigation tougher.

     - http://finance.lycos.com/home/news/story.asp?story=42397985

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

Date: Thu, 8 Jul 2004 01:32:36 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: What TiVo Teaches Us


by Sam Whitmore

How can you not admire TiVo, the Alviso, Calif.-based company that
pioneered the use of digital video recorders (DVRs) and built a brand
synonymous with the DVR category?

Investors might not. Though it is currently cash-flow positive, TiVo
(nasdaq: TIVO - news - people ) hasn't made a dime in five years. The
company desperately needs a partner to sell DVR service directly to
cable TV subscribers, but carriers Comcast (nasdaq: CMCSA - news -
people ), Cox Communications (nyse: COX - news - people ), Charter
Communications (nasdaq: CHTR - news - people ), Time Warner (nyse: TWX
- news - people ) and Adelphia Communications (otc: ADELQ - news -
people ) all offer DVRs built by TiVo competitors.

 DirecTV (nyse: DTV - news - people ), which according to TiVo Chief
Financial Officer Dave Courtney generates 900,000 of TiVo's 1.6
million subscribers, last month sold its 3.4 million TiVo shares and
is gearing up to offer DVRs built by NDS Group (nasdaq: NNDS - news -
people ), a TiVo archrival. TiVo's latest 10-Q statement spells out 36
material threats to the company.

http://www.forbes.com/columnists/2004/07/06/0707whitmore.html
 
------------------------------

Date: Thu, 8 Jul 2004 11:16:25 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: T-Mobile USA Views Highest Ranking in Customer Care by JD Power


     Confirmation that T-Mobile Customers Indeed do "Get More"

BELLEVUE, Wash.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--July 8, 2004--The results of the
2004 Customer Care Performance Study released today by J.D. Power and
Associates ranks T-Mobile USA highest among national carriers, by a
significant margin. This independent top ranking for T-Mobile makes it
clear when T-Mobile talks about offering "the best value in wireless"
that means more minutes, more features and more service.

     - http://finance.lycos.com/home/news/story.asp?story=42407231

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

Date: Thu, 8 Jul 2004 15:25:49 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Verizon Wireless 'Beefs Up' Wireless Capacity, Invests $2 M


     Preparing for Democratic National Convention
     - Jul 8, 2004 02:01 PM (PR Newswire)

FleetCenter Receives a Boost; Network COW Visits Downtown Boston

WOBURN, Mass., July 8 /PRNewswire/ -- As Massachusetts plans for four
days of street closings, traffic shifts and tightened security in the
Boston area during the Democratic National Convention (DNC), Verizon
Wireless has already invested nearly $2 million to enhance its network
to handle the expected increase in wireless voice and data calls by
Convention goers, tourists, the media and local residents.

The company has increased wireless capacity inside the FleetCenter and
the immediate surrounding area to accommodate expanded cell phone
coverage on the DNC convention floor, local streets, hotels and
restaurants. Verizon Wireless will also add a "Cell On Wheels," or COW
 -- a mobile cell site -- to provide increased capacity, especially in
high wireless traffic areas. Additional capacity has also been added
to the newly constructed Convention Center, the World Trade Center and
Fenway Park, locations. where DNC events are currently being planned.

Verizon Wireless invests more than $1 billion in its network every 90
days to provide customers with the most extensive wireless voice and
data network in the United States. The volume of voice calls and data
usage demands of DNC visitors, Massachusetts telecommuters and
visiting media representatives, has Verizon Wireless planning for a
very busy week in late July.

     - http://finance.lycos.com/home/news/story.asp?story=42414505

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

Date: Thu, 8 Jul 2004 08:44:05 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: California Online Privacy Protection Act


Excerpt from
Piper Rudnick
E-Commerce & Privacy Group @lert
Vol. 4, No. 5
http://www.piperrudnick.com/db30/cgi-bin/pubs/E-Commerce%20Alert062504.pdf

CALIFORNIA LAW REQUIRING WEB SITES AND ONLINE SERVICES TO POST A
PRIVACY POLICY GOES INTO EFFECT JULY 1, 2004

Overview and Summary of Requirements

On July 1, 2004, the first online privacy law in the country that
applies to the collection of information from consumers over the age
of 13 will take effect.

The California Online Privacy Protection Act of 2003, CAL. BUS. &
PROF. CODE §§ 22575 et seq., ("Section 22575") is a privacy notice
requirement law. It contains a generous safe harbor that gives
companies 30 days to come into compliance if notified of failure to
post a policy. The law also prohibits "negligently and materially" or
"knowingly and willfully" failing to follow promises in a posted
privacy policy.

The California law will require operators of a commercial Web site or
online service that collect through their Web site or online service
personally identifiable information(1) from consumers(2) residing in
California to conspicuously post their privacy policy on their Web
site (or, in the case of an online service, to use any other
"reasonably accessible means of making the privacy policy available to
consumers"). The law exempts Internet service providers and similar
entities that transmit or store personally identifiable information at
the request of third parties. Because many Web sites and online
services do not collect physical address information, and for that
reason may be unaware that they are collecting personally identifiable
information from California consumers, sites and services may be well
advised to conform their privacy policies to the requirements of this
new law.

http://www.piperrudnick.com/db30/cgi-bin/pubs/E-Commerce%20Alert062504.pdf

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

From: simonluttrell@yahoo.com (Simon Luttrell)
Subject: Testing a New SMS Application - Need Some Messages!
Date: 8 Jul 2004 07:22:28 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Hi, I'm sitting out in sunny Bangkok and testing a new SMS application
that will soon be launched on the US mobile networks.  I need some
inbound test messages!!  Any abusive or rude message will do!:) Just
send your text message to the SMS shortcode 62339. This should then
get routed through to my Linux server.  You will not get any reply
from me and I won't harvest your numbers. (I really only need a few
mobile phones to text me, not thousands!).  I'll post back on here to
thank anyone who helps me out.

If you do send me a message can you post on this thread to let me know
so I can check my logs?

Cheers,

Simon

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

From: Eagler <eagler@pogbird.com>
Subject: Western Electric Test Gear Information Needed
Date: Thu, 08 Jul 2004 01:01:12 GMT
Organization: RoadRunner - Tampa Bay


Any help in identify this piece of test gear would be greatly
appreciated.  It is a J94730A 1A Fault Locator Test Set from Western
Electric. Anyone know the age? How common are they? I can not locate
anything on the web concerning this piece of gear.

Here are some photos:

http://www.pogbird.com/ebay/fault.jpg
http://www.pogbird.com/ebay/fault1.jpg
http://www.pogbird.com/ebay/fault2.jpg
http://www.pogbird.com/ebay/fault3.jpg
http://www.pogbird.com/ebay/fault4.jpg
http://www.pogbird.com/ebay/fault5.jpg
http://www.pogbird.com/ebay/fault6.jpg
http://www.pogbird.com/ebay/fault7.jpg
http://www.pogbird.com/ebay/fault8.jpg
http://www.pogbird.com/ebay/fault9.jpg

Thanks for any info.

Mike

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

From: slo <DueSouth@linuxforum.net>
Subject: BAS Equipment Price
Date: Thu, 8 Jul 2004 11:24:00 +0800


Is there anybody that can tell me the price of RedBack SmartAge800 amd
Unisphere BAS equipment And some Telecom or ISP's BAS equipment
information and price ?

Best Regards!


slo
You'd better forget Horizon if you want fly higher !

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

From: tanstaafl69@yahoo.com (Ben)
Subject: Phone Phishing?
Date: 7 Jul 2004 16:52:07 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


I've been getting some odd calls on my cell phone recently that go
something like this:

  - When the call comes in, the Caller-ID shows only an area code, no
number.
  - On answering the call, and automated voice announces it has a
message for me. It does so saying my name in my voice, using the name
announcement from my voicemail.
  - It then gives instructions on handling the call if answered by an
operator.
  - Then is says "Press 2 if you are" and my name again.
  - At this point, it asks for my voicemail passcode to continue.

I'm not about to give any information to anyone who hasn't identified
themselves and their purpose. This is NOT my own voicemail calling me.
I checked with the carrier, and it's not them either.

Is this some sort of phone phishing scheme? Does anyone know?

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

From: ranck@vt.edu
Subject: Re: What Happens to Expired Wireless Numbers
Date: Thu, 8 Jul 2004 18:39:56 UTC
Organization: Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia, USA


John David Galt <jdg@diogenes.sacramento.ca.us> wrote:

> I'm looking for a cell provider that offers all or most of these:

> -  Low or no per-month charges (say $10 or less); the provider
> should make most of its money from a high per-minute rate instead.

OK. 

> -  No insistence that I accept services I don't want (paging, text
> messaging, video, or Custom Calling type features);

OK.

> -  Per-line caller-ID blocking and a promise that the number won't
> be included in cellular directories or sold to marketers;

Not sure about this one.  I don't think I understand your requirement
actually.

> -  No commitment longer than 90 days (especially if the provider is
> unwilling to commit in return that its plan and rates won't change);
> I have no problem with paying for the phone up front; and

OK.

> -  No locking the phone so that I can't use it with multiple

All the above, except as noted, sounds like Trac Fone to me.  It's a
pre-paid cell service that you basically can get for about $8/month
plus time charges.  You buy "units" which equate to minutes in your
home area, and 2 units per minute when roaming.

I have been looking into this myself recently, and will probably be
getting one of their phones at WalMart in the next couple of days.
You can also buy the pre-paid cards at WalMart and other big
retailers.


Bill Ranck
Blacksburg, Va.

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

Date: Wed, 7 Jul 2004 18:10:21 EDT
From: John R. Covert <nospam@covert.org>
Subject: Re: Internet Phone Service For Every Home Not Far Off


Tony P. <kd1s@nospamplease.verizon.reallynospam.net> wrote:

> get a measured service line, in most places they're < $10 a month anyhow.

Not in Massachusetts.  In fact, once you include the $6.45 FCC Line
charge and USF charge, not anywhere, unless local service is less than
$3.00 per month.  And I doubt that it is less than $3.00 per month
anywhere.

1 Measured Residence Service     $12.36
2 Verizon Local Calls              1.05
3 Surcharges and Taxes
  FCC Line Charge        6.45
  Federal USF Surcharge   .57
  MA State and Local Tax  .25
  Federal Tax             .61

Total                            $22.14

The 1.05 in local calls paid for 41 calls totalling 40 minutes
at 0.0100 per call plus 0.0160 per minute, for $1.05 in usage.


/john

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

From: AES/newspost <siegman@stanford.edu>
Subject: Re: Internet Phone Service For Every Home Not Far Off
Date: Wed, 07 Jul 2004 15:50:38 -0700


In article <telecom23.321.15@telecom-digest.org>, Tony P.
<kd1s@nospamplease.verizon.reallynospam.net> wrote:

> I'm sorry but if you want to live in the boonies, you damn well should
> be paying the price to string the cable out to your location. I
> shouldn't have to pay for it.

I think I agree with you that there's some level of "out in the
boonies" beyond which stringing cables (and other utilities) should be
paid for by the remotely residing residents and not the rest of us.

But at the same time, I also think that in urban and most surburban
areas, a policy of requiring a service provider to serve everyone in
an entire incorporated area, rather than just "skimming the cream" of
the most easily accessible areas, is a reasonable and overall a
socially desirable policy, as well as a fair quid pro quo for the use
of public right of ways to reach any of these areas.

I was trying to think of a reverse example to your original comment,
which might apply to city folks rather than booneie dwellers.  How
about, "If you want to live in a developed community, you damn well
should be paying the price to provide parking for all your car(s) off
the streets. I shouldn't have to pay for paving areas for you to use
as overnight or even as temporary parking."  Fair enough?

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

From: pv+usenet@pobox.com (Paul Vader)
Subject: Re: How Much Does Bill Gates Know About His Software These Days?
Date: Wed, 07 Jul 2004 21:05:52 -0000
Organization: Inline Software Creations


kludge@panix.com (Scott Dorsey) writes:

> GWBASIC was not the original Microsoft Basic.  At the time the IBM PC

You're right of course -- it was the first DOS basic. I'll be danged
if I can come up with a name other than just "Microsoft Basic" - did
the original one have any other name? * 

            -- * PV something like
badgers--something like lizards--and something like corkscrews.

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

Date: Wed, 07 Jul 2004 20:05:02 -0400
From: Fred Goldstein <SeeSigForEmail@wn6.wn.net>
Subject: Re: How Much Does Bill Gates Know About His Software?


I suspect that Bill has a pretty good handle on Microsoft's core product 
lines -- he is "Chairman and Chief Software Architect", after all, not 
President or CEO.  Not that I expect him to be bashing much code.

In those early days, BASIC was far and away the most popular
small-computer language. Microsoft's first product was Altair BASIC.
Released in 1975, it was sold by MITS Inc. of Albuquerque, where Bill
went after the last term he spent at Harvard.  I believe there were
three authors: Bill Gates, Paul Allen, and Monte Davidoff.  Monte
didn't stay with the company.  I know he was involved because that
summer, I went to work for a magazine publisher who had one of the
early Altair 8800s.  It sat on his shelf, lights blinking, but no real
programs running.

The Altair had a cassette interface to load code, and used an external
Teletype or "TV Typewriter" terminal.  We wanted to get it to do
something, but it wasn't exactly obvious how.  We did figure out how
to read the BASIC (I forget if it was the 4K or 8K version) cassette
into the system, and then look byte by byte at the beginning of the
file.  It was a copyright notice naming Microsoft (yes, the name was
in use that early) and programmers Bill Gates and Monte Davidoff.  So
we phoned MITS and asked for Bill.  He told us what to do (probably
something with the sense switches on the front panel, like jump to a
certain address and then hit the run switch, but I really don't
remember), and indeed the interpreter did get running.  So that was
the one time I personally did speak to Bill Gates, who was just a
young pisher like me at the time, and nobody had any idea that he
would become, well, Bill Gates!

Stories that have circulated since then suggest that Bill was working
on the interpreter while still a student at Harvard, and that some of
the code he claimed credit for was not, uh, entirely his.  But I have
no real knowledge of that.  Given how quickly Altair BASIC came out,
he and his friends probably were working on it it while still in
school.

Oh yes, one other interesting quote, from Hartmut Frommer's web page,
where he has a set of documents on OS/2:

" The FAT was invented by Bill Gates and Marc McDonald in 1977 as a
method of managing disk space in the NCR version of standalone
Microsoft's Disk BASIC. Tim Paterson, at that time an employee of
Seattle Computer Products (SCP), was introduced to the FAT concept
when his company shared a booth with Microsoft at the National
Computer Conference in 1979. Paterson subsequently incorporated FATs
into the file system of 86-DOS, an operating system for SCP s S-100
bus 8086 CPU boards. 86-DOS was eventually purchased by Micro-soft and
became the starting point for MS-DOS Version 1.0, which was released
for the original lBM PC in August 1981.  "

More recent reports deny Bill's personal involvement in FAT, though it
would explain Microsoft's sticking with such a bad system for so long.
He may have simply been given credit, the way songwriting credit is
often given to people who had nothing to do with writing the song, but
who do want royalties.

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com (Lisa Hancock)
Subject: Re: How Much Does Bill Gates Know About His Software These Days?
Date: 8 Jul 2004 07:49:44 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Richard S. Shuford <shuford@list.stratagy.com> wrote: 

> There are some dark rumors about how Gates obtained timesharing
> resources on a large computer system to complete this project.

In one of the biographies it was mentioned that Gates was using his
school's computer for commercial work when he was young.  However,
this was very common in those days for the kids to get little
contracts and run them on their school's (high school or college)
computer.  Generally, the jobs were pretty small.  Many were research
for professors.

In those days it seemed most of the computer enthusiasts were boys
even though many early computer pioneer programmers (like Grace Hopper
and many others) were women.

Here's a little story:

In those days (1970) the city had separate public academic high 
schools for boys and girls.*  Each had a Teletype timesharing terminal 
for student use.  The boys' school terminal was very busy since 
lots of boys wanted to use it, but the girls' school terminal
didn't have much use.  Some boys in the computer club got the
idea to link up with girls' school for two reasons -- 1) to get
some of their idle terminal time, and 2) have an opportunity
to meet girls (esp important for an all-boys school).  The boys
went to the girls' school and suggested a link up.  The teachers
at the girls' school were ok with the idea; they didn't mind
the social aspect, but were concerned about losing their computer
time to the boys.  Unfortunately, the teachers at the boys' school
vetoed the idea and nothing ever came of it.

*The courts ordered the boys' high school to go co-ed, which it
did.  The girls' high school remains all girls to this day.

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

Date: Thu, 8 Jul 2004 12:36:10 PDT
From: Lisa Minter <lisa_minter2001@yahoo.com>
Subject: Last Laugh! What if You Had a Daughter Like This?


A mother enters her daughter's bedroom and sees a letter over the bed. 
With the worst premonition, she reads it, with trembling hands:

It is with great regret and sorrow that I'm telling you that I eloped 
with my new boyfriend. I found real passion and he is so nice, with 
all his piercing and  tattoos and his big motorcycle. But not only 
that mom, I'm pregnant and Ahmed said that we will be very  happy in 
his trailer in the woods. He wants to have many more children with me 
and that's one of my dreams. I've learned that marijuana
doesn't hurt anyone and we'll be growing it for us and his friends,
who are providing us with all the cocaine and ecstasy we may want.

In the meantime, we'll pray for the science to find the AIDS cure, for 
Ahmed to get better, he deserves it. Don't worry Mom, I'm 15 years old 
now and I know how to take care of myself. Some day I'll visit for you 
to know your grandchildren.

Your daughter,
Judith

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

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