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Subject: TELECOM Digest V23 #384

TELECOM Digest     Mon, 16 Aug 2004 23:35:00 EDT    Volume 23 : Issue 384

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Comcast to Launch NFL Network For Video on Demand (Monty Solomon)
    Re: Interconnect Fees Get Ugly (John Levine)
    Re: Interconnect Fees Get Ugly (Paul Vader)
    Re: Number Not in Use (Paul Vader)
    Re: Computer Programmers in Telecom (Ray)
    Re: Wardriving Guilty Plea in Lowe's Wi-Fi Case (Paul Vader)
    Re: Delete: Bathwater. Undelete: Baby (Paul Vader)
    Re: Vonage Will Drive You Crazy - Beware Vonage (Charlie)
    Guidance Wanted in Starting Telecom Service Business (Marcel Riley)  
    Emerging Technologies Conference at MIT, Sept 29-30, 2004 (Jason Pontin)

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: Mon, 16 Aug 2004 16:52:47 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Comcast to Launch NFL Network For Video on Demand


NEW YORK, Aug 16 (Reuters) - Comcast Corp. (NASDAQ:CMCSA) on Monday
said it plans to launch the National Football League Network this
month as part of a plan to bolster the operator's video-on-demand
offerings.

The NFL network will be added to the Philadelphia-based cable
operator's digital cable service, featuring 54 preseason games, a deep
trove of historic games, and other programs.

Although analysts do not view the current deal as a major boon to
Comcast's business, they said it could be a precursor to a more
extensive agreement to gain access to lucrative Sunday games, as it
seeks to lure more television watchers back to cable.

DirecTV Group Inc. (NYSE:DTV) currently owns on an exclusive basis the
NFL's most prized asset -- the cable broadcast rights to Sunday games,
through 2005.

Cable operators have vowed to lure back video subscribers, which they
lost to rival satellite television services at a higher than expected
rate in the second quarter.

     - http://finance.lycos.com/home/news/story.asp?story=43147307

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

Date: 16 Aug 2004 20:59:23 -0000
From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com>
Subject: Re: Interconnect Fees Get Ugly
Organization: I.E.C.C., Trumansburg NY USA


> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: John, I am curious about something. In
> an area where there is a predominant LEC (everywhere, I suppose) and
> it negotiates things regards its customers (such as 'bill and keep'
> as one example) what about the independent telcos in the same area? 
> Are they obligated to go along with what the LEC 'negotiates'?  PAT]

The interconnection agreements among ILECs all date from the regulated
era, so they were all overseen by state utility commissions.  Since
they were supposed to be cost-based, they often depended on how many
miles of the interconnecting trunks were owned by each telco.

Now that we have wireless, paging, and CLECs, and transmission costs
have gotten so low that it's common to switch calls 50 or 100 miles
from the subscriber's location, it's all gotten a lot more complicated.

John R. Levine, IECC, POB 727, Trumansburg NY 14886 +1 607 330 5711
johnl@iecc.com, Mayor, http://johnlevine.com, 
Member, Provisional board, Coalition Against Unsolicited Commercial E-mail

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

From: pv+usenet@pobox.com (Paul Vader)
Subject: Re: Interconnect Fees Get Ugly
Date: Mon, 16 Aug 2004 22:32:35 -0000
Organization: Inline Software Creations


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

> Seems this little co-op phone company is about to bring the cell 
> carriers to their knees. 

More likely, to get sued into a smoking crater. *

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

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

From: pv+usenet@pobox.com (Paul Vader)
Subject: Re: Number Not in Use
Date: Mon, 16 Aug 2004 22:43:31 -0000
Organization: Inline Software Creations


Ned Protter <invalid@nothing.com> writes:

> Do they diddle with their caller ID because it's illegal for them to 
> block it?  Is it illegal to fake their caller ID?  Could the phone 
> company trace them anyway?

It's been illegal for the last 6 months to block or alter caller ID on
a telemarketing call -- the number must show, and must be the 'get me
off your dang list' number. If you know the company that's calling,
file a complaint with the FTC -- it's an $11,000 per occurrence fine.

> Can they fake the area code and exchange as well as the OCN?  

Anything at all in a caller-id record can be faked.

> A couple of weeks ago, my machine recorded a message saying I'd won a 
> trip.  There was a thirteen-second delay before it started, and it was 
> very distorted.  It had come from a cell phone, as if somebody had 
> dialed me and held the cell phone over an answering machine that played 
> back a telemarketing message.  

The real boiler-room operators (and you can definitely count the
free-trip ones in that category) are often running old crappy
equipment. Think of it as the telemarketing equivalent of the
massively misspelled spam email. It might attract your attention, but
not in a GOOD way.

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Its not illegal for them to block their
> number; that is what *67 is used for. But many recipients of telephone

Not for telemarketers. They can't block the number, period. *

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

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

From: rayj00@yahoo.com (Ray)
Subject: Re: Computer Programmers in Telecom
Date: 16 Aug 2004 16:14:42 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


I tend to agree with previous posters ... I should have went to law
school! :)

As a side note, when Lucent first started working on the 5E, they
hired a bunch of college Comp Sci folks. Well, I don't care how good
you are at software development, if you don't have the telephony
background, it will be a struggle to say the least.  Most of them did
not even know the basics of call routing!

Good luck ...

Ray


sumitkchawla@rediffmail.com (sumit chawla) wrote in message
news:<telecom23.376.10@telecom-digest.org>:

> Thanks for your response. Actually I am doing training in Lucent Switch.

> I just wanted to know how I could apply my software development skills
> in the respective industry.

> Sumit Chawla
> E-mail (sumitkchawla@rediffmail.com)

> Bit Twister <BitTwister@localhost.localdomain> wrote in message
> news:<telecom23.363.13@telecom-digest.org>:

>> On 3 Aug 2004 07:35:52 -0700, Sumit Chawla wrote:

>>> I'm a computer engineer. I want to pursue a career in the telecom
>>> sector.

>> Move to China, Vietnam, India where the outsourcing is going.

>> I wish you luck; ALCATEL France, came over, bought a telecom company,
>> took the good projects back to Europe, outsourced other jobs, layed
>> everyone else off except enough to keep the sales/service office up and
>> running.

>> Suggest moving your expertise into the medical field.

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

From: pv+usenet@pobox.com (Paul Vader)
Subject: Re: Wardriving Guilty Plea in Lowe's Wi-Fi Case
Date: Mon, 16 Aug 2004 22:28:27 -0000
Organization: Inline Software Creations


SPAMhukolautTRAP@SPAMattTRAP.net writes:

> Whoever installed their WiFi network was, to overstate the case,
> "clueless" with regards to security.

You don't know that. Given that the unauthorized people, whoever they
were, were caught red-handed, you can't rule out someone watching the
server logs. It might just APPEAR to be an open network.

On the other hand, running things that way might put you into 'attractive
nuisance' territory.  *

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

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

From: pv+usenet@pobox.com (Paul Vader)
Subject: Re: Delete: Bathwater. Undelete: Baby.
Date: Mon, 16 Aug 2004 22:36:57 -0000
Organization: Inline Software Creations


TELECOM Digest Editor noted in response to Monty Solomon
<monty@roscom.com>:

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: This is the reason why I at least give
> a cursory glance at everything in the spam bucket before dumping it
> out. There is that occassional item in the spam bucket which should 

Feh. The fault is solely the other people for not USING A PHONE to back up
an email contact, especially if the two parties have never communicated
before.

It sounds like a made-up story anyway, or at least a garbled one. *

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

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: However, Paul, I am not in a position
to use the telephone either to call submitters and let them know their
message was received, nor to receive telephone calls from people who
want to know did I receive their message and when if ever it will be
used in the Digest. What kind of email volume do the people involved
in this story get in a day's time. I've had people write here who do 
not know an auto-ack is sent out who have been quite indignant with me
for allegedly 'ignoring' them. PAT]

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

From: charlie@cdsdetroit.com (charlie3)
Subject: Re: Vonage Will Drive You Crazy - Beware Vonage
Date: 16 Aug 2004 19:22:07 -0700


I read all the Vonage posts I could find before signing up and decided
the people who are disappointed had bad luck or unrealistic
expectations.

I made sure the new Vonage line number was local to my POTS line then,
when the Vonage box was working I call forwarded the POTS line to
Vonage and set Vonage to ring my cell phone simultaneously.

After a month of experience I put in the order to port my home phone
to Vonage and have never looked back.

I've had a few glitchy calls; I experienced the several hour outage
same as everyone else.  My cell phone is always at the ready to
receive calls or allow me to make calls if necessary.

The overwhelming majority of the time the Vonage phone has behaved
exactly like the old POTS line.  Nobody seems to notice they are
talking to me on a VOIP line (at 50kbs) unless I tell them -- I
usually don't.

I happen to have a remote rural location where I like to spend as much
time as possible.  The cost of land based wireless broad band service
there is the same as the house phone plus the dialup internet service
I needed there.  So the vonage box travels with me.  I can sit in a
shady spot in the yard with a cordless phone and wireless notebook and
take care of business.  The only thing that gives away my location is
the song birds.  If I want to take a walk in the woods I pick up the
cell phone and go.

VOIP service is not a substitute for every POTS phone.  It's fool
hardy to drop the house phone without testing VOIP for several months
in your location and completely understanding and accepting the
tradeoffs.

I recommend Vonage because I believe it's the right product at the
right price and it's the one I know.  If there's a better one go buy
it.

Charlie

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

From: marcel_riley@yahoo.com (Marcel Riley)
Subject: Guidance Wanted in Starting Telecom Service Business
Date: 16 Aug 2004 18:57:40 -0700


I am exploring starting a business to offer services to companies to
install/repair/etc. their business telephone systems.

I would like to ask people who are engaged in this type of work to
offer their perspective:

1) What aspect of this business is more lucrative and has less
headaches (sales or service, etc.)?

2) How can someone who is entering the business new, diffrentiate
himself from companies that are already in the game?

3) Any other aspects? pros, cons, etc.


Thanks,

Marcel Riley

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

Subject: The Emerging Technologies Conference at MIT, September 29-30, 2004
Reply-To: edeployments@technologyreview.com
From: Jason Pontin, Technology Review  <edeployments@technologyreview.com>
Date: Mon, 16 Aug 2004 14:39:56 PDT


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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
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