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Message Digest 
Volume 28 : Issue 72 : "text" Format

Messages in this Issue:
  Re: To Bury or Not to Bury 
  Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) 
  Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) 
  Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) 
  Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) 
  Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) 
  Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) 
  Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) 
  Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) 
  Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) 
  OMG What happened to 800-555-1212?   
  Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) 
  Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) 
  Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) 
  Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) 
  under-sea power transmission cables 
  Re: under-sea power transmission cables 
  Phone company asks payment delay 
  Re: Phone company asks payment delay 
  Re: To Bury or Not to Bury 
  Re: To Bury or Not to Bury 
  Re: To Bury or Not to Bury 
  Google Voice: A push to rewire your phone service 
  [Fwd: Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) ]
  Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) 
  Re: Steam Railroads, was: Telex 
  ISDN (was Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT))   


====== 27 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ====== Telecom and VOIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) Digest for the Internet. 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, and other stuff of interest. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 17:33:14 +1100 From: David Clayton <dcstar@myrealbox.com> To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: Re: To Bury or Not to Bury Message-ID: <pan.2009.03.12.06.33.13.225984@myrealbox.com> On Wed, 11 Mar 2009 18:02:20 -0400, Neal McLain wrote: > David Clayton <dcstar@myrealbox.com> wrote: > > > Vehicles can't crash into power poles that aren't there, winds can't > > affect power lines that are underground, and the visual pollution of > > underground power distribution is limited to the access ports on the > > pavement. > > Are "access ports" in Australia the same things that we call "manhole > covers" here in the USA -- round steel plates about a meter in diameter? > In the street near me which was converted to underground a few years ago, the circular power covers (concrete) are only about 0.5 metre dia. Actually that street is "almost" converted as there is one property who must have refused to pay their share of the costs of conversion and they are served by an overhead feed from the single remaining pole in the whole street (apart from the street lights). The one remaining pole highlights how ugly it is in comparison to the cleaner and far more open street-scape where they have been removed. > Where are equipment enclosures (transformers and switchgear) located? > Are they also underground? I know a lot of power infrastructure is underground in the city here, out in the 'burbs a lot is still up on poles. The city ones are usually covered by large rectangular covers that pop up to create barriers when work is done in them (as do a lot of the telco pits). ........ -- Regards, David. David Clayton Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Knowledge is a measure of how many answers you have, intelligence is a measure of how many questions you have. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 17:40:12 +1100 From: David Clayton <dcstar@myrealbox.com> To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) Message-ID: <pan.2009.03.12.06.40.11.121390@myrealbox.com> On Thu, 12 Mar 2009 01:10:36 -0400, Scott Dorsey wrote: ......... > For the most part the primary users of ISDN in the US are people who > have realtime data and need fixed latency connections, like radio > stations doing remote broadcasts. Odds are when you tune into a radio > broadcast of a sports event, the connection from the stadium to the > radio station is an ISDN link carrying MUSCAM-compressed audio. It is a > switched service... the engineer plugs a codec unit into the line at the > stadium, and dials the ISDN circuit at the station. ........ Where I work we use a specialist ISDN service where the D-channel is used for a low volume data link for POS transaction to a bank. The data goes up to D-channel from our site to our local exchange, from there is goes into an old packet-switched network that terminates (along with many other identical services) at our bank. It is a reasonably cost-efficient way of moving small quantities of data in a secure point-to-point (virtual) circuit. We also use the B-channels for normal telephony as it costs us the same as two POTS lines anyway. -- Regards, David. David Clayton Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Knowledge is a measure of how many answers you have, intelligence is a measure of how many questions you have. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 13:03:12 -0700 (PDT) From: Joseph Singer <joeofseattle@yahoo.com> To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) Message-ID: <577748.97556.qm@web52703.mail.re2.yahoo.com> Wed, 11 Mar 2009 11:01:13 -0700 hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote: <<This was discussed in the past, but I remain confused over the difference between "ISDN" and "DSL". In the past, ISDN was supposed to be the big wave of the future, but then DSL came out and we heard little about ISDN after that. Could someone explain the differences, and why DSL replaced it?>> My impression of DSL vs. ISDN is that if you were too far from the CO for DSL sometimes ISDN (@128 Kbps) was often available, and not very cheaply either. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 01:55:26 -0600 From: Michael Grigoni <michael.grigoni@cybertheque.org> To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) Message-ID: <49B8BFEE.6080909@cybertheque.org> hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote: >>***** Moderator's Note ***** >>3. Switch to ISDN service, which can provide two separate call paths >> on a single pair. It tends to be pricey, but you'll have full use of >> both lines at your new location. I don't know if this will work >> with ADSL. The following excerpt is from the Wikipedia article on ISDN: <quote> In Germany, ISDN is very popular with an installed base of 25 million channels (29% of all subscriber lines in Germany as of 2003 and 20% of all ISDN channels worldwide). Due to the success of ISDN, the number of installed analog lines is decreasing. Deutsche Telekom (DTAG) offers both BRI and PRI. Competing phone companies often offer ISDN only and no analog lines. Because of the widespread availability of ADSL services, ISDN is today primarily used for voice and fax traffic, but is still very popular thanks to the pricing policy of German telecommunication providers. Today ISDN (BRI) and ADSL/VDSL are often bundled on the same line, mainly because the combination of ADSL with an analog line has no cost advantage over a combined ISDN-ADSL line. </quote> Other replies to this thread seemed to rule-out the ADSL/ISDN combination; could someone please elaborate? Michael ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 17:43:05 +0000 (UTC) From: Koos van den Hout <koos+newsposting@kzdoos.xs4all.nl> To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) Message-ID: <gpbhj9$s99$7@kzdoos.xs4all.nl> Michael Grigoni <michael.grigoni@cybertheque.org> wrote in <49B8BFEE.6080909@cybertheque.org>: > Other replies to this thread seemed to rule-out the ADSL/ISDN combination; > could someone please elaborate? I am typing this over an ADSL+ISDN line, so that combination is available, in the Netherlands. The difference is that ADSL over POTS lines is known as 'Annex A' and has a slightly higher theoretical upstream rate than ADSL over ISDN lines which is 'Annex B'. Because of the higher bandwidth of an ISDN line (it is in theory a 144 kilobit baseband line) more frequency space is reserved. Annex A versus Annex B requires different types of ADSL modems and different types of DSLAMs (the equipment in the central office). I can imagine certain places which have very low rates of ISDN adaptation to not offer ISDN+ADSL over one copper pair because of the high cost of the special DSLAM with very few customers actually using the service. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ADSL has more. Koos van den Hout -- Koos van den Hout, PGP keyid DSS/1024 0xF0D7C263 via keyservers koos@kzdoos.xs4all.nl or RSA/1024 0xCA845CB5 -?) Visit the site about books with reviews /\\ http://idefix.net/~koos/ http://www.virtualbookcase.com/ _\_V ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 18:02:46 +0000 (UTC) From: David Lesher <wb8foz@panix.com> To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) Message-ID: <gpbio6$ki6$3@reader1.panix.com> Michael Grigoni <michael.grigoni@cybertheque.org> writes: >Other replies to this thread seemed to rule-out the ADSL/ISDN combination; >could someone please elaborate? EuroISDN is different protocol-wise from US; and they wanted DSL to work over ISDN, so they did it. In the US, Ma's bastard stepchildren had enough issues with ISDN at all so they didn't care to try adding DSL... -- A host is a host from coast to coast.................wb8foz@nrk.com & no one will talk to a host that's close........[v].(301) 56-LINUX Unless the host (that isn't close).........................pob 1433 is busy, hung or dead....................................20915-1433 ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 08:26:54 -0700 (PDT) From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) Message-ID: <a16578a2-63bf-45ee-9d44-ada81af4fd9b@h5g2000yqh.googlegroups.com> On Mar 11, 5:55 pm, hanco...@bbs.cpcn.com wrote: > This was discussed in the past, but I remain confused over the > difference between "ISDN" and "DSL".  In the past, ISDN was supposed > to be the big wave of the future, but then DSL came out and we heard > little about ISDN after that.  Could someone explain the differences, > and why DSL replaced it? Thanks to all for their explanations. One comment . . . several posters used the term "Ma Bell" to refer to the phone company. IMHO, that term is obsolete in that it only referred to the old unified Bell System prior to divesture. Once divesture occured each individual Baby Bell as well as the long- distance AT&T went their own way. Further, the advent of "competition" resulted in cost cutting and reduced service quality. The days where a service and equipment in Florida matched to that in Oregon are gone. (Indeed, even before divesture the Operating Companies had variations in service offerings and service quality). I point this out because problems one Baby Bell might have in one city won't necessarily occur in other cities, even of the same Baby Bell. For example, Verizon today is a merger of multiple companies, each with their own personality--GTE, Bell Atlantic, Nynex, and various cellular units. Those units in turn are made up of various companies each with their own personality (e.g. NY Telephone was different than New England Bell, and GTE contained various Independents of different heritages.) Remember also each state has its own level of regulation and history of services. And as we know, today's at&t is a entirely different company, having been bought out. I do wish the various telephone providers would be consistent in their naming of special services. Some services are consistent, such as Call Waiting. But others have varying names, such as the special ring associated with a number. Unfortunately, due to the pressures of marketing, services and their names and costs are purposely changed frequently. (At home I have flat rate national long distance, and every month they change the name of the service as it appears on the bill.) ***** Moderator's Note ***** Ma Bell has set her minions to the task of convincing the public and the regulators that she no longer exists. I'll talk to her later this week, and I'll let her know the plan is still on track. Bill Horne Temporary Moderator ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 09:57:38 -0700 (PDT) From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) Message-ID: <db38b100-6dc5-4926-b2f6-9ac4171d92dd@v19g2000yqn.googlegroups.com> > ***** Moderator's Note ***** > > Ma Bell has set her minions to the task of convincing the public and > the regulators that she no longer exists. I'll talk to her later this > week, and I'll let her know the plan is still on track. I don't understand . . . For better or worse, what was Ma Bell--the old unified Bell System--no longer exists. While the old Bell System wasn't perfect, it's main objective was excellent service at a good price, and [it] strove to [provide that]. After divesture it became a mostly unregulated competitive environment of multiple companies and the main objectives were profit and market- share, which do not at all necessarily tie to service quality. If any customer's request is too difficult to fulfill, they won't bother and [they'll] allow the customer to go elsewhere--because the competitors--who compete by lower prices--are all doing the same thing or much worse. The public no longer deals with a highly trained and carefully recruited Service Representative, but a salesperson on commission. Outside of Western Electric, the Bell System tried very hard not to lay people off in lean times, even when converting manual exchanges to dial service. But today--as we saw in the AT&T article-- employees come and go in a revolving door. As to the competition, when my neighbor switched to cable phone service, the installer left and her phone didn't work for three days until they sent someone out to fix their errors; and that's typical. ***** Moderator's Note ***** The Unified New Bell System is now run by a secret cabal of former Bell System employees. We^h^hThey control the current executives via the Instrument of Obedience which was implanted shortly after they were recruited. Coded messages are sent to them as super-audible tones that can only be heard through the IOO implants. Everything is under control. Bill "Where's my medication?" Horne Temporary Moderator ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 14:42:21 -0500 From: "Who Me?" <hitchhiker@dont.panic> To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) Message-ID: <Dxdul.3384$Lr6.1903@flpi143.ffdc.sbc.com> <hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com> wrote > I don't understand . . . > > For better or worse, what was Ma Bell--the old unified Bell System--no > longer exists. > Lighten up Lisa. He is pulling your chain........or maybe that should be "ringing your Bell". ;-) ***** Moderator's Note ***** Well, sort of ... but not always. Ma Bell is dead, but her ghost haunts the minions of the Baby Bells, and the attitudes that led to rise and fall of the world's biggest paramilitary organization are still deeply ingrained and still being put into practice by (thankfully, a few) of the orphans: arrogance, intractability, and (most damaging of all) the deeply set notion that the way "we" do things is the only way that matters. The old whore knows everybody's secrets, and is therefore untouchable: our leaders are literally incapable of thinking of a society without universal phone service, or (by extension) without the cacaphony of constant background noise that passes for entertainment, masquerades as education, and represents itself as being All American. It is an idea as far-fetched as people doing without mortgages or cars; the very concept that it's possible would not register unless a million people marched up to Washington and demanded it. The fact that almost everyone who reads this will wonder why I would even think of it is proof that's it's true, yet the supposed benefits of being constantly connected to the electronic world have often been offset by serious problems that we, as a society, are unable to discuss or even to comprehend. Winston Smith has done his job too well: we can't think of "freedom" as being a right to choose _not_ to be bothered. Our children are bombarded by advertisements before they can control their bowels, let alone their minds; our teenagers are incapable of conceiving of a world where "tomorrow" or "next week" is soon enough, or where the etiquette of civil behavior included the notion of private spaces or even of private time. The economic underclass grows up believing that the TV actors who flash cell phones at every dramatic plot twist are real; that the tall white guy makes all the decisions and that everybody but them has new cars, new clothes, new ideas, and the privilege of being in charge of their own lives. To me, "Ma Bell" was not a corporation based on the Prussian Army, but rather a set of attitudes - notions, beliefs, and habits which snuck into our collective consciousness as if from poison in our wells: worst amoung them the notion that someone else decides how we should spend our time and what we should believe is right. To paraphrase Mark Antony: The good Ma Bell did was interred with her bones, but the evils that she allowed have survived and festered in the society that created and then abandoned her. Bill Horne Temporary Moderator ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 18:35:58 -0700 (PDT) From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) Message-ID: <a6a8cf2a-b258-44d8-98d1-2f9fc0ca01af@w35g2000yqm.googlegroups.com> > ***** Moderator's Note ***** > > Well, sort of ... but not always. > > Ma Bell is dead, but her ghost haunts the minions of the Baby Bells, > and the attitudes that led to rise and fall of the world's biggest > paramilitary organization are still deeply ingrained and still being > put into practice by (thankfully, a few) of the orphans: arrogance, > intractability, and (most damaging of all) the deeply set notion that > the way "we" do things is the only way that matters. But there also some employees who have the legacy spirit of service who work hard to take care of the subscribers--to properly do an installation, debug a problem, patiently explain complex rates and services, etc. [snip] > To paraphrase Mark Antony: The good Ma Bell did was interred with her > bones, but the evils that she allowed have survived and festered in > the society that created and then abandoned her. If we attempted to connect today's typical customer provided equipment to the Bell System of old, the old system would've crashed and burned for a variety of reasons. The old Bell System was geared toward full responsibility end-to-end. Long Distance was a toll charge and they'd always credit you if a call failed. Lousy telephones and PBX networks cause me constant disconects these days*, but since I don't pay for calls I don't care as much. Back then people would flood the company with complaints about cutoff calls and demands for credit if using today's equipment. (*Cheap switchhooks, bad PBX consoles/operators, cordless phones, poor customer wiring.) Further, the old electro mechanical gear was very expensive and the system was engineered with much less capacity. Constant redialing, false offhooks, etc., from today's phones would cause problems back then. > To me, "Ma Bell" was not a corporation based on the Prussian Army, but > rather a set of attitudes - notions, beliefs, and habits which snuck > into our collective consciousness as if from poison in our wells: > worst amoung them the notion that someone else decides how we should > spend our time and what we should believe is right. I'm afraid I don't agree with that. The old Bell System provided telephone service for us, no more, no less. It's attitudes were internal only, other companies generally did not do business the same way and Bell's attitudes didn't, IMHO, seep into the overall social conscious (other than as a source for jokes for Lily Tomlin and Alan King). As to technical issues, back in the heydey of the Bell System the rest of the general population didn't have a clue about technology (with few exceptions of engineers). Remember that years ago society's overall educational level was less and technology wasn't in offices. In a separate thread in alt.folklore. we're discussing a high school computer in 1973 and how at that time so few people knew anything about computers as compared to today. Remember how terrified so many people were in the old days of the C:> prompt? If you took a typical office worker from 1973 and plopped them down today, they'd freak out and be completely lost. We forgot about the days before technology was so common; we take it for granted. The old Bell System designed equipment, quite carefully, to be as user friendly as possible and to be as economically maintainable as possible. In the past that required rigid standardization and that "Prussian" model for things to work well, given the realities of times. Let's be clear that even without divesture, the Bell System and its relations with subscribers today would be very different, to reflect the changes in technology that have come along. Cheap electronics of the 1980s allowed them to switch to ESS and advanced carrier (ie fibre) in a big way and that changed everything. Even without divesture the idea of renting phones to customers was dead, it was no longer economically justified. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 13:00:57 -0400 From: Carl Navarro <cnavarro@wcnet.org> To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: OMG What happened to 800-555-1212? Message-ID: <qcfir4dp0id854g81nvna9pr231j32b1j5@4ax.com> I guess I'm the last one to know, but AT&T no longer maintains the Toll-Free Directory :-) Shows you how much I call it. Apparently Tellme administers it. I found this out because the company I'm an agent for gave me $35 setup, $3/month recurring charges AND $1.25 for every listing given out!!! My question is How do I get into the Tellme database? Their web site is pretty vague about listings. I already covered Switchboard and inter800.com. Carl ------------------------------ Date: 12 Mar 2009 15:30:17 -0000 From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com> To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) Message-ID: <20090312153017.3612.qmail@simone.iecc.com> > In the past, ISDN was supposed to be the big wave of the future, but > then DSL came out and we heard little about ISDN after that. Beyond the political issues, there's technical botches in the North American version of ISDN that makes it painful to install, with careful configuration of both ends of the line needed. In Europe and Asia, it's plug and play, not much harder than an analog phone. ISDN comes in two speeds, BRI which is two 64K "bearer" (voice or data) channels and a 16K data control channel on a regular twisted pair, and PRI which is 23B and 1D on a T1. BRI is pretty much dead, but PRI is quite popular as a way to provide trunks to a PBX since it has perfect voice quality and flexible control that can handle all of the stuff that a PBX needs to do, e.g. direct inward dialing and providing per-extension caller-id on outbound calls, and unlike a plain T1 lets you dynamically assign channels rather than having fixed assignments to inbound and outbound. R's, John ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 09:58:53 -0700 (PDT) From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) Message-ID: <7f3abf5f-f59c-40e1-a3be-f4e3bcda4291@s20g2000yqh.googlegroups.com> On Mar 12, 12:40 pm, John Levine <jo...@iecc.com> wrote: > Beyond the political issues, there's technical botches in the North > American version of ISDN that makes it painful to install, with > careful configuration of both ends of the line needed.  In Europe and > Asia, it's plug and play, not much harder than an analog phone. Just an observation--before divesture it was the U.S. that had the best telephone plant and Europe and Asia much weaker infrastructure. Now today the situation is reversed. ------------------------------ Date: 12 Mar 2009 18:09:05 -0000 From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com> To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) Message-ID: <20090312180905.50581.qmail@simone.iecc.com> >> Beyond the political issues, there's technical botches in the North >> American version of ISDN that makes it painful to install, with >> careful configuration of both ends of the line needed.  In Europe and >> Asia, it's plug and play, not much harder than an analog phone. > >Just an observation--before divesture it was the U.S. that had the >best telephone plant and Europe and Asia much weaker infrastructure. >Now today the situation is reversed. The screwups with ISDN predate the breakup. You can't blame them on Judge Greene. Also keep in mind that other countries have telecom markets as competitive if not more so than the US. To me the problem is primarily one of poor regulation by the FCC and states and short-term thinking by the telcos. R's, John ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 13:34:35 -0700 From: Steven Lichter <diespammers@ikillspammers.com> To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) Message-ID: <zleul.22115$Ws1.16037@nlpi064.nbdc.sbc.com> John Levine wrote: >>> Beyond the political issues, there's technical botches in the North >>> American version of ISDN that makes it painful to install, with >>> careful configuration of both ends of the line needed. In Europe and >>> Asia, it's plug and play, not much harder than an analog phone. >> Just an observation--before divesture it was the U.S. that had the >> best telephone plant and Europe and Asia much weaker infrastructure. >> Now today the situation is reversed. > > The screwups with ISDN predate the breakup. You can't blame them on > Judge Greene. Also keep in mind that other countries have telecom > markets as competitive if not more so than the US. To me the problem > is primarily one of poor regulation by the FCC and states and > short-term thinking by the telcos. > > R's, > John > > > The biggest problem is the lack of and or trained maintainers to work on this equipment. I worked on a project in Washington state a few years ago as a contractor and had to train Verizon people to work on the equipment I installed, years ago before I retired from GTE we had many schools, we also learned from older more experienced people; t hat is were I leaned most o what I know, but now it seem that they count more on contractors for everything. The California company had its own CO Installers back before I retired, but from what I can tell there are less then 10 left and they just handle the working contractors. Maintainers are covers many offices so there maybe no one there at times and at&t is the same way. -- The Only Good Spammer is a Dead one!! Have you hunted one down today? (c) 2009 I Kill Spammers, Inc. A Rot In Hell Co. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 09:02:35 -0400 From: Will Roberts <oldbear@arctos.com> To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: under-sea power transmission cables Message-ID: <0MKp8S-1LhkYa1OIo-000fmk@mrelay.perfora.net> Following up on the discussion of underground high-voltage power transmission lines, it's worth noting a project which was under consideration in Hawaii. Most of the state's population lives on Oahu while there are abundant geothermal resources on the big island of Hawaii. The problem is getting energy from where it is to where it is needed: Interisland Cable ----------------- From 1982 through early 1990, a large-scale 500 megawatt geothermal/interisland submarine cable project was under consideration. About $26 million (Federal and State funding) was expended in studies, design, engineering, fabrication, and testing for the Hawaii Deep Water Cable Project. The design criteria stated that the cable(s) would have to be able to withstand the stresses of at-sea deployment (including strong currents, large waves, and stong winds), the undersea environment (including corrosion and abrasion), and be able to reliably conduct electricity for thirty years. Since the Alenuihaha Channel is nearly 2,000 meters deep, both deployment (laying of the cables) and operating environment posed unique engineering challenges. Over 251 different cable designs were considered. Tests included laboratory and at-sea cable deployment tests. The cable, while shown to be technically feasible through the research project, did not prove to be economical. Cost proposals for commercial installation of the cable demonstrated that the project could not be supported without significant government subsidies, which were not possible at the time. source: http://hawaii.gov/dbedt/info/energy/renewable/geothermal Like so many things, the technology is possible but just too expensive. And, unfortunately, overhead transmission lines are not an option. ;) Regards, Will ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 13 Mar 2009 10:49:13 +1100 From: David Clayton <dcstar@myrealbox.com> To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: Re: under-sea power transmission cables Message-ID: <pan.2009.03.12.23.49.11.597091@myrealbox.com> On Thu, 12 Mar 2009 13:07:10 -0400, Will Roberts wrote: > > Following up on the discussion of underground high-voltage power > transmission lines, it's worth noting a project which was under > consideration in Hawaii. > > Most of the state's population lives on Oahu while there are abundant > geothermal resources on the big island of Hawaii. The problem is getting > energy from where it is to where it is needed: ....... > Like so many things, the technology is possible but just too expensive. > And, unfortunately, overhead transmission lines are not an option. ;) That may seem like an application for a massive Hydrogen generating plant where the power is, and shipping it across the gap to where the people actually are. They call aluminium "frozen electricity" (except you can't unfreeze it back into electricity), maybe in this century hydrogen may one day be named "bottled electricity"? -- Regards, David. David Clayton Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Knowledge is a measure of how many answers you have, intelligence is a measure of how many questions you have. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 10:43:58 -0700 (PDT) From: Joseph Singer <joeofseattle@yahoo.com> To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: Phone company asks payment delay Message-ID: <832815.37891.qm@web52708.mail.re2.yahoo.com> (PORTLAND, Maine) FairPoint Communications wants to delay a scheduled $11.25 million debt payment that's due at the end of March. FairPoint, which operates about 1.6 million customer lines in Maine, New Ha= mpshire and Vermont, is asking Maine's Public Utilities Commission to appro= ve the payment delay until June. It's pledging to resume regular quarterly payments after that. http://www.boston.com/news/local/maine/articles/2009/03/12/phone_company_asks_payment_delay/?rss_id=Boston.com+--+Maine+news ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 16:58:24 -0400 From: T <kd1s.nospam@cox.nospam.net> To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: Re: Phone company asks payment delay Message-ID: <MPG.2423417d9399bd4d98994b@reader.motzarella.org> In article <832815.37891.qm@web52708.mail.re2.yahoo.com>, joeofseattle@yahoo.com says... > > (PORTLAND, Maine) FairPoint Communications wants to delay a scheduled > $11.25 million debt payment that's due at the end of March. > > FairPoint, which operates about 1.6 million customer lines in Maine, > New Ha= mpshire and Vermont, is asking Maine's Public Utilities > Commission to appro= ve the payment delay until June. It's pledging to > resume regular quarterly payments after that. > > phone_company_asks_payment_delay Hmmm. I wonder what happen if they default. Does Verizon move in to snatch it back up again at a discount? ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 11:22:32 -0700 (PDT) From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: Re: To Bury or Not to Bury Message-ID: <122e9a88-a789-4a0f-89c0-19a12ee8a759@d19g2000yqb.googlegroups.com> On Mar 11, 6:02 pm, Neal McLain <nmcl...@annsgarden.com> wrote: >  > I've also read reports that indicate trouble shooting and repairing >  > underground power lines near the end of their life is very expensive. > To the extent that repair work is required near the end of life, it's > usually caused by failure of the insulation.  This is a slow process, > more likely to occur after a period of years.  Reasons include corrosion > caused by water (and whatever chemicals are dissolved in it); rodent and > tree-root damage; and (in the case of power lines) conductor heating > caused by I-squared-R heating. We were told our 40 year old power distribution lines, which were not buried in conduit, would "wear" from the power line heating and cooling and expanding and contracting against the earth. Apparently conduit lines are better protected from that. We had to replace the lines. $$$ I saw in a new community how they built underground lines, as you describe. So much better than what we originally had. (Thank goodness telephone and cable aren't our problem.) > Construction in established residential neighborhoods costs a lot more. > Even if utility easements already exist, explaining that to homeowners > can be a challenge.  Actual construction can be a nightmare -- see my > earlier post about the problems cable TV companies face in such > situations at http://tinyurl.com/cm29d. The local water company had an easement through our community. They needed to build a high volume new water line. Technically the easement ran under our driveway, it was to mutual advantage for them to run it under a wild growth area (so our driveway wouldn't be disrupted and they could dig in soil instead of concrete). We had a problem afterwards in that they wouldn't restore as many trees as existed before, as they promised. Of course we screwed up by not getting the agreement in writing in advance. > Or try running it down a congested city street, working your way around > sewer pipes, catch basins, water mains, gas mains, steam pipes, telco > conduits, telco manholes, abandoned coal bins, abandoned streetcar > rails, colonial-era cobblestones.... Constructing a few miles of street running track for a new light rail line cost more than building 25 miles in open area, due to all the stuff you describe in an old industrial city. Don't forget telegraph lines, too. > Then there's the problem of finding space for transformers, splices, > and switchgear.  In suburban areas, you can put this stuff in big steel > boxes above ground and hope that nobody complains.  But in congested > urban centers, there's no place for it above ground.  So you either > have to construct manholes or put it in the basement of a nearby > building.  You can imagine the difficulties these options would > encounter. When the cable company upgraded to fibre from coax, they needed to install "steamer trunk" boxes at frequent intervals. In our community we arranged to locate such boxes behind shrubs. But in other communities, they just put them along sidewalks. Suburban homeowners are VERY fussy about their lawns and screamed like crazy. (A big cable rate increase at the time didn't help.) In our community, the building transformers were originally underground. As they expired (sometimes violently) we replaced them with aboveground boxes. The community objected to them but we were told below ground transformers were no longer available and had shorter lifespans. Due to PCB fears, we had to replace all of them. $ $$ >  > NYC is probably the worst case example, where the city is built on a >  > slab of rock, and digging the tunnels involves jackhammers and >  > blasting.  They flood, too.  But given the density of wires there, >  > overhead simply stopped being practical in the heart of the city, >  > although there's still plenty of overhead in the outer boroughs. In Chicago, they built a tunnel network to handle phone lines. But then they used the tunnels to move freight around. Eventually the freight system was retired, but then the tunnels reverted to their original goal--utility lines were installed in them. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 16:22:56 -0400 From: T <kd1s.nospam@cox.nospam.net> To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: Re: To Bury or Not to Bury Message-ID: <MPG.24233926f6aedbe1989949@reader.motzarella.org> In article <0MKpCa-1LgjQo1Oze-000czW@mrelay.perfora.net>, oldbear@arctos.com says... > Several of the major transmission lines feeding the City of Boston > have been placed underground in the last few years: How very interesting. Is Boston served by National Grid now? I know here in RI it was like pulling teeth to get them to bury the HV wires that ran over India Point Park. The only way they'd do it was if they could pass off costs to the rate base. BTW, our per kWH cost has doubled since National Grid took over. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 16:26:04 -0400 From: T <kd1s.nospam@cox.nospam.net> To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: Re: To Bury or Not to Bury Message-ID: <MPG.242339e46e6c745798994a@reader.motzarella.org> In article <49B824AB.2080409@annsgarden.com>, nmclain@annsgarden.com says... > > David Clayton <dcstar@myrealbox.com> wrote: > > > Vehicles can't crash into power poles that aren't there, winds can't > > affect power lines that are underground, and the visual pollution of > > underground power distribution is limited to the access ports on the > > pavement. > > Are "access ports" in Australia the same things that we call "manhole > covers" here in the USA -- round steel plates about a meter in diameter? > > Where are equipment enclosures (transformers and switchgear) located? > Are they also underground? Access ports can be manholes but they can also be metal doors about 6x8 feet. There are several of those in downtown Providence. Not to mention the vent stacks that stick up occasionally. That's what happens when you build a city on a site that was once called the Great Swamp. > "Tony Toews \[MVP\]" <ttoews@telusplanet.net> wrote: > > > I've also read reports that indicate trouble shooting and repairing > > underground power lines near the end of their life is very expensive. > > Troubleshooting and repairing any kind of underground cables -- power, > telco, or CATV -- is expensive at any point during the life of the > cables. Physical damage due to excavation work can occur at any time. Which is why you run inexpensive nylon lines through the ducting in order to pull through new cable. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 12:04:29 -0700 (PDT) From: Joseph Singer <joeofseattle@yahoo.com> To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: Google Voice: A push to rewire your phone service Message-ID: <27157.14252.qm@web52706.mail.re2.yahoo.com> SAN FRANCISCO--Google plans to unveil a service called Google Voice on Thursday that indicates Google wants to do with your telephone communications what companies such as Yahoo have done with e-mail. Google Voice, the new version of the GrandCentral technology Google acquired in July 2007, has the potential to make the search giant a middleman in an important part of people's lives, telephone communications. With the service, people can pick a new phone number from Google Voice; when others call it, Google can ring all the actual phones a person uses and handle voice mail. http://news.cnet.com/8301-17939_109-10194446-2.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-20 ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 13:15:07 -0600 From: Michael Grigoni <michael.grigoni@cybertheque.org> To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: [Fwd: Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) ] Message-ID: <49B95F3B.5010905@cybertheque.org> From: merlyn@dork.geeks.org (Doug McIntyre) Subject: Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) To: michael.grigoni@cybertheque.org Doug McIntyre says: > My newsserver doesn't seem to post correctly to this usenet group. Original Message: ================== In comp.dcom.telecom you write: >hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote: >>>***** Moderator's Note ***** >>>3. Switch to ISDN service, which can provide two separate call paths >>> on a single pair. It tends to be pricey, but you'll have full use of >>> both lines at your new location. I don't know if this will work >>> with ADSL. >The following excerpt is from the Wikipedia article on ISDN: ><quote> >In Germany, ISDN is very popular with an installed base of 25 million >channels (29% of all subscriber lines in Germany as of 2003 and 20% >of all ISDN channels worldwide). Due to the success of ISDN, the number >of installed analog lines is decreasing. Deutsche Telekom (DTAG) offers >both BRI and PRI. Competing phone companies often offer ISDN only and >no analog lines. Because of the widespread availability of ADSL services, >ISDN is today primarily used for voice and fax traffic, but is still >very popular thanks to the pricing policy of German telecommunication >providers. Today ISDN (BRI) and ADSL/VDSL are often bundled on the same >line, mainly because the combination of ADSL with an analog line has no >cost advantage over a combined ISDN-ADSL line. ></quote> >Other replies to this thread seemed to rule-out the ADSL/ISDN combination; >could someone please elaborate? There are two widely used parts of the ADSL standards, one for use of ADSL riding an analog POTS line for use in the US, and many other areas. And another part for using ADSL over ISDN, mainly for use in Germany, and other parts of Europe where ISDN BRI is also popular. Many people believe that ADSL over ISDN isn't possible, because its not offered in the US, and the equipment required for it is different, and they think that two digital services over the same wire would conflict. But it is widely deployed in Germany and other European countries where ISDN BRI is widely installed. If you look through popular vendors, you'll find many products for ADSLoISDN (ie. the Cisco 876 router). vs ADSLoPOTS (ie. the Cisco 877 router). ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 13 Mar 2009 00:05:22 GMT From: "Gary" <fake-email-address@bogus.hotmail.com> To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT) Message-ID: <6rhul.2775$gm6.172@nwrddc02.gnilink.net> > ***** Moderator's Note ***** > > I have always been puzzled by Ma Bell's distaste for ISDN: if there's > someone reading this that knows The Real Truth(tm), PLEASE tell us > why. While you've gotten "The Real Truth(tm)" about the service, you haven't gotten it about the name. No, ISDN does NOT stand for "Integrated Services Digital Network." It really stands for (take your pick): I See Dollars Now I Still Don't Know It Still Does Nothing Innovation Subscribers Don't Need and I'm sure there are more that I can't recall.... -Gary ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 19:09:59 -0600 From: Neal McLain <nmclain@annsgarden.com> To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: Re: Steam Railroads, was: Telex Message-ID: <49B9B267.1010306@annsgarden.com> Bill Horne wrote: > OhMyGhod! A real railroad guy! I've been a railfan for > years. > > OK, totally unrelated, Moderator's privilege, etc. Hey, this gives me a chance to put in a plug for one of my must-see television programs: "Trains & Locomotives" on RFD-TV. It's a glorious hodgepodge of the old and the new: old 16mm B&W films of narrow-gauge steam from the 30s and 50s to coverage of railfan weekends in the 90s and 00s. Most programs feature U.S. railroads, but there have been episodes about railroads in Canada, Germany, China, Russia, and South Africa. T&L runs three times a week. A new episode premiers at 6:00 pm Eastern on Monday, and repeats at 4:00 am Tuesday and sometime on Saturday (the Saturday schedule changes depending on other programming). This week's program features D&RGW narrow-gauge in New Mexico and Colorado. Several shots of the Durango & Silverton, and a few shots of the Galloping Goose. Your last chance to see it: Saturday, March 14, at 12:00 EDT. RFD-TV launched in 2000. It's a non-profit company based in rural Nebraska, with studio operations in Nashville. It claims to be "Rural America's Most Important Network" which is probably a safe claim since it's rural America's only network. It's on DirecTV (Channel 379) and Dish (Channel 231), and numerous cable TV systems. Comcast has a contract to carry it, although only some of its systems actually carry it. Don't know if Boston-area systems carry it. Neal McLain ***** Moderator's Note ***** I'll have to pass: I use rabbit ears and I've just gotten a DTV converter so that my ~5 year old tv can keep chugging along. Bill Horne Temporary Moderator ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 22:08:28 -0400 From: Fred Goldstein <fgoldstein.SeeSigSpambait@wn2.wn.net> To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu Subject: ISDN (was Re: 2 phone numers on one landline? (Slightly OT)) Message-ID: <20090313020734.1CEB048141@mailout.easydns.com> On Thu, 12 Mar 2009 05:02:28 +0000 (UTC), David Lesher wrote, > >I have always been puzzled by Ma Bell's distaste for ISDN: if there's > >someone reading this that knows The Real Truth(tm), PLEASE tell us why. > >[I bet Fred Goldstein has some comments as well...] Well, since you asked politely... ;-) To answer Lisa's question, ISDN is basically The Telephone Network (PSTN), with the subscriber connections digital rather than analog. The guts of the network are 64000 bps digital, so why use analog at the edges? And if it's digital, why use ancient signaling techniques (tones) which were designed to run over analog circuits? It's computers at both ends, so it makes more sense to use computer-type signaling protocols. That's ISDN in a nutshell, 64000 bps circuit switched telephony. You can use it for voice or data calls. In Europe, ISDN became very common for ordinary phones. And the T1/E1 speed ISDN PRI is common for PBXs, again more in Europe than the US but pretty common here. DSL is not the PSTN at all. It is simply using the old copper wire to carry faster data. ADSL can run "atop" an analog line (high frequency), and in Europe, it runs atop ISDN. (The splitters in Europe have a higher split frequency.) For good measure, there's a rare flavor of DSL (MVL) that runs *in* the ISDN frequency range (20-160 kHz) *and* can run atop analog phones. ISDN was conceived in the early 1980s as a way to complete the digitization of the PSTN, a logical evolution. And 64000 bps (both ways) beats the crap out of modems. (The retail BRI has two B channels so you can combine them to get 128,000 bps.) But then we got the RBOCs. They were born in 1984, just after a failed and long-forgotten boomlet in "integrated voice-data terminals", which basically were dumb timesharing terminals with handsets. Bellcore and some RBOCs got the idea that ISDN was built for that, so the two B channels had to be one voice and one data channel. Of course it took years for ISDN to be available, by which time IVDTs were no more common than Hupmobiles, but instead of positioning it as a modem substitute, they positioned it as a LAN substitute (yeah, right, dial-up 64000 instead of Ethernet). BOCs rhymes with rocks, as in "dumb as"... So while ISDN trials began in 1987 or so and it was commercially ready for volume deployment in the US by 1990 or so, the RBOCs screwed up. Bell Atlantic in particular was fanatical about Centrex, and ISDN provided them with a standardized Centrex featurephone, so ISDN was made available for Centrex, period. A couple of years later, Internet went commercial, and ISDN was way better than the 28 kbps modems of the day, so it became the "killer app". BUT the Bells *hated* Internet with a purple passion (and still do). So while demand for ISDN soared, for Internet use, they associated ISDN demand with Internet demand and treated it as an evil to be stomped out. One way was to tariff it as measured-service only, or, in BA's case, sometimes flat rate for $240/month. In NYNEXland, it was hard to order, and "loop qualified" only about half the time. At least BA would clean up the loop if they decided to take the order; NYNEX used lousy plant as a way to avoid it. Eventually modems got faster and the Internet caught on even bigger. Modems actually cost the Bells more to support than ISDN, but since POTS lines were also used for voice, they accepted them. And once DSL caught on, ISDN declined. I switched from ISDN to a cable modem about a decade ago, after putting in cable telephone service, so I've been Bell-free since then. In most places ISDN BRI has been de-tariffed (grandfathered) so you can't even order it. Modern US-market switches don't even support it; only the ILECs have it in their "legacy" (antique) 5ESS and DMS-100 switches. PRI is however very common, especially from CLECs; many VoIP networks use CLEC PRI to connect their gateways to the PSTN. That has recycled many of the PRIs formerly used for modems. -- Fred Goldstein k1io fgoldstein "at" ionary.com ionary Consulting http://www.ionary.com/ +1 617 795 2701 ------------------------------ TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly to telecom- munications topics. 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