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Message-ID: <QamdndU7tM2ZpmnEnZ2dnUU7-cHNnZ2d@posted.internetamerica>
Date: Sat, 28 Oct 2017 03:08:36 -0500
From: gordonb.ms5m4@burditt.org (Gordon Burditt)
Subject: Re: FCC Proposes Market-Based Changes to Toll Free Number
Administration
>>On Sept. 28, 2017, the Federal Communications Commission
>>released a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) that
>>seeks to permit the assignment of toll free numbers via
>>alternative market-based approaches,
Would there be any effect on toll-free number hoarding if there
was a fee of, say, $1 / month per number "owned", whether there
is any service connected with that number or not? Yes, that means
you and me as well as the hoarders, but the hoarders have a LOT
more numbers, and I suspect this would upset their business plan.
> I'd like to understand one thing: why does anyone bother with toll-
> free numbers any more? Don't most people have national calling
> plans at this point? (Especially poor people, who are as likely to
> have prepaid cellular as landlines these days.)
Most people do not have *UNLIMITED* national plans, and it's really
easy to burn up a few months worth of your minutes on hold with one
attempt to resolve an issue with, say, an insurance company, which
may involve lots of calls and many hours on hold. (I do know of
one person who spent several days including an entire weekend on
hold trying to contact a mortgage company to get some mess straightened
out before April 15, and that call didn't resolve anything - she
didn't even get through to a bot.
Your marginal cost can be a lot higher than your average cost for
minutes. It gets even worse if going 1 minute over requires you
to buy another $20 in minutes, even if that includes a lot of minutes
for that $20. If you are usually close to your limit, go over it
occasionally, and can't forecast exactly how much you're going to
need for the rest of the month for talking to friends, co-workers,
and family, you may be a bit reluctant to a business where you might
be spending a lot of time on hold.
When Obamacare's health marketplace first started in 2014, I signed
up, then spent the whole year trying to find a doctor in my network.
After a few hundred calls to doctors on the insurance company's
list, all of whom denied being in the network, and lots of time on
hold with the insurance company and online with their web site, I
never succeeded in finding an in-network doctor. I don't really
believe there was one - that was a big waste of money that year
for both unusable health insurance and overages on minutes.
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Message-ID: <7230d40d-f230-41b8-a857-ab12400073f5@googlegroups.com>
Date: Sat, 28 Oct 2017 13:03:26 -0700 (PDT)
From: HAncock4 <withheld@invalid.telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Re: History--Western Union's cellular service, 1984
On Saturday, October 28, 2017 at 1:14:22 AM UTC-4, Michael D. Sullivan wrote:
> HAncock4 <withheld@invalid.telecom-digest.org> wrote:
>
> > In 1984, the Western Union Telegraph Company got into the cellular
> > mobile phone business. Below is a link to an ad they ran in "New
> > York" magazine.
> >
> > Unfortunately, at that time W/U was losing serious money in various
> > ventures. They were forced to sell off their bandwidth. Had they
> > been able to keep it a few more years, it would've been very
> > valuable.
> >
> >
https://books.google.com/books?id=gOUCAAAAMBAJ&lpg=PA23&dq=look%20%22western%20union%22&pg=PA23#v=onepage&q&f=false
>
> That ad doesn't advertise cellular *service*, but physical cellular
> *phones* made by WUTC's E.F. Johnson subsidiary. WUTC didn't have any
> cellular "bandwidth" in New York. There were two cellular licensees
> in New York back then; one of the two initial licenses was awarded to
> the NYNEX cellular affiliate and the other was awarded to Cellular
> Telephone Corporation, a joint venture of LIN Broadcasting,
> Metromedia, and a coalition of New York paging companies (principally
> Metromedia). Western Union Telegraph Co. was not involved. (I was
> the chief of the FCC's Mobile Services Division, responsible for
> cellular rules and licensing, at the time.)
It appears that WU did have some spectrum in a few other places.
According to "The Cellphone: The History and Technology of the
Gadget That Changed the World"*, pg 70, Western Union won several
markets with the potential of millions of potential users, but
when the company hit hard times, the decision came to sell
everything. Western Union sold its cellular phone spectrum
in 1985, giving away what would later turn out to be billions
in revenue.
* Available on google books at:
https://books.google.com/books?id=3WNnM7iZF_QC&pg=PA70&lpg=PA70&dq=western+union+cellular+spectrum
&source=bl&ots=JME88bm1bM&sig=t1cBc0sx8cbE4atu4erXMbDdpzE
&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi32Yv1ipTXAhUD_IMKHYdjBL0Q6AEIRDAF#v=onepage
&q=western%20union%20cellular%20spectrum&f=false
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Message-ID: <20171027064229.55264.qmail@submit.iecc.com>
Date: Fri, 27 Oct 2017 02:42:06 -0400
From: bernieS <bernies@remove-this.panix.com>
Subject: Re: History -- Western Union's cellular service, 1984
In 1985 I installed this very same Western Union branded cellular
telephone systems in a friend's Cadillac. I don't know where he got
the phone or how much he paid for it, but it was like the Rolls-Royce
of cellular phones. At the time cellular phones cost thousands of
dollars (no portables yet) and this was the best of the best. I
mounted the large, heavy transceiver in the trunk and ran the fat
wiring harness under the carpeting to the transmission hump under the
dash, where I mounted the control head.
The Western Union cellular (AMPS) transceiver was the only one I've
ever seen to this day that used a diversity receiver--two receivers
and two antennas arranged in a 'voting' configuration to ensure the
800 MHz band signal would be received as reliably as possible. The
wavelength of the radio signals in that 800 MHz band made 'picket
fencing" (rapid signal fade-in / fade out) a problem as the car phone
was in motion and experienced signal peaks and troughs from to wave
interference, which could cause the transceiver to lose connection
with the cellular repeater / tower. So I took advantage of the
feature and mounted dual 5/8 wave coaxial antennas on either side of
the trunk. It looked and worked great.
The Western Union control head was impressive. The keypad and
electroluminescent blue display looked similar to an AT&T Merlin desk
set, but with the control panel and keypad angled to the left towards
the driver. The handset looked like a normal modular handset with
squired-off earpiece and microphone. All very ergonomic. It had a
key switch to prevent unauthorized phone calls (by parking valets) and
a relay that could blow your car horn when you were outside the
vehicle when your phone rang!
This phone had full-duplex audio and superb audio fidelity. Remember,
the AMPS standard mandated a 30 KHz FM chanel for each side of the
conversation. Nowadays we're stuck with a comparatively
awful-sounding 4 kbps half-duplex codec and a tinny earpiece speaker.
Progress? Only for telco industry profits. Cell phones used to sound
as good as landlines.
Western Union not only invested in cellular licenses in various
markets, but also manufactured end-user equipment. This phone model
was made by WU's subsidiary E.F. Johnson, which had a long history of
making quality two-way radio gear. (I still have my 1959 E.F. Johnson
Challenger amateur shortwave transmitter.)
The New York Magazine advertisement posted by HAncock4 touted the
phone's privacy. That's a laugh. While it was more private than
pre-cellular IMTS (which was like a giant party line) analog (AMPS)
cellular calls were anything but private. Anyone could easily monitor
nearby random cellular conversations with an ordinary analog TV by
tuning through the upper UHF TV channels which had been recently
refarmed by the FCC for cellular around 1980.
To address potential cellular users' privacy concerns, the cellular
telephone industry lobby bought a new federal law in 1986 called the
ECPA (Electronic Communications Privacy Act) which for the first time
criminalized listening to certain radio frequencies. And it denied
FCC type-acceptance for consumer-grade receivers/scanners that could
receive those frequencies. But modifying radio scanners wasn't
difficult and turned cellular monitoring into a popular hobby -- until
the FCC allowed cellular telcos to switch to encrypted digital
modulation in 2007.
-bernieS
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End of telecom Digest Sun, 29 Oct 2017