----------------------------------------------------------------------
Message-ID: <20200708173836.GA439@telecom.csail.mit.edu>
Date: Wed, 8 Jul 2020 17:38:36 +0000
From: Moderator <telecomdigestsubmissions@remove-this.telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Nokia dampens rumours of Verizon 5G loss
By Chris Donkin
Nokia played-down reports it was set to lose a 5G RAN contract with
Verizon, after US media speculation the operator was lining up a deal
with Samsung.
In a statement, a Nokia representative said although it did not
comment on customers' vendor strategies it was "proud to serve
Verizon, and we are committed to continuing to help them build the
best, most reliable and highest-performing network."
https://www.mobileworldlive.com/featured-content/home-banner/nokia-dampens-rumours-of-verizon-5g-loss/
--
Bill Horne
Telecom Digest Moderator
------------------------------
Message-ID: <20200708175954.GA552@telecom.csail.mit.edu>
Date: Wed, 8 Jul 2020 17:59:54 +0000
From: Moderator <telecomdigestsubmissions@remove-this.telecom-digest.org>
Subject: New York City to Seek Assessment on Internet Providers to
Fund Low-Income Service
(Reuters)
NEW YORK - New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said on Tuesday the city
would invest $157 million to expand high-speed internet service to
low-income residents as part of a plan to offer universal broadband
services to New Yorkers.
https://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2020/07/07/us/07reuters-new-york-internet.html
--
Bill Horne
Telecom Digest Moderator
------------------------------
Message-ID: <alpine.LRH.2.00.2007071919270.17604@kss.sorabji.com>
Date: 7 Jul 2020 22:14:13 -0400
From: "mark thomas" <sorabji@sorabji.com>
Subject: Re: Are there any payphones left?
> From: Bill Horne <telecomdigestsubmissions@remove-this.telecom-digest.org>
> Subject: Are there any payphones left?
Pacific Telemanagement Service (PTS) is the nation's largest payphone
service provider (PSP), with about 25,000 phones nationwide. PTS
acquired many of its phones from the likes of Verizon, Qwest, AT&T, and
other diversified telecoms that got out of the payphone and calling card
businesses years ago. Verizon was the last major telco to dump its
payphones in 2010.
You never know where you'll find one but PTS's phones are found in
state and national parks, government buildings, desert highways, transit
hubs, hospitals, etc. I once found a working PTS phone in a cemetery.
PTS also has a lucrative presence in some states' prison systems.
A payphone that is profitable solely on coin or calling card revenue is
rare, and probably non-existent. It's been a long time since larger
ILEC's and telecom companies have had interest in maintaining them. The
cost of paying someone to go to the phones, empty them of coins, fix
busted handsets, etc.; all these costs greatly exceed the amount of money
coming in. It's like good money chasing bad.
PTS's model is to negotiate long-term contracts in which businesses or
government entities pay PTS a fee of something like 75 dollars a month for
providing what amounts to a concession, or a convenience. Some of these
contracts include a percentage of revenue share on coin and calling card
payments. With so little money coming in many contracts don't even
include this.
The FCC released stats on payphones a couple of years ago, estimating the
nationwide population to be about 100,000. The agency will probably not
compile such stats again, but it's safe to assume the number has declined
since then.
Here in New York, as of a few months ago, we still had about 3,000 outdoor
payphones. But in March the City's technology agency ordered the removal
of "hundreds" of payphones. By my observation this long-promised payphone
apocalypse finally commenced sometime in the last 5 or 6 weeks, probably
delayed by the pandemic lockdown, and the "hundreds" directive probably
escalated to "thousands". In the areas I've spent most of my
pandemic time I've seen at least three dozen payphones removed in the
Astoria and Woodside neighborhoods in Queens, and maybe a =EF=BF=BD dozen g=
one
from Midtown Manhattan.
New York has maintained a conspicuous quantity of payphones, a supply that
far exceeds demand, not on account of the phones being in demand but
because the revenue from the display advertising on the enclosures makes
a decent amount of money for both the payphone owners and the city agency
that oversees their operation. Display advertising on New York's payphone
enclosures has essentially subsidized the business since the mid-1980s,
when NYNEX went rogue and started slapping ads on its payphones without
obtaining City approval.
Today, speaking only of outdoor phones located on City sidewalks,
virtually all of New York's payphones are owned by CityBridge, a
confusing consortium of technology, advertising, and media companies that
includes Alphabet among its principle investors. Who'd'a thunk that the
payphones of New York are kept alive, in part, by The Big G?
Google's acquisition of most New York City payphones came in 2015, when
New York awarded the CityBridge consortium a monopoly franchise on outdoor
payphones and information kiosks throughout the 5 boroughs. Since 2016
the consortium has removed hundreds upon hundreds of payphones, replacing
them with LinkNYC kiosks, a product CityBridge calls "the payphone of the
future".
Akin to the payphones they replaced, which made *almost* all their money
from display advertising, LinkNYC's revenue stream comes 100% from ads.
The kiosks are said to cost taxpayers absolutely nothing, a claim many
observers refuse to believe.
Link kiosks are also found in Newark and Philadelphia, but at nowhere
near the quantity of New York, which presently has about 1,800 Links.
The controversies and failures of the LinkNYC program are subject for a
separate discussion.
PTS, the nation's largest PSP, owns what is probably the largest number of
payphones under one roof in New York, with about a dozen phones at Penn
Station. Despite that, and with a surprising quantity of phones at both
Staten Island Ferry Terminals, the company today has a relatively small
presence in New York. PTS had acquired all of Verizon's subway payphones
but they've given up on almost all of those. PTS also had phones in many
of the city's parks, acquired from Verizon, but those, too, are done.
Until as late as 2015 the Port Authority Bus Terminal housed a ludicrous
quantity of what must been over 100 working payphones, virtually all
languishing in disuse, owned and operated by G-Tel. Those phones
disappeared in March, 2015.
What killed off the payphones? Well, for starters, they're not dead yet,
even though many people seem to think so.
The payphone's main assassin has no doubt been the now-ubiquitous cell
phone, said to be in the pockets and handbags of 95% of Americans.
But people in the payphone industry (what's left of it, that is) say the
Federal Lifeline Assistance Program, which gives free or low-cost cell
phones to those who qualify, is what really siphoned away the payphone's
last reliable customer base: The poor.
------------------------------
*********************************************
End of telecom Digest Thu, 09 Jul 2020