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- *****************************
- TELECOM DIGEST - Issue 890410
- *****************************
-
-
-
- Date: 23 Mar 89 08:23:00 EST
- From: B CHURCHFIELD <churchfield1@aldncf.alcoa.com>
- Subject: C.O.C.O.T.'S
-
- In the past couple of months I have seen a lot of people complaining
- about what a rip COCOTs are. I think maybe not every one knows what a
- COCOT is, especially based on some of the descriptions I have seen given.
- A COCOT is a Customer Owned Coin Operated Telephone, I have seen some
- complaints of ATT operated COCOTs which to me sounds like a conflict
- of interest. Yesterday I couldn't spell COCOT, today I is one. When I
- purchased my phone I was told I needed to go through an AOS (alternate
- operator service) in order to get call supervision. Some people that
- I have talked to since say this is not so, but the point is it is
- the AOS that is overcharging on calls. In most states the AOSs are not
- regulated therefore that can charge what they want or at least what ever
- the traffic will bear. Most people get into COCOTs to make money but,
- other than AOS I don't think one can get rich. I went into this blindly
- based on articles I had read in trade publications, if anyone knows of
- any good reading on COCOTs I would appreciate the info .
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 23 Mar 89 09:38:13 EST
- From: Jerry Glomph Black <@ll-vlsi.ARPA:black@ll-micro>
- Subject: The dreaded AOS:Just when you thought it was safe....
- Reply-To: @ll-vlsi.ARPA:black@micro
- Organization: None discernable
-
- In my regular monthly New England Telephone bill, received yesterday, was a
- small nondescript insert entitled: "To our customers who use NE Tel coin phones
- to make long distance calls". I'm not gonna type it in, but in effect, it says,
- starting in April, the LD carrier pertaining to a given NE Tel payphone will
- not necessarily be AT&T. It will be determined by the owner of the premises
- where the phone is installed. Thus the last safe haven of COCOT/AOS haters
- has fallen. It really makes me barf, the lawyers win again.
-
- They note in the flyer that you can get any carrier you wish on a NE Tel
- payphone by dialing the appropriate 10XXX (10288 for ATT, 10777 for Sprint,
- etc.), but I'll bet 98% of the phone-using public never heard of the 10XXX
- codes for home, business, or coin-phone use. I would guess that the guano will
- hit the proverbial fan when the bills start arriving in a few months, with
- those lovely AOS rates! "Thank you for using BumStench Communications!"
-
- Oh, well, it takes your attention away from the CPID/ACLU cacophony!
-
- Jerry G Black, MIT Lincoln Laboratory, 244 Wood St. C-120, Lexington MA 02173
- Phone (617) 981-4721 Fax (617) 862-9057 black@micro@VLSI.LL.MIT.EDU
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- From: "David E. Bernholdt" <bernhold@qtp.ufl.edu>
- Subject: CLID for 911 - who pays?
- Date: 23 Mar 89 23:11:05 GMT
- Reply-To: "David E. Bernholdt" <bernhold@qtp.ufl.edu>
- Organization: University of Florida Quantum Theory Project
-
-
-
- I've noted many mentions in the discussions of calling line ID that
- 911 get the number anyway. Of course that's only true if the 911
- equipment can handle CLID.
-
- Here in Alachua County, Florida, they've recently upgraded their 911
- equipment so that it can handle CLID -- and every subscriber in the
- county gets an item like "E911 Upgrade" on their local service billing
- to pay for it (at $0.50/month).
-
- We're all familiar with the local BOC acting as a billing agent for
- the long-distance carriers and the like, but is there any limit to
- what (whom) a BOC can collect for? Just out of curiousity, does
- anyone know of other cases where the BOC is collecting "taxes" for a
- local government?
- --
- David Bernholdt bernhold@qtp.ufl.edu
- Quantum Theory Project bernhold@ufpine.bitnet
- University of Florida
- Gainesville, FL 32611 904/392 6365
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- Date: Thu, 23 Mar 89 21:16:57 EST
- From: Jonathan Haruni <decom@dgp.toronto.edu>
- Subject: Re: Selling an Interesting Telephone Number?
- Organization: University of Toronto
-
- In article <telecom-v09i0105m04@vector.UUCP> "Anthony E. Siegman" <sierra!
- siegman@labrea.stanford.edu> writes:
- >My residential phone number (415 area code) happens to spell a
- >quite commercially interesting word. During the 15-plus years I've
- >had this number I've had a couple of inquiries from businesses wanting
- >to take it over, paying me something for giving it up. A recent one
- >seems serious.
-
- >Anyone have any thoughts on the dollar value of such a number?
-
- If you're selling your phone number for the money and for no other reason,
- (ie, I assume that you have not been eager for a career in phone number
- sales since the age of 12) then it is worth as much as the offering company
- is willing to pay. You'll have to figure it out yourself. How much money
- do they have ? How much more would your phone number get them ? How
- good a bargainer are you, and how good is the guy who is your contact with
- the company ? Expect to get ALOT of money if it is a phone order company
- with high profits and much competition. That would be the ideal situation.
-
- Jon.
-
- [Moderator's Note: The Dominos Pizza people are trying to grab up all the
- xxx-3030 and xxx-0030 combinations they can find around Chicago. Paying
- off with pizza coupons and some money, I understand. PT]
- ------------------------------
-
-
- From: Ron Natalie <ron@ron.rutgers.edu>
- Subject: Re: Some notes on the UK phone system
- Date: 23 Mar 89 15:32:48 GMT
- Organization: Rutgers Univ., New Brunswick, N.J.
-
-
- The advantage to the phone cards is that you don't have to waddle around
- with a pocket full of coins on the off-chance that you might decide to
- make a public call today. You don't have to sit there and push them
- into the slot. We've got the same thing here at the University for the
- photocopiers in the library. If I go there and find an article that I
- want to copy, I just pop this card into the machine and it just debits
- the copies as I go. Several mass transit systems here have the same
- thing (Washington and San Francisco amongh others). Rather than having
- to carry change, or find an open token booth, you just zip the card into
- the turnstile. For the person who makes frequent use of these things,
- the cards are an incredible convenience over coins or tokens. For those
- who don't, you can always revert to the hard money (except on the subways
- where they force you to buy the card anyway).
-
- -Ron
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 23 Mar 89 11:10:19 EST
- From: Jonathan Haruni <decom@dgp.toronto.edu>
- Subject: Re: Some notes on the UK phone system
- Organization: University of Toronto
-
- In article <telecom-v09i0102m07@vector.UUCP> dhesi@bsu-cs.uucp writes:
- >This [phonecards] seems to be of dubious value.
- >What is the difference between
- >buying a phone card from a grocery store and then using it in a
- >telephone, as opposed to just putting the money into the telephone
- >directly? This just seems to add an extra step.
-
- In Britain, you pay by time for even local calls, so you tend to go
- through alot of coins. And the coins are bigger and heavier as well.
- The phonecards save you the frustration of running out of coins during
- a call, the frustration of having your calls interrupted every minute
- by "more coins please" noises, and the frustration of
- sewing up holes in your pockets.
-
- >The only advantage I see is that you can user paper money to buy the
- >phone card, while telephones will only take coins. A little advance
- >preparedness eliminates this advantage too, and you don't have to hunt
- >for a place to buy the phone card before you use the telephone.
-
- The cards come in denominations ranging from the equivalent of $3 to about
- $100. So you buy one which you know will last you a reasonable amount
- of time. They are particularly useful for long distance calls, because
- you get the customer-dialled rate without feeding a continuous stream of
- coins into the phone.
-
- >--
- >Rahul Dhesi UUCP: <backbones>!{iuvax,pur-ee}!bsu-cs!dhesi
- > ARPA: dhesi@bsu-cs.bsu.edu
-
- Jonathan Haruni
- decom@dgp.toronto.edu
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 23 Mar 89 8:50 -0800
- From: laura halliday <halliday@cc.ubc.ca>
- Subject: British phone cards
-
- While in London a couple of years ago the locals told me
- that the rationale for phone cards (other than byuing a
- 20 pound phone card with paper money rather than coins)
- was that card phones have no money in them, and are thus
- much less likely to be vandalized.
-
- - Laura
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 24 Mar 89 04:00:47 GMT
- From: dswise@iuvax.cs.indiana.edu
- Subject: Re: Some notes on the UK phone system
- Organization: Indiana University CSCI, Bloomington
-
-
- I was introduced to the British Telecom debit card only recently,
- and I am surprised at the pollution that the system generates:
- depleted green cards littering the floors of call-boxes.
- 'Course, Telecom is not answerable to environmental interests. :-)
-
- Instead of purchasing new green cards all the time, why can't one
- go to one of a few secure coin-operated stations where
- one's depleted card can be recharged (or replaced if defective.)
- (Put them in post offices and the corner Boot's.)
- In order to use these machines you *must* return your old card.
- Viola: no litter.
-
- The Washington, DC, Metro has a system like this that recovers
- residual value from fare cards too depleted to buy any fare---but
- it recovers the cards in the process! Result is also reduction in litter.
-
- Incentive: Such machines might recharge to 100% of value for only 95% fee.
- Like deposits on beverage containers, except no human handling is required.
- I suspect that the 5% would be a good long-term investment.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Pulse Dialing
- Date: Wed, 22 Mar 89 18:29:33 EST
- From: "Dr. T. Andrews" <tanner@ki4pv.uucp>
-
- A year or three ago, the local phone co. switched from stepper relays
- to electronic switching. At the same time, they "cleverly" checked
- phone lines for equipment which could tone dial, and quietly added
- the $1/mo charge on such lines. One item so detected was a plain old
- telephone set (with pulse dial) at home.
-
- After I made the proper noises, the charges were removed. It might
- be interesting to know how these "tests" are done: do they just add
- the charge and hope no one notices? The "test" is that if you yell,
- then you don't get charged?
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: Ron Natalie <ron@ron.rutgers.edu>
- Subject: Re: Possible Cancer Risk from Cellular Phones?
- Date: 23 Mar 89 15:24:45 GMT
- Organization: Rutgers Univ., New Brunswick, N.J.
-
-
- Carcinogenic? Not quite. There are serious problems that result from
- microwave exposure. The most widely known fo these is the increased risk of
- cataracts. There was quite a scare on this subject in the ham radio
- community, more so than in the cellular field, since hams were frequently
- using walkie talkies. When you hold the thing up to talk into it the antenna
- is sitting right there at your forehead. The frequencies and powers are
- approximately the same. Nothing conclusive was established about the effects
- of these relatively low power levels (<3 watts for cellular, 1-5 watts for ham
- radios), but the ARRL (the largest association of ham radio operators in the
- US) suggests that you try to keep the antenna away from your head. Notice
- that this would only correspond to hand held portable cellular telephones.
- Most mobile units have the antennas (and for that matter the radio transmitter
- itself) mounted away from the car occupants.
-
- My personal opinion is that there is more of threat from people being
- inattentive to their driving while operating their telephones than there are
- from microwave radiation.
-
- -Ron
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 23 Mar 1989 16:55:15 CST
- From: Werner Uhrig <werner@rascal.ics.utexas.edu>
- Reply-To: Werner Uhrig <werner@rascal.ics.utexas.edu>
- Subject: Highest German (FRG) court strikes down a telecommunications law
-
- the following msg posted to the German-branch of USEnet might be
- of interest to this group as questions about legality and feasabi-
- lity of modem use in Europe crop up repeatedly.
-
- the law in question reads:
-
- Paragraph 15 section II of the law regulating telecommunication equipment:
- Person who install, change or use motifiable equipment
- in violation of the lending conditions will be punished with
- 2 years imprisonment or fines.
-
- the (overjoyed) author of the article informs us that the German
- Supreme Court has declared this law unconstitutional and null-and-void
- in a decision of June 22, 1988. He states that this has as a conse-
- quence that imported modems can no longer be confiscated (according
- to the guidelines of the Code of Criminal Procedures).
-
- the legislature has been called upon to pass a new law.
- However (the author believes that) because there exists such strong
- interest (and influence, presumably) of industry, users, and the
- European market-community against such a new prohibitive law, the
- author believes that there is reason for optimism (that no such
- prohibitive law will be passed).
-
- I've been away from Germany for a while now, but my estimate of German
- tele-buraucrats and their actions and motivations in the past do not have
- me share Joern's optimism. I hope I'm wrong ...
-
- Ceers, ---Werner
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- Date: Sun, 26 Mar 89 22:13:18 PST
- From: Robert Horvitz <rh@well.uucp>
- Subject: Cellular Radio Hazards
-
-
- Mike Trout asks if there is any truth to the assertion
- that "cellular phones [are] extremely hazardous and probably highly
- carcinogenic."
-
- I am not a scientist, but research on the bio-effects of radio-frequency
- emissions is something I follow closely. In general, if you want the
- lastest news, pointers to new published evidence of bio-effects (beneficial
- or harmful), announcements of regulatory action, and pro/con debates among
- experts, consult MICROWAVE NEWS, edited/published by Dr. Louis Slesin
- (6 bimonthly issues for $250 in the US, $285 to Canada & elsewhere; order
- from P.O. Box 1799, Grand Central Station, New York, NY 10163; phone
- 212-517-2800). My only connection to this publication is as an avid reader
- for 7 years. (BTW, the title is misleading: it doesn't just cover the
- microwave part of the spectrum. Increasingly, attention is focussing on
- the magnetic fields surrounding powerlines and video display terminals as a
- health issue.)
-
- To make a long, unfinished story short, there's no definite evidence yet
- that radio emissions from cellular phones cause cancer, but there is reason
- to fear that over the long term there COULD be harmful effects of SOME sort.
- Different parts of the human body resonant at different electromagnetic
- frequencies. When radio waves pass through the body, some of the energy
- is absorbed - very little, usually, since we are highly "transparent"
- to the waves. In theory, the more closely resonant a body is with the
- radio waves, the more energy is transferred to the body. The human head
- and neck are pretty close to resonance with the frequencies emitted by
- cellular phones. ("Hots-spots" in the body for radio absorption are
- generally the narrowings - ankles, neck - and places with sharp angles -
- armpits, groin.)
-
- If the cellular transmitter and antenna are in the headset, and you hold it
- right against your skull, your brain is probably going to absorb quite a bit
- of RF energy - probably more than the safety limits set by organizations
- like ANSI. But most cellular phones DON'T have the transmitter and antenna
- in the headset. The little pig-tail on the roof or window is the radiator.
- Depending how far away it is, and how much shielding is provided by the car
- roof, frame and seat, your exposure will be less. (Because the interior of a
- car is a complex reflective cavity for radio waves, there may be invisible
- "hot-spots" where energy of specific frequencies is concentrated. It's hard
- to generalize about particular ambient fields. Direct measurement is the
- best way to determine the field strength at specific points.)
-
- Beyond that, little is yet known about the bio-effects of radio waves that
- are below the threshold where living tissue is measurably heated by energy
- absorption. What your source was probably picking up on was a finding that
- living DNA can absorb enough energy from pulsed microwaves to fracture. Dr.
- Bill Guy (University of Washington) demonstrated in 1985 that rats exposed to
- pulsed microwaves had a significant number of tumors induced in their
- endocrine systems. Other researchers have confirmed this, and still others
- have found pulsed microwaves can cause mutations (chromosome damage) in chick
- and rat embryos.
-
- But it is a very long reach from pulsed microwaves to frequency-modulated
- UHF radio waves - that's what cellular emits - and from rats to humans
- - the resonant frequencies and absorption/dissipation rates are different.
- Intuition suggests that pulsing may be more stressful on tissue than FM,
- and the longer wavelengths of VHF mean less resonance with the tiny
- structures in membranes and cells.
-
- To complicate things further, bio-effects have only been found in certain
- COMBINATIONS of power-density, frequency and duration. Unlike exposure to
- toxic chemicals, say, exposure to a more intense radio field might actually be
- LESS harmful than a less intense field of the same frequency. Same goes for
- the duration of exposure: it may be that intermittent exposure is more
- - or less! - harmful than continuous exposure. We just don't know.
-
- We live in a sea of man-made radio energy containing all sorts of frequencies
- and modulations that we can't see or feel, and we know very little about the
- long-term effects. For that reason, it's a shame - willful negligence? -
- that the Environmental Protection Agency disbanded its radio effects
- laboratory (thank you Ronald Reagan!) and gave up trying to set safety
- standards for human exposure (thank you Gramm-Rudman-Hollings!).
-
- I wouldn't hold a walkie-talkie up to my head - or wear a rubber-ducky
- antenna on my headband, as some hams do - until we understand more about
- the effects. As for cellular, there's much more certain harm being
- caused to your privacy (as others have noted, cellular systems BROADCAST
- your words over very large areas), and also to your wallet. For those
- reasons alone you're better off stopping to use a pay-phone.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: California PUC pulls plug on egregious AOS gougers.
- Date: Sat, 25 Mar 89 19:58:43 PST
- From: the terminal of Geoff Goodfellow <geoff@fernwood.mpk.ca.us>
-
- According to a story in Friday's San Francisco Examiner, Business Section,
- the Public Utilities Commission directed TPC (Pacific Bell) to disconnect
- 54 privately owned pay phones in its first enforcement action against
- "price gouging by some operator services".
-
- "Privately owned pay phones can charge no more than 10 cents above Pacific
- Bell and AT&T rates for local calls or calls in California".
-
- The 54 privately owned pay phones belonged to 12 owners, and their charges
- were found to be at least 90% higher than the authorized rates, and
- sometimes were up to three times as high. All owners had been warned of
- the overcharging in November. Under the PUC orders, Pacific Bell has sent
- letters to the owners notifying them that their plug will be pulled in
- seven days.
-
- The article also mentioned the FCC last month imposed some restrictions on
- five AOS firms accused of egregious gouging that require the companies "to
- identify themselves to each caller and disclose rates if computers asked."
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: Jeff Woolsey <woolsey@nsc.nsc.com>
- Subject: Pac*Bell, AT&T in cahoots?
- Date: 26 Mar 89 00:57:41 GMT
- Reply-To: Jeff Woolsey <woolsey@nsc.nsc.com.uucp>
- Organization: National Semiconductor Corporation
-
-
- I walked up to a genuine Pacific*Bell coin phone in 408-738 this
- afternoon. It had a placard on it that proclaimed that 10XXX calls
- could be placed from the phone, and that AT&T was the long distance
- carrier for that phone. I found out that they weren't kidding: I
- dialed 10333-1-700-555-4141 and got a recording saying that I had
- reached the AT&T long distance network. I dialed 10222-1-700-555-4141
- and got the same announcement. Evidently the CO routes any
- 10XXX-1-NXX-NXX-XXXX call to AT&T for coin collection (unless XXX is
- not a valid carrier). Seems mighty strange to me since the days of
- free calls via this method are long gone, and most such calls got an
- operator of some kind at the carrier of your choice, exactly like
- 10XXX-0-NXX-NXX-XXXX calls.
-
- It seems you can't trust ANYBODY these days.
- --
- --
- Qualify nearly everything.
-
- Jeff Woolsey woolsey@nsc.NSC.COM -or- woolsey@umn-cs.cs.umn.EDU
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 23 Mar 89 15:59:49 PST
- From: "Anthony E. Siegman" <siegman@sierra.stanford.edu>
- Subject: Re: Selling an Interesting Telephone Number?
- Organization: Stanford University
-
-
- My residential phone number (415 area code) happens to spell a
- quite commercially interesting word. During the 15-plus years I've
- had this number I've had a couple of inquiries from businesses wanting
- to take it over, paying me something for giving it up. A recent one
- seems serious.
-
- Anyone have any thoughts on the dollar value of such a number? Rumor
- has it that someone whose all-digit dialing number was "AMERICA" got
- $1000 for turning over this number during the Centennial".
-
- My "commercially interesting" number, by the way, is 326-6669 =
- ECONOMY. Wasn't certain whether I wanted to publish it or not.
-
- A. E. Siegman siegman@sierra.stanford.edu
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- Date: Mon, 27 Mar 89 10:47 CST
- From: David Tamkin <dattier@jolnet.orpk.il.us>
- Subject: The Strange Territory That Will Be Area 708
-
- [Moderator's Note: This is a letter I received from David Tamkin, a fellow
- Chicagoan. We were discussing other things, and got into a discussion about
- the odd-ball prefixes here which straddle the city/suburban boundary lines.
- I asked David where they would be placed: 708 or 312. Here is his reply. PT]
-
- Patrick:
-
- I already knew about those numbers. I'd spoken to a live operator on one of
- them, who admitted, when I brought up the mess in the Newcastle CO, that it
- wouldn't really be possible to make it through without changing any phone
- numbers. (Had IBT not gotten sloppy they could have.)
-
- The following twelve prefixes are, per the recording, to "be served by both
- area code 312 and area code 708:"
-
- 200 340 411 555 611 796 911 950 958 959 970 976
-
- These thirty-seven prefixes are invalid. I imagine that 414 and 219 (which
- match area codes in the LATA) and 217, 309, 312, 618, 708, and 805 (matching
- area codes in Illinois) will remain invalid:
-
- 203 211 212 217 219 270 290 300 309 311 312 313 319 320 370 400 414 415 494
- 500 511 600 610 616 618 700 708 710 711 800 809 811 813 815 900 912 999
-
- 494 I'll get back to below.
-
- All the dedicated mobile prefixes I knew of are, per the recording, to
- remain in 312. So are the dedicated FX prefixes such as BRoadway 3,
- BIshop 2, and 569. The ten prefixes serving the city from suburban CO's:
-
- 229 380 399 58(LUdlow)6 589 62(NAtional)5 693 694 714 992
-
- will remain in 312.
-
- The prefixes serving the suburbs from city CO's [well, only one city CO, now
- that 494 has been dissolved: 45(GLadstone)7, 64(NIles)7, and 86(UNderhill)7]
- will be switched to 708, meaning that 708 will cover three discontiguous
- geographical areas. UNderhill 7 has always been listed in the Chicago
- directories (and the Jefferson Park local) and handled from the same city
- business office as Chicago's parts of the Newcastle CO district, so that
- will likely change when it goes into area code 708: Harwood Heights listings
- will appear in the River Grove local and Near West Suburban regional books
- instead and be served from the west suburban business office.
-
- (The other two holes in the city are no problem: one is a small plot of land
- with no phones, belonging to the state and condemned for highway purposes.
- The other is filled by Mt. Greenwood Cemetery, where mail is addressed "Blue
- Island, Illinois" but which has a city phone number.)
-
- Unincorporated Norwood Park Township will be a mess. If it had been up to
- me, I'd have kept Elmwood Park, Harwood Heights, Norridge, and River Grove
- in 312 so that 708 could be in one piece and there would be only one
- boundary line, but it wasn't up to me. UNPT is laid out like this: Sections
- 1 and 12 have 867 prefixes, section 11 has 457 prefixes, and section 2 has a
- mosaic of suburban Park Ridge prefixes (692, 698, 823, 825, and maybe a 696
- or two, but no 318's or 518's) and Chicago-service Park Ridge prefixes (380,
- 399, 693, and 714). You see, up until 1976 Centel treated it as suburbia
- and assigned suburban prefixes, charged at suburban rates; then, since it
- had been surrounded by Chicago for fifteen years, they started assigning
- Chicago numbers charged at Chicago rates but didn't make anyone who was
- already there change numbers. If the rest of UNPT were to have stayed in
- 312, Centel could have gone on as they have and eventually the remaining
- suburban phone numbers would have been replaced with Chicago numbers as
- people sold their homes or changed their numbers, but since the IBT parts of
- UNPT are going to 708 it's a whole new story.
-
- IBT was cleaning up its act in the Newcastle area but just assigned a 775-
- prefix to a new store in Harwood Heights (Cosmetic Center in Holiday Plaza).
- I wish I had a way to the ear of someone who'll listen.
-
- Do you think that a discontiguous NPA is a bad idea? I know I do, and I'm
- sure that people in Harwood Heights, Norridge, and UNPT have a lot more
- telephone conversations with Chicago locations than they do with locations
- in suburbs that are outside the perimeter of the city. Heck, that's
- probably true of Elmwood Park as well, if not also River Grove!
-
- Now, about what you were saying regarding the Cicero-Chicago border: I'm not
- sure if you were talking about 24(BIshop)2 or 494. Each is a separate story.
-
- BIshop 2 is a dedicated Foreign Exchange prefix, used solely to provide city
- numbers to west suburban businesses. Until 1987 it was located in the
- Cicero CO, but then it was moved to Chicago-Austin. However, it is part of
- the Chicago-Lafayette exchange and Chicago Zone 6 for when a call is charged
- by exchanges or zones (such as calls from coin phones or from Centel
- service) rather than by CO's. It will remain in 312.
-
- 494 was in the Chicago-Lawndale CO. It was part of the Cicero exchange. I
- couldn't figure out where it served, and every number I tried dialing on
- that prefix got an intercept that the number was not in service or that the
- number had been disconnected with no further information available. The
- recorded service for the area code change says 494 is an invalid prefix now;
- if I try to dial 494-XXXX, the call is intercepted after only three digits.
- It's been dissolved.
-
- And I think IBT are once again out of their minds. 494 was the only
- suburban prefix that was within an A call of Lake Shore, Illinois Dearborn,
- or Superior (Franklin, Wabash, and the Canals are in the A zone from the
- Cicero CO's three exchanges and ten prefixes; Lakeview is in the A zone from
- Oak Park, Evanston, and Skokie). They could have offered lower rates for a
- 708-494- number to downtown locations than for any other 708 prefix and
- accordingly had much more of such traffic in Remote Call Forwarding from
- business customers who won't pop for full-fledged Foreign Exchange service,
- but they blew it by having it dissolved.
-
- If I were in charge of this, I'd be aggressively promoting the 494 prefix
- for Remote Call Forwarding, telling downtown businesses that they don't have
- to make their suburban customers feel alienated by needing to dial eleven
- digits.
-
- David
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: Frank G Kienast <well!fgk@lll-crg.llnl.gov>
- Subject: Directory Assistance by Modem?
- Date: 28 Mar 89 02:02:07 GMT
-
-
- I am curious as to why the phone companies do not offer directory assistance
- by modem. Seems like it would cut down on the cost of providing this
- service, especially when the directory assistance operator punches your
- request into a computer anyway. I realize that many people who call
- directory assistance may not even know what a modem is, but wouldn't it
- be worthwhile even if only a relatively small percentage of people used it?
-
- What would be even better would be a single modem number that would provide
- directory assistance for any city in the US. This would save time, in that
- you would only have to make one call to get all the numbers you need. I
- wonder why some private information company hasn't thought of this. Seems
- to me that people would be willing to pay for a service like this. Or are
- there major legal, etc. problems that would be encountered?
-
- In real life: Frank Kienast
- Well: well!fgk@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU
- CIS: 73327,3073
- V-mail: 804-980-3733
-
-
- [Moderator's Note: Illinois Bell has tariffed this service, known locally
- as 'Directory Express' for about three years. They sell Directory Assistance
- by the hour rather than by the call. The last I heard, they only had about
- four or five customers using it: a couple of collection agencies and credit
- services. They call via modem and get the same data base DA uses. PT]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: Daniel Senie <dts@cloud9.stratus.com>
- Subject: Yes! Directory Assistance via Modem
- Date: 24 Mar 89 05:46:35 GMT
- Organization: Stratus Computer, Inc., Marlboro, MA
-
-
-
- Several people have made the argument that CPID does not reveal the caller's
- name or other such information and therefore does not really provide
- information which would violate privacy. I beg to differ:
-
- A year or two ago NYNEX announced plans to distribute the white pages on
- CD-ROM. They claimed to get all NYNEX market telephone listings on a single
- disc. While this information would not necessarily be indexed by phone number,
- building such an index is not difficult.
-
- So, a person or company with CPID interfaced to a PC or minicomputer could
- display the caller's name and address while the phone is still ringing.
-
- Dan
- =================================
- Personally I wish NET would just get around to providing touch-tone in this
- town! All of these services are just a pipe dream in this area. NYNEX doesn't
- seem to feel that it is important to provide advanced services outside the
- cities.
-
- --
- Daniel Senie UUCP: harvard!ulowell!cloud9!dts
- Stratus Computer, Inc. ARPA: anvil!cloud9!dts@harvard.harvard.edu
- 55 Fairbanks Blvd. CSRV: 74176,1347
- Marlboro, MA 01752 TEL.: 508 - 460 - 2686
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- From: "John R. Covert" <covert%covert.DEC@decwrl.dec.com>
- Date: 28 Mar 89 05:25
- Subject: Cellular prefixes in Chicagoland
-
- >All the dedicated mobile prefixes I knew of are, per the recording, to
- >remain in 312.
-
- How about 550 (Ameritech) and 659 (Southwestern Bell/Cellular One)?
-
- As far as I can tell, these are dedicated -- in fact they are the "main"
- prefixes for each company, containing the Chicago roamer access numbers.
- Yet I would expect both of them to move, since they are currently listed
- outside the city. This will put both "Chicago" roamer numbers in 708.
-
- It seems that 867 is the only exception to the rule that if the "name place"
- for the prefix is "Chicago" it stays in 312, otherwise it moves to 708. This
- makes one suspicious about 867 -- will its "name place" change along with its
- NPA?
-
- /john
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 28 Mar 89 9:52:28 EST
- From: Carl Moore (VLD/VMB) <cmoore@brl.mil>
- Subject: 0+NPA+7D refused?!
-
- Last night, I went to a Diamond State pay phone on 302-366-9xxx (Newark, Del.)
- and tried to place a 0+ call to a Va. suburb of DC on 703-893 prefix. It turns
- out I would have to dial 10288+0+703-893-xxxx to get AT&T routing. My attempt
- to use 0+703-893-xxxx got a recording "Your call cannot be completed as dialed"
- as did my attempt to use areacode 202 instead of 703.
- Mind you, this is not a COCOT.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: Piet van Oostrum <piet@cs.ruu.nl>
- Subject: Re: Some notes on the UK phone system
- Date: 28 Mar 89 11:09:34 GMT
- Reply-To: piet@cs.ruu.nl
- Organization: Dept of Computer Science, University of Utrecht, Holland
-
-
- In article <telecom-v09i0102m07@vector.UUCP>, dhesi@bsu-cs (Rahul Dhesi) writes:
-
- `In article <telecom-v09i0098m01@vector.UUCP> OLE@csli.stanford.edu (Ole J.
- Jacobsen) writes:
- `>My most favorite aspect of the British phone system is the PhoneCard.
- `>...Put one in the special PhoneCard phones
- `>and dial away *anywhere*. There is no minimum charge, and you can
- `>talk until the "money" runs out (1 unit = 10p).
-
- `This seems to be of dubious value. What is the difference between
- `buying a phone card from a grocery store and then using it in a
- `telephone, as opposed to just putting the money into the telephone
- `directly? This just seems to add an extra step.
-
- It makes sense if you dial an international call. With coins you will
- not do much more than pushing coins. Moreover, the British pay phones have
- the terrible habit of disabling the voice channel momentarily while you
- insert a coin (maybe they have better ones now?).
-
- I think the major advantage is for the phone company. They don't have to
- collect the coins and there is no chance of theft of the money from the phone.
- --
- Piet van Oostrum, Dept of Computer Science, University of Utrecht
- Padualaan 14, P.O. Box 80.089, 3508 TB Utrecht, The Netherlands
- Telephone: +31-30-531806. piet@cs.ruu.nl (mcvax!hp4nl!ruuinf!piet)
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: "Marc T. Kaufman" <kaufman@polya.stanford.edu>
- Subject: COCOTs as an investment
- Date: 28 Mar 89 16:29:04 GMT
- Reply-To: "Marc T. Kaufman" <kaufman@polya.stanford.edu>
- Organization: Stanford University
-
-
- A boiler-room investment group called to offer my wife a sure-fire
- investment, with 35% annual return -- GUARANTEED!
-
- ...in the form of secured corporate notes in U.S. Fiber-Line, who are
- supposed to be in the AOS and COCOT business.
-
- ---I knew a guy once, who was so ticked off that a door-to-door salesman
- sold him a set of encyclopedias, that he went to work for the company and
- sold encyclopedias himself until he had recouped his losses.---
-
- If you can't lick 'em, join 'em?
-
- Marc Kaufman (kaufman@polya.stanford.edu)
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 900 service providers--who?
- Date: Mon Mar 27 14:42:26 1989
- From: John Boteler <csense!bote@uunet.uu.net>
- Organization: Bote Communications, McLean VA
-
- HELP!!! I'm lost in telecom.hell!!!
-
- It is truly amazing that some carriers are still in business after
- the rigamarole I just went through with AT&T, Bell Atlantic, Allnet,
- et al.
-
- All I wanted to know was whether or not they currently provide
- 900-xxx-xxxx service. Part of the problem was that I don't know
- what name to call this service, which does present some problems
- when the people I called don't know either! After describing what
- I wanted in detail, then they checked to find out if they
- offered the service. Five to eight departmental transfers/phone
- calls later, the answer was: they don't know!
-
- Do you? I have already retrieved the list posted to this newsgroup
- listing three letter codes translating to 900 service providers. However,
- I do not have any contact information for many of them.
-
- I need, and would appreciate greatly, a list delineating:
- 1. The carrier's 900 offering name (so I can ask for it intelligently)
- 2. The carrier's phone number
- 3. Any additional info (rates, service quality, etc)
-
- At this point, the query time spent per carrier has become prohibitive;
- that is why I am counting on the renowned expertise of this
- forum for guidance. Of course, thank you in advance!
-
- email to:
-
- Bote
- uunet!cyclops!csense!bote
- {mimsy,sundc}!{prometheus,hqda-ai}!media!cyclops!csense!bote
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: John Murray <johnm@uts.amdahl.com>
- Subject: Re: Directory Assistance by Modem?
- Date: 28 Mar 89 21:41:22 GMT
- Organization: Amdahl Corporation, Sunnyvale CA
-
-
- In article <telecom-v09i0112m02@vector.UUCP>, well!fgk@lll-crg.llnl.gov (Frank
- G Kienast) writes:
- > I am curious as to why the phone companies do not offer directory assistance
- > by modem.
-
- Isn't this what the French Minitel system was initially established for?
- - J. Murray, Amdahl Corp.
-
- ------------------------------
- Date: Tue, 28 Mar 89 23:29:45 EST
- From: "Nicholas J. Simicich" <bywater!scifi!njs@uunet.uu.net>
- Subject: Re: Yes! Directory Assistance via Modem
- Reply-To: njs@scifi.UUCP (Nicholas J. Simicich)
-
-
- In article <telecom-v09i0112m03@vector.UUCP> dts@cloud9.stratus.com (Daniel
- Senie) writes:
- (.....)
- >A year or two ago NYNEX announced plans to distribute the white pages on
- >CD-ROM.
-
- Yep. I've seen it running at a Long Island communication show last
- year. It allowed you to do lookups by region and name, or by phone
- number. It would probably take a ring or two to do a lookup.
-
- Licensing policies didn't allow you to make wholesale copies of the
- directory, or use it as a basis for sales calls. The AT+T people
- claimed that they had put "ringers" (as it were) into the database,
- and that if they found a correlation between cold calls arriving at
- those numbers and people who were getting this service, they would cut
- off subscriptions.
-
- They weren't telling you the format of the database, although figuring
- it out and using it on a LAN as a server didn't violate their license,
- according to the person I talked to, as long as you didn't copy data
- from the database wholesale. They also claimed that someone had done
- it.
-
- You got a new CD-ROM every month, as an update. I seem to remember a
- number of around $10,000/year for the service, plus the setup (AT
- class machine and CD ROM drive, supplied by NYNEX). As NYNEX sold it,
- this was for a single station.
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- From: Bob Toxen <bob@cloud9.stratus.com>
- Subject: Re: Possible Cancer Risk from Cellular Phones?
- Date: 30 Mar 89 00:58:47 GMT
- Organization: Stratus Computer, Inc., Marlboro, MA
-
-
- Cellular phones DON'T cause cancer! In order for electromagnetic
- radiation to cause cancer and almost all other problems to the human
- body it must be of a high enough energy (frequency) to ionize one's
- atoms.
-
- This is what is meant by the term "ionizing radiation", which you might
- have heard. The minimum frequency is that of ultraviolet. These,
- X-rays, and Gamma rays are the cancer danger. Even these are not a
- significant risk to the average person.
-
- The main danger from lower frequencies is if the intensity is so high
- that the heating from the absorbed radiation is excessive. This is the
- cooking effect of a microwave oven. Another danger is induced electric
- currents in older unshielded heart pacemakers since it takes only minute
- currents flowing directly through the heart for problems.
-
- The public cannot get close enough to radio towers to be at risk without
- ignoring signs, climbing fences, and trespassing. I have been within
- 600 feet of television antennas without harm without harm without harm :^)
-
- Regarding the quoted "expert" claiming danger from them, many people have
- irrational fears and being an technical expert does not protect someone
- (from the fear.) People who are afraid to fly airplanes even though airlines
- are 100 times safer per mile per person than automobiles and even "small"
- planes are as safe as automobiles are an example.
-
- Nikola Tesla, who invented radio and worked within a few dozen feet of
- equipment producing millions of volts of electricity, was deathly afraid
- of germs even though the chances of his being electrocuted were far
- higher. (He died of old age.) [To avoid flames, Marconi did NOT invent
- radio but he did infringe on Tesla's patents as determined by the U. S.
- Supreme Court. References available on request.]
- --
-
- Bob Toxen {ucbvax!harvard,cloud9!es}!anvil!cavu!bob
- Stratus Computer, Marlboro, MA
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: Rob Warnock <amdcad!amdcad.AMD.COM!rpw3@ames.arc.nasa.gov>
- Subject: Re: Possible Cancer Risk from Cellular Phones?
- Date: 30 Mar 89 04:07:58 GMT
- Reply-To: Rob Warnock <amdcad!amdcad!rpw3@ames.arc.nasa.gov>
- Organization: [Consultant] San Mateo, CA
-
-
- In article <telecom-v09i0106m06@vector.UUCP> Ron Natalie writes:
- +---------------
- | of these relatively low power levels (3 watts for cellular, 1-5 watts for ham
- +---------------
-
- Note that all of the portable (handheld) cellulars I have seen are 600 mw max.
- [It's the transportables (luggables) that are 3 watts.] Is this to keep down
- the human exposure? ...or just to keep down battery drain? ;-}
-
- Also note that unlike ham and police radios, with handheld cellular the
- antenna tends to be held not in front of your face but off to the back/side
- of your head. [Given 1/R^2, a *lot* farther from your eyes...]
-
-
- Rob Warnock
- Systems Architecture Consultant
-
- UUCP: {amdcad,fortune,sun}!redwood!rpw3
- DDD: (415)572-2607
- USPS: 627 26th Ave, San Mateo, CA 94403
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: John Higdon <decvax!decwrl!apple!zygot!john@ucbvax.berkeley.edu>
- Subject: Re: Cellular Radio Hazards
- Date: 29 Mar 89 20:35:09 GMT
- Organization: ATI Wares Team
-
-
- In article <telecom-v09i0110m02@vector.UUCP>, rh@well.uucp (Robert Horvitz)
- writes:
- > As for cellular, there's much more certain harm being
- > caused to your privacy (as others have noted, cellular systems BROADCAST
- > your words over very large areas), and also to your wallet. For those
- > reasons alone you're better off stopping to use a pay-phone.
-
- Thank you for your opinion. Unfortunately we now live in the era of
- COCOTs (or COPTs, as Pacific Bell refers to them), and it is quite
- literally cheaper in many cases to use a cellular telephone. Putting
- the inconvenience of trying to locate a pay phone aside, I know that I
- can always send DTMF to my voice mail with my handheld. Also, I know
- that long distance will be reasonably priced, that my party and I can
- hear each other, that I can call anywhere from Napa to Monterey for the
- same 45 cent charge.
-
- I'm afraid, sir, that pay phones are cellular's greatest selling tool.
- --
- John Higdon
- john@zygot ..sun!{apple|cohesive|pacbell}!zygot!john
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: "John R. Covert" <covert%covert.DEC@decwrl.dec.com>
- Date: 29 Mar 89 08:01
- Subject: Cellular Power
-
- >Most cellular phones operate in the 4-20 watt range, the low end being the
- >very portable hand-held units.
-
- The maximum allowable power for cellular in the U.S. and Canada is 3 watts.
-
- Hand-held portables are not permitted to radiate more than 600 milliwatts.
-
- /john
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 29 Mar 89 18:28:32 GMT
- From: folta@tove.umd.edu (Wayne Folta)
- Subject: How big can a Local Dialing Area be?
- Reply-To: folta@tove.umd.edu.UUCP (Wayne Folta)
- Organization: U of Maryland, Dept. of Computer Science, gs
-
- Since childhood, I have been amazed at the size of our local dialing area.
- Being in the Washington DC suburbs, I (roughly) calculate that I can make
- a local call to anywhere in a 500-square-mile area. If you count DC as
- a state, that includes three states (MD, VA, DC).
-
- But is this really a very large area? How large might a local call area be
- in LA or NY? Are all local dialing areas determined by distance, or might
- there be an *enormous* exchange out in Montana somewhere that includes
- thousands of square miles but only a few thousand people?
-
- (It would be interesting to hear about maximal sizes in terms of: area,
- number of people, and number of exchanges.)
-
-
- Wayne Folta (folta@tove.umd.edu 128.8.128.42)
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- From: brian@cbw1.UUCP (Brian Cuthie)
- Subject: Leased Line Costs Versus Dial Up Line
- Date: 29 Mar 89 15:49:02 GMT
- Reply-To: brian@cbw1.UMD.EDU (Brian Cuthie)
- Organization: CBW, Columbia, MD 21046
-
-
- In article <telecom-v09i0112m04@vector.UUCP> ron@ron.rutgers.edu (Ron Natalie)
- writes:
- [other stuff deleted]
- >I'm not sure of your leased line statement. The rates for a 3002 dedicated
- >circuit are still cheaper than leaving a line dialed up if you're a business
- >and hence have message unit service.
- >
- >-Ron
-
- This depends entirely on whether the local telco has untimed business
- service. In the Balto/Wash area, business service is untimed. Therefore it
- is usually cheaper to leave a line dialed up than to pay the 3002 rate.
-
-
- -brian
-
- --
- Brian D. Cuthie uunet!umbc3!cbw1!brian
- Columbia, MD brian@umbc3.umbc.edu
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- From: David Tamkin <dattier@jolnet.orpk.il.us>
- Subject: Already Stung by Caller ID
- Date: Thu, 30 Mar 89 11:31:56 CST
-
-
- I live in the small corner of the city of Chicago not served by Illinois
- Bell. Our telco here (Central Telephone of Illinois) retains IBT for
- directory assistance and operator services.
-
- If I want to know where a prefix not listed in the directory's information
- pages is located, the IBT operator I get by dialing 0 tells me to call IBT's
- service office for business customers. Centel can provide some of the
- information but not all; IBT can provide the rest (but sometimes not the
- part Centel can give me).
-
- Accordingly I did that on Tuesday to find out what areas some new prefixes
- serve. The service representative at Illinois Bell started demanding my
- name and my telephone number, and I said, "Nevermind! This is information
- that should be in the phone book coming out this summer, or maybe last year
- or two years ago since your list there is so far out of date, and your
- office has procedures to treat me like a criminal for asking! I want to
- have an idea of how much a call will cost before I place it, and you put me
- through this grilling!"
-
- I hung up and dialed IBT's headquarters to complain. Someone in the General
- Manager's office told me that *because I was calling from a Centel prefix*
- it could be that the representatives there are under instructions to find
- out what is going on.
-
- So, they have Caller ID, and I'm supposed to *know* that they will treat me
- accordingly; they have Caller ID, but they ask for my phone number to see if
- I'll lie (not to see if I'm calling from my own number, as I'll explain);
- they have Caller ID, and they use it to predetermine how to treat the
- caller. Yes, anyone dialing from a Centel phone gets the third-degree;
- does anyone calling from a Chicago-Lawndale prefix get greeted in Spanish?
- Does anyone calling from a Chicago-Kedzie or Chicago-Stewart prefix get
- greeted in jive? Does someone calling from a Chicago-Merrimac prefix hear
- "Hail Mary, mother of God! This is Illinois Bell, how may we help you?" on
- the presumption that the caller must be Roman Catholic?
-
- Because I was dialing from a Centel phone, the representative treated me
- with suspicion. Of course, everyone there *knows* that no one *ever* calls
- from a phone other than his or her own and no one *ever* calls on behalf of
- someone else (like an employer who hires the caller to do that very thing).
- No, the number from which the call is placed tells all. You can't fool a
- service representative of Illinois Bell.
-
- Friggin' incredible. Next time I want to reach them I'll perform a feat
- they believe impossible: I'll cross the street I live on and enter Illinois
- Bell's territory, where I'll call from a pay phone. Yes, they'll ID it as
- such, but maybe I'll get someone with enough brainpower to understand my
- protest that I don't spend my entire life at a single outdoor pay phone.
-
- On the other hand, this is one more reason I'm glad to have Centel instead
- of IBT. The service representatives there have always been aware that
- people might be away from their own telephones when they call or when they
- are to be called back.
-
- David W. Tamkin Post Office Box 567542 Norridge, Illinois 60656-7542
- dattier@jolnet.orpk.il.us Jolnet Public Access Unix GEnie: D.W.TAMKIN
- ...!killer!jolnet!dattier Orland Park, Illinois CIS: 73720,1570
- /\/\/\/\/\/\/
- [Moderator's Note: What about Chicago-Rogers Park? "Oy Vey! This is Illinois
- Bell!" And what about Chicago-Lakeview and Chicago-Edgewater? Would those
- calls be automatically routed to one of those nice Young Men who work as
- service reps under the assumption that they are of the same pursuasion as
- the gentleman caller? Oh, I am getting in the mood for April Fool's Day! PT]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 30 Mar 89 12:32:51 -0200
- From: infpve@utrcu1 (Peter van Eijk)
- Subject: Phone numbers for chatting?
- Reply-To: infpve@utrcu1.UUCP (Peter van Eijk)
- Organization: Utwente, Enschede
-
-
- Who can give me information on telephone numbers around the world
- that offer a sort of `chat' service?
-
- Here in the Netherlands we have a so-called `Babbel Box'
- also called `party-line' (i think its different from what the Americans
- call a party line), dialled through e.g. 06-32033010 (?).
- This number is extra priced, 50cts a minute (approx 0.25$).
- When you call it you enter a conversation with approximately 10 other
- people who did the same. There are a number of numbers like this,
- operated 24 hours a day (the conversation gets a little special after
- midnight....).
-
- I believe that in the US this would be something like a 1-900 number.
-
- I'm interested in the names, telephone numbers and charges around the
- world. It is out of curiosity, we have a toy computerized version of it and i
- would like to document my presentation of it.
-
- Side remarks:
- These pay numbers account for 5% of total telephone charges here, i read
- in a news paper. Not surprising since there have been stories of people
- getting addicted to it..
-
- --
- Peter van Eijk University of Twente Dept Informatica / IPS
- P.O. Box 217; 7500 AE Enschede The Netherlands
- +31-53-893789 mcvax!utrcu1!infpve
- My organisation is so paranoid that I don't even know if these opinions are
- mine.
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: rwp@cup.portal.com
- Subject: Re: Selling an Interesting Phone Number?
- Date: Thu, 30-Mar-89 19:03:11 PST
-
- The last four digits of my phone number used to spell EXEC. One day, someone
- from Executive something-or-other called me and offered to buy my phone
- number for $100. I asked him to also pay for the conversion of my number
- to a new number, making it a total of $126.50. He promptly sent me a check
- for this amount.
-
- Roger Preisendefer
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- From: xrtll!rsnider@nexus.yorku.ca
- Subject: Cellular Phones and Big Brother
- Date: Fri, 31 Mar 89 14:56:57 EST
- Reply-To: rsnider@xrtll.UUCP
- Organization: ISOTECH Computer Industries, Toronto, Canada
-
- Yesterday I sat in my office and had a nice chat with a friend of mine
- who called my from his truck while driving through Toronto. We talked
- for about 10 minutes and I noticed that handoff happened about 4 times.
- In this 10 minutes he could not have driven more than 10 km. This seems
- to imply to me that the cell areas are about 4 km apart.
-
- Afterward I thought about this and relized that the cellular service
- providers here have a VERY good idea of where you are with your phone.
- There seems to be a potential here for the police department to locate
- stolen vehicles with cellular phones in them by simply having the
- service providers tell them where they are. As well, the phones will
- respond if polled so there does not have to be a conversation in progress
- in order to do this.
-
- With some fiddling about with the computers, I am sure that the
- cellular network could easily report location within .5 km since each
- transmitter maintains a record (or samples) of signal strength relative
- to other nearby transmitters to decide when to handoff. Unfortunately
- I believe that if the general public was made aware of how well their
- location was known if they owned a cellular phone there would be rage and
- panic, not to mention there is not a thing that can be done about it.
-
- I seem to remember that somewhere in the states a company offered a
- service to find your stolen car. You get this transmitter installed
- in your car and some police car has a directional receiver that they
- use to follow your car around if it has been stolen. It never caught
- on because everyone thought this made people too easy to find even if
- the car is not stolen.
-
- So how many people out there just decided to turn off their cellular
- phone when they are not using it or expecting calls ?
- After all, you ARE being watched......
-
- Richard Snider
-
- Where: ..uunet!mnetor!yunexus!xrtll!rsnider Also: rsnider@xrtll.UUCP
- "Hey ! Whats with all the blue lines on the RGB Monitor ???"
- "Ummm.....Looks like.....well....Ethernet!"
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- Date: Fri, 31 Mar 89 12:46:43 CST
- From: Paul Fuqua <pf@islington-terrace.csc.ti.com>
- Subject: Re: How big can a Local Dialing Area be?
-
- Date: Wednesday, March 29, 1989 12:28pm (CST)
- From: folta at tove.umd.edu (Wayne Folta)
- Subject: How big can a Local Dialing Area be?
-
- But is this really a very large area? How large might a local call area be
- in LA or NY? Are all local dialing areas determined by distance, or might
- there be an *enormous* exchange out in Montana somewhere that includes
- thousands of square miles but only a few thousand people?
-
- (It would be interesting to hear about maximal sizes in terms of: area,
- number of people, and number of exchanges.)
-
- The local calling area in Dallas includes the city itself, plus most of
- the first two rings of suburbs and DFW airport. That's a rough square
- 25 or 30 miles on a side, so 600 to 900 square miles. Between 1 and 2
- million people, more than 300 exchanges.
-
- Also, it's all "free" -- there's no measured local service here, except
- for a couple of economy and business plans that charge per-call.
- Southwestern Bell keeps trying to institute time-and-distance charging
- for local calls (ie, message units), but the PUC keeps shooting them
- down.
-
- Paul Fuqua pf@csc.ti.com
- {smu,texsun,cs.utexas.edu,rice}!ti-csl!pf
- Texas Instruments Computer Science Center
- PO Box 655474 MS 238, Dallas, Texas 75265
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 2 Apr 89 21:03:26 EDT
- From: Steve Elias <eli@ursa-major.spdcc.com>
- Subject: Divestiture was not a mistake
-
- The current state of COCOTS and the recent rulings regarding default
- long distance carriers for pay phones can surely cause one to despair.
- With regard to pay phones and AOS, divestiture *is* a joke.
-
- I think it is mistaken to blame divestiture for these problems. If
- our pal Judge Hoo-Haa and his cronies had the public's best interest
- in mind, we might see a few reasonable laws. Allowing crappy AOS
- companies to charge exorbitant prices without telling the dialer is
- stupid. There has to be some recourse against these thieves.
-
- I don't think the answer is to allow any one company to monopolize
- long distance service. If the pay phones were required to display
- or speak the rates being applied, the problem would be solved by the
- free market. The voice equipment necessary for such a task shouldn't
- be too much -- especially for companies which charge megabucks per minute!
-
- sincerely 10333,
-
- steve elias
- (eli@spdcc.com)
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- Date: Thu, 30 Mar 89 11:53:31 +0100
- From: pwt1%ukc.ac.uk@nss.cs.ucl.ac.uk
- Subject: Re: British PhoneCard question
-
- In article <telecom-v09i0106m02@vector.UUCP> decom@dgp.toronto.edu writes:
- >In Britain, you pay by time for even local calls, so you tend to go
- >through alot of coins. And the coins are bigger and heavier as well.
- >The phonecards save you the frustration of running out of coins during
- >a call, the frustration of having your calls interrupted every minute
- >by "more coins please" noises, and the frustration of sewing up holes in
- >your pockets.
-
- Almost all new BT coin-op phones are of the modern type that allow one
- to accumulate a credit prior to and at any time time during a call thus
- no longer are you prompted for coins every minute (as did the older
- Pay-On-Answer types).
-
- These phones take most British coins, including 50p and One Pound coins,
- useful for long and international calls. Incidently, BT has recently
- introduced a direct dial calling card service available from most payphones
- and any touch tone compatable phone.
-
- >The cards come in denominations ranging from the equivalent of $3 to about
- >$100. So you buy one which you know will last you a reasonable amount
- >of time. They are particularly useful for long distance calls, because
- >you get the customer-dialled rate without feeding a continuous stream of
- >coins into the phone.
-
- The phone cards are not magnetic but rely on infra-red holograms printed
- on the card. There is one hologram per unit and they are destroyed as the
- units are consummed. There is no way a card can be recharged or prevented
- from being erased (people have tried, painting the card with nail varnish
- being one method used .. doesn't work). Mercury Communications have a range
- of payphones in railway stations etc which take standard credit cards and
- their own version of the pre-payed card. Their card does not seem to use
- holograms or magnetic stripes. It stores credits as pounds and pence and
- can resolve values exactly. Anyone know how this card works?
-
- Britain is the world's largest user of holographic phonecards, but Japan
- is by far the largest user of any type of phone card, which are in their
- case standard magnetic. I read that in japan they are used as currency,
- so much so that the government there is investigating phone cards effect
- on the economy!
-
-
- Peter Thurston
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: Bruce Oberg <boberg@june.cs.washington.edu>
- Subject: Re: British PhoneCard question
- Date: 30 Mar 89 16:53:39 GMT
- Reply-To: Bruce Oberg <uw-june!boberg@june.cs.washington.edu>
- Organization: U of Washington, Computer Science, Seattle
-
-
- The British Telecom PhoneCard is an interesting little gizmo. You buy
- one for X pounds and the card is then "worth" X/10 ten pence pieces.
- You insert it in a special PhoneCard phone and ten pence pieces are
- "removed" from the card during your call. A display on the phone keeps
- you informed of how much "money" is left. When you hang up, the card
- is released by the phone.
-
- As with other british phones, if you run out of money, your talk path
- is disconnected then and there until you insert more. Unfortunately,
- most PhoneCard phones do not accept coins (and usually don't have
- lines waiting for them at the train station); you have to insert a new
- card when yours runs out.
-
- The way "money" is kept track of on the card is *not* through a
- magstripe. Special markings on the front of the card specify how much
- the card was originally worth, and while you're using it, tiny tick
- marks are made in the upper right corner of the front of the card.
- I've always wondered how easy counterfeighting the cards would be;
- I've never heard of anyone getting caught doing so.
-
- Usually, ten pence lasts a couple of minutes on the phone. One time I
- used my card to call back to the U.S. and it was real fun to watch the
- ten pence pieces click down about one every five seconds.
-
- bruce oberg
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- From: Rob Warnock <amdcad!amdcad.AMD.COM!rpw3@ames.arc.nasa.gov>
- Subject: Re: Cellular Radio Hazards
- Date: 31 Mar 89 05:41:24 GMT
- Reply-To: Rob Warnock <amdcad!amdcad!rpw3@ames.arc.nasa.gov>
- Organization: [Consultant] San Mateo, CA
-
-
- In article <telecom-v09i0115m03@vector.UUCP> (John Higdon) writes:
- +---------------
- | > For those reasons alone you're better off stopping to use a pay-phone.
- | Thank you for your opinion. Unfortunately we now live in the era of
- | COCOTs (or COPTs, as Pacific Bell refers to them), and it is quite
- | literally cheaper in many cases to use a cellular telephone...
- +---------------
-
- And your call might even go through! This morning I hit the situation
- head on: I was at a breakfast meeting at Coco's in Sunnyvale, when I
- wanted to call a later appointment to tell him the meeting was going
- to run over and I'd be late. Being new to cellular, and still somewhat
- cautious about costs, I dutifully went towards the payphones in the
- back. Uh, oh, COCOTs! Well, trying the first phone gave me my party,
- but then the channel was only 1/2 open: I could hear them but
- on the other phone, but it kept spitting back
- my coin and saying my number was "invalid" and I had to dial again.
-
- So I went back to my table and picked up the handheld... The relief
- from frustration was *worth* the extra 20 cents!
-
-
- Rob Warnock
- Systems Architecture Consultant
-
- UUCP: {amdcad,fortune,sun}!redwood!rpw3
- DDD: (415)572-2607 <=== *Not* the mobile! ;-}
- USPS: 627 26th Ave, San Mateo, CA 94403
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- From: "t.m.ko" <tmk@io.att.com>
- Subject: Cordless phone that works within 10 miles
- Date: 5 Apr 89 14:21:35 GMT
- Reply-To: "t.m.ko" <tmk@io.att.com>
- Organization: AT&T, Middletown, NJ
-
-
-
- I am looking for a cordless phone that would work even if the handset
- is away from the base for up to 10 miles.
- Is there such a product?
-
- I need to use it in some rural area where cellular service is unavailable.
-
- All recommendations and comments are appreciated.
-
-
- ******************************************************************************
- Tsz-Mei Ko
- ARPA: bentley!tmk@att.ARPA AT&T Bell Labs
- UUCP: tmk@bentley.UUCP LC 3N-P08
- 184 Liberty Corner Road
- {att-ih,decwrl,amdahl,linus}!ihnp4!bentley!tmk Warren, NJ 07060-0908
- *******************************************************************************
- ------------------------------
-
- From: "John B. Nagle" <jbn@glacier.stanford.edu>
- Subject: Re: Cellular Phones and Big Brother
- Date: 5 Apr 89 16:26:03 GMT
- Reply-To: "John B. Nagle" <glacier!jbn@bu-cs.bu.edu>
- Organization: Stanford University
-
-
-
- It's not all clear that the ECPA prohibits listening to the cellular
- control channel. There might be some potential for a business that monitors
- all traffic on the cellular control channel in an area and reduces the data.
- Not only could you locate stolen phones, but you could develop targeted
- marketing information concerning heavy cellular phone users.
-
- John Nagle
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- Date: Mon, 3 Apr 89 16:34:26 EDT
- From: Mark Robert Smith <msmith@topaz.rutgers.edu>
- Subject: Caller*ID betrays a crank caller
-
- The other night, I got a call at 3am, that I wasn't expecting. So, I let
- the phone ring twice, and poof, the number 560-0846 appears on my CallerID
- box.
-
- I didn't recognize the number, but I answered anyway. The person on the
- other end proceeded to say any number of obscene things. I interrupted,
- saying: "Did you know that your phone number is 560-08[click]". He
- hung up before I could finish. So, I called him back.
-
- Caller - "Hello?"
- Me - " Why did you just call me?"
- Caller - silence
- Me - "I know your phone number, it's 560-0846, and if you ever call back
- here again, I'm going to report you to the police."
- Caller - "All right [click]"
-
- His "All right" was very sheepish-sounding.
-
- I next called the operator, to see if she could do a reverse-directory
- listing check. She passed me to her supervisor, who told me that she
- couldn't, and I should call either the police, or the business office on
- Monday. I told her the story, and heard a room full of people
- laughing in the background, hysterically. She said, "I wish I could
- have seen his face when you called back...."
-
- So, I called the business office on Monday. They refused to do a
- reverse directory lookup, because that information is private. The
- best I could have done, is pay $1 to do a Call*Trace, after which I
- would have to contact the police and press charges, before I could
- find out who it was.
-
- Does anyone out there know of another way to do a reverse lookup?
-
- Mark
- ----
- Mark Smith (alias Smitty) "Be careful when looking into the distance,
- RPO 1604; P.O. Box 5063 that you do not miss what is right under your nose."
- New Brunswick, NJ 08903-5063 rutgers!topaz.rutgers.edu!msmith (OK, Bob?)
- msmith@topaz.rutgers.edu
-
- [Moderator's Note: Try the Haines Criss Cross Directory; available in the
- Business/Technology or similar reference department in many public libraries.
- Sometimes if you call the library on the phone and ask for the reference
- department the librarian will do the look up and give it to you; other times
- they say you have to come in the library and do it yourself. PT]
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- Subject: Cancer from cell phones ...
- Date: 3 Apr 89 13:03:56 EST (Mon)
- From: gmeeca!sb@tis.llnl.gov
-
-
- The recent comments produce concern -- ionizing radiation is clearly NOT
- the only to get cancer -- there is much concern about low frequency
- radiation (previously thought to be safe), such as 60 Hz. There are
- several studies out that show that people living in the area (not
- underneath, not sitting on the wire) of high voltage lines have
- significantly increased chances of cancer (and I forget which type). For
- infants, it is clearly stated that even the minor field generated by
- electric blankets can induce cancer.
-
- Having been in the EMC arena for a while, the topic of cancer is under
- very heavy scrutiny in the 500W arena/60 Hz arena, to which we are cur-
- ently exposing people in relatively large quantities, as this is the std
- power used to drive large magnetic (Helmholz coils). As a safety prec-
- aution, we do require our people to be with the vehicle while it is sub-
- jected to this EMR (as it is on a dynamometer). We also require a
- minimum of a yearly physical exam done by the company to catch any areas
- of difficulty that could arise. It is important to understand, that
- while this field will seriously deflect a CRT beam at several feet, it
- is nothing when compared to the field produced by a hand held razor.
-
- As this applies to Cellphones (including those with internal mount ant-
- ennas), there is most likely a very small finite probability that the
- radiation will produce odd side effects in adults. This probability is
- also vastly increased for infants (namely those under 2 years old). THIS
- DOESN'T MEAN DON'T USE CELLPHONES! Dosage is the key factor -- no human
- being is exposed to hours of cellphone communication on end -- expense,
- drop-outs, safety, and cauliflower ear prohibit such exposure. Using an
- electric blanket, a child gets 8 hours plus per day exposure. Using our
- coils - technicians get 2 min/day of whole body exposure and using an
- electric razor a persons exposure is less than three minutes per day.
-
- In the future, there is going to be a significant amount of discussion
- about radiation limitations in the low frequency and low power areas of
- operation. These concerns have been troubling the EMC types for quite a
- while.
-
- Bradley W. Smith
- (313) 685-5265 @ GMPG
- lll-tis!gmeeca!sb
- umix!clip!hse001!sb
-
- Disclaimer: In consideration of the legal ramifications of the above
- statements, consider the aforementioned statements to be my
- personal opinions and non-indicative of my employer.
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- From: Peter Kendell <mcvax!tcom.stc.co.uk!pete@uunet.uu.net>
- Subject: Re: British phone cards
- Date: 3 Apr 89 14:32:28 GMT
- Organization: STC Telecoms, London N11 1HB.
-
-
- From article <telecom-v09i0106m03@vector.UUCP>, by halliday@cc.ubc.ca (laura
- halliday):
- } While in London a couple of years ago the locals told me
- } that the rationale for phone cards (other than byuing a
- } 20 pound phone card with paper money rather than coins)
- } was that card phones have no money in them, and are thus
- } much less likely to be vandalized.
- }
- } - Laura
-
- Plus, BT just *love* collecting your money from you before you make your
- call. Think of all that extra cash it gives them. Plus you might lose
- the card. Plus, a card telephone doesn't show you your money draining away
- the way a cash one does so you are likely to spend more.
-
- Do I carry a card? Yes, because money phones are disappearing fast and
- the time I *really* need a phone will be the time there's only a card
- phone nearby.
-
- But I don't like it.
- --
-
- | Peter Kendell <pete@tcom.stc.co.uk> |
- | ...{uunet!}mcvax!ukc!stc!pete |
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: Paul Anderson <stiatl!pda@gatech.edu>
- Subject: Re: How big can a Local Dialing Area be?
- Date: 5 Apr 89 00:49:32 GMT
- Reply-To: Paul Anderson <stiatl!pda@gatech.edu>
- Organization: Sales Technologies Inc., a Dun & Bradstreet Company
-
-
- In article <telecom-v09i0121m05@vector.UUCP> pf@islington-terrace.csc.ti.com
- (Paul Fuqua) writes:
- > Subject: How big can a Local Dialing Area be?
-
- >The local calling area in Dallas includes the city itself, plus most of
- >the first two rings of suburbs and DFW airport. That's a rough square
- >25 or 30 miles on a side, so 600 to 900 square miles. Between 1 and 2
- >million people, more than 300 exchanges.
-
- Hmmm. In this light, I think that the Atlanta calling region -may- be
- larger geographically (and I will take a stab at a population for that
- region to be around 4 million people). The Atlanta local calling area
- extends from about 20 miles on one side of the 'perimeter' to 20 miles
- out on the other side. The I285 ('perimeter') is conservatively 20 miles
- across. This yields a diameter of 60 miles or ~ 2826 sq miles. Now,
- while you are all coughing, I have made calls this distance regularly
- and drive to these locations to do business! I searched the phone
- book for a listing of the exchanges and was unable to find
- anything. There are, however, 400 private residence listings per page
- in the phone book for all 2004 pages of it yielding a total of 801,600
- residence listings. If the average household headcount of 4 per holds,
- then this bears out an estimate of about 4 million people in the metro
- area. The business section averages 350 listings per page for 700 pages
- for a total of 245,000 *listed* lines. The real number is at least
- probably double that, but more likely triple that, so lets say business
- lines account for 600,000 more. That yields a total of 1.4 million
- lines. This results in 495 lines per sq mile. Big area, but not real
- dense like in New York City.
-
- Paul
- --
- Paul Anderson gatech!stiatl!pda (404) 841-4000
- X isn't just an adventure, X is a way of life...
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- From: Dave Levenson <westmark!dave@rutgers.edu>
- Subject: Re: Cellular Phones and Big Brother
- Date: 4 Apr 89 22:05:38 GMT
- Organization: Westmark, Inc., Warren, NJ, USA
-
-
- In article <telecom-v09i0121m01@vector.UUCP>, xrtll!rsnider@nexus.yorku.ca
- writes:
-
- > There seems to be a potential here for the police department to locate
- > stolen vehicles with cellular phones in them by simply having the
- > service providers tell them where they are.
-
-
- A few years ago, a friend had a cellular mobile phone stolen from
- her car. She called the local service provider to ask them to try
- to locate the vehicle. (She worked at Bell Laboratories, and was
- involved in the development of the software that makes Cellular
- Telephony work.) They refused to do any kind of tracing, and
- suggested that their equipment did not make the information
- available.
-
- They did offer to turn off the service (by causing their switch to
- reject calls to/from the mobile number). The stolen equipment
- turned up on my friend's door step one morning a few weeks later!
-
- --
- Dave Levenson /-----------------------------\
- Westmark, Inc. | If you can't give me your |
- Warren, NJ USA | Phone number, don't call! |
- {rutgers | att}!westmark!dave \-----------------------------/
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- Date: Wed, 5 Apr 89 15:24:57 -0500 (EST)
- From: Marvin Sirbu <ms6b+@andrew.cmu.edu>
- Subject: Who is responsible for COCOTS?
-
- You don't need divestiture to have a problem with COCOTS. You don't even need
- facilities based competition. All you need are:
-
- 1) Authorization of resale of long distance, with no price regualtion for
- resale carriers.
-
- 2) Authorization to property owners that they may choose the AOS operator of
- their choice, and receive whatever kickback that operator wants to give them.
-
- Given these two propositions, both of which are strictly within the domain of
- the FCC, you can create all the problems we have seen with AOS.
-
- The solution therefore, is also within the domain of the FCC. Either
-
- a) eliminate resale. This of course would eliminate Telenet, Tymnet,
- Compuserve and all other value added network providers.
-
- b) compel the property owner to contract with only the lowest cost service
- provider (likely to lead to low level of service quality.)
-
- c) limit the level of kickbacks to property owners, thereby reducing
- (partially) the incentive for high AOS prices; or
-
- d) put price caps on what AOS operators can charge.
-
- e) mandate that all carriers be reachable from every payphone and educate
- customers to choose the lowest cost carrier.
-
- f) do nothing.
-
- I vote for d).
-
-
-
- Marvin Sirbu
- Carnegie Mellon University
- internet: ms6b+@andrew.cmu.edu
- bitnet: ms6b+%andrew@CMCCVB
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- Date: Wed, 5 Apr 89 17:16:40 PDT
- From: David Gast <gast@cs.ucla.edu>
- SubjectzT&Vcfn A>yXOs
-
- In article <telecom-v09i0121m05@vector.UUCP> pf@islington-terrace.csc.ti.com
- (Paul Fuqua) writes:
- > Subject: How big can a Local Dialing Area be?
-
- I think we went over this subject a few months ago. Unfortunately, it
- is not a very interesting question in itself. In theory, a local
- calling area could be all of a state, all of the country, or all of
- the world. One would just need the ``right'' tariff.
-
- A much more interesting question is what is the cheapest phone service.
- This question is also much more difficult to define because the cheapest
- phone service depends on the calling pattern of the individual subscriber,
- which clearly varies with the subscriber.
-
- The point is: There is an implicit if not explicit assumption that a large
- calling area is equated with lower cost. (Why else would it be an advantage
- instead of just a question for trivial pursuits?) This assumption is not
- necessarily true. It is only likely to be true if the individual
- subscriber makes a lot of calls to the outlying area of the local
- calling area. If GTE offered me a local calling area twice the size
- for $2 more per month, I would not take it because I do not make $2
- worth of toll calls to the expanded area per month. Other people would
- probably would take it. In fact, I might even trade in some of my
- local calling area in exchange for a lower base rate. (Depends, of
- course, exactly what areas they want to take away. The ``Valley'', for
- example, is a local call me for me, but I never call there because I
- ``like for sure can't totally understand any rad, bitchin' thing'' they
- say. :-) )
-
- David Gast
- gast@cs.ucla.edu
- {uunet,ucbvax,rutgers}!{ucla-cs,cs.ucla.edu}!gast
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 6 Apr 89 1:17:04 CDT
- From: TELECOM Moderator <telecom@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Subject: 976 WAKE - up Service in California
-
- You don't have to be a hotel guest to get a wake-up call anymore.
- People in California can now dial a service called '976-WAKE' and arrange
- a telephonic alarm clock/reminder service for the next day.
-
- From one of several area codes in California, the caller dials 976-WAKE,
- then follows the instructions given, entering his own telephone number
- on the touchtone pad, and the time for the wakeup call, etc. The system
- is programmed so that only California area codes can be called; and no
- calls can ordered for numbers such as xxx-555-xxxx, etc.
-
- The charge is $2 for each wakeup/reminder call. You do not have to be in
- California to hear how it works; just dial 213-976-WAKE. From outside of
- California all you will pay is around 25 cents if you call at night, but
- don't expect to be able to get a wakeup call, because it won't work without
- a California area code entered.
-
- Is this God's way of telling people they have too much money?
-
- Patrick Townson
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- Date: Tue, 4 Apr 89 2:09:32 CDT
- From: TELECOM Moderator <telecom@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Subject: Obscene Caller Brought To Justice
-
- The year was 1967. I was living in Hyde Park, one of the south side
- neighborhoods in Chicago. A fellow living in my building worked for Illinois
- Bell as a techician in the frames at the Chicago-Wabash central office
- downtown.
-
- Now this was long before ESS, of course, and in fact at the time, Wabash
- was an ancient step by step office; one of the first converted to dial from
- manual service in the early 1940's. Woody worked the 4-12 midnight shift
- on Saturday and Sunday, and had just a single clerk working with him;
- a woman who answered the calls to '611' repair service among other things.
-
- You would have to know something about the area to fully appreciate the
- story, but here goes anyway. The section of downtown Chicago where
- that CO is located is on the southern edge of the financial section.
- It is *dead* on Saturday evenings; no one is left in any of the offices
- to call Repair Service at that time on the weekend; at least not back then.
-
- So as often as not, the woman clerk taking 611 calls would sit there for
- several minutes at a time doing nothing. There was one fellow though,
- who *always* called at exactly 6:00 PM on Saturday, and would begin talking
- dirty to the woman who answered the repair line. I assume this chap was
- probably alone in his office, getting ready to go home for the night, and
- liked to get his jollies by talking dirty on the phone. He apparently
- assumed calls to 611 could not be traced; or at least he knew it was a
- free call and would cost him nothing for a couple minutes of thrills the
- way he liked to get them.
-
- You could set your watch by this guy. Every Saturday night; always at
- 6 PM; always to the same woman answering 611 calls; always two or three
- minutes of nasty talk while he was on the other end doing whatever it is
- that guys do while they are making calls of this sort.
-
- Woody the central office tech and the repair service lady always used
- to laugh about it. Around five minutes to six every Saturday night Woody
- would tell the woman, "oh, look at the time; its about time for your
- boyfriend to call..."
-
- One night Woody was feeling energetic, and he said to the clerk, let's
- catch that silly old fool tonight.
-
- The woman asked how, and Woody explained, thusly --
-
- "You've got no calls now; when it lights up you know it will be him.
- No one else ever calls Repair at this time of the evening from downtown
- on Saturday night.
-
- "What I want you to do is this: when he calls, make your voice sound like
- a *recorded message*, and all I want you to say is 'Repair Service has a
- new number. To call Repair Service, please hang up and dial 230'..."
-
- In those days at least, '230' was a special test number which terminated
- on the test board. Woody had a special treat in mind for their gentleman
- caller that evening.
-
- Sure enough, within a minute or two, 611 gets a call. The woman answers
- and carefully recites, "This is a recorded message. Repair Service has a
- new telephone number.
-
- Downloaded From P-80 Systems 304-744-2253
-