home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
-
-
- TELECOM Digest Wed, 3 Nov 93 03:32:30 CST Volume 13 : Issue 734
-
- Inside This Issue: Moderator: Patrick A. Townson
-
- Fire Update (Steve Lichter)
- Fires at Will (Jeff Sicherman)
- Book Review: "Globalization, Technology and Competition" (Rob Slade)
- Telecom-Tech Mailing List (Tom Ace)
- Canadian Internet Resources (Rick Broadhead)
- LZW Compression -vs- v.42bis Compression (Thaddeus H. Wood)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: 2 Nov 93 16:16:42-0500
- From: Steven Lichter <telecom@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Subject: Fire Update
-
-
- [Moderator's Note: This was written *before* Malibu ...and was delayed
- in transmission due to Steve's difficult work assignment at present.
- My thanks also go to the person at GTE who is faxing me updates; but
- Steve's account below seems to be quite detailed. We'll have to
- wait until later to hear what the scoop is on Malibu. PAT]
-
-
- Posted: Mon, Nov 1, 1993 3:53 PM PST Msg: NGJD-5641-2522
- From: M.AMADOR
- To: GTCA, GTEL, CRISIS.COMM, R.J.PALMER, T.EDWARDS, P.MINER,
- L.NIGG, M.FOSTER, D.FIASCO, T.WHITE, M.ESSTMAN, T.ZIEGLER
- Subj: FIRE UPDATE - GTE CALIFORNIA
-
- The following is another in a series of updates that relate
- to the catastrophic fires in Southern California:
-
-
- STATUS AS OF 9:00 AM PST - NOVEMBER 1, 1993
-
- I. CUSTOMER FACILITY IMPACTS:
-
- A. NETWORK SERVICES
-
- INLAND VALLEYS DIVISION
-
-
- The network has been fully restored. There are no
- outages.
-
- The Ortega fire area assessment has been completed.
- There is no GTE facility damage in that area.
-
-
- CENTRAL VALLEYS DIVISION
-
- The network has been fully restored. There are no
- outages.
-
-
- OCEAN VALLEYS DIVISION
-
- The network is fully restored.
-
-
- B. NETWORK PROVISIONING
-
-
- INLAND VALLEYS DIVISION
-
- There are no reported problems in this division.
-
- CENTRAL VALLEYS DIVISION
-
- Division personnel worked over the weekend to restore
- customer services in those areas impacted by the fire.
-
- Laguna is comprised of several small community
- divisions. In those divisions, the customers that are
- out of service are not the entire community; but
- spotty.
-
- 373 homes were destroyed. 91 customers have been
- returned to service. Total restoration for customers
- in this area requesting service and requiring outside
- plant repair or replacement will be completed on 11/4
- Customer impact: Approximately 100
-
-
- OCEAN VALLEYS DIVISION
-
- The areas of Mugu, Sycamore Canyon and Santa Paula have
- all been fully restored.
-
- Laguna Peak is restored and awaiting installation
- request from the customer.
-
- Carlisle Canyon is 40% restored. It will be 70%
- restored by the end of business November 1. Total
- restoration will be achieved by Thursday November 4,
- 1993.
-
- Customer impact: 20 - 25 customers
-
- Yerba Buena Canyon remains the most difficult area to
- restore. It is in a mountainous and difficult terrain.
- Complete restoration will require replacing 60,000 feet
- of cable and at least 12 utility poles. Crews are
- working to place poles in hard rock and elevated areas.
-
- It is estimated the majority of the customers in that
- area will be restored within 6 - 7 days. Total
- restoration may take up to 2 weeks.
-
- Customer impact: 200 - 250 customers
-
- SUMMARY: The remaining restoration efforts are
- concentrating on repair and replacement of outside plant.
- Only 375 of GTE California's customers remain out of
- service. This figure is down from the 2500 originally
- requiring restoration efforts. There is no damage to GTE
- buildings and all critical switching centers are operating.
- Repair call volumes from customers are at a normal or
- slightly lower than normal level.
-
- II. EMPLOYEE ISSUES
-
- Division personnel continue to work to provide service to
- GTE customers. The Customer Disaster Center established in
- Laguna Beach has processed over 100 orders and will remain
- open until Friday November 5, 1993.
-
- Ocean Valleys Division will augment the workforce in the
- restoration of Yerba Buena Canyon once the poles have been
- properly placed. At that time additional employees will be
- required.
-
- No employees have suffered a loss of their homes as a result
- of the fires.
-
- III. COMMUNITY RESPONSES
-
- The coin trailers placed in response to the disaster effort
- remain in the area and active. They provide free local and
- long distance calling to victims in the fire areas.
-
- Two of the trailers have been moved at the request of the
- cities either to misuse (in Malibu) by non victims or to
- improve accessibility.
-
- The Division of Ratepayers Advocates has contacted
- Regulatory to say they appreciated our periodic updates on
- fire response and restoration at GTE.
-
- Public Affairs continues to release internal and external
- statements to keep GTE activities in the forefront of
- employees and customers. Over 200 interviews have been
- given to the media and Public Affairs is in the process of
- drafting an advertisement to appear in local papers thanking
- customers and employees during this period.
-
- A $75,000 grant from the GTE Foundation has been requested
- to donate to the Red Cross. It is in the approval process
- and it is hoped the funds will be available for distribution
- no later than Wednesday November 3, to capitalize on press
- opportunities.
-
-
- The next scheduled conference call is on Tuesday November 2,
- at 9:00 AM PST. At that conference, attendees will receive
- an initial report on expenditures and determine the need for
- further calls.
-
- All restoration efforts and work completed will be permanent
- wherever possible. This will minimize duplication of
- restoration efforts.
-
- All charges of labor, material and labor are to be charged
- to the open ended work orders assigned to this project. Any
- questions from the field regarding the work order numbers
- may be called to Valerie Clairmont at 805/372-8106, if you
- are unable to resolve locally.
-
- The Emergency Operating Center is closed for calls; but
- personnel remain on stand by.
-
- Any questions regarding the information in this telemail or
- the Emergency Operating Center, other than the work orders,
- may be directed to M. Amador at 805/372-7512.
-
-
-
- M. AMADOR
- Administrator - Emergency Preparedness
-
- Posted: Mon, Nov 1, 1993 4:01 PM PST Msg: CGJD-5641-2791
- From: B.J.BARBER
- To: gtca, gtel
- CC: l.higson
- Subj: Fire Damage Update
-
- The following is an all-employee bulletin
-
- November 1, 1993
-
- Final fire damage restoration underway
-
-
- Approximately 375 of GTE California's 3.1 million customers statewide
- were still out of service on Monday morning due to the fires that hit
- Southern California last week.
-
- As of this morning, the GTE network is 100 percent operational.
- Employees continued to work throughout the weekend to restore service
- to customers.
-
- In the Laguna Beach area, more than 100 customers used the GTE service
- center set up at the Laguna Beach central office. Cellular phones
- were lent to 10 Laguna customers and a coin trailer was moved to the
- Laguna Beach City Hall. A total of 373 customer homes were destroyed
- in Laguna but work will be completed by Thursday to restore an
- additional 100 customer lines that were out of service due to the
- fire.
-
- In the Thousand Oaks fire, employees are working to restore more than
- 20 customer lines that were damaged by the fire in Carlisle Canyon.
- Most customers there will be back in service today. Complete
- restoration is expected by Thursday. In the Yerba Buena fire,
- employees are replacing a 60,000 foot cable, which includes stringing
- cable over canyons and an extensive amount of hand digging. Telephone
- service for 250 customers who were affected in that area will be
- restored in the next six to 14 days.
-
- "We are very service conscious and it is times like this when the real
- GTE comes out," said Mike Crawford, Vice President General Manager for
- GTE West Area.
-
- There were no employee injuries and no damage to employee homes
- reported from the fires.
-
- GTE has waived payment of the basic monthly phone rate for 90 days for
- Californians displaced by the fires. We also are offering fire
- victims free local and toll calling from coin phone trailers located
- in Malibu and Laguna Beach. AT&T, MCI and Sprint are providing free
- long-distance service from those phones, excluding international
- calls.
-
- GTE also is providing customers with free remote call forwarding, so
- they can be called on their usual phone number, which can be
- transferred to another location within GTE or Pacific Bell. Customers
- would pay only toll costs for this service. Or, displaced customers
- within GTE can use Personal Secretary at no charge. After 90 days,
- they would pay their basic phone rate, but could receive remote call
- forwarding or Personal Secretary free of charge until October 1994.
-
- To facilitate communications among firefighters, GTE has provided
- mobile cellular phones to fire departments in Ventura County and
- Laguna Beach. Additionally, GTE has provided phone lines to the
- Ventura County Sheriff's Dept., and for the emergency services command
- centers in Laguna Beach, Malibu, Thousand Oaks and Hemet. The company
- also installed a portable microwave facility to serve the Laguna Beach
- Police Dept. and is continuing to work with emergency agencies to
- provide communications capabilities.
-
- I sure hope you got this.
-
- Things are starting to cook here again. The Hemet fire is still going and
- now there is one in Woodland Hills.
-
-
- Steven Lichter GTECalif COEI
-
-
- [Moderator's Note: Steve's comment 'I sure hope you got this' is due
- to the fact that the first transmission of this bulletin was lost
- in transit. Little did he know (or maybe not, maybe experience has
- already prepared him) that Malibu would become an inferno next. :( PAT]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: sichermn@csulb.edu (Jeff Sicherman)
- Subject: Fires at Will
- Date: 2 Nov 1993 21:28:20 GMT
- Organization: Cal State Long Beach
-
-
- The latest blaze ... the Calabasas/Topanga/Malibu fire (choose one,
- it'll be there before long anyway) is heading in the general direction
- of Saddle Peak, which is -- according to news reports -- a major
- installation site for PacBell, GTE, and emergency agencies
- communications (relay) equipment. It might be cellular stuff; they
- weren't too precise about it.
-
-
- Jeff Sicherman
-
-
- [Moderator's Note: A long time reader of the Digest wrote me Tuesday
- evening to say he woke up Tuesday with the fire a mile or so away,
- which I guess would make anyone jump out of bed in a hurry. It was
- good luck for him though that winds were blowing the fire away from
- him by that time. Maybe when he sees this he will write to comment
- on Saddle Peak, what he knows about it, and if it is skipped by
- the fires or not. What is going on in southern California? I mean,
- *everyone* knows California has fires every year; it is in the
- nature of things there. But this past week ... jeeze ... it seems
- much more extreme than in my past memory. PAT]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 2 Nov 93 15:13 -0600
- From: Rob Slade <roberts@decus.arc.ab.ca>
- Subject: Book Review: "Globalization, Technology and Competition"
-
-
- BKGLBTCH.RVW 980930
-
- Havard Business School Press
- Soldiers Field Road
- Boston, MA 02163
- 617-495-6700 617-495-6117 800-545-7685
- 617-495-6444 617-495-6334 fax: 617-496-8066
- or
- McGraw-Hill Ryerson/Osborne
- 300 Water Street
- Whitby, Ontario L1N 9B6
- 416-430-5000 416-430-5047 Rita Bisram, Marketing
- fax: 416-430-5020
- or
- 2600 Tenth St.
- Berkeley, CA 94710 USA
- 415-548-2805 800-227-0900
- "Globalization, Technology and Competition", Bradley/Hausman/Nolan, U$34.95
-
-
- The inclusion of "globalization" and "competition" in the title, as
- well as the imprimatur of the Harvard Business School indicate that
- this will be other than a technical manual. At the same time, the
- subtitle does give one hope that there will be some technical material
- of interest. One should know better by now. When business and
- technical interests clash, business always wins.
-
- "Business" research, along with much of economics, reminds one of the
- statement about much of educational research: if it isn't blatant
- nonsense, it's stuff your grandmother knew. As they say in Russia,
- there is no pravda in Izvetsia, and no izvetsia in Pravda (a pun on
- the names of the two major papers, the "Truth" and the "News"). This
- compilation of papers appears to have been taken from a single
- symposium and made to fit into a book. The heavy preponderance of
- professors from Harvard and MIT make the work seem quite
- self-indulgent. The range of companies studied goes from big to big:
- by the time you are finished you will know more than you ever wanted
- about the International Stock Exchange, General Electric Information
- Services, Saturn, Benetton, Wal-Mart and Rosenbluth Travel.
-
- In the absence of a preface or foreword, chapter (or paper) one, with
- the slightly reordered title of "Global Competition and Technology",
- would seem to fill that role, particularly as it is the only content
- of part one. However, after an initial laying of some foundations and
- a seeming introduction to part two, this first paper drifts into a
- mini-"Megatrend" essay which tries to touch all of the communications,
- technology and globalization bases without much apparent structure.
- The technical background is suspect in places, as where the authors
- applaud the death of standards, suggesting that this will drive the
- movement to open systems. This indicates a very profound lack of
- understanding of the necessity of standards for the open systems
- concept to even exist, and a limiting of the definition of "standard"
- to "proprietary standards", itself almost an oxymoron.
-
- Part two discusses organizational structures. If the aim is to
- propose any suggested style for "global" organizations, it is only
- scantily achieved. Malone and Rockart give us some rewording of
- Naismith's "networking", structure with an organization (as opposed to
- the hierarchical pyramid of traditional companies) with "adhocracies"
- and "answer networks". However, they appear to be proposing that such
- structures already exist within large corporations: their only
- evidence is a "gee whiz" listing of some information technologies
- already in use. Some idea of the framework under which a global
- organizational structure could develop would be helpful. Eccles and
- Nolan appear to want to give us that. Instead, we get a retreading of
- the usual "policy vs procedure" model of delegation from management to
- line workers (under the new phrase "superordinate design"). Tacking
- an additional title onto an existing acronym (GIS, commonly known as
- geographic information systems but here used as global information
- systems), Konsynski and Karimi purport to help us to design worldwide
- networks. Instead, we have vague business terms being applied to
- complex networking problems; one admission that networks might be
- limited by available technologies; and one "case study" which lists
- applications which are, again, impressive but do not address current
- major problems.
-
- Part three purports to talk about the creation and restructuring of
- industries. Whether this is supposed to be prescriptive (how to
- restructure) or descriptive (what new industries *will* look like) is
- left open. In any case, definitive statements about restructuring are
- hard to come by. Bradley's article lists some new industries and some
- restructured companies. But the role of information technology is not
- directly linked to any changes. The promised examination of the value
- and cost justification is limited to two paragraphs stating that
- measurements of return on investment for networks are difficult,
- seldom done, but should be done. Not very helpful. (In addition it
- is very difficult, in the paper, to distinguish technical networking
- from business, political or social "networking".) Hayter's chapter
- discussing the changes wrought by the introduction of electronic
- trading to the International Stock Exchange is fascinating but
- somewhat limited by the lack of specific examples of change to
- affected companies. The restructuring of a manufacturing industry is
- examined in the case of a particular company, but the Jaikumar/Upton
- paper goes to the opposite extreme and fails to give any account of
- technology in this firm limited not only to one nation, but to a
- restricted area within Italy. The Hammond article does study one
- technology area ("point of sale" information) and one industry (retail
- sales, particularly fashion) and produces the best of the bunch. More
- detail would have been helpful. One example in the fashion industry
- cites a six-week response time. That is half a "season" in fashion:
- it would be interesting to see how to shorten it.
-
- Part four is ostensibly aimed at the general manager who needs to
- respond strategically to the changes of globalization and technology.
- One would assume, therefore, that this section would be primarily
- practical. Not so. A paper by Clemons again trying to cover the
- whole field (and, again, demonstrating a basic misunderstanding of the
- business aspects of computing by the statement that information
- technology investments are feasible and not restricted to a single use
- with a single partner), a presentation of an IBM study on
- globalization that stresses "balance", and an interesting study of
- GM's Saturn division which makes almost no mention of technology. The
- one useful article details the international "expansion" of a travel
- agency through alliances with "local" firms in other countries and the
- use of technological assistance which supports and cements the
- alliance.
-
- The final section of the book is entitled, "Competing with
- Technology". However you wish to interpret that, the three papers
- have little to do with it. Hausman lists activities of various
- telecommunications carriers overseas, while the other two articles are
- two versions of peering into the future. The Marx article is quite
- "blue sky" in its assessment. The Hald and Konsynski article is more
- detailed but perhaps no more useful. The technologies it examines are
- certainly interesting. However, the recent development of a
- dependable replacement for the century-old gas meter design will
- likely turn a seven hundred million dollar gas meter supply industry
- into a twenty-five million dollar industry within three years (and
- have an even greater impact on gas service.) This may not be as
- "sexy" as virtual reality, but it will affect business much more over
- the next five years.
-
- The conference that prompted this book may simply have been a bad one.
- In all likelihood, though, this is a fair representation of current
- business thinking with regard to technology. Fuzzy. I would
- recommend that managers with a technical background study this book.
- My reason is the same reason I would give for studying BASIC. In self
- defence, it behooves you to know what the brass is being fed, and,
- what nonsense you might have to deal with.
-
-
- copyright Robert M. Slade, 1993 BKGLBTCH.RVW 980930
- Permission granted to distribute with unedited copies of the TELECOM
- Digest and associated mailing lists/newsgroups.
-
- DECUS Canada Communications, Desktop, Education and Security group newsletters
- Editor and/or reviewer ROBERTS@decus.ca, RSlade@sfu.ca, Rob Slade at 1:153/733
- DECUS Symposium '94, Vancouver, BC, Mar 1-3, 1994, contact: rulag@decus.ca
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 2 Nov 93 14:43:26 PST
- From: crux!tom@hercules.aptix.com (Tom Ace)
- Subject: Telecom-Tech Mailing List
-
-
- If (like me) you don't have a news feed, you can now read and
- participate in the discussions in alt.dcom.telecom, as it is now also
- available by mail as a digest. To quote from the heading of a recent
- issue:
-
- The Telecom-Tech Mailing List is an unmoderated forum for the
- discussion of the various technical aspects of modern and historical
- telecommuniations. Major topics include switching, physical means of
- transmission of analog and digital data, wireless communications, and
- methods of control and distribution of services. Discussions of
- legislation and regulation as they directly affect technology are also
- welcome.
-
- Telecom-Tech is bi-directionally gated to the newsgroup alt.dcom.telecom.
-
- Please send subscription requests and changes to:
- TeleTech-Request@zygot.ati.com
-
- Please send your articles to: teletech@zygot.ati.com
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 02 Nov 93 18:11:47 EST
- From: Rick Broadhead <HANDBOOK@VM1.YorkU.CA>
- Subject: Canadian Internet Resources
-
-
- Calling all Canadian Internet users!
-
- Rick Broadhead and Jim Carroll are working on an Internet book called
- the Canadian Internet Handbook. The Canadian Internet Handbook is
- expected to be the first Internet book with a Canadian perspective.
- To help us make this book truly Canadian, we are asking Internet users
- to send us information about Canadian Internet resources.
- Specifically, we are collecting the following types of information for
- the book:
-
- (1) Internet resources ** where the subject matter pertains to Canada **
- (these resources don't have to be located in Canada)
- e.g. mailing lists, Gopher resources, telnet sites, FTP files,
- Canadian library catalogs accessible via the Internet
-
- (2) Internet resources located in Canada
- e.g. Gopher servers, IRC sites, telnet sites, FTP sites,
- archie sites, finger sites, and other Internet services
- available in Canada
-
- (3) Canadian organizations doing interesting work that involves the
- Internet
-
- (4) Canadian organizations that offer courses/seminars on how to use
- the Internet. Canadian organizations that do Internet training and
- consulting.
-
- (5) Statistics and interesting facts about the Internet in Canada
- (Canadian Internet trivia)
-
- (6) Anecdotes about how people and organizations are using the Internet
- in Canada. Do you have an interesting story to tell? How has the
- Internet helped you or your business/organization?
-
- We need your help! Here's how to submit information for the book:
-
- For items (1) and (2), please complete the enclosed form and return it
- to HANDBOOK@VM1.YorkU.CA. For items (3), (4), (5), and (6), please
- send the information directly to HANDBOOK@VM1.YorkU.CA. All
- contributions are greatly appreciated!
-
-
- Name of Canadian Internet Resource:
-
- Brief Description (1-4 sentences):
-
- How to Access the Resource (please provide instructions):
-
-
- Thank you for your contribution. For more information about the
- Canadian Internet Handbook, please contact the authors, as detailed
- below.
-
-
- Rick Broadhead, FAS, York University | Jim Carroll, J.A. Carroll Consulting
- Internet: HANDBOOK@VM1.YorkU.CA | Internet: jcarroll@jacc.com
- Voice: (416) 487-5220 | Voice: (905) 855-2950
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: pustule@cats.ucsc.edu (Thaddeus H. Wood)
- Subject: LZW Compression -vs- v.42bis Compression
- Date: 2 Nov 1993 05:47:36 GMT
- Organization: University of California; Santa Cruz
-
-
- Okay. Here's my thought-dilemma. It's my intuitive belief that a
- file maximally compressed with a non real-time LZW algorithm, such as
- used in pkZIP or lha, should not be able to be compressed with a
- real-time algorithm such as v.42bis. This seems logical to me. If
- anyone can say otherwise, please do.
-
- Now, it is also my understanding that when using a 14.4kbs modem, one
- should be able to send 1440 bytes/second. Taking into consideration 1
- start and 1 stop bit per byte.
-
- Now, what I want to know is why when I transfer a highly compressed
- file using a v.32bis and v.42bis modem, I almost always see a
- throughput of nearly 1650 bytes/second.
-
- My mind tells me that this compression ratio should not be possible in
- a real-time environment on already compressed data.
-
- So, my question is what am I not taking into account here, if my
- suppositions are correct? And if they are correct, then why hasn't
- anyone implemented a non real-time v.42bis implementation to compress
- those "uncompressable" LZW compressed files? Should save considerable
- HD space, no?
-
- And, of course, if this message seems totally ludicrous to you, please
- be forgiving. It's been a long day.
-
-
- Thaddeus H. Wood 715 Washington St. Suite D Santa Cruz, CA 95060
- pustule@cats.ucsc.edu -- +1 408.423.8733 -- pustule@gorn.echo.com
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of TELECOM Digest V13 #734
- ******************************
-
-
-
- ******************************************************************************
-
-
- Downloaded From P-80 International Information Systems 304-744-2253
-