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- TELECOM Digest Fri, 4 Mar 94 23:54:00 CST Volume 14 : Issue 114
-
- Inside This Issue: Editor: Patrick A. Townson
-
- Personal Wireless Communications Conference (Monty Solomon)
- Wireless Internet Connections (Paul Wareham)
- RBOC FTP Sites and Gopher Servers List (Hjalmar Syversen)
- Now Anyone Can Have ANI on Their 800 Number (Tom Lowe)
- Followup on C&W CID in NY and CT (Doug Reuben)
- Online Access to AT&T Annual Report (Andrew B. Myers)
- Transborder Local Calls (John Botari)
- Workshop on Mobile Computing Systems and Applications (Monty Solomon)
- Mobile Penetrations (Lars Kalsen)
- Fax on the Net - Impact on Telcos? (Richard Sambolec)
- Re: Phones in the Movies Again (Martin McCormick)
- Re: Phones in the Movies Again (Bill Mayhew)
- Re: Can I Expect More Than 2400 Baud? (Peter M. Weiss)
- Re: Can I Expect More Than 2400 Baud? (Fred R. Goldstein)
- Administrivia: Some Lost Messages (TELECOM Digest Editor)
-
- TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
- exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
- there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
- public service systems and networks including Compuserve and GEnie.
- Subscriptions are available at no charge to qualified organizations
- and individual readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:
-
- * telecom-request@eecs.nwu.edu *
-
- The Digest is compilation-copyrighted by Patrick Townson Associates of
- Skokie, Illinois USA. We provide telecom consultation services and
- long distance resale services including calling cards and 800 numbers.
- To reach us: Post Office Box 1570, Chicago, IL 60690 or by phone
- at 708-329-0571 and fax at 708-329-0572. Email: ptownson@townson.com.
-
- ** Article submission address only: telecom@eecs.nwu.edu **
-
- Our archives are located at lcs.mit.edu and are available by using
- anonymous ftp. The archives can also be accessed using our email
- information service. For a copy of a helpful file explaining how to
- use the information service, just ask.
-
- TELECOM Digest is gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
- newsgroup comp.dcom.telecom. It has no connection with the unmoderated
- Usenet newsgroup comp.dcom.telecom.tech whose mailing list "Telecom-Tech
- Digest" shares archives resources at lcs.mit.edu for the convenience
- of users. Please *DO NOT* cross post articles between the groups. All
- opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
- organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
- should not be considered any official expression by the organization.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 4 Mar 1994 17:47:10 -0500
- From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.COM>
- Subject: Personal Wireless Communications Conference
-
-
- Excerpt from Cellular Digest <Issue 4.3.1994>
-
- From: bhargava@sirius.uvic.ca (Vijay Bhargava)
- Date: Fri, 25 Feb 94 16:50:56 PST
- Subject: Conference Announcement
-
-
- International Conference on
- Personal Wireless Communications
- August 18-19, 1994
- Windsor Manor Sheraton, Bangalore (India)
-
- Sponsored by IEEE, India Council, IEEE Bangalore Section and the IETE (India)
-
- FIRST ANNOUNCEMENT AND CALL FOR PAPERS
-
- The International Conference is conceived as a forum for discussion in
- this part of the world of the most recent advances in Wireless
- technology, networks, and services. Therefore the organizing technical
- committee will be pleased to receive most up-to-date information on
- the following subjects (although not limited to these). The Conference
- will have several technical sessions spread over two days (Aug. 18-19),
- preceded by one day (Aug.17) of tutorials covering two of the most
- topical current subjects. The organizing committee expects a lively
- and stimulating discussion on all wireless related subjects in the
- Garden city of India, Bangalore, specially of interest to developing
- countries.
-
- An edited abstract must be received by the Technical Program chair no
- later than April 15, 1994. Authors will be notified about acceptance
- by May 15, 1994 and a camera ready copy will be due by June 22, 1994.
-
- Deadlines:
- Abstract: April 15, 1994
- Camera-ready copy: June 22, 1994
-
- Plenary Speakers from Leading Organizations:
-
- - AT&T Bell Labs - Pactel Corp - NTT
- - Northern Telecom - INMARSAT - ALCATEL
- - QUALCOMM - Motorola - CITR
-
- Theme-Speaker:
-
- N. Vittal, Govt. of India
-
- Tutorials:
-
- - FLMPTS - How soon is soon enough
- - CDMA - A broadband Wireless Access
-
- Sessions:
-
- - Wireless Technology:
- Speech Coding for wireless
- Digital Modulation and channel coding TDMA or CDMA
-
- - Wireless Systems and Networks:
- Trunked Radio Systems (or Private Mobile Radio)
- Wireless solutions for Developing countries
- Mobile Data
- Satellite Communication Networks and VSAT's
- Wireless PABX's
- Wireless LAN's
-
- - Telecommunications Services
- Radio Paging and Voice-Mail
- Digital Cellular and PCS
- CT-2
- Integration of wireless subscribers into existing PSTN
- Frequency Spectrum how much and how many
-
-
- For general inquiry regarding the conference including, exhibiting at
- the conference, advertising in final program or sponsoring a meal
- event please contact:
-
- Mr. Y.S.Rao, Conference Co-Chair Dr. A.K.Seth, Conference Co-Chair
- BPL Systems and Projects Limited C-DOT, Centre for Development of Telematics
- 1/1 Palace Road 9th Floor, Akbar Bhavan
- Bangalore 560 001, India New Delhi 100 021, India
- Phone: +91 80 220 5311 Phone: +91 11 677 525
- FAX : +91 80 220 5311 FAX : +91 11 688 5528
- Email: bplysr@ncb.ernet.in
-
- Manuscript may be submitted to:
- Dr. Vijay K. Bhargava, Technical Program Chair
- Dept of Elec. and Comp. Eng.
- University of Victoria, PO Box 3055
- Victoria, B.C. Canada V8W 3P6
- Phone: +1 604 721-8617
- FAX : +1 604 721-6048
- Email: bhargava@sirius.uvic.ca
-
- ADVANCE REGISTRATION
-
- Last Name: ........................... First Name: ..........................
-
-
- Company Name and Address: ....................................................
-
- ....................................................
-
- ....................................................
-
- ....................................................
-
-
- Telephone:................. FAX: ..................
-
-
- Name of Spouse/Guest: ........................................................
-
-
- IEEE of IETE Member Registration(Membership# ............) Rs 4,000/U.S.$200.00
-
- Non Member Registration Rs 5,000/U.S.$250.00
- (Includes all sessions, conference records, refreshments and lunches)
-
-
- Tutorials Rs 2,000/U.S.$100.00
- (In addition to the registration fee above. Includes lunch and notes)
- Please check:
-
- |_| Tutorial #1 - Future Public Land Mobile Telecom Service (FPLMTS)
-
- |_| Tutorial #2 - CDMA - A Broadband Wireless Access
-
-
- Total remittance payable to: ICPWC '94
-
- Hotel Information:
-
- Bangalore had a number of starred hotels (tariffs ranging from Rs
- 2,400 to Rs 4,000 in addition to Windsor Manor where the conference is
- organized viz. The Taj, Oberoi and others. A few rooms will be booked
- in advance at these hotels on first come basis to get a preferential
- rate for the conference participants.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: wareham@vision.ee.queensu.ca (Paul Wareham)
- Subject: Wireless Internet Connections
- Date: Fri, 4 Mar 1994 19:05:15 -0500
- Organization: Dept. of Electrical Engineering, Queen's Univ, Kingston, Ontario
-
-
- I heard somewhere that there was a company offering wireless satellite
- internet connections. I think perhaps it was just Usenet News or
- something. If any has any info or can point me in the right direction
- please let me know ....
-
-
- Regards,
-
- Paul Wareham, Queen's University Ontario, Canada
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: hsyversen@BIX.com (hsyversen on BIX)
- Subject: RBOC FTP Sites and Gopher Servers List
- Date: 5 Mar 94 03:17:19 GMT
- Organization: Delphi Internet Services Corporation
-
-
- Can anyone help me with listings of RBOC FTP sites and/or Gopher
- servers? If so, I would appreciate any e-mail on these listings.
- Please e-mail to hsyversen@bix.com.
-
-
- Thanks! Hjalmar Syversen
- Bombeck/Syversen
- 711 H Street #630
- Anchorage, AK 99501
- 907/258-4557 (voice)
- hsyversen@bix.com
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: tomlowe@netcom.com (Tom Lowe)
- Subject: Now Anyone Can Have ANI on Their 800 Number
- Date: Fri, 4 Mar 1994 16:57:48 EST
-
-
- If you are interested in receiving REAL-TIME ANI on 800 calls to your
- Voice Response system, regardless of whether your calls are coming in
- on T1, Loop Start, Ground Start, or otherwise, read on ...
-
- Working with a client of mine, we have developed a method whereby
- anyone with a VRU that is direct dialable from the United States can
- receive the ANI of the caller, as well as the 800 number that was
- dialed, prior to conversing with the customer. This does NOT rely on
- Caller-ID, ISDN, or any other out-of-band type of signalling. It is
- really quite simple ... as soon as your VRU answers the ringing line,
- the DNIS and ANI will be outpulsed to the VRU using DTMF tones. If
- your VRU does not receive any digits within the first three seconds, it
- can provide a default prompting scenario. This would happen if
- someone called the VRU directly, instead of through the 800 number.
-
- For more information, please contact me at the email address listed
- below, or call me at 609-698-7044 X201.
-
-
- Tom Lowe tomlowe@netcom.com Compro Technologies, Inc.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 04 Mar 1994 12:51:53 EST
- From: dreuben@ROC.CON.WESLEYAN.EDU (Doug Reuben)
- Subject: Followup on C&W CID in NY and CT
-
-
- About a day after I posted an article on how C&W doesn't appear to be
- delivering ANI -> CID in New York and Connecticut, it suddenly started
- working again, but only in NY.
-
- Our software pages me with remotely with the CID of who called, so you
- can bet I was suprised when I got a call via a C&W 800 number in NY
- where the ANI -> CID was sent to my pager and it showed a number in
- Atlanta! I thought it was something wrong with the computer, or maybe
- that someone had paged me by mistake, but when I got down to NY and
- checked the CID box, it did indeed have the number from Atlanta.
- Further tests confirmed that ANI -> CID was indeed working again.
-
- I said "Wow! That was fast -- someone must have read the post and
- 'fixed' problem!". But, when I tried to get the CID from C&W in CT
- (where it had worked in the past), all I get is still "Out of Area :( .
-
- Also, after some testing, I noticed that the CID to NY works from most
- areas of the country, except for New England. You don't get ID's from
- Rhode Island, Mass, VT, NH, or Maine. I didn't try Canada yet, but I
- suspect that at the very least Quebec won't work either (it did previously).
-
- So it's working again -- sort of. Thanks to anyone at C&W who may have
- read my earlier posting and fixed the problem.
-
-
- Doug dreuben@eagle.wesleyan.edu dreuben@wesleyan.bitnet
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 4 Mar 94 17:49:23 EST
- From: myers@hogpa.ho.att.com (Andrew B Myers)
- Subject: Online Access to AT&T Annual Report
-
-
- ONLINE ACCESS TO AT&T'S 1993 ANNUAL REPORT; PLUS NEWS RELEASES
-
- BASKING RIDGE, N.J., March 4, 1994 -- AT&T's new 1993 Annual
- Report has just been installed on AT&T News Online.
-
- AT&T News Online is a data base containing nearly 5,000 company
- press releases going back five years. Also included are AT&T's 1991
- and 1992 Annual Reports and the most current AT&T Fact Book.
-
- The fact book contains many of the company's "vital statistics,"
- including such items as notable AT&T Bell Labs inventions, AT&T
- business units and groups, corporate environmental and philanthropic
- activities, a corporate history, employee head counts, corporate
- revenues and many other facts. The fact book was last updated in
- September 1993. The next update is expected in early April.
-
- New releases are available via AT&T News Online whenever they are
- issued to the media.
-
- There is no charge to access AT&T News Online.
-
- Anyone may access the system via computer and modem by dialing
- 908-221-8088. The system will match modem speeds up to 9600 bits per
- second. Set communications for 7 data bits, 1 stop bit, even parity.
- There is no password. When you see the prompt, just type "go news"
- (not the quote marks) and hit ENTER.
-
- If you have questions, call Andrew Myers, AT&T Corporate Media
- Relations, 908-221-2737, or send e-mail to andrew.myers@att.com.
-
- Note that AT&T News Online is NOT an Internet service; it is a
- stand-alone data base available only by modem. The only expense to
- users is the cost of the phone call.
-
-
- CONTACT:
-
- Andrew Myers, 908-221-2737 (office), 908-522-9485 (home)
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: John Botari <jb@desoto.wxe.sk.doe.ca>
- Subject: Transborder Local Calls
- Date: Fri, 4 Mar 94 16:58:44 CST
-
-
- Pat:
-
- This is in reply to a trivia question that you posted a while back
- concerning a local calling area that crosses an international boundary
- ... Baudette, MN - (218) 634-xxxx, and Rainy River, ON - (807) 852-xxxx
- can call each other locally. Dialing is seven digits (or at least it
- was the last time I looked). Baudette actually appears in the Bell
- Canada directory for Northwestern Ontario.
-
-
- John Botari Environment Canada Saskatoon, SK
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 4 Mar 1994 17:57:29 -0500
- From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.COM>
- Subject: Workshop on Mobile Computing Systems and Applications
-
-
- Excerpt from Cellular Digest <Issue 4.3.1994>
-
-
- From: M_Satya@MOZART.CODA.CS.CMU.EDU
- Date: Thu, 03 Mar 94 15:08:47 EST
- Subject: Workshop on Mobile Computing Systems and Applications
-
- CALL FOR PARTICIPATION
- WORKSHOP ON MOBILE COMPUTING SYSTEMS AND APPLICATIONS
- DECEMBER 8-9 1994
- DREAM INN, SANTA CRUZ, CA
-
- Sponsored by the IEEE Computer Society TCOS (pending)
- (in cooperation with ACM SIGOPS and USENIX Association)
-
- General Chair Darrell Long, University of California, Santa Cruz
- Program Chair M. Satyanarayanan, Carnegie Mellon University
- Exhibits Peter Honeyman, University of Michigan
- Finance & Registration
- Richard Golding, Hewlett-Packard
- Publication Luis-Felipe Cabrera, IBM Almaden
- Program Committee
- Dan Duchamp, Columbia University
- Peter Honeyman, University of Michigan
- Randy Katz, UC Berkeley & ARPA
- Jay Kistler, DEC SRC
- Krishan Sabnani, AT&T Holmdel
- M. Satyanarayanan, Carnegie Mellon University
- Amal Shaheen, IBM Austin
- Marvin Theimer, Xerox PARC
- Rich Wolff, Bellcore
-
- A major challenge of this decade is the effective exploitation of two
- symbiotic technologies: portable computers and wireless networks.
- Harnessing these technologies will dramatically change the computing
- landscape. But realizing the full potential of the resulting mobile
- computing systems will require advances in many areas such as:
-
- hardware communications scalability power management
- security data access user interfaces location sensitivity
-
- The goal of this workshop is to foster exchange of ideas in mobile
- computing among workers in the field. Attendance will be limited to
- about 60 participants, based on the position papers submitted.
- Submissions should be fewer than five pages in length and may expose a
- new problem, advocate a specific solution, or report on actual
- experience.
-
- In addition, we will be hosting a small number of novel hardware and
- software exhibits relevant to mobile computing. The exhibits may be
- research prototypes or commercial products. Interested parties should
- submit technical descriptions of their exhibits.
-
- Online copies of the position papers will be made available via
- anonymous FTP prior to the workshop. A printed proceedings will be
- published after the workshop, and mailed to participants.
-
- A small number of graduate students will be granted a waiver of the
- registration fee. In return, these students will be required to take
- notes at the workshop and help put together the proceedings. Students
- who wish to be considered for the waiver must send in a brief description
- of their current research, and an explanation of how participation in the
- workshop is likely to help them.
-
- Send ten copies of position papers to:
-
- M. Satyanarayanan Email: satya@cs.cmu.edu
- School of Computer Science Phone: (412)-268-3743
- Carnegie Mellon University Fax: (412)-681-5739
- Pittsburgh, PA 15213
-
- Send exhibit descriptions to:
-
- Peter Honeyman Email: honey@citi.umich.edu
- CITI Phone: (313)-763-4413
- University of Michigan Fax: (313)-763-4434
- Ann Arbor, MI 48103-4943
-
- IMPORTANT DATES
-
- Submissions due August 20 1994
- Acceptance Notification October 1 1994
- Camera-ready copy due November 15 1994
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: dalk@login.dkuug.dk (Lars Kalsen)
- Subject: Mobile Penetrations
- Date: 4 Mar 94 19:01:00 GMT
- Organization: DKnet
-
-
- Hi,
-
- These penetrations rates for mobile telephones are from 1992.
-
- Country Penetration of
- mobiles
-
- Spain 0.3 %
- Italy 1.2 %
- Luxembourg 0.4 %
- Germany 0.8 %
- Netherlands 0.9 %
- Ireland 1.1 %
- Belgium 0.6 %
- France 0.7 %
- Austria 1.6 %
- Switzerland 2.8 %
- UK 2.2 %
- Denmark 3.7 %
- Iceland 5.2 %
- Finland 6.2 %
- Sweden 7.4 %
-
-
- If you have some newer figures please correct the figures and return
- this article to me by E-mail.
-
- I will send a summary to this list if I get any corrections.
-
- Greetings from Denmark.
-
-
- Lars Kalsen dalk@login.dkuug.dk
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: Richard Sambolec <sambolec@sfu.ca>
- Subject: Fax on the Net - Impact on Telcos?
- Date: Fri, 4 Mar 1994 13:32:23 PST
-
-
- I've just started looking into the developments in fax gateways via
- the Internet. I know there are a number of commercial services
- available, and of course there are fax/modems and software available,
- but I'm talking about the *non-commercial* avenues available, such as
- the TPC project lead by Carl Malamud (of Internet Multicasting
- Service) and Marshall Rose (of Dover Beach Consulting, Inc.), and of
- course, Dr. Robert Riley's Digital Chicken experiment which covers the
- Toronto area.
-
- My question is this: How is this going to affect the telcos? It seems
- to me that as the Internet grows in popularity and use, people will be
- seeking options such as these, rather than mere discount fax plans.
- What's the scoop?
-
-
- Regards,
-
- Richard I. Sambolec Internet: sambolec@sfu.ca
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: martin@datacomm.ucc.okstate.edu (Martin McCormick)
- Subject: Re: Phones in the Movies Again
- Organization: Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK
- Date: Fri, 4 Mar 1994 19:49:48 GMT
-
-
- There was a movie produced in the fifties, probably patterned
- after "The Desperate Hours" in which a couple of thugs terrorize a Las
- Angeles family for a day or so.
-
- In the movie, one of the hoods modifies the radio in a car to
- receive the LAPD. The criminals also place several telephone calls
- which the police frantically try to trace.
-
- In one scene, a technician is following the call through rack
- after rack of steppers, hoping that the call won't be disconnected
- before he can follow it through.
-
- As a telecomm enthusiast, I was impressed with the technical
- authenticity of the film, but I don't remember its name. Before the
- mid sixties, the Las Angeles PD was on 1735KHZ and was often audible
- in Oklahoma around midnight, especially in Winter. In the scene where
- the telephone technician was tracing the calls, one could hear the
- rata-tat-tat of steppers and the zzzzip of the resetting relays when
- the call tore down. One of the exchange names in the trace was
- Dunkirk.
-
- Does this movie sound familiar to anybody?
-
-
- Martin McCormick WB5AGZ Stillwater, OK
- O.S.U. Computer Center Data Communications Group
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: wtm@uhura.neoucom.EDU (Bill Mayhew)
- Subject: Re: Phones in the Movies Again
- Organization: Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine
- Date: Sat, 05 Mar 1994 04:01:31 GMT
-
-
- These aren't totally telecom-related:
-
- 1. In the movie Electric Dreams, the protonist Miles [Lenny Von
- Dohlen] who lives in San Francisco, California purchases an Acorn
- computer to help keep his schedule in order. When he's unpacking the
- computer, it has European two pin style 220 volt plugs. In one scene,
- they do have US style baseboard 110 volt outlets with adaptors for the
- computer's plugs. Miles accidentally spills champagne in the
- computer, causing it to take on an anthropomorphic personality. The
- computer falls in love with Miles' neighbor [Virginia Madsen] who is a
- cellist. At one point, Edgar the computer calls Miles' pager while he
- is at a concert and serenades the cellist with Tchaikowski via the
- pager. It is a silly movie but rather fun for computer nerds.
-
- 2. In one of the Pink Panther movies (I forget which), Clouseau
- [Peter Cellars] is tracking Lady Litton in Switzerland. He's playing
- a bell boy delivering room service to Lady Litton's room. He's trying
- to remain stealthy when a lightbulb pops out of a table lamp. He has
- to catch the flying bulb so it doesn't break, rousing Litton's
- attention. He tries to put the bulb back in the socket repeatedly,
- but it keeps flying out.
-
- The movie is probably primariliy aimed at US movie audiances, but I
- doubt they understand the joke since here in the US we have Mazda base
- bulbs, which thread into their sockets. European bulbs have bayonet
- type sockets (similar to over-grown automotive turn signal lamp
- sockets) so the gag makes sense if you understand this. The US
- neophyte would think the joke dumb as there's no way a screw-in bulb
- would pop out that way.
-
- Well, there is an error in that scene where the mechanical device that
- makes the bulb pop out of the socket is clearly visible in one of the
- takes. I remember seeing it the first time I saw the movie and wasn't
- in the pick-it-apart mode.
-
- There are a number of cheesey monster movies and the like where the
- sytle of the telephone instrument doesn't match the country there the
- action is supposedly taking place.
-
-
- Bill Mayhew NEOUCOM Computer Services Department
- Rootstown, OH 44272-0095 USA phone: 216-325-2511
- wtm@uhura.neoucom.edu amateur radio 146.58: N8WED
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 04 Mar 1994 16:27:19 EST
- From: Peter M. Weiss <PMW1@PSUVM.PSU.EDU>
- Subject: Re: Can I Expect More Than 2400 Baud?
- Organization: Penn State University
-
-
- I wonder if 2400 baud is being taking literally or figuratively? BAUD
- is signaling states. BPS is something different and is some integral
- number of baud.
-
- Just a guess.
-
-
- Pete-Weiss@psu.edu Peter M. Weiss
- 31 Shields Bldg. -- Penn State Univ -- University Park, PA 16802-1202 USA
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: goldstein@carafe.tay2.dec.com (Fred R. Goldstein)
- Subject: Re: Can I Expect More Than 2400 Baud?
- Date: 5 Mar 1994 05:27:38 GMT
- Organization: Digital Equipment Corp., Littleton MA USA
-
-
- In article <telecom14.113.20@eecs.nwu.edu> dmgrant@tasc.com (Doug
- Grant) writes:
-
- > In our planning and alpha-testing we have always assumed we could
- > get at least 9600 baud. Our alpha testing runs quite well at 14400.
- > However, users on Cape Cod, our second planned beta-test site, have
- > told us that NYNEX has informally told them that 2400 baud is the best
- > they can count on.
-
- This may be a trick question, or it may be somebody at NYNEX using an
- old line.
-
- No commercial modem today runs above 2400 baud on the phone line. BY
- definition, baud is the inverse of the signaling interval; even 14.4
- kbps modems only send 2400 symbols per second, but each symbol encodes
- six bits, so they are only 2400 baud! The data terminal interface, of
- course, may be serial at the higher rate.
-
- If they're not being so literal, then it's true that they
- traditionally treated phone lines as "voice" and thus considered 2400
- the top modem rate. But today's 9600 bps modems are about as tolerant
- of line quality as yesteryears' 2400 bps modems; even faster speeds
- will usually work. They just don't _guarantee_ it. Cape Code has no
- electromechanical central office switches left, either; it's all
- modern stuff (a few 5ESS switches with a bunch of remotes, mostly).
- Unless they're very far from one of the wire centers, the phone on the
- Cape are as good as anywhere.
-
-
- Fred R. Goldstein k1io goldstein@carafe.tay2.dec.com
- Opinions are mine alone; sharing requires permission.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 4 Mar 94 14:12:15 CST
- From: telecom@eecs.nwu.edu (TELECOM Digest Editor)
- Subject: Administrivia: Some Lost Messages
-
-
- Some messages sent early this past week to the Digest have been
- accidentally trashed in processing ... and are no longer available to
- me. Some of you (those who I was able to identify from the autoreply
- logs) have been notified of this -- others are being notified here and
- now.
-
- If you sent a message to the Digest (probably on Monday or Tuesday)
- and it has not yet appeared then most likely it was lost in the
- shuffle here due to an unfortunate bug I found and (I think!) removed.
- Please resubmit it if you think it worthwhile or it has not already been
- covered/responded to by someone else.
-
-
- PAT
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of TELECOM Digest V14 #114
- ******************************
-
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Downloaded From P-80 International Information Systems 304-744-2253
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