TELECOM Digest OnLine - Sorted: Re: Western Union Public Telegram Offices


Re: Western Union Public Telegram Offices


T (nospam.kd1s@cox.nospam.net)
Sat, 11 Feb 2006 14:48:02 -0500

In article <telecom25.63.4@telecom-digest.org>,
nospam.kd1s@cox.nospam.net says:

> In article <telecom25.62.10@telecom-digest.org>, news22
> @raleighthings.com says:

>>>> I don't know about telegraph rates, but long distance telephone rates
>>>> were based on distance. A call 1,000 miles away cost considerably more
>>>> than a call 100 miles away. If telegraph rates were flat by distance,
>>>> then telegrams would be more likely sent for longer distances than
>>>> short distances.

>>> Telegraph rates, like telephone rates, were set by distance. I once
>>> had occasion to send a local telegram, and I believe they were common
>>> in some cities.

>> North by Northwest was on TCM a few hours ago. The plot hinged on Cary
>> Grant wanting to send his mother a telegram across mid town Manhattan
>> as she was at a friends where they had just moved in and the phone
>> wasn't yet installed.

>> My how times have changed.

>> Also for years you couldn't place many types of toll calls to or from
>> xxx-9xxx numbers as almost all pay phones were numbered that way. I
>> worked at a business with such a number in the early 80s and calling
>> the office collect was a big hassle at times.

>> David Ross

>> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Your complaint about exchanges which
>> used '9' as the first digit in the suffix is very true. Many years ago
>> when I was living in Chicago, I knew a guy whose mother had a phone
>> on the LOngbeach-1 (312-561) exchange. Her number was LOngbeach-1-9xxx
>> and she had a terrible time placing long distace calls or receiving
>> collect calls. Operators would never believe she was giving her number
>> correctly or that she had a private (not a coin) phone. Every other
>> telephone in Chicago had been converted to (1) 911 calling; (2) long
>> distance direct dialing (3) in most instances totally ESS while
>> LOngbeach-1 kept plugging along as a step-by-step office for several
>> more months. It was in the Chicago-Edgewater central office up on
>> Carmen Street around Ashland Avenue somewhere. PAT]

> The 9xxx rule wasn't implemented everywhere. For example, the phone
> number at my parents first home was 401-751-9392 but that was served
> by a #1 ESS.

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Just a quick mention of the 'spammer
> effect' on your messages here. Periodically, massis gets a 'denial of
> service' sort of effect from spammers who do a number on me, which is
> to say I have the spammer box totally zeroed out, completely empty,
> and am tidying up existing messages to get an issue of the Digest
> out. All of a sudden, the system seems to freeze up for a few seconds
> and wham! A quick review of the spam box will show one or two dozen
> _new_ spams, all dated at the same time have just arrived, as fast as
> the filter can process them out to the garbage bin. Since computers can
> only go so fast, the effect is the other processes sit and wait while
> the spam gets dealt with. Now and again, in the confusion, one or two
> or more _real_ messages disappear from my queue, which I think
> happened this evening to Lisa Hancock, and someone else, if she would
> care to resubmit them. Sorry about that, I had one of those 'explosions'
> tonight. But anymore, I don't really worry about it, because it just
> gets me too angry having to argue with the spam apologists around here
> each time I mention it and suggest suitable punishments for the
> spammers. PAT]

Spam, the bane of all of us that have been on the net for more than
ten years. I searched Google Groups for one of my old nicknames and
sure enough, goes back to 1989. Yikes!

I can recall email being delightful back then. Now I view it with a
little bit of disdain.

At work we use Qmail with Spamassassin. We have Spamassassin torqued up
so tightly that even legitimate mail gets dumped into my spam folder.

At home I use PopFile and here are the current stats. Note that this is
just in the past two months because the machine is only that old.

Bucket
Classification Count False Positives False
Negatives
other 0 (0.00%) 0 0
personal 267 (47.76%) 3 19
spam 268 (47.94%) 10 12
work 22 (3.93%) 5 2
unclassified 2 (0.35%) 15

I find it interesting that the ratio between spam and legitimate
messages is nearly identical.

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