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TELECOM Digest Mon, 24 Oct 2005 18:03:00 EDT Volume 24 : Issue 484 Inside This Issue: Editor: Patrick A. Townson Wilma Leaves a Mess Behind in Florida (Curt Anderson) Ericsson Plans Big Investment in India (USTelecom dailyLead) Subscriber Pulse Metering 12/16 khs; Pulse Ramp Times (Hans) 1960s Long Distance From San Francisco (Anthony Bellanga) Re: More on San Francisco and Oakland Numbering (Lisa Hancock) Re: San Francisco and Oakland Numbering (Lisa Hancock) Re: San Francisco and Oakland Numbering (Jim Stewart) Re: More on San Francisco and Oakland Numbering (Tim@Backhome.org) What Happened to the Digest? (Concerned Reader) Telecom and VOIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) Digest for the Internet. All contents here are copyrighted by Patrick Townson and the individual writers/correspondents. Articles may be used in other journals or newsgroups, provided the writer's name and the Digest are included in the fair use quote. By using -any name or email address- included herein for -any- reason other than responding to an article herein, you agree to pay a hundred dollars to the recipients of the email. =========================== Addresses herein are not to be added to any mailing list, nor to be sold or given away without explicit written consent. Chain letters, viruses, porn, spam, and miscellaneous junk are definitely unwelcome. We must fight spam for the same reason we fight crime: not because we are naive enough to believe that we will ever stamp it out, but because we do not want the kind of world that results when no one stands against crime. Geoffrey Welsh =========================== See the bottom of this issue for subscription and archive details and the name of our lawyer; other stuff of interest. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- From: Curt Anderson <ap@telecom-digest.org> Subject: Wilma Leaves a Mess Behind in Florida Date: Mon, 24 Oct 2005 14:45:12 -0500 By CURT ANDERSON, Associated Press Writer Hurricane Wilma left a wide, messy swath of damage Monday as it sped across Florida with winds of more than 100 mph, shattering skyscraper windows, peeling off roofs and knocking out power and communications to at least 3.2 million customers from Key West to Daytona Beach. One death was blamed on Wilma, and even storm-savvy Floridians found the hurricane fearsome as it sliced through the middle of heavily populated South Florida. The Category 3 hurricane littered the landscape with damaged signs, awnings, fences, billboards, roof tiles, pool screens, street lights and electrical lines. Felled trees dotted even expressways, plus a foot or two of water in many streets including the Tamiami Trail. More than one-third of Key West flooded, cutting off the island, and there was scattered floodwater elsewhere. In Fort Lauderdale, Miami and Miami Beach, high-rises had countless windows blown out, including at the Broward County Courthouse and the 14-story school board office building. "Fort Lauderdale hasn't seen anything this bad in a long time," said Adam Baer, 27, a courthouse employee and lifelong resident. Across the street, a water cooler from an office above rested on the sidewalk. All the Florida Keys was without power, and telephones and outages extended as far north as Daytona Beach, an eight-hour drive up I-95 from Key West. While 'landline' phones were dead, cellular phones were sporadic at best. The eighth hurricane to strike Florida in 15 months made landfall around 6:30 a.m. EDT near Cape Romano, an uninhabited island south of Naples in Collier County on Florida's southwest coast. Wilma moved northeast at 25 mph, and devastating winds reached Florida's east coast by midmorning. Gusts exceeded 100 mph in suburban Fort Lauderdale and Miami, where winds howled in the bunker-like National Hurricane Center. A Coral Springs man died when a tree fell on him, Broward County spokesman Carl Fowler said. By early afternoon, cleanup had begun. Monique Kilgore used a handsaw and shears to get rid of debris in front of her Fort Lauderdale town house. "I want my house to look nice," she said. "I'm also bored. I can't sit in the house any longer. No power, no lights, no phone -- you know." President Bush promised swift action. He signed a disaster declaration for hurricane-damaged areas and was briefed on the situation by Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, acting FEMA director David Paulison and Bush's brother, Gov. Jeb Bush. "We have prepositioned food, medicine, communications equipment, urban search-and-rescue teams," the president said. "We will work closely with local and state authorities to respond to this hurricane." The same storm that brought ruin over the weekend to resort towns in Mexico weakened before leaving the Yucatan Coast, then regained strength in the Gulf of Mexico before striking Florida. In South Florida's sprawling suburbs, the blue glow of exploding transformers illuminated the pre-dawn sky, and the storm stirred whitecaps even on neighborhood lakes. Broken water mains and a flooded water pumping station in the Fort Lauderdale area prompted advisories to boil water, and a busted main in downtown Miami sprayed water 15 feet in the air, flooding several blocks of Brickell Avenue forcing a temporary water shut off there. The Miami police department building lost some letters on its sign. "It was a wild and crazy night," Lt. Bill Schwartz said. "This building, built in 1976, shook like it was 1876." In Key West, the southernmost point in the United States moved a little farther north. Water from the gulf spilled over the spot marking the tourist point in Key West, and streets were flooded four blocks inland, but residents -- most of whom had stubbornly refused to obey evacuation orders earlier -- were out in force in mid-afternoon attempting to re-open their shops, cleaning up the litter, and hooking up their portable generators. "Within 45 minutes, it went from six inches to four or five feet deep," said Chris Elwell, whose new Porsche Boxster was submerged to the roof. A Coast Guard station in the Keys was under four feet of water. Even amateur hurricane chaser Josh Morgerman was impressed. Morgerman, a marketing executive from Los Angeles, flew to Tampa on Saturday to meet the storm, left Naples as the eye passed and drove to Everglades City. "It was very serene and there were birds flying," a wet and shivering Morgerman said. "And then when we got here and got out of the car, it was like a rocket went off." Morgerman said the hurricane was his fourth and "absolutely the most shocking." Eqecat Inc., a risk modeling firm, said early estimates projected that Wilma's insured losses would range from $2 billion to $6 billion. AIR Worldwide Corp. estimated that insurance companies will have to pay claims ranging from $6 billion to $9 billion. Gov. Bush said 4,000 utility workers were ready to restore power and communications. The North Carolina National Guard airlifted 12 patients from a Key West hospital, and other units were prepared to deliver food, water and other supplies to the Keys. For a change, lack of air conditioning wasn't an immediate concern in the aftermath of a hurricane. The strong cold front that pushed Wilma through Florida was expected to send the wind-chill factor into the 40s Tuesday morning. To underscore the storm's vast reach, a tornado touched down near Melbourne on the east coast, 200 miles from landfall, damaging an apartment complex. No one was injured. Closer to landfall, seven firefighters with Ochopee fire control district were at their station when a tornado spawned by Wilma hit. "We fought for two hours trying to stay alive," said chief Paul Wilson, whose white shirt was stained with debris. "We braced (the doors) with six-by-sixes, 12-by-twos, trucks, ropes, ladders. Firemen can be creative, especially when it means live or die." The snowbird enclave Marco Island was littered with damaged street signs, roofing shingles, awnings and fences. Only 3,000 of the 15,000 residents stayed for the storm, the island's public works director said. Parts of the Tamiami Trail, the main thoroughfare in Naples, were flooded with about a half-foot of water. A resident was seen wading in the water using a stick to open clogged drains so water could begin to drain away. The ritzy Fifth-Avenue downtown district was covered with tree branches, and merchants were working together to chop up the tree branches and get them out of the way of the shop entrances. Paul Tucchinio of Naples watched from his apartment as palm fronds flew past and transformers exploded as the storm made landfall. "Oh wow. I can see blue sparks," Tucchinio said. "It sounds like someone threw a bunch of rocks against the boards. It's wicked." At 2:30 p.m. EDT, Wilma had almost cleared the state and was centered over the Atlantic about 125 miles northeast of West Palm Beach with wind of 115 mph. It was moving northeast at about 29 mph. The hurricane was expected to race up the Atlantic Seaboard and reach the coast of Canada by early Wednesday. Forecasters said it will probably stay so far offshore that it will not even bring heavy rain to the eastern United States, but east coast places should expect to get some rain as a result during the day on Tuesday. Florida's strongest sustained winds of about 125 mph were felt on the southwest coast, said Ed Rappaport, deputy director of the National Hurricane Center. On the east coast, Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties felt mostly Category 1 winds of 74-95 mph, with some places there getting Category 2 winds of 96-110-mph, he said. Rappaport noted "even further north, around Orlando, the people knew something was up; one unusual thing was that even as the storm blew away, the rain was 'absolutely drenching' ". He said that heavy rain is what the northeast should expect on Tuesday, and much of Canada on Wednesday. Weary forecasters also monitored Tropical Depression Alpha, two days after that system formed off the Dominican Republic. Alpha briefly became a tropical storm, the record 22nd named storm for the Atlantic season, but wasn't considered a threat to the United States. ___ Associated Press writers Allen Breed in Naples, Erik Schelzig in Marathon, David Royse in Key West, and Ron Word, Adrian Sainz and Brent Kallestad in Miami contributed to this story, also writers for us in Plantation, and Fema Village, FL. Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new articles daily. For more stories and headlines from Associated Press, please go to http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Oct 2005 14:14:30 EDT From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com> Subject: Ericsson Plans Big Investment in India USTelecom dailyLead October 24, 2005 http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/wJBoatagCvaTtteosh TODAY'S HEADLINES NEWS OF THE DAY * Ericsson plans big investment in India BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH * TELECOM '05 puts spotlight on video * Alcatel interested in Marconi? * Ruling puts heat on RIM * The end of an era for AT&T * Report: Blacks, Hispanics more likely to use advanced mobile phone features * Three top MSOs in talks with Sprint Nextel USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT * TELECOM '05 kicks off in Las Vegas HOT TOPICS * SBC plans business class IPTV service * EBay chief: Phone calls to be free within six years * Cingular, SBC to use Lucent's IMS platform * CLECs see gold in wireless * The future of wireless: A bounty of possibilities TECHNOLOGY TRENDS * Cisco to bridge gap in radio incompatibility * Cingular launches mobile e-mail for the masses REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE * Unisys under scrutiny for TSA contract Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others. http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/wJBoatagCvaTtteosh Legal and Privacy information at http://www.dailylead.com/about/privacy_legal.jsp SmartBrief, Inc. 1100 H ST NW, Suite 1000 Washington, DC 20005 ------------------------------ From: Hans <hansuno@aol.com> Subject: Subscriber Pulse Metering 12/16 kHz: Pulse Ramp Time Date: 24 Oct 2005 13:13:22 -0700 Organization: http://groups.google.com Subscriber Pulse Metering (SPM) 12/16 kHz: pulse ramp-up and ramp-down time -- how long should it be? I have seen ramp times said to be in the 10 ms to 20 ms range. I have also heard about max. ramptime of 5 ms with an S-shaped ramp rather than a linear ramp (this supposedly for Switzerland, high metering pulse voltages). I would appreciate any further inforamtion on this subject. Hans ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Oct 2005 12:11:41 -0600 From: Anthony Bellanga <anthonybellanga@notchur.biz> Subject: 1960s Long Distance From San Francisco ATTENTION PAT... PLEASE DO NOT DISPLY my email address in any postings!!! NEITHER the "from" address nor the "reply to" address. Mark Roberts wrote in his well documented summary of San Francisco/Oakland telephone history: > Long Distance > There's an odd statement in May 1964 directory in the area code > listings, "To make a direct Distance call, just dial the Area Code and > then the telephone number". Does that mean no "1" or "211" was used? > The 1960 directory gives "211" as the Long Distance number but some > (not all) locations could be direct dialed. San Francisco/Oakland was one of a handful of places, just about all of the largest cities/urban areas of the urban northeast, urban midwest, and urban areas of California, which had developed with Panel and #1XB switching from the earliest days of their dial service. Note that San Francisco/Oakland was using N11 codes in the 1930s rather than the "step-by-step" format of 11X codes. N11 codes in use prior to the 1960s is an indication that the location developed with Panel and/or #1XB rather than SXS switching. When originating customer DDD became available from Panel/#1XB cities, there was no need for a 1+ to route the call to the CAMA/XBTandem or #4A/4M crossbar toll machine. Instead of the dialpulses needing to be registered at a tandem or toll office, the registers in the local Panel or #1XB office (similar to a #5XB) could do all of the digit storage and analysis/translation up front. Also, at that time, there were no N0X or N1X central office codes in the 415 area code. This didn't come about until the late 1980s when 415 would begin to have 415-N0X and 415-N1X codes. Thus there was no ambiguity on how many digits to "expect" when the second digit were dialed prior to the late 1980s. If the second digit was a '1' or '0', the local office assumed the call to be a ten-digit call, that the second digit was that of an area code. But if the second digit dialed was a '2' through '9', it was assumeed the call would be a seven-digit call within the 415 area code (whether local or even toll within the same area code). Thus no 1+ was needed. (and 112+ was something common to many SXS offices, both Bell and independent, until they began to standardize on 1+). The use of 211 was just a three-digit code, used to reach the outward "Long Distance" Operator. Many cities prior to the 1960s or so had two separate types of operators, both the local assitance operator (0), and the long distance operator (211 from Panel and #1XB cities; 110 from SXS cities). The smaller towns usually dialed just '0' for both local and toll assistance, which became consolidated for just about all other cities throughout the 1960s and 70s. Also, you mentioned some NN0 central office codes. These were highly discouraged by AT&T for use until the 1960s/70s time period. But there were uses of NN0 office codes in some places even in the 1930s or 1920s era, even with lettered dialing of Exchange Names. Los Angeles had mixed 2L-4N and 2L-5N numbering and dialing even as far back as the 1920s era, and there was even at least one NN0 format 2L-5N office code back then! And speaking of Los Angeles and Southern California -- remember that they developed with dial independent telephone companies in the early years of the 20th century as well as manual Bell. When these systems began to be consolidated right after the First World War, there were all kinds of unique interconnection arrangements established. Southern California did NOT have Panel (or #1XB) switching, but rather developed everything as SXS when converting manual offices to dial. However, because of the growing complexity of growing Southern California (a major urban area), there were special "kludges" developed such as Pacific Telephone's SAMA and General Telephone's SATT. I'm not exactly sure about General Telephone but I do know that when DDD was first introduced in Bell parts of Southern California, they did NOT require a 1+ for toll from their SXS offices. Instead, customers simply dialed just seven-digits for toll calls to any such toll locations within their home area code (not just 213 but also 714 and 805 are valid area codes in the southern California area), and just ten-digits for toll calls (or local adjacent calls) to other area codes, no 1+ required. - anthony bellanga [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: This is the way it was in Chicago also in the 1970's at least, and earlier. Just dial 10-D for whatever, or '211' for long distance. One plus only started _absolutely required_ in the early 1980's when prefixes started looking 'funny'. PAT] ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Oct 2005 10:10:05 -0700 From: Jim Stewart <jstewart@jkmicro.com> Reply-To: jstewart@jkmicro.com Organization: http://www.jkmicro.com Subject: Re: San Francisco and Oakland Dialing > Long Distance > There's an odd statement in May 1964 directory in the area code > listings, "To make a direct Distance call, just dial the Area Code and > then the telephone number". Does that mean no "1" or "211" was used? > The 1960 directory gives "211" as the Long Distance number but some > (not all) locations could be direct dialed. I moved to the East Bay in '72 and it was indeed possible to direct-dial long distance without dialing 1 first. Just the area code and phone number. I believe this lasted until the first great Area Code renaming when East Bay became 510 and SF stayed 415. ------------------------------ From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com Subject: Re: More on San Francisco and Oakland Numbering Date: 24 Oct 2005 13:29:03 -0700 Organization: http://groups.google.com Mark Roberts wrote: > Thanks to the clipping files at the History Room of the Oakland Public > Library, I have been able to pin down the date that San Francisco and > Oakland went fully to 2L-5N numbers: August 10, 1947, a Sunday, at 12 > midnight. > The Tribune referred to it on Saturday, which would have been August > 9, of course, but it also is clear from the context that the > switchover activities began on Saturday night. Either the Tribune's > style considered the day to begin at 12.01 am, or there was some > confusion when the story was edited. It's nice they kept that clipping on file. I tried to find a clipping describing the 1962 cutover of a manual exchange to dial but the local library didn't have anything on it. While the New York Times and some periodicals are indexed, local newspaper microfilm is not. If you don't know a particular date of an event, searching for it through microfilm is extremely tedious. It's not surprising the newspaper made mistakes in reporting the specific technical details. The reporter has to jot down notes really fast and often are inaccurate, esp on those minor details. I did find a newspaper for the day before the Philadelphia 2L-5N cutover and the article was much simpler, as was the follow up. Perhaps it was more described on earlier days. > In other words, there was, for a time, 2L-5N-1L dialing to some > exchanges! I always wondered if that existed. When did party line letters go away and replaced by individual dialable numbers? On SxS there was a coding schema where one digit differed for each party, all others the same. One thing that varied tremendously from place to place is dialing the other party on a party line. Sometimes you dialed a special code. Sometimes you dialed the number or part of your number. Sometimes you asked the operator to do it. You then hung up, let the phone ring, and lifted it when it stopped, or lifted it to stop ringing if no answer. > Dialing instructions in the 1949 and 1951 directories indicated that > cross-bay calling, e.g. Oakland to San Francisco, could be dialed only > from "dial individual line business telephones" (except coin > telephones). I never heard of separate dialing instructions for business vs. residence customers of the same exchange. Did that exist elsewhere? Did they fell business customers would dial more carefully or be able to pay toll charges? > It has more than 333,000 unfilled telephone orders, also a second > place record. Bad problem throughout the U.S., took years to clean up. Many people who get service were stuck with party lines, partly as a result of inadequate CO capacity, not just local loop capacity. I wonder if they were afraid of slow dial tone during busy periods and the use of party lines was a way of rationing out service capacity. I wonder if in those years they added new manual exchanges as a temporary fix since cord switchboards were a lot cheaper and faster to install than dial machines. The famous Levittown communities had to make do with temporary corner pay phones for a while. > last conversion in the Bay Area, in Crockett on November 11, 1969. 1969 is pretty late for a dial conversion in a Metro area. Would anyone know why that area took so long to convert? Was it a distant rural area? The last Bell System conversion was Santa Catalina Island, but that is a special situation, being difficult to ship. ------------------------------ From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com Subject: Re: San Francisco and Oakland Exchange Numbering Date: 24 Oct 2005 13:48:41 -0700 Organization: http://groups.google.com Mark Roberts wrote: > The 1935 directory also included just about *every* Bay Area > community. Oakland-Piedmont-Berkeley-Alameda were listed first, then > the business directory, then San Francisco, then San Mateo and San > Jose. Thanks for sharing the results of your library research. I wonder how many subscribers still have the same number as in 1935. We once compared the Phila White Pages of 1958 and 1998. To our surprise, quite a few people lived in the same place with the same phone. Quite a few more lived in the same place but with a different number. We also saw presumably widows, such 1958 showing a man's first name and 1998 showing the same listing but with a woman's first name "Mrs." instead. And we saw ethnic movements, such as the same person changing addresses from one ethnic neighborhood typical of 1958 to the ethnic neighborhood typical of 1988. Business numbers tended to radically change because many businesses no longer existed (almost all Phila banks have changed) and most others went Centrex. Pre-Centrex numbers were around for a very long time, however. I compared a 1923 suburban directory with today and found only one continuous listing -- that of a church, still with the name number (expanded from the manual "Town 23" to "947-0023".) > By 1958, PIedmont, AShberry, BErkeley all were gone as exchanges. > (N.B. There's a key gap here because the 1954-57 directories are > missing or not available.) You're lucky the old directories were available. My sources are old advertisements. > The local calling guide is missing from the June 1966 directory, but > approximately half the list of rate centers and message unit charges > still is extant. To save a bit of money, some phone directories were printed in two styles -- one with the front calling guide, some without. Subscribers actually in the service zone would get the calling guide, everyone else (and there were quite a few) got the book without. For instance, we lived in the city at the border. We always got the city directory (with guide) and the suburban directory (without the guide). By the 1960s these guides could be 30 pages long. They also stopped putting the guide in yellow pages. When I would look at out-of-town directories in the library to look for weird calling patterns, I'd get frustrated by the missing call guide. > There's an odd statement in May 1964 directory in the area code > listings, "To make a direct Distance call, just dial the Area Code and > then the telephone number". Does that mean no "1" or "211" was used? In many places no "1" was required. Remember area codes were distinguished by having a 0 or 1 as the second digit. Indeed, some areas didn't get a 1 prefix until area codes and exchanges would overlap in more recent years. After DDD (along with other automation for operators), 211 lost value and 0 was used for operator handled toll calls. Also, subscribers by that time knew how to dial and machines were more reliable so there was less need for basic dial assistance by the operator on local calls. Thus, the 0 operator evolved into the long distance operator. Thanks again for sharing the information. [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Lisa asked how many subscribers have the same number over a large number of years. Ameritech asked this question of their subscribers in the little monthly handout they used to give each month with the phone bill: The two oldest _business sub- scribers_ with the same number (as of middle 1980's when the poll was taken) were: Yellow Taxicab Company (assigned to CALumet-6000 in 1912, still had 312-225-6000 in the early 1980's) and the Drake Hotel (Michigan and Oak Street, near north side, assigned to SUPerior-2100 in 1919, still had 312-787-2100 in the early 1980's. But Yellow Cab lost that number (but kept their main office number 225-6010) when they merged their dispatching center with Checker Taxicab (formerly on MONroe-6-3700 [since about 1915 or so]; the new central dispatch number for the combined function became 312-TAXICAB. Now I suppose it is all '773' since the dispatch office is south/southwest side. PAT] ------------------------------ From: Tim@Backhome.org Subject: Re: More on San Francisco and Oakland Numbering Date: Mon, 24 Oct 2005 12:11:44 -0700 Organization: Cox Communications Mark Roberts wrote: > Thanks to the clipping files at the History Room of the Oakland Public > Library, I have been able to pin down the date that San Francisco and > Oakland went fully to 2L-5N numbers: August 10, 1947, a Sunday, at 12 > midnight. I don't believe any telco has done a cut on Sunday night. It was typically Saturday night (or perhaps 2:00 AM on Sunday) in early post WWII years. Then, Bell tended to do ESS cutovers at 2:00 AM on Saturdays, so they would have the weekend to work out kinks. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Oct 2005 13:52:49 -0500 From: A Concerned Reader Subject: What Happened to The Digest? I just realized the last issue I recieved via email was dated October 13th of this month. When I tried going to telecom-digest.org I got a message stating the site could not be found. Have you stopped the digest? A concerned reader. [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: As I explained to this reader in email, the Digest continues daily. I think the fact that he got a 'cannot be found' error message on the site name was simply a coincidental error. Anytime anyone fails to receive the Digest via email (assuming they are signed up for same) I suspect it can be blamed on the volume of spam these days and some failure by their 'spam filter'. It is almost impossible to fine tune those filters well enough to do what they are supposed to do without tipping things a bit too far in the wrong direction. A much better system for handling spam would be a 'white list' in connection with an opening challenge, but of course many netters are very uppity and refuse to use that method. PAT] ------------------------------ TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly to telecomm- unications topics. It is circulated anywhere there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of networks such as Compuserve and America On Line, Yahoo Groups, and other forums. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. TELECOM Digest is a not-for-profit, mostly non-commercial educational service offered to the Internet by Patrick Townson. All the contents of the Digest are compilation-copyrighted. You may reprint articles in some other media on an occasional basis, but please attribute my work and that of the original author. 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Any organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages should not be considered any official expression by the organization. End of TELECOM Digest V24 #484 ****************************** | |