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TELECOM Digest Mon, 26 Mar 2007 15:14:00 EDT Volume 26 : Issue 84
Inside This Issue: Editor: Patrick A. Townson
Life Magazine Going Out of Business (Retuers News Wire)
CommunicationsDirect News Daily Update (communicationsdirect_daily)
Judge Orders Permanent Vonage Injunction (USTelecom dailyLead)
Re: Judge Hits Vonage With Injuction (Gene S. Berkowitz)
Re: Judge Hits Vonage With Injuction; Stop Using Verizon Technology (T)
Re: Numeric Pager Notification of E-mail (GlowingBlueMist)
Re: Numeric Pager Notification of E-mail (Robert Bonomi)
Re: Unlisted Phone Number (Lisa Hancock)
Re: Unlisted Phone Number (Wesrock@aol.com)
====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
Telecom and VOIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) Digest for the
Internet. All contents here are copyrighted by Patrick Townson and
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See the bottom of this issue for subscription and archive details
and the name of our lawyer; other stuff of interest, and why not
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Date: Mon, 26 Mar 2007 13:58:16 -0500
From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Life Magazine Going Out of Business, But Staying Online
Time Inc. said on Monday it would stop publishing Life, the iconic
photography magazine that has been a weekly newspaper insert since
2004.
Although April 20 will be Life's last print issue, the brand name will
survive on the Internet, Time Inc., a unit of Time Warner Inc., said
in a statement.
It is the latest magazine to shut down as more readers desert print
publications for online news and photos.
"Growth requires taking risks, and the potential upside was huge, but
unfortunately the timing worked against us," Time Inc. Chief Executive
Ann Moore said. "The market has moved dramatically since October 2004,
and it is no longer appropriate to continue publication of Life as a
newspaper supplement."
Time is laying off 15 editorial workers and 27 in its business
department in connection with the shutdown, said spokeswoman Dawn
Bridges.
"Obviously we will try to place as many people as possible in open
Time Inc. positions," she said.
The company plans to keep Managing Editor Bill Shapiro, Executive
Editor Maggie Murphy, President Andy Blau and Publisher Peter Bauer,
she said.
Life has had more than one life since Time started publishing it in
1936. It shut down in 1972, but came back in 1978 before being shut
down again in 2000.
Time will make Life's collection of 10 million images available online,
with "the most important collection of imagery covering the events and
people of the 20th century" available for free for personal use, it said.
The public has never seen more than 97 percent of the collection,
which includes pictures by Alfred Eisenstaedt, Margaret Bourke-White
and Gordon Parks, Time said.
The announcement comes after the company launched a redesigned version
of its U.S. newsweekly Time. Earlier this year it announced plans to
cut 289 jobs from its estimated 11,300 work force to lower costs as it
invests more in the Internet.
Copyright 2007 Reuters Limited.
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. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html
For more news and headlines, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html
[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Does anyone remember the competitor to
Life Magazine called 'Look Magazine'; also a popular weekly print
journal with many pictures, etc. It has been out of business since
sometime in the 1970s also. PAT]
------------------------------
Subject: CommunicationsDirect News Daily Update - March 26, 2007
From: communicationsdirect_daily <communicationsdirect@communicationsdirect>
Reply-To: communicationsdirect_daily-owner@communicationsdirectnews.com
Date: Mon, 26 Mar 2007 11:34:17 EDT
********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The CommunicationsDirect Daily Update
For March 26, 2007
********************************
Our new poll: What is most important to you when deciding to stay with
your existing mobile service provider? Visit our web site to vote.
Belgacom Launches VoIP Services in Belgium
http://communicationsdirectnews.com/do.php/120/23439?11228
Belgium's incumbent telco, Belgacom, has launched a new VoIP
service in response to rising demand for VoIP services from
customers. The service, named I-Talk, has been launched softly,
which enables Belgacom to provide it to those of its customers
who demand it but means that the company does not have to
publicise the product. Dow ...
Ringtones Worth Watching
http://communicationsdirectnews.com/do.php/150/23434?11228
You may not be interested in video ringtones, but many -- mostly
younger -- cell phone users certainly are. Vringo, which has
developed a video ringtone sharing community, believes there's a
promising market for distributing video ringtones. The
Israel-based startup claims its Web site, which is currently
undergoing beta testing, ...
Nokia Signs Deal to Open Cell Phone Production Facility in Romania
http://communicationsdirectnews.com/do.php/120/23432?11228
BUCHAREST, Romania -- Nokia signed a deal Monday with the
Romanian government to open a cell phone production facility in
Transylvania, the company said. Nokia plans to invest E60
million (US$80 million) in the plant near Cluj, a major city in
Transylvania. The plant will be the company's 11th cell phone
production facility ...
RIM's Crimson Tide
http://communicationsdirectnews.com/do.php/120/23427?11228
Research In Motion Ltd. (RIM) will continue its cross-pollination
of enterprise and consumer devices with a new model codenamed
"Crimson," which will likely be launched by AT&T Inc. (formerly
Cingular) in April or May, according to sources. The Crimson is
similar to RIM's recently launched 8800 device. It ...
Palm Sells Record Number of Treos
http://communicationsdirectnews.com/do.php/120/23425?11228
Even though Palm sold 738,000 Treo smartphones in the third
quarter for its 2007 fiscal year, a 30% increase over the
year-ago quarter, net income was down 60.5% Palm announced its
third quarter results yesterday with mixed news. The 738,000
sales number was a record for the company, but net income fell
from $29.9 million to $11.8 ...
As Injunction Is Issued, Vonage Enters Survival Mode
http://communicationsdirectnews.com/do.php/120/23423?11228
U.S. District Court Judge Claude Hilton, in a move that could
shut down VoIP industry powerhouse Vonage, Friday issued an
injunction against the service provider's use of a trio of
Verizon patents for which a jury found it guilty of violating.
Trading in Vonage shares briefly was halted after the decision,
and then trading ...
Bright Outlook for MEMS in Consumer Electronics According to In-Stat
http://communicationsdirectnews.com/do.php/150/23420?11228
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- Nearly all major categories of MEMS have
seen, or may soon see, applications in consumer products, reports
In-Stat. As a result, the worldwide MEMS market in consumer
electronics will grow from US$727 million in 2006 to over US$1
billion by 2009, the high-tech market research firm says. MEMS
will expand to a ...
CommunicationsDirect Editor <telecom_direct_editor@us.pwc.com>
Copyright (C) 2007 PricewaterhouseCoopers.
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 26 Mar 2007 13:10:49 CDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Judge Orders Permanent Vonage Injunction
USTelecom dailyLead
March 26, 2007
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/gvxYfDtusXoCmLCibuddwVWh
TODAY'S HEADLINES
NEWS OF THE DAY
* Judge orders permanent Vonage injunction
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Alcatel-Lucent wins Verizon network contract
* Openwave names new chief, mulls possible sale
* CBS expands mobile reach with Sprint
* InterDigital files Samsung complain with ITC
* McDonald's is Lovin' new media
* Aruba Networks gears up to go public
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Register for NXTcomm today!
HOT TOPICS
* Top vendors, operators form IPTV group
* City of Milwaukee reaches agreement with AT&T
* AT&T to serve up TV channels on PCs, mobile phones
* Motorola shuffles management, cuts first-quarter outlook
* EarthLink plans Wi-Fi phone
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Verizon brings pay-TV service to more California cities
* Transmission quality important to VoIP
* The CW tests video Web waters
* Enterasys plans new core switch module line
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* India, Singapore come closer to telecom terms
Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/gvxYfDtusXoCmLCibuddwVWh
------------------------------
From: Gene S. Berkowitz <first.last@comcast.net>
Subject: Re: Judge Hits Vonage With Injuction; Stop Using Verizon Technology
Date: Sun, 25 Mar 2007 23:50:00 -0400
In article <telecom26.83.8@telecom-digest.org>, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
says:
> Peter wrote:
>> A federal judge dealt a blow to Vonage Holdings Corp. that sent its
>> stock reeling on Friday, when he agreed to bar the company from
>> using Internet phone call technology patented by Verizon
>> Communications Inc. ... A jury on March 8 found Vonage had
>> infringed three patents owned by Verizon. ...
> When Vonage hit the scene, a number of participants here were quite
> enthused about it. I am curious as to what they think of the current
> situation.
> Also, could anyone explain -- in layman's terms -- what the three
> patents covered?
From CNet:
"The patents Vonage was found to have infringed deal with technologies
involving connection of VoIP calls to the regular phone network, some
features for implementing call-waiting and voice-mail services, and VoIP
calls using Wi-Fi handsets."
http://news.com.com/Vonage+ordered+to+stop+using+Verizon+VoIP+patents/21
00-7352_3-6169950.html
"When Verizon first filed its lawsuit, it said that Vonage was
infringing on seven of its patents. It later revised its complaint, and
the jury ultimately considered five patents. The jury was asked not only
to decide whether Vonage had infringed on its patents, but also whether
the patents themselves were valid. The jury found that all five patents
were valid, but it only decided that Vonage violated three of them.
The jury also found Vonage infringed on a patent involving VoIP calls
using Wi-Fi handsets. Vonage was cleared of infringing two patents
related to billing systems designed to prevent fraud.
The eight jurors rejected Verizon's argument that the infringement was
willful. If the jury had found that the infringement was willful, it
could have tripled the damages it awarded to Verizon."
> At the risk of offending some people, I am not sympathetic to Vonage.
> I felt they entered the market by low-balling the pricing and failing
> to provide 911 support. They had to make that up after the fact.
> Cutting corners is an easy way to break in to a market, but not
> necessarily a good one. Now they've been found guilty of stealing
> inventions. Well, gee, you steal someone else's R&D, it's easy to
> underprice them. They do all the work, you get all the benefits.
So, according to the jury, Vonage was not intentionally "stealing", they
are "infringing".
"Throughout the entire lawsuit Vonage has denied that it has violated
any patents. It claims that most of the technology it uses is standards-
based and widely available throughout the industry. The company said it
plans to appeal the verdict."
http://news.com.com/2100-1036_3-6165747.html
--Gene
------------------------------
From: T <nospam.kd1s@cox.nospam.net>
Subject: Re: Judge Hits Vonage With Injuction; Stop Using Verizon Technology
Organization: The Ace Tomato and Cement Company
Date: Sun, 25 Mar 2007 23:31:39 -0400
In article <telecom26.83.8@telecom-digest.org>, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
says:
> Peter wrote:
>> A federal judge dealt a blow to Vonage Holdings Corp. that sent its
>> stock reeling on Friday, when he agreed to bar the company from
>> using Internet phone call technology patented by Verizon
>> Communications Inc. ... A jury on March 8 found Vonage had
>> infringed three patents owned by Verizon. ...
> When Vonage hit the scene, a number of participants here were quite
> enthused about it. I am curious as to what they think of the current
> situation.
> Also, could anyone explain -- in layman's terms -- what the three
> patents covered?
> At the risk of offending some people, I am not sympathetic to Vonage.
> I felt they entered the market by low-balling the pricing and failing
> to provide 911 support. They had to make that up after the fact.
> Cutting corners is an easy way to break in to a market, but not
> necessarily a good one. Now they've been found guilty of stealing
> inventions. Well, gee, you steal someone else's R&D, it's easy to
> underprice them. They do all the work, you get all the benefits.
Here are my thoughts on this. I know that Verizon approached Vonage
about this before they filed the case. And knowing how VZ operated I
know that the intent was to drive the nail into the coffin of VoIP.
They're not stealing someone elses R&D. That part is absolutely false -
all Vonage is doing is replacing the last mile of cable to the person.
Otherwise all call handling is done via PaeTec or Focal switches and
they're CLEC's who've bought the licenses for all the services offered
by Vonage. Not only that, I doubt VZ has the patent for SIP, which
Vonage uses.
Verizon is losing a lot of business to VoIP. This case shows that
they're desparate.
------------------------------
From: GlowingBlueMist <nobody@invalid.com>
Subject: Re: Numeric Pager Notification of E-mail
Date: Mon, 26 Mar 2007 07:19:37 -0500
Organization: Octanews
"Steve Crow" <steve.crow@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:telecom26.83.4@telecom-digest.org:
> I have a need to receive notifications of new e-mail on my numeric
> pager. Obviously the simplest solution is to just upgrade to a text
> pager and forward copies of my e-mail to it. However, this simply
> isn't an option.
> The specific situation is that I use GrandCentral for my voicemail and
> I would like to be paged with my GrandCentral number (or at least a
> recognizable string of numbers that indicate new voicemail) when a new
> message is deposited. If I configure GrandCentral to send
> notifications to a specific POP3 box, I can have a service monitor
> that POP3 box and shoot out a notification to my pager when a
> GrandCentral message gets deposited.
> Is anyone aware of any service that will monitor a POP3 e-mail box for
> a new message (better yet, from a specific e-mail address) and then
> blast a string of numbers to a conventional numeric pager? Googling is
> leaving me empty-handed.
> I did take a moment to leave beta feedback with the GrandCentral folks
> suggesting pager notification of new voicemail, particularly given the
> number of people who still carry pagers and the fact that most modern
> cellular voicemail systems still offer this capability.
> Thanks!
I know nothing about the companies mentioned below but you might want
to check out:
http://www.interpage.net/sub-paging.html
or
http://www.notepage.net/webgate.htm
or
http://www.sharewareconnection.com/titles/pager1.htm
With a little more research you should be able to come up with
something that does what you want if these are found to be lacking.
Try entering [email notification "numeric pager" pop3] into Google,
minus the brackets and see what turns up.
------------------------------
From: bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com (Robert Bonomi)
Subject: Re: Numeric Pager Notification of E-mail
Date: Mon, 26 Mar 2007 13:35:12 -0000
Organization: Widgets, Inc.
In article <telecom26.83.4@telecom-digest.org>,
Steve Crow <steve.crow@gmail.com> wrote:
> I have a need to receive notifications of new e-mail on my numeric
> pager. Obviously the simplest solution is to just upgrade to a text
> pager and forward copies of my e-mail to it. However, this simply
> isn't an option.
> The specific situation is that I use GrandCentral for my voicemail and
> I would like to be paged with my GrandCentral number (or at least a
> recognizable string of numbers that indicate new voicemail) when a new
> message is deposited. If I configure GrandCentral to send
> notifications to a specific POP3 box, I can have a service monitor
> that POP3 box and shoot out a notification to my pager when a
> GrandCentral message gets deposited.
> Is anyone aware of any service that will monitor a POP3 e-mail box for
> a new message (better yet, from a specific e-mail address) and then
> blast a string of numbers to a conventional numeric pager? Googling is
> leaving me empty-handed.
> I did take a moment to leave beta feedback with the GrandCentral folks
> suggesting pager notification of new voicemail, particularly given the
> number of people who still carry pagers and the fact that most modern
> cellular voicemail systems still offer this capability.
Given the availability of a UNIX box, all you need is 'procmail',
'hylafax', (or 'kermit', depending on the pager message interface you
have available) and something like 4 lines of a procmail 'recipe'
(script) to tie them together.
------------------------------
From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: Unlisted Phone Number
Date: 26 Mar 2007 09:21:30 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com
On Mar 25, 9:47 am, Wesr...@aol.com wrote:
> Another requirement for incoming DDD was that trunk groups be
> reinforced to provide at least P=.01 (not more than one call out of
> 100 would fail because of all-trunks-busy) on the final route. This
> required a considerable increase in trunking capabilities in many
> areas.
At considerable cost. Before WW II, most long distance calls were
made on a "delayed" basis, that is, the caller made his request and
would then get called back when his call was set up. There was a wait
for trunks. After WW II the increase in microwave and carrier allowed
more capacity. Further, the overall growth in telephone use generated
a higher economy of scale -- the new expensive trunks being installed
would get used. So after the war more and more calls would be
completed on a "demand" basis, and many dialed by the operator.
> Calls over the direct trunks were XB to XB and set up virtually
> instantaneously. Calls on the final route had a noticeable delay,
> since Ponca City was a step office and had to send the number to the
> Blackwell office by dial pulses.)
What is amazing is that all the routing and alternate route "logic"
was done by relays in a very sophisticated array. The Number 4
crossbar toll switch must have been an incredibly beautiful machine.
(Some of the routing info was stored on punched metal cards which were
selected out of box.)
Although these machines were not modifiable stored-program in the
modern sense of computers, they were essentially computers just the
same, with input, output, logic, and memory. Pretty head stuff for
the early 1940s!
The first No 4 crossbar was installed in Philadelphia for toll service
around 1943-1944. I've been unable to find any newspaper reference to
it, perhaps it was kept secret for the war to avoid sabotage. The
effect would be transparent to end subscribers who would continue to
place calls in the same manner, though many would be completed
quickly. In any event, at that time they didn't want to encourage
people to make any more calls since circuits were overloaded as it was
and Bell was short of staff. (Wartime newspapers have large display
ads from Bell targeted to retired or married operators to come back to
work. They also hired teens.)
------------------------------
From: Wesrock@aol.com
Date: Sun, 25 Mar 2007 09:47:37 EDT
Subject: Re: Unlisted Phone Number
In a message dated 23 Mar 2007 19:45:02 -0700, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com writes:
> It's also notable that much of the country, at least 11 states, were
> not as yet equipped to receive DDD calls. We forget that the
> implementation of DDD required both new equipment at the sending end
> as well as new equipment and often numbering changes at the receiving
> end. It's one thing to assign everyone a unique ten digit number
> nationwide, but quite another to convert local switchgear to
> accomodate it. It's also impressive in that the "logic" to handle
> billing records, signalling, and routing, was all done by relays.
Another requirement for incoming DDD was that trunk groups be
reinforced to provide at least P=.01 (not more than one call out of
100 would fail because of all-trunks-busy) on the final route. This
required a considerable increase in trunking capabilities in many
areas.
(An interesting artifact of this requirement, probably duplicated in
many places, was incoming calls to Blackwell, Oklahoma. You could
readily tell if your call had taken the high-usage direct trunks from
the Oklahoma City 4A or the final route via Ponca City by the set-up
time for your call. Calls over the direct trunks were XB to XB and
set up virtually instantaneously. Calls on the final route had a
noticeable delay, since Ponca City was a step office and had to send
the number to the Blackwell office by dial pulses.)
Wes Leatherock
wesrock@aol.com
wleathus@yahoo.com
[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Does anyone (mainly big-city telephone
users) remember how in the early years following the Second World War
how certain types of old, antiquated phone switches could not
immediatly produce a 'busy signal' if the line was busy? People would
call my office phone WEbster-9-4600 and the line would seemingly
'ring' once or twice in their ear, then instantly change to a busy
signal. Not always, not late at night, but only during the day at
busy hours, so apparently not only was my office phone busy, but so
were the devices which would return 'busy signals'. PAT]
------------------------------
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End of TELECOM Digest V26 #84
*****************************
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