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TELECOM Digest     Thu, 17 Nov 2005 14:33:00 EST    Volume 24 : Issue 523

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Cingular Revamps Wireless Internet Service (Reuters News Wire)
    Survey Studies Internet Use in China (Patrick Casey)
    Bloggers Break Sony (Thomas Claborn)
    Cellular-News for Thursday 17th November 2005 (Cellular-News)
    Sony Launches Internet Phone Service (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Real Story of the Rogue Rootkit (Monty Solomon)
    Internet Society Welcomes WSIS Proposal (Peter Godwin)
    Nokia 6340i Cell Phone (TELECOM Digest Editor)
    Re: My New Cell Phone, Nokia 6010 (John R Levine)
    Re: My New Cell Phone, Nokia 6010 (jmeissen@aracnet.com)
    Re: My New Cell Phone, Nokia 6010 (John R. Levine)
    Re: If You Would Like to Get Away From ICANN Oversight (Robert Bonomi)
    Re: How Do I Detect the Number of a Phone Line? (Ron Kritzman)
    Last Laugh! Amusing Short Film (Dale Farmer)

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: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Cingular Revamps Wireless Internet Services
Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2005 12:13:05 -0600


Cingular Wireless said on Thursday it redesigned its wireless Web
offerings with a ticker service and options that make it easier to get
news and weather on phones.

Along with rivals, Cingular, the No. 1 U.S. mobile service, has been
working to expand its services beyond traditional phone calls in order
to boost revenue as call prices fall and the number of potential new
first-time customers dwindles.

But consumers have been slow to adopt services such as mobile Internet
as Web surfing on phones is slower than on computers and it is more
difficult to navigate the Internet on small phone screens.

Cingular, a venture of SBC Communications Inc. and BellSouth Corp.,
hopes to increase Web usage with a ticker that scrolls headlines
across the bottom of phone screens, letting users access an item of
interest to them with just one click.

It has also revamped its more traditional Web options by making it
possible for users decide what kind of Web sites are prominently
displayed on the phone's main menu.

In the most recent quarter less than 10 percent of Cingular's average
monthly revenue per user came from data services including Web
browsing and text messaging.

"I expect there will be a significant increase in people using browser
services," as a result of the revamp Jim Ryan, vice president of
consumer data products at Cingular said.

Ovum analyst Roger Entner also said the ticker service should succeed
in encouraging usage of data services because it does not force the
user to wade through menus.

"The cool thing about the ticker is that it makes impulse information
access a reality," Entner said. "Here the Web comes to you and that's
why it will drive usage."

Cingular said that the ticker service would be available on more than
30 million of its phones in the next several weeks.

Its next biggest rivals are Verizon Wireless, a venture of Verizon and
Vodafone and Sprint Nextel Corp.

Copyright 2005 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.

------------------------------

From: Patrick Casey <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Survey Studies Internet Use in China
Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2005 12:16:16 -0600


By PATRICK CASEY, Associated Press Writer

A typical Chinese Internet user is a young male who prefers instant
messaging to e-mail, rarely makes online purchases and favors news,
music and games sites, according to a new study.

The only major public opinion research tracking Internet use in China,
the survey was conducted in five cities by Guo Liang of the prominent
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in Beijing, the government's main
think tank.

According to the study, released Thursday at the Brookings Institution
in Washington, about two-thirds of survey participants use the
Internet for news -- often entertainment-related -- or for online
games. About half download music and movies.

They also tend to prefer instant messaging to e-mail, and they are
relying on the Internet more frequently than before to contact others
who have the same professions, hobbies and political interests.

Online purchases still remain unpopular in China.

Three-quarters of users surveyed have never bought anything over the
Internet, and only 10 percent make purchases even once a month. Among
those who do buy online, most pay for entertainment while others buy
phone cards, or computer hardware or software.

"Many people don't trust the quality of goods bought online," Guo said
Wednesday. "If they buy it in a store and don't like it, they can
easily bring it back."

The survey was conducted in five major cities: Beijing, Shanghai,
Guangzhou, Chengdu and Changsha. The cities also were surveyed in 2003
as part of the ongoing study that began in 2000 as a way to provide
empirical data and analysis on Internet development in China. Results
do not necessarily project countrywide because Internet use in rural
areas is lower than in cities.

Guo, the academy's leading Internet expert, describes the typical
netizen in the five cities surveyed as young, male, richer and more
highly educated.

Males make up two-thirds of the Internet community, and more than 80
percent of users are under 24. Among people ages 25 to 29, 60 percent
to 80 percent go online.

China has more than 100 million people online, second in the world to
the United States, according to government statistics.

Its government has aggressively promoted Internet use for education
and business, though it has also tried to keep its citizens from
material it deems subversive or pornographic. Online dissidents are
regularly arrested.

According to Guo's survey, more than one-third of the urban users
surveyed do not use e-mail. Of those that do, only about one-third
check their e-mail at least once a day.

"I think Chinese people prefer instant contact. Very few Chinese use
answering machines and e-mail is like an answering machine. It's
convenient but but not immediate," Guo said.

Forty-two percent say they do not engage search engines. Those who do
seek leisure or entertainment news, as well as information useful for
work or study. Traditional news ranked behind those searches. Online
portal Baidu.com was used by half of those surveyed, compared with a
quarter for Google, the leading search engine in the United States.

The survey, conducted in February and March, was based on random
door-to-door household interviews in the five major cities. The sample
size was 2,376, including 1,169 Internet users and 1,207 nonusers.

On the Net:

Markle Foundation: http://www.markle.org
China Internet Project: http://www.wipchina.org
China Internet Network Information Center: http://www.cnnic.cn

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 Associated Press News headlines, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

------------------------------

From: Thomas Claburn <informationweek@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Bloggers Break Sony
Date: Wed, 16 Nov 2005 21:29:43 -0600


Bloggers Break Sony

Sony made an unpopular product decision and got its reputation incinerated
by waves of flaming bloggers. That's a lesson for other companies.

By Thomas Claburn,  InformationWeek
http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=174300636

Sony's decision to withdraw its controversial copy-protected CDs followed
weeks of flames by bloggers.

Sony BMG Music Entertainment said Wednesday it will stop selling 50 CD
titles with its XCP content protection software. Sony also said it
will remove the discs from stores, and offer replacements without copy
protection to customers.

Before Sony acted, the company suffered through weeks of angry posts by
bloggers who stirred outrage against the company.

It started when security researcher Mark Russinovich first posted to
his blog that Sony's music CDs surreptitiously installed digital
rights management software based on a "rootkit" -- a hacking tool
widely considered to be spyware. Following that, bloggers of all
stripes, from seasoned security experts to aggrieved consumers, vented
about the record company's unethical and possibly illegal behavior.

"It seems crystal clear that but for the citizen journalists, Sony
never would have done anything about this," says Fred von Lohmann,
senior intellectual property attorney for the Electronic Frontier
Foundation, a cyber liberties advocacy group that has been vocal in
its condemnation of Sony and may eventually file a a lawsuit against
Sony, in addition to three that have already been filed. "It's plain
to me that it was Sony's intent to brush the story under the rug and
forget about it."

Alan Scott, chief marketing office at business information service
Factiva, said, "I think that we're in an entirely new world from a
marketing perspective. The rules of the game have changed
dramatically. The old way of doing things by ignoring issues, or with
giving the canned PR spin response within the blogosphere, it just
doesn't work."

Thomas Hesse, Sony BMG's Global Digital Business President, attempted
to do just that by dismissing the online protests. "Most people, I
think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care
about it?" he said in a November 4 interview on National Public
Radio's Morning Edition. He added, "The software is designed to
protect our CDs from unauthorized copying and ripping."

Blog search site Technorati.com shows well over a hundred blog
postings ridiculing this particular quote, each of which may have been
linked to by other blogs.

The day before the NPR interview, Sony attempted to mollify its
critics by offering an update that "removes the cloaking technology
component" of the XCP DRM software. The update notes claim, "This
component is not malicious and does not compromise security."

That's simply not true -- the rootkit component allows attackers to
take control of target computers. Moreover, another component, the
uninstaller Sony provided to remove the XCP software, did compromise
security. And once again, it was the blog community that brought this
fact to light.

In their Freedom-to-Tinker.com blog, computer researchers J. Alex
Halderman and Edward Felten confirmed the findings of a Finnish
computer expert that the uninstaller utilizes a poorly coded ActiveX
control that allows any Web page a user visits to install and run any
code its like on the user's machine. In a E-mail message, Graham
Cluley, senior technology consultant at security company Sophos,
condemned Sony's actions. "Business PC users have a very low opinion
of any code that endangers the safety of their networks, and they have
sent a loud and clear message to Sony and other companies that this
kind of code is unacceptable," he wrote.

Indeed, judging by the online outcry, it's fair to say that PC users
in general feel that way.

However, Cluley said that Sony XCP software isn't really comparable to
a virus incident in terms of impact. "In many ways it can be argued
that it's more similar to Microsoft security vulnerabilities which
have later led to a worm infection," he explained via E-mail. "Sony's
code wasn't intentionally malicious, but did open up a security hole
on users' computers which could be exploited by malware. Rather than
malware, I would term this as 'ineptware.'"

Finnish computer security company F-Secure Corporation contends the
software is malware because it hides from the user and doesn't offer a
way to uninstall itself.

But the company's intellectual property concerns have not
disappeared. At a music industry conference in San Diego in August
2005, Recording Industry Association of America CEO Mitch Bainwol
presented findings by market research firm NPD Group Inc. that
suggested ripping songs--copying them to a computer from a CD--and
sharing them has come to represent a revenue threat that's at least as
significant as illegal peer-to-peer file trading.

In his presentation, Bainwol noted that the people in the music
industry are seen as bad guys rather than the victims they perceive
themselves to be. Yet winning the hearts and minds of the blogosphere,
and by extension, consumers in general, will require more than
marketing as usual.

"There's a whole new set of rules that people have to live by," Scott
says.  "Whether it's blogs or user groups or NGOs, it's all about
honesty and authenticity. This is just the latest painful example of a
major company finding that the old tools and the old actions don't
work."

Scott's advice to companies is to look for text-mining software, which
Factiva happens to make, to help follow what's being said online and
then to participate in the conversation honestly. In an example of the
sort of transparency called for under the "new rules," Scott admits
his advice is self-serving. He says, nonetheless, he believes in what
he's selling.

The same might be said for Sony BMG. The company no doubt believes in
content protection technology. The trouble is few of its customers do.
Either Sony's customers don't know what they're missing or the company
is selling something no one wants.

As for participating in the conversation, Sony BMG has a ways to go.
Repeated calls to the company's corporate press office for further
comment met with the message, "Announcement not recorded. Try again
later. Please disconnect."

Copyright 2005 CMP Media LLC

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.

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------------------------------

Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2005 13:37:33 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Real Story of the Rogue Rootkit


By Bruce Schneier

It's a David and Goliath story of the tech blogs defeating a 
mega-corporation.

On Oct. 31, Mark Russinovich broke the story in his blog: Sony BMG
Music Entertainment distributed a copy-protection scheme with music
CDs that secretly installed a rootkit on computers. This software tool
is run without your knowledge or consent -- if it's loaded on your
computer with a CD, a hacker can gain and maintain access to your
system and you wouldn't know it.

The Sony code modifies Windows so you can't tell it's there, a process
called "cloaking" in the hacker world. It acts as spyware,
surreptitiously sending information about you to Sony. And it can't be
removed; trying to get rid of it damages Windows.

This story was picked up by other blogs (including mine), followed by
the computer press. Finally, the mainstream media took it up.

The outcry was so great that on Nov. 11, Sony announced it was
temporarily halting production of that copy-protection scheme. That
still wasn't enough -- on Nov. 14 the company announced it was pulling
copy-protected CDs from store shelves and offered to replace
customers' infected CDs for free.

But that's not the real story here.

...

http://www.wired.com/news/privacy/0,1848,69601,00.html

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2005 13:55:52 EST
From: Peter Godwin <godwin@isoc.org>
Subject: Internet Society Welcomes WSIS Proposal to Build on Internet


Tunis - 17th November 2005 - Delegates meeting at the World Summit on
the Information Society (WSIS) in Tunis have affirmed their commitment
to build on the governance mechanisms that have enabled the Internet's
incredibly successful growth.

ISOC welcomes the recognition by WSIS of how the effectiveness of the
existing arrangements for Internet governance has helped make the
Internet the highly robust, dynamic and geographically diverse medium
that it is today.

"We are delighted that there is now much broader recognition of the
achievements of the organisations that support the Internet
community," said Lynn St. Amour, President and CEO of the Internet
Society. "These organisations, along with their open, consensus-based
processes clearly have a vital role to play in the further development
of the Internet. It is also significant that the WSIS debate has moved
beyond the details of technical administration and on to broader
issues that require increased coordination by stakeholders in order to
ensure the continued stability of the Internet."

The WSIS recommendation includes a proposal for a new forum for
multi-stakeholder policy dialogue - the Internet Governance
Forum. ISOC, together with partner organisations from the Internet
community, has always worked to encourage full engagement in such
dialogues by all those with an interest in the Internet's future. ISOC
believes that the forum=92s success depends upon the fullest
participation by all stakeholders. At the same time, ISOC is pleased
to note that the proposed forum would have no oversight function and
would have no involvement in the day-to-day operations of the
Internet.

"ISOC will facilitate increased cooperation and information sharing
amongst all parties interested in Internet governance and we look
forward to playing an active role in the new forum as is expected of
us by the global community," said Lynn St. Amour. "We very much hope
that the Tunis summit will lead to some real and positive outcomes
that will help bring the benefits of the Internet to people everywhere
 -- especially to those who are yet to be connected."

The Internet Society, along with some of its partner organisations =96
the Number Resource Organisation (NRO), the Internet Engineering Task
Force (IETF), London Internet Exchange (LINX), the Internet
Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) and the Council of
European National Top level domain Registries (CENTR) - are present at
the ICT 4 all exhibition held in conjunction with WSIS. The Internet
Pavilion is at stand 1323 in the Kram Palexpo.

ABOUT ISOC

The Internet Society (http://www.isoc.org) is a not-for-profit
membership organization founded in 1992 to provide leadership in
Internet related standards, education, and policy. With offices in
Washington, DC, and Geneva, Switzerland, it is dedicated to ensuring
the open development, evolution and use of the Internet for the
benefit of people throughout the world. ISOC is the organizational
home of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) and other
Internet-related bodies who together play a critical role in ensuring
that the Internet develops in a stable and open manner. For over 13
years ISOC has run international network training programs for
developing countries and these have played a vital role in setting up
the Internet connections and networks in virtually every country
connecting to the Internet during this time.

FOR FURTHER DETAILS:

Peter Godwin
Communications Manager, Internet Society
E-mail: godwin@isoc.org
4, rue des Falaises
1205 Geneva
Switzerland

------------------------------

Subject: Cellular-News for Thursday 17th November 2005
Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2005 07:45:17 -0600
From: Cellular-News <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - http://www.cellular-news.com


[[3G News]]

Irish Regulator Awards Final 3G License
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14860.php

Ireland's communications regulator Wednesday awarded Smart Telecom PLC Ireland's fourth and final third-generation mobile phone license. ...

CDMA 1xEV-DO Coverage Expanded in Canada
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14868.php

Bell Canada says that it has extended its CDMA2000 1xEV-DO (Evolution
Data Optimized) network to Western Canada. Bell Mobility users in
Vancouver, British Columbia and both Calgary and Edmonton, Alberta
will now immediately enjoy the benefits of a 3G...

[[Financial News]]

Vodafone's Japan Head Says Operations Continuing To Improve
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14853.php

A day after Vodafone Group PLC warned that further investments to turn
around its Japanese unit would dent profits ahead, the head of Japan
operations said Wednesday it won't be long before the unit returns to
a growth path. ...

Telekom Austria Upgrades 05 Outlook, 3Q Net +90%
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14858.php

Telekom Austria AG Wednesday raised its full-year net profit forecast
after reporting a 90% jump in third-quarter net profit, partly due to
the first-time consolidation of Bulgarian company Mobiltel. ...

Russia's MegaFon capex up, at $500 million in Jan-Jun 
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14863.php

The capital expenditures of Russia's third largest mobile operator
MegaFon rose 63% on the year to U.S. $500 million in January-June, the
company said Wednesday. ...

Fraud Cost Operators US$170 Billion in One Year
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14867.php

Azure Solutions, the revenue-assurance company has revealed that
global telecoms operators are losing an estimated 11.6% of turnover
($170 billion) through fraud and other types of revenue leakage in
2005, compared to 10.7% in 2004. This is one of th...

[[Handsets News]]

Motorola To Speed Up Shipping of New Handsets
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14865.php

PREMIUM - Stepping up the competitive battle in the handset market,
Motorola will begin shipping its phones immediately after announcing
them next year, according to an executive. ...

Motorola Expands in India
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14871.php

Motorola has announced a series of important firsts to help drive the
company's growth in India. Specifically, Motorola announced the C115,
one of the company's hottest-selling handsets, will now have a "Made
in India" label - a first for the company...

[[Interviews News]]

INTERVIEW: Symbian CEO Says Targeting Mass Market
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14861.php

PREMIUM - The Symbian software used in high-end mobile phones will
expand out of its current niche, Symbian Chief Executive Nigel
Clifford said Wednesday. ...

[[Legal News]]

EU: No Decision On Kroes Conflict In Telefonica-O2 Deal
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14857.php

Europe's top antitrust official Neelie Kroes hasn't decided whether to
let another European Commission official review Telefonica SA's bid
for O2 PLC, the Commission said Wednesday. ...

FOCUS: VimpelCom enters Ukraine, conflict with Telenor to worsen
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14862.php

Despite fierce opposition from a key shareholder, Russia’s
second-largest mobile operator VimpelCom closed a deal last week to
buy Ukrainian Radiosystems, or URS, a little-known small mobile
operator in Ukraine. ...

Chile Antitrust Court Rejects Telefonica Moviles' Auction
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14864.php

Chile's antitrust court Wednesday rejected the mobile spectrum auction
submitted by the Chilean unit of mobile telephony company Telefonica
Moviles. ...

[[Messaging News]]

UK Data Users Tend to Switch Networks Regularly - report
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14870.php

More than half of advanced mobile data service users in the UK have
switched mobile network provider in the last three years, according to
independent research commissioned by LogicaCMG. The research also
shows that users of services such as MMS and ...

[[Mobile Content News]]

Wireless Content Market Rebound Begins
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14875.php

The Russian research firm, J'son & Partners (J&P) announced in a
recent client letter that its indicators show a clear rebound in the
Russian wireless content industry in 3Q and 4Q 2005. Following a
slack-down and crisis in 1H 2005, the Russian wirel...

[[Network Contracts News]]

O2 Germany Awards Siemens EUR250 Million Wireless Equipment Deal
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14854.php

German engineering firm Siemens AG Wednesday said that O2 Germany has
placed an order with its telecoms equipment unit to deliver mobile
technology for its GSM/UMTS network by 2010, worth EUR250 million. ...

Ericsson To Build Network In Ukraine For Vimpelcom
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14855.php

Swedish telecommunications equipment maker Telefon AB LM Ericsson
Wednesday said it has signed a deal with Russian mobile operator
Vimpel Communications to supply a GSM/GPRS/EDGE network in
Ukraine. ...

Macau Signs CDMA Roaming Contract
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14873.php

Syniverse Technologies has been awarded a contract with China Unicom
Macau for a suite of voice roaming services that includes
clearinghouse services for roaming revenue settlement and exchange
between roaming partners, network connectivity and inter...

Vodafone Signs Latin American Partnership
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14876.php

Vodafone has signed a group wide co-operation Agreement with America
Movil covering 53 countries across the Americas, Africa, Europe and
Asia. Under the terms of the agreement America Movil and Vodafone will
deliver international roaming services to ...

[[Network Operators News]]

MTS launches network in 2 Russian regions
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14866.php

Russia's largest mobile operator Mobile TeleSystems (MTS) has started
operating in Russia's constituent republics of Ingushetia and
Kabardino-Balkaria and plans to launch its network in the constituent
republic of Karachayevo-Cherkessia Thursday, M...

[[Regulatory News]]

Russia May Allocate GSM Frequencies Without Tender
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14859.php

The Russian government is prepared to allocate mobile phone
frequencies for Russia's Far-East districts to OAO New Telephone
Company, or NTC, without a tender, according to documents seen
Wednesday by Dow Jones Newswires. ...

Tunisia's Telecom Market: At the Threshold of Major Changes
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14874.php

The planned privatization of Tunisie Telecom will be a major event in
Tunisia's telecom history says a report from Arab Advisors. That,
along with the government's liberalization plans, will usher in a new
era of massive growth and potential in the T...

[[Statistics News]]

Camera Phone Shipments to Reach 850 Million in 2009 - report
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14869.php

InfoTrends/CAP Ventures' latest camera phone and photo messaging
forecast shows worldwide camera phone shipments continuing on a strong
growth trajectory, climbing from 370 million units in 2005 to 847
million units in 2009....

Cell Phone Roaming Spending Climbs During Summer Vacation Season
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14872.php

Roaming spending for American mobile phone subscribers rose during the
peak summer travel season, according to Telephia. The latest data from
Telephia's Customer Value Metrics report shows cell phone subscribers
paid 15% more in roaming charges to ne...

8 out of 10 Cell Phone Customers Choose GSM Service
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14877.php

Wireless industry trade association 3G Americas reports that the GSM
family of wireless technologies -- GSM, GPRS, EDGE and UMTS/HSDPA --
added more than 112 million new customers in three months (Q3 2005),
increasing its global market share to 77.6%...

[[Technology News]]

Intel Sees Mobile Chip Market Share Over 10%
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/14856.php

Intel Corp. Chairman Craig Barrett said Wednesday he expects the
company to reach a double-digit share in the global chip market for
mobile phones in the next few years. ...

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2005 13:07:10 EST
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Sony Launches Internet Phone Service


USTelecom dailyLead
November 17, 2005
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/yhvMatagCxxgyVuEcp

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* Sony launches Internet phone service
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* BellSouth's DSL feels need for speed
* Cingular updates Media Net
* Nokia buys Intellisync
* Mobile content market becomes a battlefield
* AT&T chief Dorman reflects on tenure at Ma Bell
* Vodafone KK shifts course to better serve Japanese customers
* Japanese handset makers see opportunity in growing 3G markets
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Broadband Certainty: Forward Looking Legislation for the Broadband Era
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* KT debuts WiBro at economic summit
* BellSouth data backup service links to Cingular's wireless network
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Aussie government to forge ahead with Telstra privatization

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/yhvMatagCxxgyVuEcp

------------------------------

Subject: Nokia 6340i Cell Phone
Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2005 00:35:53 EST
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (TELECOM Digest Editor)


John Levine sent a message to the Digest regards my new cell phone, which
got trashed by accident mid all the spam here tonight.  I now have a
Nokia 6010  and complained here yesterday about being unable to use
any of my accessories as a result. John said the Nokia 6340i was
almost identical in shape, size, etc to the Nokia 5165 for which I have
all my atachments. 

What I want to know is if the 'pinout' on the bottom of the 6340i
phone is identical to the 5165 (so therefore things like my 'cell
socket' will work (use cell phone connected to another regular style
phone) and my headset (which relies on an adapter I got at Radio Shack
to connect with the pinout on the bottom).

If that is true (pinout works identical) then how would I go about
swapping out the SIM which was installed in this phone and putting it
into the 6340i which I will buy from EBay?

Also some of the sellers on EBay say their (Nokia type) phones are
'unlocked' but I see no mention of Cingular Wireless on many of
them. The 6340i phones however seem very inexpensive around $15-20
usually.

Any comments?

PAT

------------------------------

Date: 17 Nov 2005 01:48:57 -0500
From: John R Levine <johnl@iecc.com>
Subject: Re: My New Cell Phone, Nokia 6010


> I do not know how to exchange the SIM to a different phone.

It's a little chip about the size of your thumbnail, usually in a
socket under the battery.  Cingular SIMs are orange and white.  Takes
about 10 seconds to pop out and pop into another phone.  Look in the
manual that came with the phone.

> And I do not know why some of the sellers on Ebay say their phones are
> 'unlocked'.

Locked == Cingular only, unlocked == any GSM carrier.  In this case,
you don't care.  If you want to unlock a locked phone yourself, you
can buy an unlock code online for about $8.  I've done it.

> I do see the phone you told me about on E-Bay but I cannot
> see the 'pin out' on the bottom of the phone all that well, and I wish
> to know if the pin out on the bottom works _exactly_ the same way or
> not.

It's just the same.  The car kit matched up to every single pin,
power, and even the antenna plug on the back, and it all worked.

> (instead of plugging in with a eighth inch plug uses an adapter
> I got at Radio Shack to plug in on the pin out.

It's just the same.

> I also have a 'Cell Socket' which allows the phone to charge while
> in the holder and be used at the same time.

Yes, I know.

> If the pin out on the bottom matches exactly with the pin out on the
> old phone (including the little rubber stopper on the back side
> which you can remove to plug it into the Cell Socket then I will get
> it.

The pinout is just the same.  It fit my car kit which has the same pins
and antenna plug, remember?  I suppose it's possible that the Cellsocket
has some dependency on the phone firmware, but it looks to me like the one
you have supports all sorts of Nokia 5100 and 6000 models.

> This new phone also has a very long life battery (Lithium?) which goes
> for a couple days without charging. Does the new phone you are talking
> about also have a long life battery?

All the 6340i phones you'll find are used, so it depends how old they
are.  I got a new battery for mine which seems to be good for a week.

R's,

John

------------------------------

From: jmeissen@aracnet.com
Subject: Re: My New Cell Phone, Nokia 6010
Date: 16 Nov 2005 20:50:41 GMT
Organization: http://extra.newsguy.com


In article <telecom24.522.7@telecom-digest.org>,
TELECOM Digest Editor <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu> wrote:

> It still is not clear to me _why_ they feel it is a better
> system than the phone I was using but they insist it is.

"Better" doesn't necessarily mean "better for you". I expect there are
a lot of advantages for them to move customers to GSM phones.  When my
phone needed replacing I let them sell me a GSM phone/plan, and in my
opinion the sound quality sucks, the ATT GSM network (at the time)
wasn't as widespread, and I have constant problems with dropped calls
and wildly varying reception, even when standing still in a spot that
initially shows "5 bars". If I had any reason to believe that any of
the other providers was any better I'd switch from Cingular.


John Meissen                       jmeissen@aracnet.com

------------------------------

From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com>
Subject: Re: My New Cell Phone, Nokia 6010
Date: Wed, 17 Nov 2005 00:00:00 EST


>> It still is not clear to me _why_ they feel it is a beter system
>> than the phone I was using but they insist it is.

Because your old phone was TDMA and your new phone is GSM.  Cingular
is moving their entire network from TDMA to GSM and as time goes on
there will be less and less TDMA capacity and more and more GSM.

> As with all these things, there is absolutely no standardization
> between peripherals on old and new phones. My old cell socket, power
> chargers, headsets, other handsfree devices do not fit and cannot be
> used.

Wasn't your old phone a Nokia 5165?  If so, poke around on ebay and
get yourself a Nokia 6340i.  It's GSM (actually a GSM/TDMA combo) and
it fits all the same stuff as a 5165.  I got my 6340i because I had a
5165 car kit in my truck.  You need only move the SIM chip from your
current GSM phone to the 6340i and it'll work.  They're quite cheap,
about $20 plus shipping.

When my wife lost her fancy flip phone, I bought a new SIM from
Cingular, then a rugged 6340i on ebay.  I also blew $3 on some new
covers so her phone would look different from mine.

R's,

John

------------------------------

From: bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com (Robert Bonomi)
Subject: Re: If You Would Like to Get Away From ICANN Oversight and Registrars
Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2005 17:36:40 -0000
Organization: Widgets, Inc.


In article <telecom24.518.14@telecom-digest.org>, Robert Bonomi
<bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com> wrote:

> In article <telecom24.517.16@telecom-digest.org>, Dave Garland
> <dave.garland@wizinfo.com> wrote:

>> It was a dark and stormy night when Patrick Townson
>> <ptownson@telecom-digest.org> wrote:

>>> or DHS International http://www.dhs.org where you can register domains in
>>> the name of your choice in the 'n3.net' top level and a few other top
>>> levels. 

>> ".net" is the "top" level.

>>> or SMARTDOTS http://smartdots.com where you can register domains
>>> in the name of your choice in the top level '.tc'

>> I think that they actually own about 25 domains such as "at.tc" and
>> "net.tc", and offer subdomains. I have a few sub-subdomains there
>> myself, though I'm converting them to .com since Google doesn't seem to
>> index them.  ".tc" is the national top-level domain for the Turks &
>> Calicos Islands.

>> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: You are correct; it is '.net' and
>> not 'n3.net' which is the top level. 'n3' is one underneath it. I
>> thank you for telling me the geographic location of '.tc' and I
>> believe that '.tf' is somewhere in the southern part of the Indian
>> Ocean. I do not know where '.tt' is located, nor '.tv' although the
>> latter is used by many

>    .tf is the "French Southern Territories" -- a group of 4 *UNINHABITED*
>	islands in the southern Indian Ocean, about equidistant between
>	Africa, Antarctica, and Australia.  NO permanent residents, only
>	visiting researchers studying native fauna.  (according to CIA world
>	fact book.)
>    .tv is "Tuvalu".  an island group in the South Pacific about halfway
>	between Hawaii and Australia.  They are most noted for leasing
>	their Internet domain (.tv) for _US$50_million_ in royalties,
>	paid over a dozen years.
>    .tt is 'Trinidad and Tobago.  an island group between the Caribbean Sea,
>	and the North Atlantic Ocean, northeast of Venezuela.
>	part of the Atlantic Ocean.

> See ISO 3166-1 (on-line at www.iso.org) for what all those two-letter 
> codes mean, and the CIA world factbook (can be found online at: 
> http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/ ) for where the place 
> is, and "more than you really want to know" about what they do there. 

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I don't suppose you know about '.ms'
  do you?

Yes, as a matter of fact, I do.  And there *is* an interesting story
there.

It seems that, a number of years ago, the titular ruler of the Duchy of
Grand Fenwick[1] (the Duchess Gloriana) fell head-over-heels in love with a 
dashing Italian nobleman -- the Count Giovaninni Bruno Enzo Ippi.

The Duchess, exercising the powers of her throne, purchased a tropical
island (located a distance south-east of Puerto Rico), and caused a
mansion to be constructed there -- this was to be a private 'getaway'
for her, and her soon-to-be-husband.

After the construction was completed,  Gloriana abdicated the throne,
married the Count, and they retired to the island hideaway, to live for
the rest of their days.  Gloriana also renounced all of her titles of
nobility, saying that now, to her, the only title that mattered, and the
one that gave her happiness, was that of "Mrs. Ippi".

With that background, the rationale for the assignment of that particular 
ISO code to her domicile should be obvious.

[1] for more on the Duchy of Grand Fenwick, consult the histories written
    by Leonard Wibberly -- "The Mouse that Roared", "Beware of the Mouse",
    "The Mouse on the Moon", "The Mouse on Wall Street", and "The Mouse 
    that Saved the West".

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2005 11:41:28 -0600
From: Ron Kritzman <ron@dbOnayAmspaYmasters.com>
Subject: Re: How Do I Detect the Number of a Phone Line?


jason.sandlin@wymtnews.com wrote:

> Hey. I am going to be running a few new phone lines into my building. I
> have the TS21 Harris test set, but I want to be able to see what the
> number is on the line that I am testing. 

I quit bothering with verification numbers years ago. I just dial my
own cell phone and look at the caller-id.


Emoveray ethay Igpay Atinlay otay eplyray

------------------------------

From: Dale Farmer <dale@cybercom.net>
Organization: The  fuzz in the back of the fridge. 
Subject: Last Laugh! Amusing Short Film 
Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2005 06:07:12 GMT


About the worst job in telecom today.  Not work safe, due to some
profanity near the end.  those who are not in the US may not get the
joke.

http://www.wimp.com/worstjob/

  --Dale

------------------------------


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