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1/7/2009
Wednesday morning
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| (After thirty minutes, Rave steps back and admires his
handiwork. A beeping sound is then heard. Rave pulls
out the cellular phone from the pack, the one used
earlier.) |
| GLOBAL WIRELESS GROUPS MOVE TO EASE TRAVEL CALLING FOR USERS
Issue: Wireless
The two largest wireless telephone consortiums, GSM Association and the
Universal Wireless Communications (UWCC), have agreed on an international
pact that eventually could allow about 290 million cellular phone
subscribers to use their phones almost anywhere they travel. The consortiums
represent two of the three incompatible digital-wireless standards used in
the U.S. Members of the GSM Association use the global standard for mobile
communications (GSM), which is the single standard in Europe and has an
estimated 220 million cellular customers worldwide. The UWCC represents
companies such as AT&T that use the time division multiple access standard
(TDMA) and those operators serve about 70 million users. The third standard
in wireless, code division multiple access (CDMA), is used by companies such
as Sprint and has 35 million users worldwide -- but is not part of the pact.
This new pact will allow customers. |
| As to the privacy issue pertaining to cordless phone and cellular phone
monitoring it is unfortunate that those frequencies fall into multi purpose
bands. Industry has already responded by marketing digital cellular phones
along with numerous models of digital security in 900MHZ cordless phones.
Products are available for consumers to purchase should they have concern
about privacy at near equal pricing to non secure conventional cordless
phones. Consumers do have a choice. |
|
TOKYO--This is where it all ends up, everything from bowling balls
and crooked dentures to purses, cell phones and umbrellas. Welcome to
the Tokyo Metropolitan Lost and Found, a veritable monument to the
misplaced, the abandoned, the rejected.
Drop something in a public restroom or in a subway corridor in
Tokyo and theres a good chance youll get it back, here in one of the
most honest nations on Earth, even if you dont necessarily want it.
And like so much else in Japan, the lost-and-found system is
traditional, very well organized and rigorously maintained.
Although this nondescript building doesnt get much natural light,
the 34 people who run the institution can read the seasons as easily as
experienced gardeners. Shorter days and colder winds bring skis and
snowboards over the transom. Warmer weather sprouts surfboards and
swimsuits. March--when most Japanese students graduate--brings stacks
of diplomas, while June yields wedding gifts. And any time of year, a
good . |
| Contents:
Finnish Executives Jailed for Software Piracy (Edupage)
Cellular phones and Pacemakers: a RISKY Combination (Peter M. Weiss via
Duane Thompson)
The Road Watches You: Smart highway systems may know too much
(Simson L. Garfinkel)
Using a car alarm to steal a car (Kevin Purcell)
Final Program for COMPASS 95 (John Rushby)
Safety through Quality Conference, 23-25 Oct, Cape Canaveral, Florida
``Cybercritical (Cliff Stolls new book) (Edupage)
Re: Portable phone interference in hospitals (Derek Hill)
Re: CyberWinter: A Forecast (Arthur A Mcgiven)
Re: Outrage! of the Month (Jeff Grigg)
Year 2000? Dont forget 1752! (Matthew D. Healy)
Re: Floating-point time (Andrew D. Fernandes, Peter Ludemann, Phil Brady)
Re: Radar-detector messages & cop-car computers (F. Barry Mulligan,
Mark Seecof, Richard Soderberg)
Info on RISKS (comp.risks), contributions, subscriptions, FTP, etc. |
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