> I'm looking for a list of telephone company modulation frequencies used on
> toll lines (trunk lines) to control switching between offices. Anyone
> know where I can find them. Used to know them by heart - 2600 to disconect
> and 300 - 1200 ?? for the control tones.
The best source, by far, fo
On Thu, Jul 27, 2000 at 02:20:26AM -0400, !Dr. Joe Baptista wrote:
> I'm looking for a list of telephone company modulation frequencies used on
> toll lines (trunk lines) to control switching between offices. Anyone
> know where I can find them. Used to know them by heart - 2600 to disconect
>
For the purposes of information only:
The Greek home direct number still accepts certain 2400/2600 hertz tones
(its a toll free number for doing reverse charge calls to greece, Im not
sure what you would call from the US to get to it), and last I heard you
could still use an old style bluebox to
X-Loop: openpgp.net
From: "Esteban Gutierrez-Moguel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > > I think your content needs mirrors.
> > I agree, and continue to work on it.
> a standard mirroring network is helpful, but what about using FreeNet?
Hehe... you're late. Someone has already started to post document
Officials said they already have found signs that
anarchists from a national organization based in
Oregon are in Los Angeles. Within the past few
weeks, police have arrested a handful of people
for taking pictures of downtown buildings from
Scientists spot Achilles heel of the Internet
Updated 2:29 PM ET July 26, 2000
By Patricia Reaney
LONDON (Reuters) - The complex structure of the Internet makes it
resistant to errors or failure but is also its Achilles heel, scientists in the
Unit
A while ago, I wrote implementation of Yarrow in Delphi. I just managed to
get the files (I haven't got them with me when I came to the US), and I'm
still not sure that it is a good implementation. It passes DIEHARD, but I
don't know if it goes through the "proper" stages (if that is needed) - tha
At 08:11 PM 7/26/00 -0400, Alan Olsen wrote:
>I agree with that. It also needs an OS that handles better under load.
>The times I have looked at it, it looked as if it was running on a Windows
>box. (I am unable to confirm that due to www.jya.com:80 not answering.)
>
>I am sure you can find a nu
At 11:47 PM 7/26/00 -0400, Kevin Elliott wrote:
>At 00:48 -0400 7/26/00, Tim May wrote:
>>At 12:06 AM -0400 7/26/00, Ernest Hua wrote:
>>>I thought recent presidents have been declaring a state of emergency
>>>for who knows how long.
>>
>>But that's not what is being talked about. You are not read
Alan Olsen wrote:
>
> I am sure you can find a number of willing mirror sites. (I would also
> suggest publishing signed and/or md5 hashes of the contents, lest there be
> tampering by the Forces of Evil(tm).)
Actually what's needed is some performance tuning. Login to the box, and
run top whe
When Napster goes down, there are going to be a lot of
folks switching to other file-exchange indices. What is
fascinating is that Napster has seeded disk drives with
tradable files, introduced a lot of people to the concept.
Trilobites didn't make it, but they sure fed a lot of
critters whose
I am getting these errors from several yahoo accounts. does anyone know what a
"message has wrong owner" error is? does this mean that yahoo is blocking list traffic?
In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, on 07/27/00
at 04:17 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
>Message from yahoo.com.
>Unable to deliver messag
A very good analysis.
And on a different tack, I expect/predict that Napster will reinvent
itself as a distributor of material with the permission of the record
companies and will then aggressively go after Gnutella, Freenet, and
Mojo types of sites. "Those who live by the sword..."
More com
On Thu, Jul 27, 2000 at 01:47:35PM -0400, Tim May wrote:
>
> Digression on "rent-seeking behavior." In an effort to stave off
> corporate extinction, the loss of all of their IPO dreams, and the
> laying-off of their employees, Napster will probably "cut a deal"
> with the RIAA.
They're alrea
> And on a different tack, I expect/predict that Napster will reinvent
> itself as a distributor of material with the permission of the record
> companies and will then aggressively go after Gnutella, Freenet, and
> Mojo types of sites. "Those who live by the sword..."
They already have: http
Tim May <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> A very good analysis.
>
> And on a different tack, I expect/predict that Napster will reinvent
> itself as a distributor of material with the permission of the record
> companies and will then aggressively go after Gnutella, Freenet, and
> Mojo types of s
X-Loop: openpgp.net
From: "petro" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> There was a presentation at the Bay Area Cypherpunks meat
> meet about "E", a capabilities based language. Is that along the
> lines of what you are looking for?
>
> I can't find anything on the web, but searching for "E" isn't
> going to ge
Yup, there have been two cases reported in Minnesota media recently of
"observers" being taken away to jail. In one, in Duluth, a guy who had drunk
several beers, was walking home, thru an alley, saw a guy laying on the ground
with a rent-a-cop standing nearby. He asked what was going on, the
At 12:23 PM 7/27/00 -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>A colleague asked yesterday "I wonder how much Diffie-Hellman is actually
>used?", as we were sitting around talking about authentication (in
particular)
>and security (in general) protocols.
Its used in PGPfone, because the parties have to b
At 01:02 PM 7/27/00 -0400, Tim May wrote:
>To elaborate on "generatable," something like a "CAD program for
>crypto" is what we were talking about. Bob Baldwin, when he was at
A library implementing a clean API or a new domain-specific language?
The latter tend to die out. The former tend to
At 12:42 PM 7/27/00 -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>>weeks, police have arrested a handful of people
>>for taking pictures of downtown buildings from
>
>It's the Picture Taking Crime - the buildings are copyrighted.
>
>The warnings are quite similar to those issued for Y2K (hello, Bill S. :-).
>U
LOL.. yet another idea of "how to deal with copyright". Is it legal if I
"borrow" the CD from the server when I start listening, and "return" it
afterwards? The server could have a number of licenses for each CD, and
"lock" them every time someone else is streaming them.
Mark
X-Loop: openpgp.net
On Thu, Jul 27, 2000 at 02:20:26AM -0400, !Dr. Joe Baptista wrote:
> Hello:
>
> I'm looking for a list of telephone company modulation frequencies used on
> toll lines (trunk lines) to control switching between offices. Anyone
> know where I can find them. Used to know them by heart - 2600 to di
23 matches
Mail list logo