2973 lines
95 KiB
Plaintext
2973 lines
95 KiB
Plaintext
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
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Equal Access and Modem Autodialers by Shadow 2600
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Now that AT&T is being divested of its local telephone companies, phone
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customers across the nation have to choose their long distance carrier as equal
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access is phased in. Advertising campaigns emphasize such aspects as low rates
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and operator assistance, but no one mentions a factor that will affect modem
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users who use auto dialers for long distance calls. Not all of the alternate
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long distance carriers provide called party answering supervision on all calls.
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Called party answering supervision basically has the telephone company start
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billing only when the called party answers the telephone. However, many of the
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alternate long distance companies still operate with the "fixed timeout" basis
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for charging. That is, if a call is held for a fixed length of time (usually
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30 seconds) the charging starts, whether or not the call was answered. This
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could cause modem owners large bills if they use autodialers to make long
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distance calls. Modems are usually set up to wait up to one minute when
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attempting to make a call, and thus have to timeout through busy signals, long
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call setup sequences, extender waits, and similar problems. This could result
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in many billed but never answered calls.
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Some of the other carriers provide it on calls to some cities, and others
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not support it at all. Only AT&T Communications provides called party
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answering supervision on all calls to all points at this time. It is almost
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impossible to get information on how a long distance company charges its calls
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as as they don't want to reveal how their billing is handled. The alternate
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carriers get called party supervision when the destination location goes equal
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access. However, there has been no quick action on the part of the alternate
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long distance companies to make use of the supervision data as they would have
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to get equipment for passing the information back to the billing computer at
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the originating point. Thus called party answering supervision information
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often ends up being ignored by these carriers even when available. Another
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point to remember is that called party answering supervision's availability
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depends on whether the destination has equal access, not the originating
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location. The lower long distance rates of alternate long distance rates must
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be weighed against the time out problem as it affects autodialing modems. One
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way to circumvent this is merely to set your modem to a shorter
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waiting-for-connect time, but this may not provide enough time for the call to
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go through. [For more information on this and other telecommunications topics
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call the Private Sector BBS at (201) 366- 4431]
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Page 160
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
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==Phrack Inc.==
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Volume One, Issue Two, Phile #6 of 9
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Toward Universal Information Services Via ISDN
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~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~ ~~~ ~~~~
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by Taran King
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From PROTO newsletter of AT&T Bell Laboratories
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------------------------------------------------------------
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Phase one, the Present.
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~~~~~ ~~~~ ~~~ ~~~~~~~~
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The local network of today, although still largely voice-oriented, is already
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on the path to Universal Information Services. Lightguide fiber is
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dramatically expanding the capacity of local networks, helping to lower the
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costs and increase the demand for high-band width, Information Age services.
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And public networks are increasingly digital and geared for data and special
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services. For example:
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o The AT&T Network Systems 5ESS (TM <riiiight>) switch, designed by Bell
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Laboratories, can serve as the hub of a local deployment of remote modules at
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locations up to 100 miles from a host central office.
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o The Integrated Special Services Network (ISSN) is a channel network that
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provides special services, customer control options and digital private lines
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rearrangeable under software control. The ISSN incorporates digital carrier
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terminating equipment such as the D4 Channel Bank, D5 Digital Terminal System
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and Digital Access and Cross-connect System (DACS).
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o The New Centrex is bringing greater levels of customer control, improved
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services and a broad range of data capabilities to the business customer.
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Today's public networks consist of multiple or overlay networks. The public
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switched network, or circuit network, mainly for voice, is the base network.
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Two kinds of overlay networks provide special services. Channel networks carry
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private lines leased by large customers and transmit much of today's data and
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image traffic; they also handle traffic for network operations support. Packet
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networks carry data communications, while packet switching is used internally
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to public networks for common channel signaling to set up, route and take down
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calls, or to give customers information. "Overlay networks help
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telecommunications companies efficiently meet growing demand for digital
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transmission and special services," says Stan Johnston, Market Planning
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Manager, Network Systems Evolution, in AT&T Network Systems. "Their integration
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into a single network, however, would be still more effective."
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Phase two, the Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN).
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~~~~~ ~~~~ ~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~
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The ISDN is a concept to which AT&T is committed - and it's the foundation
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for Universal Information Services. The central idea of ISDN, as AT&T Network
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Systems sees it, is to provide an individual user a link to the local central
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office of generous band-width - a digital subscriber line that can carry
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144,000 bits per second (sure beats 2400 baud!). The band-width is subdivided
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into two 64,000-bit channels, which may carry voice or data or both, and one
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16,000-bit channel for packetized signaling information or data transport.
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Such a link provides convenient "integrated" network access by accommodating
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voice, data and signaling over a single line.
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The ISDN will make it easier for a customer to get varied services from
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public and private networks. More bandwidth for big customers will be
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available through another ISDN access standard, the extended digital subscriber
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Page 161
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
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line, which provides 1.5 billion bits per second as 24 channels of 64,000 bits
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each.
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In 1986, new software from Bell Labs will enable the 5ESS switch to
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accommodate ISDN-sized 144,000-bit channels that standardize and simplify
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subscribers' use of local networks. AT&T is committed to future products that
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will also be ISDN-compatible. Other vendors, too, some of whom already plan to
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build premises, terminal, and other equipment to ISDN standards, will make ISDN
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a cooperative effort.
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By providing integrated digital access to networks, ISDN will make important
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progress toward the goal of Universal Information Services. But overlay
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networks will continue to divvy up the transport job. And messages needing
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less than 144,000 bits per second will not fill their allotted bandwidth,
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leaving capacity under utilized.
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Phase three, Universal Information Services.
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~~~~~ ~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~
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Rooted in the fertile ground of 5ESS switches, ISDN equipment and
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technologies such as wideband packet transport, Universal Information Services
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will bear fruit during the 1990s. From a single kind of network will hang
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services as different as apples, oranges and pears. Just as network access was
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integrated in ISDN, transport functions will increasingly be integrated by
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powerful new network equipment evolved from equipment developed for the ISDN.
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Where customers once got standard-sized ISDN channels, they'll get big
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bandwidth for large jobs, little bandwidth for small jobs.
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Page 162
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
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TOWARD UNIVERSAL INFORMATION SERVICES VIA ISDN
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Phase one, the present. The local network of today, although still largely
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voice oriented, is already on the path to Universal Information Services.
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Lightguide fiber is dramatically expanding the capacity of local networks,
|
|
helping to lower the costs and increase the demand for high-bandwidth,
|
|
Information Age services. And public networks are increasingly digital and
|
|
geared for data and special services. For example:
|
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|
|
* The AT&T Network Systems 5ESS switch, designed by Bell Laboratories, can
|
|
serve as the hub of a local digital network through deployment of remote
|
|
modules at locations up to 100 miles from a host central office.
|
|
|
|
* The Integrated Special Services Network (ISSN) is a channel networks that
|
|
provides special services, customer control options and digital private lines
|
|
rearrangeable under software control. The ISSN incorporates digital carrier
|
|
terminating equipment such as the D4 Channel Bank, D5 Digital Terminal System
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|
and Digital Access and Cross-connect Systems (DACS).
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|
|
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* The New Centrex is bringing greater levels of customer control, improved
|
|
services and a broad range of data capabilities to the business customer.
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|
|
|
Todays public networks consist of multiple or overlay networks. The public
|
|
switched network, or circuit network, is the base network. Two kinds of
|
|
overlay networks provide special services. Channel networks carry private
|
|
lines leased by large customers and transmit much of today's data and image
|
|
traffic; they also handle traffic for network operations support. Packet
|
|
networks carry data communications, while packet switching is used internal to
|
|
public networks for common channel signaling to set up, route and take down
|
|
calls, or to give customers information.
|
|
"Overlay networks help telecommunications companies efficiently meet growing
|
|
demand for digital transmission and special services," says Stan Johnston,
|
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Market Planning Manager, Network Systems Evolution, in AT&T Network Systems.
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|
"Their integration into a signal network, however, would be still
|
|
more effective."
|
|
Phase two, the Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN). The ISDN is a
|
|
concept to which AT&T is commited--and it's the foundation for Universal
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|
Information Services. The central idea of ISDN, as AT&T Network Systems sees
|
|
it, is to provide an individual user a link to the local central office of
|
|
generous bandwidth--a digital subscriber line that can carry 144,000 bits per
|
|
second. The bandwidth is subdivided into two 64,000-bit channels, which may
|
|
carry voice or data or both, and one 16,000-bit channel for packetized
|
|
signaling information or data transport. Such a link provides convenient
|
|
"integrated" network access by accommodating voice, data and signaling over a
|
|
single line.
|
|
The ISDN will make it easier for a customer to get varied services from
|
|
public and private networks. More bandwidth for big customers will be
|
|
available through another ISDN access standard, the extended digital subscriber
|
|
line, which provides 1.5 million bit per second as 24 channels of 64,000 bits
|
|
each.
|
|
In 1986, new software from Bell Labs will enable the 5ESS switch to
|
|
accommodate ISDN-sized 144,000-bit channels that standardize and simplify
|
|
subscribers' use of local networks. AT&T is committed to future products that
|
|
will also be ISDN-compatible. Other vendors, too, some of whom already plan to
|
|
build premises, terminal and other equipment to ISDN standards, will make ISDN
|
|
a cooperative effort.
|
|
By providing integrated digital access to networks, ISDN will make
|
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important progress toward the goal of Universal Information Services. But
|
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Page 163
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
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overlay networks will continue to divvy up the transport job. And messages
|
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needing less than 144,000 bits per second will not fill their allotted
|
|
bandwidth, leaving capacity underutilized.
|
|
Phase three, Universal Information Services. Rooted in the fertile ground
|
|
of 5ESS switches, ISDN equipment and technologies such as wideband packet
|
|
transport, Universal Information Services will bear fruit during the 1990s.
|
|
From a single kind of network will hang services as different as apples,
|
|
oranges and pears. Just as network access was integrated in ISDN, transport
|
|
functions will increasingly be integrated by powerful new equipment evolved
|
|
from equipment developed for the ISDN. Where customers once got standard-
|
|
sized ISDN channels, they'll get big bandwidth for large jobs, little bandwidth
|
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for small jobs.
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*** retyped from PROTO, AT&T Bell Laboratories report to executives on new
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technologies, without written permission from the editors. (heh, heh.)
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Subscriptions: $15.00 per year, published bi-monthly. Send check payable to
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"Bell Laboratories PROTO," to PROTO Circulation Manager, Room 3E-230, 150 John
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F. Kennedy Parkway, Short Hills, N.J. 07078.
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:LIQUID:CRYSTAL:
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wisdom is safety
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Page 164
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
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==Phrack Inc.==
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Volume One, Issue Two, Phile #7 of 9
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@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
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@ @
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@ _ _ _______ @
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@ | \/ | / _____/ @
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@ |_||_|etal / /hop @
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@ __________/ / @
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@ /___________/ @
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@ Headquarters of Phrack Newsletter @
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@ (314) 432-0756 @
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@ Proudly Presents @
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@ MCI Overview @
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@ Written on 11/16/85 @
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@ by @
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@ @
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@ Knight Lightning & Taran King @
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@ @
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@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
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MCI Communications Corporation, headquartered in Washington, D.C., provides a
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full range of domestic and international telecommunications services, including
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voice and data, telex and cable, paging and mobile telephone, and time
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sensitive message delivery.
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Since its founding in 1968, MCI has grown to more than $1.6 billion in annual
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sales and serves more than 1.9 million business, residential and government
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customers through its four major business units:
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MCI Telecommunications
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MCI Airsignal
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MCI International
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MCI Digital Information Services
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MCI TELECOMMUNICATIONS
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MCI Telecommunications provides domestic interstate long distance service
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throughout all 50 states, plus Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and major
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calling areas of Canada. It is also authorized to provide varying degrees of
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intrastate long distance service in some states.
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MCI also is the first long distance carrier other than AT&T to offer direct
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dial service overseas. International telephone service is available to all
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residential and commercial customers (with the exception of Private Line
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customers). In October, 1984 the first international service agreements were
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announced with the following countries: Argentina, Belgium, Brazil, East
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Germany, Greece, United Arab Emirates, and the United Kingdom.
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Total capital investment in MCI's long distance network is approximately $2
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billion. MCI's network, the second largest in the U.S., employs microwave
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optical fiber, satellite and various digital transmission technologies.
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Subscribers - Domestic Long Distance (as of 10/84)
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Page 165
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
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----------- ----------------------
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Residential 1.4 million
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Commercial .3 million
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Total 1.7 million
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Operations - (as of 10/84)
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Network Miles...20,543 (microwave, optical fiber, satellite)
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Circuits.......238,000
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Employees........9,500 (full-time, approx.)
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MCI AIRSIGNAL
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MCI Airsignal provides personal message delivery and car telephone services.
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MCI Message Service is offered in more than 50 metropolitan areas. In 1984,
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service will commence in New York City, Baltimore-Washington, Los Angeles, and
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Chicago. MCI car telephone service is offered in 20 markets.
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Personal Message Delivery Service
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ALPHANUMERIC MESSAGE SERVICE
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Displays up to 40-character message using letters and/or numbers. Memory and
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recall ability. Alerts subscriber with a silent visual alert or a soft tone.
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DISPLAY MESSAGE SERVICE
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Displays up to 24-digit message (e.g., phone number, stock quotes, sales
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figures, coded messages). Memory and recall capability. Alerts customer to
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message with a silent visual alert or a soft tone.
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TONE MESSAGE SERVICE
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Notifies customer of a message with a soft tone.
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VOICE MESSAGE SERVICE
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Receives message in actual voice of caller.
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EXPRESS MESSAGE SERVICE
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Receives and stores messages. Instantly alerts subscriber via pager when a
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message is received.
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Car Telephone Service
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Enables customers to place calls to or receive calls from anywhere in the
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world, 24 hours a day, as they travel in their cars. With the advent of new
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cellular technology, both the quality and the accessibility of car telephone
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service will vastly improve.
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MCI has thus far obtained franchises to operate a new kind of mobile phone
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service, cellular telephone, in Minneapolis and Pittsburgh, and has received
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favorable decisions from FCC administration law judges authorizing service in
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Los Angeles, Denver-Boulder, and Kansas City. MCI has applied for licenses to
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provide cellular service in 81 metropolitan areas.
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MCI Airsignal Branch Sales Offices
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Page 166
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
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Personal Message Service/Conventional Mobile Phone Service
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Birmingham (205) 942-2924
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Sacramento (916) 444-2350
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Memphis (901) 682-9658
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Cleveland (216) 464-7311
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Dallas (214) 788-5111
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Fresno (209) 486-7410
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Las Vegas (702) 382-7461
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Denver (303) 778-7878
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Portland (503) 227-2556
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Philadelphia (215) 677-9845
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Atlanta (404) 252-2114
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West Florida (813) 875-3404
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Minneapolis (612) 544-8175
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Kansas City (913) 648-8090
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Miami (305) 491-0122
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Pittsburgh (412) 343-1611
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Houston (713) 464-2516
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Bakersfield (805) 832-2346
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Cellular Telephone Offices
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Minneapolis-St. Paul (612) 544-3312
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Los Angeles (714) 527-0385
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Elsewhere in California (800) 344-3455
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Headquarters - Washington, D.C. (202) 429-9660
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MCI INTERNATIONAL
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MCI International provides private-line voice service to several overseas
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countries, and data and message services, including telex, cablegram, leased
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channel, and packet switching communications, to more than 200 overseas points.
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MCI has moved into two new areas of service: International direct-dial
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telephone service and international electronic mail and hard-copy delivery
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services.
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International Record Services
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TELEX SERVICE (domestic and international) permits instantaneous, two-way,
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written communications with other subscribers worldwide. Customers can send
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messages at any time, even though the receiving terminal may be unattended. MCI
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International offers access to its telex service from a variety of terminals
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and networks; not only subscribers with telex terminals but also those with
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communicating word processors, data terminals or computers that communicate
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over telephone lines can take advantage of MCI International telex service. To
|
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subscribers connected to its own telex network, MCI International offers World
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Message Services--a package of communications offerings including telex,
|
|
cablegram and MCI Mail services. Various service enhancements are available to
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save time, improve operating efficiency and simplify records keeping for telex
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users.
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CABLEGRAM SERVICE, the traditional means of international written
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|
communications, offers flexibility in delivery and economical rates for shorter
|
|
messages. Cablegrams can be delivered to virtually any overseas
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|
point.Subscribers with telex terminals or various other types of equipment can
|
|
access and TELUS cablegram switch and take advantage of such service
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|
|
Page 167
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
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enhancements as abbreviated addressing and departmental billing.
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LEASED
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CHANNEL SERVICE provides an exclusive line between a U.S. firm and it's
|
|
overseas office for private communications 24 hours a day. Each MCI
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|
International leased channel is tailored to meet the needs of a specific
|
|
customer for teleprinter, facsimile, voice and/or data traffic. For subscribers
|
|
with several offices requiring private communications with each other, MCI
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|
International offers a versatile message-switching service. Voice/data leases
|
|
can be configured to meet a whole array of communicating needs; for example,
|
|
one channel might carry data traffic from a computer at night, voice
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|
communications during office hours, and simultaneous teleprinter messages at
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|
any time. Data channels can handle requirements for traffic at any speed from
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1200 bits per second to 1.544 megabits per second.
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|
IMPACS SERVICE uses packet-switching technology to provide international
|
|
communications service between data terminals and computers. Impacs offers
|
|
on-line, real-time connections and enables many types of incompatible systems
|
|
to communicate. Impacs service offers virtually error-free transmission
|
|
because of the error-detection and retransmission capability of the network.
|
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|
|
INSTALINK SERVICE allows businesses overseas to use regular telex equipment to
|
|
access remote computing systems and databases in the U.S. Subscribers can
|
|
retrieve data from a computer-based information service or use a computing
|
|
system connecting to a packet-switching network in the U.S.
|
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|
|
INTERNATIONAL
|
|
FACSIMILE SERVICE enables subscribers to send duplicates of original documents
|
|
overseas quickly and efficiently, even when neither the sender or the receiver
|
|
has facsimile transmission equipment, or when the sender and receiver have
|
|
incompatible equipment.
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|
|
DATEL SERVICE provides automatic or voice-coordinated data transmission at
|
|
speeds up to 2400 bits per second. Either digital or analog facsimile traffic
|
|
can be transmitted via Datel. Datel facilities are conditioned to ensure
|
|
high-quality transmission. The MCI International switching center allows
|
|
communications between incompatible terminals.
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|
|
MARITIME SERVICES provide instant, high--quality contact between ships at sea
|
|
or offshore rigs, and between these vessels and land-based subscribers
|
|
worldwide.
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|
|
International Voice Services
|
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|
|
PRIVATE
|
|
LINE SERVICE provides, fast, easy access to a single overseas location at an
|
|
economical monthly rate. This technically efficient system maximizes the use
|
|
of line capacity by recognizing idle time and assigning a speaker to a
|
|
transmission path only when the path is needed. Users can dial a four-digit
|
|
extension from a regular business phone to reach a key overseas location.
|
|
|
|
International Mail Services
|
|
|
|
WORLD
|
|
MESSAGE SERVICE subscribers can access the domestic electronic mail and
|
|
hard-copy delivery offerings of MCI Mail. In addition, MCI International is
|
|
developing fast, low-cost services that will deliver electronic messages and
|
|
high-quality printed documents worldwide.
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Page 168
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
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Customer Service
|
|
|
|
THE CUSTOMER TROUBLE REPORTING ASSISTANCE CENTER at MCI International addresses
|
|
customer concerns such as equipment maintenance and service performance
|
|
questions. Customer service specialists, on duty 24 hours a day on business
|
|
days, answer questions and electronically route service requests to technicians
|
|
nationwide.
|
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|
|
MCI DIGITAL INFORMATION SERVICES CORP.
|
|
|
|
MCI Digital Information Services, MCI's newest unit, provides high-speed,
|
|
low-cost, time-sensitive message delivery (MCI Mail), either electronically or
|
|
via hard copy.
|
|
|
|
MCI Mail provides time-sensitive document delivery to anyone, anywhere vial
|
|
MCI's long-distance telephone network. MCI Mail can reach a recipient
|
|
instantly, in four hours or less, or overnight by noon the next day. Prices
|
|
are as much as 90 percent lower than comparable time-sensitive mail delivery
|
|
services. MCI Mail can be delivered electronically, terminal to terminal, or
|
|
laser printed on letterhead stationery with the customer's signature.
|
|
|
|
MCI Mail customers can even order gifts and services direct through MCI Mail,
|
|
ranging from software and paper for personal computers to investment advisory
|
|
services to travel specials.
|
|
|
|
There are no sign-up, monthly service charges or "connect time" charges for MCI
|
|
Mail. MCI Mail can be used by virtually any personal computer, word processor,
|
|
electronic typewriter, data terminal, telex, or other digital communications
|
|
device. The service is accessed by a local telephone call or 800 number.
|
|
|
|
MCI Mail
|
|
|
|
INSTANT delivery to an "electronic" mailbox.
|
|
|
|
FOUR-HOUR paper delivery by courier to 17 major metropolitan areas regardless
|
|
of point of origin.
|
|
|
|
OVERNIGHT paper delivery by courier by noon the next day in 20,000 continental
|
|
U.S. cities.
|
|
|
|
MCI LETTER transmitted electronically to the MCI digital postal center nearest
|
|
its destination, then delivered locally by the U.S. Postal Service.
|
|
|
|
TELEX DISPATCH enables MCI Mail subscribers to transmit messages to the more
|
|
than 1.6 million telex subscribers worldwide.
|
|
|
|
VOLUME MAIL enables customers to send large mailings in a variety of letter
|
|
formats, at substantial savings in delivery time and expense.
|
|
|
|
============================================================
|
|
Look for more MCI Files coming to Metal Shop soon!
|
|
|
|
This has been a Knight Lightning Presentation
|
|
============================================================
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Page 169
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
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|
|
Reference Tables
|
|
|
|
Just some notes that you will always try to find but can never!
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Page 170
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
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|
|
==Phrack Inc.==
|
|
Volume One, Issue One, Phile #5 of 8
|
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|
|
Using MCI Calling Cards
|
|
by
|
|
Knight Lightning
|
|
of the
|
|
2600 Club!
|
|
|
|
How to dial international calls on MCI:
|
|
|
|
"Its easy to use MCI for international calling."
|
|
|
|
1. Dial your MCI access number and authorization code (code = 14 digit number,
|
|
however the first 10 digits are the card holders NPA+PRE+SUFF).
|
|
|
|
2. Dial 011
|
|
|
|
3. Dial the country code
|
|
|
|
4. Dial the city code and the PRE+SUFF that you want.
|
|
|
|
Countries served by MCI:
|
|
|
|
Country code|Country code
|
|
-------------------------------------|--------------------------------
|
|
Algeria..........................213 |New Zealand..................064
|
|
Argentina........................054 |Northern Ireland.............044
|
|
Australia........................061 |Oman.........................968
|
|
Belgium..........................032 |Papua New Guinea.............675
|
|
Brazil...........................055 |Qatar........................974
|
|
Canada................Use Area Codes |Saudi Arabia.................966
|
|
Cyprus...........................357 |Scotland.....................044
|
|
Denmark..........................045 |Senegal......................221
|
|
Egypt............................020 |South Africa.................027
|
|
England..........................044 |Sri Lanka....................094
|
|
German Democratic Republic |Sweden.......................046
|
|
(East Germany)...................037 |Taiwan.......................886
|
|
Greece...........................030 |Tanzania.....................255
|
|
Jordan...........................962 |Tunisa.......................216
|
|
Kenya............................254 |United Arab Emirates.........971
|
|
Kuwait...........................965 |Wales........................044
|
|
Malawi...........................265 |
|
|
======================================================================
|
|
|
|
Thats 33 countries in all. To get the extender for these calls dial 950-1022 or
|
|
1-800-624-1022.
|
|
|
|
For local calling:
|
|
|
|
1. Dial 950-10222 or 1-800-624-1022
|
|
|
|
2. Wait for tone
|
|
|
|
3. Dial "0", the area code, the phone number, and the 14 digit authorization
|
|
code. You will hear 2 more tones that let you know you are connected.
|
|
|
|
- Knight Lightning --> The 2600 Club!
|
|
|
|
Page 171
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
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|
|
=====================================================================
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Page 172
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|
|
The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
|
|
|
AT&T INTERNATIONAL DIALING COUNTRY CODES AS OF 2-17-85
|
|
|
|
FILE BY: Lock Lifter
|
|
+=========================+
|
|
|
|
*UNITED KINGDOM/IRELAND
|
|
------------------------------------
|
|
IRELAND.........................353
|
|
UNITED KINGDOM...................44
|
|
|
|
*EUROPE
|
|
------------------------------------
|
|
ANDORRA..........................33
|
|
AUSTRIA..........................43
|
|
BELGIUM..........................32
|
|
CYPRUS..........................357
|
|
CZECHOLSLOVAKIA..................42
|
|
DENMARK..........................45
|
|
FINLAND.........................358
|
|
FRANCE...........................33
|
|
GERMAN DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC.......37
|
|
GERMANY, FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF.....49
|
|
GIBRALTAR.......................350
|
|
GREECE...........................30
|
|
HUNGARY..........................36
|
|
ICELAND.........................354
|
|
ITALY............................39
|
|
LIECHTENSTEIN....................41
|
|
LUXEMBOURG......................352
|
|
MONACO...........................33
|
|
NETHERLANDS......................31
|
|
NORWAY...........................47
|
|
POLAND...........................48
|
|
PORTUGAL........................351
|
|
ROMANIA..........................40
|
|
SAN MARINO.......................39
|
|
SPAIN............................34
|
|
SWEDEN...........................46
|
|
SWITZERLAND......................41
|
|
TURKEY...........................90
|
|
VATICAN CITY.....................39
|
|
YUGOSLAVIA.......................38
|
|
|
|
*CENTRAL AMERICA
|
|
------------------------------------
|
|
BELIZE..........................501
|
|
COSTA RICA......................506
|
|
EL SALVADOR.....................503
|
|
GUATEMALA.......................502
|
|
HONDURAS........................504
|
|
NICARAGUA.......................505
|
|
PANAMA..........................507
|
|
|
|
*AFRICA
|
|
------------------------------------
|
|
ALGERIA.........................213
|
|
CAMEROON........................237
|
|
EGYPT............................20
|
|
|
|
Page 173
|
|
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
|
|
|
ETHIOPIA........................251
|
|
GABON...........................241
|
|
IVORY COAST.....................225
|
|
KENYA...........................254
|
|
LESOTHO.........................266
|
|
LIBERIA.........................231
|
|
LIBYA...........................218
|
|
MALAWI..........................265
|
|
MOROCCO.........................212
|
|
NAMIBIA.........................264
|
|
NIGERIA.........................234
|
|
SENEGAL.........................221
|
|
SOUTH AFRICA.....................27
|
|
SWAZILAND.......................268
|
|
TANZANIA........................255
|
|
TUNISIA.........................216
|
|
UGANDA..........................256
|
|
ZAMBIA..........................260
|
|
ZIMBABWE........................263
|
|
|
|
*PACIFIC
|
|
------------------------------------
|
|
AMERICAN SAMOA..................684
|
|
AUSTRAILIA.......................61
|
|
BRUNEI..........................673
|
|
FIJI............................679
|
|
FRENCH POLYNESIA................689
|
|
GUAM............................671
|
|
HONG KONG.......................852
|
|
INDONESIA........................62
|
|
JAPAN............................81
|
|
KOREA, REPUBLIC OF...............82
|
|
MALAYSIA.........................60
|
|
NEW CALEDONIA...................687
|
|
NEW ZEALAND......................64
|
|
PAPUA NEW GUINEA................675
|
|
PHILIPPINES......................63
|
|
SAIPAN..........................670
|
|
SINGAPORE........................65
|
|
TAIWAN..........................886
|
|
THAILAND.........................66
|
|
|
|
*INDIAN OCEAN
|
|
------------------------------------
|
|
PAKISTAN.........................92
|
|
SRI LANKA........................94
|
|
|
|
*SOUTH AMERICA
|
|
------------------------------------
|
|
ARGENTINA........................54
|
|
BOLIVIA.........................591
|
|
BRAZIL...........................55
|
|
CHILE............................56
|
|
COLOMBIA.........................57
|
|
ECUADOR.........................593
|
|
GUYANA..........................592
|
|
PARAGUAY........................595
|
|
PERU.............................51
|
|
|
|
Page 174
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
|
|
|
SURINAME........................597
|
|
URUGUAY.........................598
|
|
VENEZUELA........................58
|
|
|
|
*NEAR EAST
|
|
------------------------------------
|
|
BAHRAIN.........................973
|
|
IRAN.............................98
|
|
IRAQ............................964
|
|
ISRAEL..........................972
|
|
JORDAN..........................962
|
|
KUWAIT..........................965
|
|
OMAN............................968
|
|
QATAR...........................974
|
|
SAUDI ARABIA....................966
|
|
UNITED ARAB EMIRATES............971
|
|
YEMEN ARAB REPUBLIC.............967
|
|
|
|
*CARIBBEAN/ATLANTIC
|
|
------------------------------------
|
|
FRENCH ANTILLES.................596
|
|
GUANTANAMO BAY (US NAVY BASE)....53
|
|
HAITI...........................509
|
|
NETHERLANDS ANTILLES............599
|
|
ST. PIERRE AND MIQUELON.........508
|
|
|
|
*INDIA
|
|
------------------------------------
|
|
INDIA............................91
|
|
|
|
*CANADA
|
|
------------------------------------
|
|
TO CALL CANADA, DIAL 1 + AREA CODE +
|
|
LOCAL NUMBER.
|
|
|
|
*MEXICO
|
|
------------------------------------
|
|
TO CALL MEXICO, DIAL 011 + 52 + CITY CODE+ LOCAL NUMBER.
|
|
|
|
***NOTES :DO NOT FORGET ABOUT THE TIME DIFFERENCE WHEN CALLING OUTSIDE OF YOUR
|
|
TIME ZONE. CALLING CARDS CAN BE USED OVER SEAS TO CALL BACK INTO THE U.S. FOR
|
|
FURTHER INFORMATION CALL TOLL-FREE 1-800-874-0000. DIAL '#' AFTER THE COMPLETE
|
|
NUMBER TO MAKE THE CALL GO THROUGH FASTER.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
Page 175
|
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|
|
The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
|
|
|
**************************************
|
|
* *
|
|
* International Dialing Codes *
|
|
* Country + Routing *
|
|
* *
|
|
* (Typed by The Dagda Mor) *
|
|
* (Edited by The Jammer) *
|
|
* *
|
|
**************************************
|
|
|
|
To dial international calls:
|
|
|
|
International Access Code + Country code + Routing code
|
|
|
|
Example :
|
|
|
|
To call Frankfurt, Germany, you would do the following:
|
|
|
|
011 + 49 + 611 + (# wanted) + # sign(octothrope)
|
|
|
|
The # sign at the end is to tell Bell that you are done entering in all the
|
|
needed info.
|
|
|
|
Here is the list of Country Codes, listed next to the country, and the routing
|
|
codes listed next to the city.
|
|
|
|
Andorra- 33 Argentina- 54
|
|
------- ---------
|
|
all points- 078 Buenos Aires- 1
|
|
|
|
|
|
Australia- 61 Austria- 43
|
|
--------- -------
|
|
Melbourne- 3 Innsbruck- 5222
|
|
Sydney- 2 Vienna- 222
|
|
|
|
|
|
Bahrain- 973 Belgium- 32
|
|
------- -------
|
|
no routing needed Antwerp- 31
|
|
Brussels- 2
|
|
|
|
|
|
Belize- 501 Bolivia- 591
|
|
------ -------
|
|
no routing needed La Paz- 2
|
|
|
|
|
|
Brazil- 591 Chile- 56
|
|
------ -----
|
|
Brasilia-61 Santiago- 2
|
|
Rio de Janeiro- 21 Valparaiso- 31
|
|
Sao Paulo- 11
|
|
|
|
|
|
China- 86 Colombia- 56
|
|
----- --------
|
|
Tainan- 62 none needed
|
|
|
|
Page 176
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
|
|
|
Taipei- 2
|
|
|
|
|
|
Costa Rica- 506 Cyprus- 357
|
|
----- ---- ------
|
|
no routing needed Nicosia- 21
|
|
|
|
|
|
Denmark- 45 Ecuador- 593
|
|
------- -------
|
|
Aalborg- 8 Cuenca- 4
|
|
Copenhagen 1 or 2 Quito- 2
|
|
|
|
|
|
El Salvador- 503 Fiji- 679
|
|
---------- ----
|
|
no routing needed none needed
|
|
|
|
|
|
France- 33 Germany- 49
|
|
------ -------
|
|
Bordeaux- 56 Berlin- 30
|
|
Marseille- 91 Bonn- 228
|
|
Nice- 93 Frankfurt- 661
|
|
Paris- 1 Munich- 89
|
|
|
|
|
|
German. Rep- 37 Greece- 30
|
|
------- --- ------
|
|
Berlin- 2 Athens- 1
|
|
Rhodes- 241
|
|
|
|
|
|
Guam- 671 Guatamala- 502
|
|
---- ---------
|
|
no routing needed Guatemala City- 2
|
|
|
|
|
|
Guyana- 592 Haiti- 509
|
|
------ -----
|
|
Georgetown- 02 Port Au Prince- 1
|
|
|
|
|
|
Hoduras- 504 Hong Kong- 852
|
|
------- ---- ----
|
|
no routing needed Hong Kong- 5
|
|
Kowloon- 3
|
|
|
|
|
|
Indonesia- 62 Iran- 98
|
|
--------- ----
|
|
Jakarta- 21 Teheran- 21
|
|
|
|
|
|
Iraq- 964 Ireland- 353
|
|
---- -------
|
|
Baghdad- 1 Dublin- 1
|
|
Galway- 91
|
|
|
|
Page 177
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Israel- 978 Italy- 39
|
|
------ -----
|
|
Haifa- 4 Florence- 55
|
|
Jerusalem- 2 Naples- 81
|
|
Tel Aviv- 3 Rome- 6
|
|
Venice- 41
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ivory Coast- 225 Japan- 81
|
|
----- ----- -----
|
|
no routing needed Hiroshima- 822
|
|
Tokyo- 3
|
|
Yokohama- 45
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kenya- 254 Korea- 82
|
|
----- -----
|
|
Nairobi- 2 Pusan- 51
|
|
Seoul- 2
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kuwait- 965 Liberia- 231
|
|
------ -------
|
|
no routing needed none needed
|
|
|
|
|
|
Libya- 218 Lechtenstein- 4
|
|
----- ------------
|
|
Tripoli- 21 All points- 75
|
|
|
|
|
|
Luxembourg- 352 Malaysia- 60
|
|
---------- --------
|
|
no routing needed Kuala Lumpur- 3
|
|
|
|
|
|
Monaco- 33 Netherlands- 31
|
|
------ -----------
|
|
All points- 93 Amsterdam- 20
|
|
Rotterdam- 10
|
|
The Hague- 70
|
|
|
|
|
|
New Caledonia- 687 New Zealand- 64
|
|
--- --------- --- -------
|
|
no routing needed Auckland- 9
|
|
Wellinton- 4
|
|
|
|
|
|
Nicaragua- 505 Nigeria- 234
|
|
--------- -------
|
|
Managua- 2 Lagos- 1
|
|
|
|
|
|
Norway- 47 Panama- 507
|
|
------ ------
|
|
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|
Page 178
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
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|
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Bergen- 5 none needed
|
|
Oslo- 2
|
|
|
|
|
|
Papua New Guinea-675 Paraguay- 595
|
|
----- --- ------ --------
|
|
no routing needed Asuncion- 21
|
|
|
|
|
|
Peru- 51 Phillippines- 63
|
|
---- ------------
|
|
Arequipa- 542 Manila- 2
|
|
Lima- 14
|
|
|
|
Portugal- 351 Romania- 40
|
|
-------- -------
|
|
Lisbon- 19 Bucuresti- 0
|
|
|
|
|
|
San Marino- 39 Saudi Arabia- 966
|
|
--- ------ ----- ------
|
|
All points- 541 Riyadh- 1
|
|
|
|
|
|
Senegal- 221 South Africa- 27
|
|
------- ----- ------
|
|
no routing needed Cape Town- 21
|
|
Pretoria- 12
|
|
|
|
|
|
Spain- 34 Sri Lanka- 94
|
|
----- --- -----
|
|
Barcelona- 3 Colombo- 1
|
|
Canary Is.- 28
|
|
Madrid- 1
|
|
Seville- 54
|
|
|
|
|
|
Suriname- 597 Sweden- 46
|
|
-------- ------
|
|
no routing needed Goteborg- 31
|
|
Stockholm- 8
|
|
|
|
|
|
Switzerland- 41 Tahiti- 689
|
|
----------- ------
|
|
Berne- 31 none needed
|
|
Geneva- 22
|
|
Lucerne- 41
|
|
Zurich- 1
|
|
|
|
|
|
Thailand- 66 Tunisia- 216
|
|
-------- -------
|
|
Bangkok- 2 Tunis- 1
|
|
|
|
|
|
Turkey- 90 United Arab
|
|
|
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Page 179
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
|
|
|
------ Emirates- 971
|
|
Istanbul- 11 --------
|
|
Abu Dhabi- 2
|
|
Ajman- 6
|
|
Al Ain- 3
|
|
Aweir- 49
|
|
Dubai- 4
|
|
Fujairah- 91
|
|
Jebel Dhana- 5
|
|
Sharjah- 6
|
|
Umm-Al-Quwain- 6
|
|
|
|
|
|
United Kingdom- 44 USSR- 7
|
|
------ ------- ----
|
|
Belfast- 232 Kiev- 044
|
|
Cardiff- 222 Leningrad- 812
|
|
Edinburgh- 31 Minsk- 017
|
|
Glasgow- 41 Moscow- 095
|
|
Liverpool- 51 Tallinn- 0142
|
|
London- 1
|
|
|
|
Vatican City- 39 Venezuela- 58
|
|
------- ---- ---------
|
|
All points- 6 Caracas- 2
|
|
Maracaibo- 61
|
|
|
|
Yugoslavia- 38
|
|
----------
|
|
Belgrade- 11
|
|
Zagreb- 41
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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Page 180
|
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
|
|
|
**************************************
|
|
* *
|
|
* MAX ACCESS PORTS *
|
|
* *
|
|
* (LEXITEL CORPORATION) *
|
|
* *
|
|
* WORD PROCESSED BY THE DAGDA MOR *
|
|
* *
|
|
**************************************
|
|
|
|
ADRIAN,MI............313-263-0191 LIVONIA, MI..........313-261-6970
|
|
AKRON,OH.............216-275-9814 LOS ANGELES, CA......213-624-9041
|
|
ANN ARBOR, MI........313-451-2121 LOUISVILLE, KY.......502-568-6204
|
|
ATLANTA, GA..........404-525-1769 MARION, OH...........614-387-1011
|
|
AVON LAKE, OH........216-933-2823 MCKEESPORT, PA.......412-664-4870
|
|
BADEN, PA............412-869-1360 MENTOR, OH...........216-255-1645
|
|
BALTIMORE, MD........301-444-7280 MIDDLETOWN, OH.......513-423-1066
|
|
BEAVER FALLS, PA.....412-847-3640 MILWAUKEE, WI........414-933-1880
|
|
BIRMINGHAM, MI.......313-649-0730 MINNEAPOLIS, MN......612-375-0280
|
|
BOSTON, MA...........617-267-9134 MONESSEN, PA.........412-684-8710
|
|
BUFFALO, NY..........716-854-0802 MORTON GROVE,IL......312-950-1066
|
|
BUTLER, PA...........412-285-9081 NEWARK, NJ...........201-624-5040
|
|
CANTON, OH...........216-455-1425 NEWARK, OH...........614-349-8754
|
|
CHICAGO, IL..........312-950-1066 NEW CASTLE, PA.......412-656-9420
|
|
CHILLICOTHE, OH......614-772-1066 NEW YORK, NY.........212-950-1066
|
|
CINCINNATI, OH.......513-421-1880 OAK LAWN, IL.........312-950-1066
|
|
CLEVELAND, OH........216-771-6614 PHILADELPHIA, PA.....215-751-9711
|
|
COLUMBUS, OH.........614-950-1066 PITTSBURG, PA........412-391-9532
|
|
DALLAS, TX...........214-653-1047 PLYMOUTH, MI.........313-451-2121
|
|
DAYTON, OH...........513-223-0366 PONTIAC, MI..........313-332-0500
|
|
DETROIT, MI..........313-950-1066 PORT HURON, MI.......313-982-7115
|
|
ELK GROVE, IL........312-950-1066 PHOENIX, AZ..........602-242-0252
|
|
ELYRIA, OH...........419-323-4431 QUEENS, NY...........718-204-7330
|
|
FINDLAY, OH..........419-424-5934 SANDUSKY, OH.........419-625-1289
|
|
GLEENSHAW, PA........412-486-7394 SHARON, PA...........412-983-0100
|
|
GRAND RAPIDS, MI.....616-456-7925 SPRINGFIELD, OH......513-950-1066
|
|
GREENSBURG, PA.......412-836-8110 STEUBENVILLE, OH.....614-283-1756
|
|
HACKENSACK, NJ.......201-342-2815 ST. LOUIS, MO........314-289-9100
|
|
HOUSTON, TX..........713-224-0982 ST. PAUL, WI.........612-375-0280
|
|
INDIANA, PA..........412-349-8760 TOLEDO, OH...........419-255-1316
|
|
INDIANAPOLIS, IN.....317-638-4442 TROY, OH.............513-335-2303
|
|
KALAMAZOO, MI........616-342-0266 TURTLE CREEK, PA.....412-823-1500
|
|
KANSAS CITY, MO......816-474-6193 WASHINGTON, DC.......202-479-4411
|
|
KOKOMO, IN...........317-453-9932 WASHINGTON, PA.......412-225-1800
|
|
LA GRANGE, IL........312-950-1066 WARREN, MI...........313-268-9120
|
|
LANCASTER, OH........614-687-0159 XENIA, OH............513-376-2991
|
|
LANSING, MI..........517-950-1066 YOUNGSTOWN, OH.......216-746-2021
|
|
LAFAYETTE, IN........317-423-5492 ZANESVILLE, OH.......614-454-6815
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Page 181
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
|
|
|
******************** METROFONE ACCESS NUMBERS ********************
|
|
|
|
ANAHEIM, CA (714)527-7055 LOS ANGELES, CA (213)992-8282
|
|
ATLANTA, GA (404)223-1000 LOS ANGELES, CA (213)202-6117
|
|
AUSTIN, TX (512)474-6057 MIAMI, FL (305)326-3300
|
|
BALTIMORE, MD (301)659-7700 MILWAUKEE, WI (414)277-1805
|
|
BEAUMONT, TX (713)833-9331 MINNEAPOLIS, MN (612)370-9000
|
|
BOSTON, MA (617)482-3222 NEW ORLEANS, LA (504)566-8500
|
|
BUFFALO, NY (716)852-9200 NEW YORK, NY (212)732-7430
|
|
CHICAGO, IL (312)853-4700 NEWARK, NJ (201)645-9220
|
|
CINCINNATI, OH (513)241-1747 OAKLAND, CA (415)836-6900
|
|
CLEVELAND, OH (216)861-5163 OKLAHOMA CITY, OK (405)232-9011
|
|
COLUMBUS, OH (614)224-0577 OMAHA, NE (402)422-1120
|
|
CULVER CITY, CA (213)410-0078 PHILADELPHIA, PA (215)351-0100
|
|
DALLAS, TX (214)742-4500 PITTSBURGH, PA (412)261-5720
|
|
DAYTON, OH (513)228-1576 RENO, NV (702)329-1025
|
|
DENVER, CO (303)623-5326 RICHMOND, VA (804)225-1920
|
|
DETROIT, MI (313)963-4847 ST. LOUIS, MO (314)342-1130
|
|
EL MONTE, CA (213)350-1028 SACRAMENTO, CA (916)443-6921
|
|
ELK GROVE, IL (312)981-8870 SAN ANTONIO, TX (512)224-9600
|
|
FT. LAUDERDALE, FL (305)462-3530 SAN DIEGO, CA (714)233-0327
|
|
FT. WORTH, TX (817)338-1639 SAN FRANCISCO, CA (415)956-0162
|
|
HACKENSACK, NJ (201)487-3155 SAN JOSE, CA (408)947-7606
|
|
HARTFORD, CT (203)522-0003 SAN MATEO, CA (415)579-6001
|
|
HAWTHORNE, NJ (201)427-1100 SANTA ANA, CA (714)972-9515
|
|
HINSDALE, IL (312)986-0566 SEATTLE, WA (206)382-0910
|
|
HOUSTON, TX (713)224-9417 SKOKIE, IL (312)679-8120
|
|
HUNTINGTON BEACH, CA (714)972-8515 SYRACUSE, NY (315)474-3911
|
|
INDIANAPOLIS, IN (317)635-6284 TOLEDO, OH (419)243-1046
|
|
KANSAS CITY, KS (913)621-3186 WASHINGTON, DC (202)737-2051
|
|
LONG ISLAND, NY (516)443-5402
|
|
LOS ANGELES, CA (213)629-1026
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
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|
|
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Page 182
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
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|
|
Area Codes In Numerical Order, by The Jammer
|
|
______________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
201 Newark New Jersey 519 London Ontario
|
|
202 Washington D.C (all) 601 Mississippi (all)
|
|
203 Connecticut (all) 602 Arizona (all)
|
|
205 Alabama (all) 603 New Hampshire (all)
|
|
206 Seattle Washington 605 South Dakota (all)
|
|
207 Maine (all) 606 Winchester Kentucky
|
|
208 Idaho (all) 607 Binghamton New York
|
|
212 Bronx Nyc, New York 608 Madison Wisconsin
|
|
212 Manhattan Nyc, New York 609 Trenton New Jersey
|
|
213 Los Angeles California 612 St. Paul Minnesota
|
|
214 Dallas Texas 613 Ottawa Ontario
|
|
215 Philadelphia Pennsylvania 614 Columbus Ohio
|
|
216 Cleveland Ohio 615 Nashville Tennessee
|
|
217 Springfield Illinois 616 Grand Rapids Michigan
|
|
218 Duluth Minnesota 617 Boston Massachusetts
|
|
219 Gary Indiana 618 Alton Illinois
|
|
301 Maryland (all) 619 San Diego California
|
|
303 Colorado (all) 700 Teleconference (all)
|
|
304 West Virginia (all) 701 North Dakota (all)
|
|
305 Miami Florida 702 Nevada (all)
|
|
305 Orlando Florida 703 Alexandria Virginia
|
|
307 Wyoming (all) 704 Charlotte North Carolina
|
|
308 Abott Nebraska 705 North Bay Ontario
|
|
309 Peoria Illinois 712 Councilbluffs Iowa
|
|
312 Chicago Illinois 713 Houston Texas
|
|
313 Detroit Michigan 714 Anaheim California
|
|
314 St. Louis Missouri 715 Bay City Wisconsin
|
|
315 Syracuse New York 716 Buffalo New York
|
|
316 Wichita Kansas 716 Rochester New York
|
|
317 Indinapolis Illinois 717 Harrisburg Pennsylvania
|
|
318 Lake charles Lousiana 800 Toll Free (all)
|
|
319 Davenport Iowa 801 Utah (all)
|
|
401 Rhode Island (all) 802 Vermont (all)
|
|
402 Omaha Nebraska 803 South Carolina (all)
|
|
404 Atlanta Georgia 804 Richmond Virgina
|
|
405 Oklahoma City Oklahoma 805 Bakersfield California
|
|
406 Montana (all) 806 Amarillo Texas
|
|
408 San Jose California 807 Thunder Bay Ontario
|
|
412 Pittsburg Pennsylvania 808 Hawaii (all)
|
|
413 Springfield Massachusetts 809 Bermuda (all)
|
|
414 Milwaukee Wisconsin 809 Bahamas (all)
|
|
415 San Francisco California 809 Puerto Rico (all)
|
|
416 Toronto Onterio 809 Virgin Islands (all)
|
|
417 Joplin Missouri 812 Evansville Indiana
|
|
418 Quebec Quebec 812 Dade park Kentucky
|
|
419 Toledo Ohio 814 Johnston Pennsylvania
|
|
501 Arkansas (all) 815 Rockford Illinois
|
|
502 Frankfort Kentucky 816 Independence Missouri
|
|
503 Oregon (all) 817 Fort Worth Texas
|
|
504 New Orleans Louisiana 818 Burbank California
|
|
504 Baton Rouge Louisiana 819 Trois Riv. Quebec
|
|
505 New Mexico (all) 900 Dial-it (all)
|
|
507 Rochester Minnesota 901 Memphis Tennessee
|
|
509 Pullman Washington 904 Talahassee Florida
|
|
512 Austin Texas 906 Escanaba Michigan
|
|
|
|
Page 183
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
|
|
|
513 Cincinnati Ohio 907 Alaska (all)
|
|
514 Montreal Quebec 912 Savannah Georgia
|
|
515 Des Moines Iowa 913 Kansas City Kansas
|
|
516 Hempstead New York 915 El Paso Texas
|
|
517 Lansing Michigan 916 Sacramento California
|
|
518 Albany New York 918 Tulsa Oklahoma
|
|
919 Raleigh North Carolina
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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Page 184
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
|
|
|
==Phrack Inc.==
|
|
Volume One, Issue Two, Phile #5 of 9
|
|
|
|
Updated from November 26, 1985
|
|
Tac Dialups taken from Arpanet
|
|
by Phantom Phreaker
|
|
|
|
TAC DIALUPS SORTED BY LOCATION 26-NOV-85
|
|
|
|
State/Country 300 Baud 1200 Baud 1200 Type
|
|
------------- --------------- ----------------- ---------
|
|
|
|
ALABAMA
|
|
Anniston Army Depot [M]
|
|
(ANNIS-MIL-TAC) (205) 235-6285 (R4) (205) 235-7650 B/V
|
|
(205) 237-5731 (R8) (205) 237-5731 (R8) B/V
|
|
(205) 237-5770 (R8) (205) 237-5779 (R8) B/V
|
|
(205) 237-5805 (R8) (205) 237-5805 (R8) B/V
|
|
|
|
*Please note: When accessing the Anniston TAC you must first enter a
|
|
<RETURN>, then enter DDN <RETURN>. After you receive CLASS DDN START,
|
|
proceed as normal.
|
|
|
|
Gunter AFS [M]
|
|
|
|
(GUNTER-TAC) (205) 279-3576
|
|
(205) 279-4682
|
|
|
|
Redstone Arsenal [M]
|
|
(MICOM-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
ARIZONA
|
|
Ft. Huachuca [M]
|
|
(HUAC-MIL-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
Yuma [M]
|
|
(YUMA-TAC) (602) 328-2186 (602) 328-2186 B/V
|
|
(602) 328-2187 (602) 328-2187 B/V
|
|
(602) 328-2188 (602) 328-2188 B/V
|
|
|
|
CALIFORNIA (NORTHERN)
|
|
Alameda [M]
|
|
(ALAMEDA-MIL-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
Menlo Park [M]
|
|
(SRI-MIL-TAC) (415) 327-5440 (R3) (415) 327-5440 (R3) B
|
|
|
|
(USGS3-TAC) [M] [no dialups]
|
|
|
|
Moffett Field [M]
|
|
(AMES-TAC) [no dialups; contact NSC for access]
|
|
William Jones - (415) 694-6482
|
|
(FTS) 494-6482
|
|
(AV) 359-6482
|
|
|
|
Monterey [M]
|
|
(NPS-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
|
|
Page 185
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
|
|
|
Sacsamento [M]
|
|
(MCCLELLAN1-MIL-TAC) [none known]
|
|
(MCCLELLAN2-MIL-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
Stanford [A]
|
|
(SU-TAC) (415) 327-5220
|
|
|
|
CALIFORNIA (SOUTHERN)
|
|
China Lake [M]
|
|
(NWC-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
|
|
Edwards AFB [M]
|
|
(EDWARD-MIL-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
El Segundo [M]
|
|
(AFSC-SD-TAC) (213) 643-9204 (213) 643-9204 B/V
|
|
|
|
Los Angeles [A]
|
|
(USC-TAC) (213) 749-5436
|
|
|
|
Los Angeles [A]
|
|
(USC-ARPA-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
San Diego [M]
|
|
(ACCAT-TAC) (619) 225-1641 (R4) (619) 225-6903 V
|
|
(619) 225-6946 (R3)
|
|
(619) 223-2148 V
|
|
(619) 226-7884 (R2)
|
|
|
|
Santa Monica
|
|
(RAND-ARPA-TAC) [A]
|
|
(213) 393-9230
|
|
(213) 393-9237
|
|
(213) 393-9238
|
|
(213) 393-9239
|
|
|
|
(RAND2-MIL-TAC) [M] [none known]
|
|
|
|
COLORADO
|
|
Denver Fed Ctr [M]
|
|
(USGS2-TAC) (303) 232-0206 (303) 232-0206 B/V
|
|
|
|
Lowry Air Force Base [M]
|
|
(LOWRY-MIL-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
D.C.
|
|
Washington
|
|
[Andrews AFB] [M]
|
|
(AFSC-HQ-TAC) (301) 967-7930 (R16) (301) 967-7930 (R16) B
|
|
(301) 736-2990 (R4) (301) 736-2990 (R4) B
|
|
(301) 736-2998 (R2) (301) 736-2998 (R2) B
|
|
|
|
(PENTAGON-TAC) (202) 553-0229 (R14) (202) 553-0229 (R14) B
|
|
|
|
FLORIDA
|
|
Eglin AFB [M]
|
|
(AFSC-AD-TAC) (904) 882-8202 (904) 882-8202 B/V
|
|
|
|
Page 186
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
|
|
|
(904) 882-8201 (904) 882-8201 V
|
|
|
|
MacDill AFB [M]
|
|
(MACDILL-MIL-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
Naval Air Station - Jacksonville [M]
|
|
(JAX1-MIL-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
Naval Air Station - Orlando [M]
|
|
(ORLANDO-MIL-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
GEORGIA
|
|
Robins AFB [M]
|
|
(ROBINS-TAC) (912) 926-2725 (912) 926-2725 B/V
|
|
(912) 926-2726
|
|
(912) 926-3231
|
|
(912) 926-3232
|
|
(912) 926-2204 (912) 926-2204 B/V
|
|
HAWAII
|
|
Camp H.M. Smith [M]
|
|
(HAWAII2-TAC) (808) 487-5545 (808) 487-5545 B
|
|
|
|
ILLINOIS
|
|
Scott AFB [M]
|
|
(SCOTT-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
(SCOTT2-MIL-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
KANSAS
|
|
Ft. Leavenworth [M]
|
|
(LVN-MIL-TAC) (913) 651-7041 (R8) (913) 651-7041 (R8) B
|
|
|
|
LOUISIANA
|
|
Navy Regional Data Automation Center [M]
|
|
(NORL-MIL-TAC) (504) 944-7940 (504) 944-7940 B
|
|
(504) 944-7948 (R2) (504) 944-7948 (R2) B
|
|
(504) 944-7951 (R5) (504) 944-7951 (R5) B
|
|
(504) 944-8702 (R8) (504) 944-8702 (R8) B
|
|
|
|
MARYLAND
|
|
Aberdeen Proving Ground [M]
|
|
(BRL-TAC) (301) 278-6916 (R4) (301) 278-6916 (R4) B/V
|
|
|
|
Bethesda [M]
|
|
(DAVID-TAC) (202) 227-3526 (R16) (202) 227-3526 (R16) B/V
|
|
|
|
Patuxent River [M]
|
|
(PAX-RV-TAC) (301) 863-4815 (301) 863-4815 B/V
|
|
(301) 863-4816 (301) 863-4816 B/V
|
|
(301) 863-5750 (R6) (301) 863-5750 (R6) B/V
|
|
|
|
Silver Spring [M]
|
|
(WHITEOAK-MIL-TAC) (301) 572-5960 (R10) (301) 572-5960 (R10) B
|
|
(301) 572-5970 (R10) (301) 572-5970 (R10) B
|
|
|
|
MASSACHUSETTS
|
|
Hanscom AFB [M]
|
|
(AFGL-TAC) (617) 861-3000 (R8) (617) 861-3000 (R8) B
|
|
|
|
Page 187
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
|
|
|
(617) 861-4965 (R8) (617) 861-4965 (R8)
|
|
|
|
Cambridge
|
|
(BBN-MIL-TAC) [M] [none known]
|
|
|
|
(BBN-ARPA-TAC) [A] [no dialup capability]
|
|
|
|
(CCA-ARP-TAC) [A] [none known]
|
|
|
|
(MIT-TAC) [A]
|
|
(617) 491-5669 (617) 258-6224 V
|
|
(617) 491-5708 (617) 258-6225 V
|
|
(617) 491-5734 (617) 258-6227 V
|
|
(617) 491-5819 (617) 258-6248 V
|
|
(617) 491-5826
|
|
(617) 491-5841
|
|
(617) 491-5849
|
|
(617) 491-6769
|
|
(617) 491-6772
|
|
(617) 491-6937
|
|
(617) 258-6241
|
|
(617) 258-6242
|
|
(617) 258-6243
|
|
|
|
MICHIGAN
|
|
U.S. Army Tank Automotive Command (TACOM) - Warren [M]
|
|
(TACOM-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
MISSOURI
|
|
St. Louis [M]
|
|
(STLA-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
NEBRASKA
|
|
Offutt AFB [M]
|
|
(SAC1-MIL-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
(SAC2-MIL-TAC) (402) 292-4638 (R10) (402) 292-4638 (R10) B
|
|
|
|
(SAC-ARPA-TAC) [A]
|
|
(402) 294-2398 (402) 294-2398 B
|
|
(402) 291-2018 (402) 291-2018 B
|
|
(402) 292-7054 (402) 292-7054 B
|
|
|
|
NEW JERSEY
|
|
Dover [M]
|
|
(ARDC-TAC) (201) 724-6731 (201) 724-6731 B/V
|
|
(201) 724-6732 (201) 724-6732 B/V
|
|
(201) 724-6733 (201) 724-6733 B/V
|
|
(201) 724-6734 (201) 724-6734 B/V
|
|
|
|
Fort Monmouth [M]
|
|
(FTMONMOUTH1-MIL-TAC) (201) 544-2052 (201) 544-2052 B/V
|
|
(201) 544-2062 (201) 544-2062 B/V
|
|
(201) 544-2072 (201) 544-2072 B/V
|
|
(201) 544-2396 (201) 544-2396 B/V
|
|
(201) 544-2430 (201) 544-2430 B/V
|
|
|
|
(FTMONMOUTH2-MIL-TAC) (201) 544-4254 (R3) (201) 544-2430 B
|
|
|
|
Page 188
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
|
|
|
(201) 544-2636 B
|
|
(201) 544-2638 B
|
|
(201) 544-2777 B
|
|
|
|
NEW MEXICO
|
|
Albuquerque [M]
|
|
(AFWL-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
White Sands [M]
|
|
(WSMR-TAC) [no dialups; contact NSC for access]
|
|
Claude (Skeet) Steffey - (505) 678-1271
|
|
(FTS) 898-1271
|
|
(AV) 258-1271
|
|
|
|
NEW YORK
|
|
Griffiss AFB
|
|
(RADC-ARPA-TAC) [A] [no dialup capability]
|
|
|
|
(RADC-TAC) [M]
|
|
(315) 339-4913 (R5)
|
|
(315) 337-2004 (315) 337-2004 B/V
|
|
(315) 337-2005 (315) 337-2005 B/V
|
|
|
|
(315) 330-2294 (315) 330-2294 (FTS) 952 B/V
|
|
|
|
(315) 330-3587 (315) 330-3587 (FTS) 952 B/V
|
|
|
|
NORTH CAROLINA
|
|
Ft. Bragg [A]
|
|
(BRAGG-ARPA-TAC) (919) 396-1131 (R10) (919) 396-1426 (R5) B/V
|
|
(919) 396-1491 (R8) B/V
|
|
Ft. Bragg [M]
|
|
(BRAGG-MIL-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
OHIO
|
|
Wright-Patterson AFB [M]
|
|
(WPAFB-TAC) (513) 258-4218
|
|
(513) 258-4219
|
|
(513) 258-4987
|
|
(513) 258-4988
|
|
(513) 258-4989
|
|
(513) 258-4990
|
|
|
|
(WPAFB2-MIL-TAC) (513) 257-2172 (R8) (513) 257-2172 (R8) B
|
|
(513) 257-2690 (R8) (513) 257-2690 (R8) B
|
|
(513) 257-3625 (R8) (513) 257-3625 (R8) B
|
|
|
|
OKLAHOMA
|
|
Tinker AFB [M]
|
|
(TINKER-MIL-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
|
|
PENNSYLVANIA
|
|
New Cumberland Army Depot [M]
|
|
(NCAD-MIL-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
(NCAD2-MIL-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
|
|
Page 189
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
|
|
|
TEXAS
|
|
Brooks AFB [M]
|
|
(BROOKS-AFB-TAC) (512) 536-3081 (R6) (512) 536-3081 (R6) B/V
|
|
|
|
Richardson [A]
|
|
(COLLINS-TAC) (214) 235-2131 (214) 235-2131 B
|
|
(214) 235-2143 (214) 235-2143 B
|
|
(214) 235-2178 (214) 235-2178 B
|
|
(214) 235-2204 (214) 235-2204 B
|
|
(214) 235-2251 (214) 235-2251 B
|
|
(214) 235-2278 (214) 235-2278 B
|
|
|
|
UTAH
|
|
Dugway Proving Ground [M]
|
|
(DUGWAY-MIL-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
Salt Lake City (University of Utah) [A]
|
|
(UTAH-TAC) (801) 581-3486 (801) 581-3486 B/V
|
|
|
|
VIRGINIA
|
|
Alexandria [M]
|
|
(DARCOM-TAC) (202) 274-5300 (202) 274-5300 B
|
|
(202) 274-5320 (R6) (202) 274-5320 (R6) B
|
|
|
|
Arlington
|
|
(ARPA1-MIL-TAC) [M] [none known]
|
|
|
|
(ARPA2-MIL-TAC) [M] [none known]
|
|
|
|
(ARPA3-TAC) [A] [no dialup capability]
|
|
|
|
Dahlgren [M]
|
|
(NSWC-TAC) (703) 663-2162 (R8) (703) 663-2162 (R8) B
|
|
|
|
Langley Air Force Base [M]
|
|
(LANGLEY-MIL-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
McLean [M]
|
|
(DDN-PMO-MIL-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
|
|
(MITRE-TAC) [M]
|
|
(703) 442-8020 (R15)
|
|
(703) 893-0330 (R10) (703) 893-0330 (R10) B/V
|
|
|
|
Norfolk [M]
|
|
(NORFOLK-MILTAC) (804) 423-0241 (R2) (804) 423-0241 (R2) B
|
|
(804) 423-0247 (R2) (804) 423-0247 (R2) B
|
|
(804) 423-0346 (R4) (804) 423-0346 (R4) B
|
|
(804) 423-0480 (804) 423-0480 B
|
|
(804) 423-0486 (R2) (804) 423-0486 (R2) B
|
|
(804) 423-0489 (804) 423-0489 B
|
|
(804) 423-0570 (804) 423-0570 B
|
|
(804) 423-0572 (R2) (804) 423-0572 (R2) B
|
|
(804) 423-0577 (R2) (804) 423-0577 (R2) B
|
|
(804) 423-0651 (804) 423-0651 B
|
|
(804) 423-0654 (R3) (804) 423-0654 (R3) B
|
|
(804) 423-0841 (R2) (804) 423-0841 (R2) B
|
|
|
|
Page 190
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
|
|
|
(804) 423-0845 (804) 423-0845 B
|
|
(804) 423-0849 (804) 423-0849 B
|
|
(804) 423-0858 (804) 423-0858 B
|
|
(804) 423-0950 (804) 423-0950 B
|
|
(804) 423-0952 (804) 423-0952 B
|
|
(804) 423-0955 (R3) (804) 423-0955 (R3) B
|
|
(804) 423-0959 (804) 423-0959 B
|
|
|
|
Reston
|
|
(DCEC-ARPA-TAC) [A] [no dialups available]
|
|
|
|
(DCEC-MIL-TAC) [M]
|
|
(703) 437-2892 (R5) (703) 437-2928 B
|
|
(703) 437-2925 (703) 437-2929 B
|
|
(703) 437-2926
|
|
(703) 437-2927
|
|
|
|
WASHINGTON
|
|
Seattle [A]
|
|
(WASHINGTON-TAC) [no dialup capability]
|
|
|
|
ENGLAND [M]
|
|
(CROUGHTON-MIL-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
GERMANY [M]
|
|
(FRANKFURT-MIL-TAC)
|
|
(M) 2311-5641 (R8) B
|
|
|
|
(RAMSTEIN2-MIL-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
ITALY [M]
|
|
(AGNANO-MIL-TAC)
|
|
|
|
JAPAN [M]
|
|
(BUCKNER-MIL-TAC)
|
|
|
|
(ZAMA-MIL-TAC)
|
|
|
|
KOREA [M]
|
|
(KOREA-TAC) (M) 264-4951 (R8) B
|
|
|
|
PHILIPPINES [M]
|
|
(CLARK-MIL-TAC)
|
|
|
|
SPAIN [M]
|
|
(MILNET-TJN-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
(ROTA-MIL-TAC) [none known]
|
|
|
|
Notes:
|
|
|
|
1. "(R10)" following phone number indicates a rotary with 10 lines.
|
|
|
|
2. For alternate phone numbers, FTS=Federal Telephone System.
|
|
3. (M)=Military DoD Telephone System.
|
|
|
|
4. [M] denotes a MILNET TAC and [A] denotes an ARPANET TAC.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Page 191
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
|
|
|
5. "1200 Type" refers to the modem compatibility for 1200 baud only:
|
|
B/V = Bell and Vadic
|
|
B = Bell 212A only
|
|
V = Vadic 3400 only
|
|
|
|
6. This list is contained in the file NETINFO:TAC-PHONES.LIST at
|
|
SRI-NIC.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Page 192
|
|
|
|
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|
|
|
The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
|
|
|
>>==========================<<
|
|
>>==> TELCO TEST NUMBERS <==<<
|
|
>>====> as of 5/16/85 <=====<<
|
|
>>=> compiled and updated <=<<
|
|
>>====> by Shadow 2600 <====<<
|
|
>>==========================<<
|
|
|
|
011-44-61-2468011 : US dial tone then "When this system changes, this is the
|
|
new dial tone you hear" (UK is changing dialtone)
|
|
|
|
201-226-0709 : alternating tones, then "warble"
|
|
201-267-9922 : sweep tone
|
|
201-267-9966 : 600 ohm termination
|
|
201-232-9924 : (tone 1,2,5-beep, bleep; 9,#- 1200 baud static, beep, bleep;
|
|
6-tone, higher tone, bleep)
|
|
201-232-9959 : tone 11 sec. silence, repeats...
|
|
201-233-9972 : multitude of clicks
|
|
201-233-9974 : busy 15 sec. then tone w/ clicks
|
|
201-241-9916 : hissing with clicks
|
|
201-328-9971 : 1000 hrtz tone
|
|
201-376-9907 : "is being checked for trouble. Please try again later"
|
|
201-464-9915 : low tone 15 sec, silence
|
|
201-464-9916 : low tone 2 sec, silence
|
|
201-464-9963 : buzz
|
|
201-464-9974 : busy 15 sec, low tone
|
|
201-543-9902 : "If you'd like to make a call, hang up and try it again."
|
|
201-543-9903 : "We're sorry, your call did not go through."
|
|
201-543-9904 : "the number you have dialed requires a .20 cents deposit."
|
|
201-655-9900 : "cannot be completed as dialed from the phone you are using"
|
|
201-769-0205 : People's Express Reservation system
|
|
203-771-4920 : telephone company employee newsline
|
|
207-866-4411 : 1000 hrtz tone
|
|
212-233-9980 : (tone 1,2,3,*-tone, higher tone, bloop; 5-tone, bloop; 9,#-
|
|
static,beep,bloop)
|
|
212-369-7003 : "you have reached 212-369-7003 in zone 3" (?)
|
|
212-799-5017 : ABC New York feed line
|
|
213-621-4141 : telephone employee newsline
|
|
213-935-1111 : sweep tone with echo at top of range (?)
|
|
215-489-0036 : tone, bloop (1,2,5-tone bloop, 3,6,9-tone, higher tone,tone)
|
|
215-489-0040 : "please check your instruction manual or call repair service for
|
|
assistance"
|
|
215-489-0042 : "if you like to make a call please hang up and try again"
|
|
215-489-0043 : "We're sorry, your call did not go through."
|
|
215-489-0044 : "The call you have made requires a 25 cent deposit"
|
|
215-489-0045 : "You must first dial a 1 when dialing this number."
|
|
215-489-0074 : LOUD tone, stops, repeats
|
|
215-489-0075 : 600 ohm termination (silence)
|
|
215-489-0078 : tone, silence
|
|
215-489-0080 : 600 ohm termination
|
|
215-489-0097 : tone, (lower pitched than -0078) silence (also at -0098)
|
|
215-489-0104 : 1000 hrtz tone
|
|
216-861-8300 : tone, then higher tone
|
|
301-256-9987 : 1000 hertz
|
|
301-546-7777 : "Due to Telephone Company facility trouble your call cannot be
|
|
completed at this time"
|
|
301-725-9904 : "deposit .20"
|
|
305-263-0000 : repeating bloop (keypress 2 : slow reorder w/ bloops, clicks)
|
|
305-994-9963 : pay fone instructions
|
|
|
|
Page 193
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
|
|
|
305-994-9966 : "telephone you are calling from is not in service"
|
|
312-222-9948 : tone (keypress 1,2,3,6,7,*-tone, high tone, bleep,
|
|
4-tone,bloop,9, #-static,beep,bloop)
|
|
312-222-9954 : "Test Center"
|
|
312-222-9990 : clicks, ticking like
|
|
312-222-9996 : LOUD tone, repeats
|
|
312-368-8000 : Illinois Bell Communicator (employee newsline)
|
|
312-592-0000 : tone (keypress 2222, then other digits, at re-order type * to
|
|
restart) (?)
|
|
313-223-7223 : telephone employee newsline
|
|
313-333-9981 : LOUD tone, silence
|
|
313-333-9989 : high tone (enter touchtones for a while, eventually get
|
|
"metallic" echo, then 5-high pitched tone, random re-orders)
|
|
313-333-9990 : beep, click repeats, with "winks"
|
|
313-333-9994 : tone bloop (keypress in 2-tone,bloop, 3-tone, higher tone,tone,
|
|
9-static, beep,bloop)
|
|
313-333-9995 : 600 ohm termination (silence)
|
|
313-333-9996 : weird siren/sweep tone, multi-frequency
|
|
313-430-4300 : beep, beep, beep, then reorder
|
|
313-698-9998 : sweep tone
|
|
314-247-5511 : Southwestern Bell Telenews (employee newsline)
|
|
315-471-9934 : "deposit 5 cents for next five minutes"
|
|
408-255-0081 : (any two 2,4,8,0-tone)
|
|
408-294-6969 : beep, click, computer voice repeats number
|
|
408-395-1110 : (tone 2-bleep,glitch; 3-beep,higher beep;#then number-loud
|
|
tone,bleep)
|
|
408-738-8190 : (tone 1,3,6,7,*-tone, high tone, tone;2-beep,cluck;9,#-
|
|
static,tone,beep)
|
|
408-745-6060 : high pitched tone, low tone then repeats
|
|
408-994-0044 : tone end of loop
|
|
412-633-3333 : telephone company employee newsline
|
|
414-628-0001 : continuous tone
|
|
414-628-0002 : continuous tone (higher pitched, sounds like muted dial)
|
|
414-628-0004 : high pitched tone, bloop, silence
|
|
414-628-0006 : brief very high tone (also -0007) (multiple keypresses of
|
|
2,5,8,0 tone repeats)
|
|
414-628-0010 : loud tone, stops, repeats...
|
|
414-628-0011 : loud tone, stops
|
|
414-628-0013 : 600 ohm termination (silence) (also -0017, two in an exchange?)
|
|
414-628-0014 : continuous tone (sounds like weird dial), eventually stops
|
|
414-628-0015 : LOUD tone, repeats
|
|
414-628-0028 : "Your call cannot be completed as dialed
|
|
414-678-3511 : Wisconsin Bell Newsline
|
|
414-781-0004 : high tone, silence (keypress 2,5-beep,bleep, 3,6-beep,longbeep,
|
|
bloop, 9-static,bloop)
|
|
415-284-1111 : one sweep, then silence
|
|
415-327-0046 : sweep tone
|
|
415-388-0037 : tone,bloop (keypress 2-tone,bloop, 3-tone,high tone,tone,
|
|
9-static,beep,bloop)
|
|
415-472-0046 : sweep w/ glitch at top
|
|
415-545-8800 : Pacific Bell Newsline
|
|
415-467-0097 : fast DTMF tones, keypress to repeat
|
|
415-777-0020 : 1000 hrtz tone
|
|
415-777-0037 : tone, bloop (keypress 2-beep,bloop, 3,6-tone,higher tone,
|
|
9-static,beep,bloop)
|
|
415-777-0046 : sweep tone with echo
|
|
415-777-0105 : tone,bloop (keypress 2-beep,bleep, 3,6-tone, higher tone,
|
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tone,9-static,beep,bloop
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Page 194
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
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415-826-0022 : tone, click, tone (sounds like a busy)
|
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415-994-0710 : multitude of clicks
|
|
512-472-2181 : "if you would like to make a call, please hang up and try
|
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again"
|
|
512-472-4263 : garbled recording (?)
|
|
512-472-9833 : "you must first dial a 1 or 0 before calling this number"
|
|
512-472-9936 : "please check your instructions or call your business office for
|
|
assistance"
|
|
512-472-9941 : "insert 25 cents"
|
|
516-222-3825 : LOUD tone
|
|
516-234-9914 : New York Telephone Newsline
|
|
518-471-2272 : New York Telephone Newsline
|
|
518-789-3299 : weird busy, multitude of clicks
|
|
609-267-9966 : busy with clicks in background
|
|
609-267-9967 : 600 ohm termination (silence)
|
|
609-267-9968 : 1000 hrtz tone
|
|
609-267-9971 : LOUD tone, stops, repeats
|
|
609-267-9972 : rings with clicks in background (also -9973 and -9974)
|
|
609-877-9924 : high tone (tone in 1,2,5-tone, bloop; 3,6,*-tone, higher tone,
|
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bleep; #-static, beep, bleep)
|
|
609-877-9929 : 1000 hrz tone
|
|
617-553-9953 : tone end of loop
|
|
617-890-9900 : sweep tone
|
|
617-955-1111 : telephone company employee newsline
|
|
619-748-0002 : tone increases in pitch, silence, repeats in monotone
|
|
619-748-0003 : sweep, repeat, hangs up
|
|
702-789-6711 : Nevada Bell Newsline
|
|
713-354-0000 : touch tone in #, then new #, then 5 - listed, 9 - unlisted)
|
|
713-482-3199 : "We're sorry, all circuit are busy now."
|
|
713-652-5111 : touch tones echo back "metallic", something about "drivers
|
|
licence number" replys in a female recorded voice
|
|
717-255-5555 : Bell of Pennsylvania "Inside Line" (employee newsline)
|
|
718-429-9900 : "Please slide a valid credit card through the slot now"
|
|
800-221-5959 : tone (# makes it ring)
|
|
800-228-8466 : Sensaphone (tm) demo (time etc. (EST) (wait 7+ rings))
|
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800-321-3048 : non-connecting loop with 800-321-3049
|
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800-321-3052 : loop (don't know where other end is)
|
|
800-321-6366 : Centagram's Voice Memo System (extension 100 for demo)
|
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800-323-6321 : tone, stops, bloop repeats
|
|
800-327-0000 : "Announcement three, Dallas" (changes sometimes)
|
|
800-344-4001 : non-connecting loop with 800-344-4002
|
|
800-524-0000 : "Announcement 1 Atlanta"
|
|
800-554-5924 : Cable News Network audio feed
|
|
800-824-8274 : "Enter your password service code"
|
|
802-955-1111 : telephone company newsline
|
|
808-533-4426 : Hawaiian Telephone Newsline
|
|
816-391-1122 : recorder (keypress 1-toggle on/off, 3-rewind, 4-stop, 7-play)
|
|
907-269-0955 : tone (sounds like extender, doesn't take touch tone (?))
|
|
914-232-9901 : "Daytona, New York DMS-100 verification"
|
|
914-268-9901 : "Congers DMS 100 Verification"
|
|
914-268-9903 : "your call cannot be completed as dialed"
|
|
914-268-9968 : (keypress 2-high tone, 3-high, higher tone, 6,0-click, 7- hangs
|
|
up, sometimes 0,#,*-harmony)
|
|
914-359-9901 : repeats the number dialed ("914-359-9901")
|
|
914-359-9960 : weird tone, stops, clicks, repeats
|
|
914-623-9968 : (keypress 2,5-beep glitch, 3,6-tone highertone)
|
|
916-480-8000 : Pacific Bell Newsline
|
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Page 195
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
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WHAT A TSPS CONSOLE LOOKS LIKE
|
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|
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--- NON/COIN ---- ------------- COIN ------------- --------- HOTEL ---------
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|
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---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- --- --- ----
|
|
!VFY ! !OVER! !SCRN! !INWD! !EMER! !STA ! ! 0+ ! !DIAL! !STA ! ! 0+ !
|
|
!DIAL! !POST! !TONE! !STA ! ! 0+ ! !DIAL! !QST ! ! ! ! ! ! !
|
|
---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----
|
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|
|
----- OUTGOING TRUNKS ----- RING RELEASE
|
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|
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---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ----
|
|
! DA ! !R&R ! !SWB ! !OGT ! !BACK! ! FWD ! !CALL! !T&C ! !NFY ! !CHG !
|
|
---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ! DUE!
|
|
----
|
|
--- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----
|
|
!KEY ! !BACK! !FWD ! ! SR ! !MAKE! !MTCE! !POS ! !BACK! ! ! ! !
|
|
!CLG ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !BUSY! !TRFR! ---- ---- ---- ----
|
|
---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----
|
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|
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----------------- AMA -----------------
|
|
---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----
|
|
STATION -----!PAID! !COL ! !SPL ! !SPL ! !AUTO! !DDD !
|
|
! ! ! ! !CLG ! !CLD ! !COL ! ! !
|
|
---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----
|
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|
|
---- ---- ---- ---- ----
|
|
PERSON ----- !PAID! !COL ! !SPL ! !SPL ! ! NO !
|
|
! ! ! ! !CLG ! !CLD ! !AMA !
|
|
---- ---- ---- ---- ----
|
|
|
|
---- ---- ----
|
|
!CLG ! !CLG ! !CLG !
|
|
! ! ! ! ! !
|
|
---- ---- ----
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Page 196
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
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Box Plans
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|
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Hmm... I wonder! This is still under construction (Ha Ha).
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Page 197
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
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|
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THE INFINITY TRANSMITTER
|
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|
|
TYPED BY THE GHOST WIND
|
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|
|
FROM THE BOOK BUILD YOUR OWN
|
|
LASER, PHASER, ION RAY GUN & OTHER WORKING SPACE-AGE PROJECTS
|
|
BY ROBERT IANNINI (TAB BOOKS INC)
|
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|
|
Description: Briefly, the Infinity Transmitter is a device which activates a
|
|
microphone via a phone call. It is plugged into the phone line, and when the
|
|
phone rings, it will immediately intercept the ring and broadcast into the
|
|
phone any sound that is in the room. This device was originally made by
|
|
Information Unlimited, and had a touch tone decoder to prevent all who did not
|
|
know the code from being able to use the phone in its normal way. This
|
|
version, however, will activate the microphone for anyone who calls while it is
|
|
in operation.
|
|
NOTE: It is illegal to use this device to try to bug someone. It is also
|
|
pretty stupid because they are fairly noticeable.
|
|
Parts List:
|
|
Pretend that uF means micro Farad, cap= capacitor
|
|
|
|
Part # Description
|
|
---- - -----------
|
|
R1,4,8 3 390 k 1/4 watt resistor
|
|
R2 1 5.6 M 1/4 watt resistor
|
|
R3,5,6 3 6.8 k 1/4 watt resistor
|
|
R7/S1 1 5 k pot/switch
|
|
R9,16 2 100 k 1/4 watt resistor
|
|
R10 1 2.2 k 1/4 watt resistor
|
|
R13,18 2 1 k 1/4 watt resistor
|
|
R14 1 470 ohm 1/4 watt resistor
|
|
R15 1 10 k 1/4 watt resistor
|
|
R17 1 1 M 1/4 watt resistor
|
|
C1 1 .05 uF/25 V disc cap
|
|
C2,3,5,6,7 5 1 uF 50 V electrolytic cap or tant
|
|
(preferably non-polarized)
|
|
C4,11,12 3 .01 uF/50 V disc cap
|
|
C8,10 2 100 uF @ 25 V electrolytic cap
|
|
C9 1 5 uF @ 150 V electrolytic cap
|
|
C13 1 10 uF @ 25 V electrolytic cap
|
|
TM1 1 555 timer dip
|
|
A1 1 CA3018 amp array in can
|
|
Q1,2 2 PN2222 npn sil transistor
|
|
Q3 1 D4OD5 npn pwr tab transistor
|
|
D1,2 2 50 V 1 amp react. 1N4002
|
|
T1 1 1.5 k/500 matching transformer
|
|
M1 1 large crystal microphone
|
|
J1 1 Phono jack optional for sense output
|
|
WR3 (24") #24 red and black hook up wire
|
|
WR4 (24") #24 black hook up wire
|
|
CL3,4 2 Alligator clips
|
|
CL1,2 2 6" battery snap clips
|
|
PB1 1 1 3/4x4 1/2x.1 perfboard
|
|
CA1 1 5 1/4x3x2 1/8 grey enclosure fab
|
|
WR15 (12") #24 buss wire
|
|
KN1 1 small plastic knob
|
|
BU1 1 small clamp bushing
|
|
B1,2 2 9 volt transistor battery or 9V ni-cad
|
|
|
|
Page 198
|
|
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|
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
|
|
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|
|
Circuit Operation: Not being the most technical guy in the world, and not being
|
|
very good at electronics (yet), I'm just repeating what Mr. Iannini's said
|
|
about the circuit operation. The Transmitter consists of a high grain
|
|
amplifier fed into the telephone lines via transformer. The circuit is
|
|
initiated by the action of a voltage transient pulse occurring across the
|
|
phone line at the instant the telephone circuit is made (the ring, in other
|
|
words). This transient immediately triggers a timer whose output pin 3 goes
|
|
positive, turning on transistors Q2 and Q3. Timer TM1 now remains in this
|
|
state for a period depending on the values of R17 and C13 (usually about 10
|
|
seconds for the values shown). When Q3 is turned on by the timer, a simulated
|
|
"off hook" condition is created by the switching action of Q3 connecting the
|
|
500 ohm winding of the transformer directly across the phone lines.
|
|
Simultaneously, Q2 clamps the ground of A1, amplifier, and Q1, output
|
|
transistor, to the negative return of B1,B2, therefore enabling this amplifier
|
|
section. Note that B2 is always required by supplying quiescent power to TM1
|
|
during normal conditions. System is off/on controlled by S1 (switch).
|
|
A crystal mike picks up the sounds that are fed to the first two
|
|
transistors of the A1 array connected as an emitter follower driving the
|
|
remaining two transistors as cascaded common emitters. Output of the
|
|
array now drives Q1 capacitively coupled to the 1500 ohm winding of T1.
|
|
R7 controls the pick up sensitivity of the system.
|
|
Diode D1 is forward biased at the instant of connection and essentially
|
|
applies a negative pulse at pin 2 of TM1, initiating the cycle. D2 clamps
|
|
any high positive pulses. C9 dc-isolates and desensitizes the circuit. The
|
|
system described should operate when any incoming call is made without ringing
|
|
the phone.
|
|
|
|
Schematic Diagram: Because this is text, this doesn't look too hot. Please
|
|
use a little imagination! I will hopefully get a graphics drawing of this
|
|
out as soon as I can on a Fontrix graffile.
|
|
|
|
To be able to see what everything is, this character: | should appear as a
|
|
horizontal bar. I did this on a ][e using a ][e 80 column card, so I'm sorry if
|
|
it looks kinda weird to you.
|
|
|
|
Symbols:
|
|
resistor: -/\/\/- switch: _/ _
|
|
battery: -|!|!- capacitor (electrolytic): -|(-
|
|
capacitor (disc): -||- _ _
|
|
transistor:(c) > (e) Transformer: )||(
|
|
\_/ )||(
|
|
|(b) _)||(_
|
|
diode: |<
|
|
chip: ._____.
|
|
!_____! (chips are easy to recognize!)
|
|
|
|
Dots imply a connection between wires. NO DOT, NO CONNECTION.
|
|
ie.: _!_ means a connection while _|_ means no connection.
|
|
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
.________________________to GREEN wire phone line
|
|
|
|
|
| .______________________to RED wire phone line
|
|
| |
|
|
| | ._________(M1)______________.
|
|
| | | |
|
|
| | | R1 |
|
|
|
|
Page 199
|
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
|
|
|
| | !__________/\/\/____________!
|
|
| | | _!_ C1
|
|
| | |this wire is the amp ___
|
|
| | |<=ground | R2
|
|
| | | !___________________/\/\/_____________.
|
|
| | | ._______!_______. |
|
|
| | !___________________!4 9 11!_____________________________!
|
|
| | | | | |
|
|
| | !___________________!7 12._____________________________!
|
|
| | | | A1 | R3 |
|
|
| | !___________________!10 ____*8!_______.____/\/\/____________! ^
|
|
| | | | / | | | |
|
|
| | | C4 | / | \ |2ma
|
|
| | !____||______. | / | /R4 B1 +
|
|
| | | || | | / | \ |!|!
|
|
| | | R7 | C2 | / | / |
|
|
| | !____/\/\/___!__)|__!8*_/ | | S1 |
|
|
| | | ^ | 6!_______! neg<__/.__!
|
|
| | | | C3 | | | C5 return |
|
|
| | | !_____|(___.__!3 | '-|(-| |
|
|
| | | | | 5 1!____________! |
|
|
| | | \ !_______._______! | B2|!|!
|
|
| | !________. R8 / | | +
|
|
| | | \ | | R6 |3ma
|
|
| | | !__________!____________________|_____/\/\/______! |
|
|
| | | R5 | | | v
|
|
| | !__/\/\/___________|____________________! |
|
|
| | | | |
|
|
| | | | |
|
|
| | | C6 | |
|
|
| | | |-)|-' R9 |
|
|
| | | !_________________/\/\/_______. |
|
|
| | | | | |
|
|
| | | Q1 _!_ | R10 |
|
|
| | !____________/ \____________________________!__/\/\/_____!
|
|
| | | | |
|
|
| | | | |
|
|
| | | C8 | |
|
|
| | !__________)|_______________________________|____________!
|
|
| | ! | |
|
|
| | / | |
|
|
| | -----| | |
|
|
| | | \ | |
|
|
| | | > | |
|
|
| | | | | |
|
|
| | | | | |
|
|
| | | !_____________. | |
|
|
| | | | | |
|
|
| | !__________. | | |
|
|
| | | | | |
|
|
| !________. | | ._____! |
|
|
| | | | | |
|
|
| | | | | |
|
|
| | | | | C7 |
|
|
| | | | '-|(-| |
|
|
| |_________|_________!_______.T1._________________| |
|
|
| | | 1500 )||( 500 |
|
|
| | | ohm )||( ohm |
|
|
|
|
Page 200
|
|
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|
|
The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
|
|
|
| | !______.)||(.__. |
|
|
| | | | |
|
|
| | | | |
|
|
| | | > |
|
|
| | | |/ |
|
|
| | | +----| Q3 |
|
|
| | | | |\ |
|
|
!____________________|_________|_______|______!__. D1 C9 |
|
|
| | | '-|<---|(------| |
|
|
.______________! | | | |
|
|
| | | | |
|
|
| .________________! | | |
|
|
| | | | |
|
|
\ | .________________! C11 | |
|
|
/ | | .___||____________! |
|
|
R13 \ | | | || | |
|
|
/ | | | | |
|
|
\ !___.___|_______________________! | |
|
|
| | | | | R16 | R15 |
|
|
| v | | !___/\/\/\________!___/\/\/_!
|
|
| neg | | | D2 | |
|
|
| return | | !_____|<__________! |
|
|
| B1,B2 | \ | | |
|
|
| | / | .____________!_. |
|
|
| | \R14 |C12 | TM1 2 | |
|
|
| | / !_||_!5 4!_______!
|
|
| | \ | || | | |
|
|
| | | !____!1 8!_______!
|
|
| | | | | 7 6 3 | |
|
|
| | | | !_____._.____._! |
|
|
| | | | | | | |
|
|
| | | | C13 | | | R17 |
|
|
| | | !___)|_____!_!____|__/\/\/__!
|
|
| | | | | |
|
|
!___________|___!_______________________|_________________! |
|
|
| | | |
|
|
| \ | C10 |
|
|
| /R18 !__________)|_______________!
|
|
| \
|
|
| /
|
|
| |
|
|
!___O J1
|
|
sense output
|
|
|
|
Construction notes: Because the damned book just gave a picture instead of step
|
|
by step instructions, and I'll try to give you as much help as possible. Note
|
|
that all the parts that you will be using are clearly labeled in the schematic.
|
|
The perfboard, knobs, 'gator clips, etc are optional. I do strongly suggest
|
|
that you do use the board!!! It will make wiring the components up much much
|
|
easier than if you don't use it.
|
|
The knob you can use to control the pot (R7). R7 is used to tune the IT so
|
|
that is sounds ok over the phone. (You get to determine what sounds good) By
|
|
changing the value of C13, you can change the amount of time that the circuit
|
|
will stay open (it cannot detect a hang up, so it works on a timer.) A value of
|
|
100 micro Farads will increase the time by about 10 times.
|
|
The switch (S1) determines whether or not the unit is operational. Closed is
|
|
on. Open is off. The negative return is the negative terminals of the battery!!
|
|
The batteries will look something like this when hooked up:
|
|
|
|
Page 201
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Official Phreaker's Manual
|
|
|
|
<-v_____. .______. ._____. .____->
|
|
| | | | | |
|
|
__!___!__ | | __!___!__
|
|
| + - | !_/ _! | + - |
|
|
| | switch ^ | |
|
|
| 9volts| | | 9volts|
|
|
!_______! neg return !_______!
|
|
|
|
To hook this up to the phone line, there are three ways, depending upon what
|
|
type of jack you have. If it is the old type (non modular) then you can just
|
|
open up the wall plate and connect the wires from the transmitter directly to
|
|
the terminals of the phone.
|
|
If you have a modular jack with four prongs, attach the red to the negative
|
|
prong (don't ask me which is which! I don't have that type of jack... I've only
|
|
seen them in stores), and the green to the positive prong, and plug in. Try not
|
|
to shock yourself...
|
|
If you have the clip-in type jack, get double male extension cord (one with a
|
|
clip on each end), and chop off one clip. Get a sharp knife and splice off the
|
|
grey protective material. You should see four wires, including one green and
|
|
one red. You attach the appropriate wires from the IT to these two, and plug
|
|
the other end into the wall.
|
|
|
|
Getting the IT to work: If you happen to have a problem, you should attempt to
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do the following (these are common sense rules!!) Make sure that you have the
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polarity of all the capacitors right (if you used polarized capacitors, that
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is). Make sure that all the soldering is done well and has not short circuited
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something accidently (like if you have a glob touching two wires which should
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not be touching.) Check for other short circuits. Check to see if the battery
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is in right. Check to make sure the switch is closed.
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If it still doesn't work, drop me a line on one of the Maryland or Virginia
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BBSs and I'll try to help you out.
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The sense output: Somehow or other, it is possible to hook something else up to
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this and activate it by phone (like an alarm, flashing lights, etc.)
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As of this writing, I have not tried to make one of these, but I will. If you
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actually get it working, leave me a note somewhere.
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I sure hope all you people appreciate this.
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<<< the Ghost Wind >>>
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Page 202
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
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::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
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: :
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: SILVER BOX: AN ALTERNATE METHOD OF CONSTRUCTION :
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: :
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: BY: THE LOCK LIFTER--1/25/85 :
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: :
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::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
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PARTS & EQUIPMENT:
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(1) POCKET TONE DIALER (RADIO SHACK CAT. NO. 43-138)
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(2) SINGLE POLE DOUBLE THROW SWITCH (TOGGLE, THE SMALLER THE BETTER)
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(3) SOLDERING IRON
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THIS MODIFICATION WILL ALLOW THE PRODUCTION OF A,B,C,&D TONES. WHEN YOU
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FLIP THE SWITCH THE 3,6,9,&# KEYS WILL BECOME A,B,C,&D RESPECTIVELY. THE IC
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INSIDE THE DIALER IS CAPABLE OF MAKING THESE TONES ALREADY, ALL WE MUST DO IS
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CONNECT IT FULLY. THIS MOD CAN ALSO BE MADE TO MANY ELECTRONIC FONES THAT
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CONTAIN A DTMF TONE ENCODING IC. THIS CHIP CAN BE IDENTIFIED BY THE NUMBER 5089
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OR S2559 OR MK5380 OR TCM5087N. PIN 9 OF THESE CHIPS IS THE FOURTH COLUMN
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KEYPAD INPUT WHILE PIN 5 IS THE THIRD COLUMN. NOW ON WITH THE CONSTRUCTION.
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1) REMOVE THE BATTERY COVER, BATTERIES, AND THE SMALL SCREW. THE CASE SHOULD
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NOW POP OPEN WITH A LITTLE PRESSURE.
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2) OPEN THE CASE SO THAT THE HALF CONTAINING THE SPEAKER AND THE BATTERIES
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IS ON YOUR LEFT WITH THE BATTERIES ON THE BOTTOM. YOU SHOULD NOW BE LOOKING AT
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THE BACK OF 2 PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARDS.
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3) FIND THE TWO ROWS OF SOLDER BEADS WHERE THE IC IS CONNECTED. THE UPPER
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LEFT PIN OF THE 2 ROWS SHOULD HAVE NO SOLDER ON IT. THIS IS PIN 9 OF THE IC.
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4) ATTACH A SHORT WIRE TO PIN 9.
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5) SEE THE 8 GOLD WIRES GOING TO THE KEY PAD? UNSOLDER THE ONE 4TH FROM THE
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LEFT AND CONNECT IT TO A SHORT WIRE.
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6) SOLDER A SHORT WIRE INTO THE NOW VACANT HOLE IN THE KEYPAD PCB.
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7) MELT OR DRILL A ROUND HOLE IN THE PLASTIC CASE FOR THE SWITCH. THE BEST
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PLACE FOR THIS IS OPPOSITE THE SMALL PCB CONTAINING THE L.E.D.
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8) INSERT THE SWITCH AND SCREW IT IN PLACE.
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9) ATTACH THE WIRE FROM THE KEYPAD PCB TO THE CENTER OF THE SWITCH. ATTACH THE
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OTHER TWO WIRES TO THE OTHER TWO POLES OF THE SWITCH. JUST CLOSE THE CASE, PUT
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BACK IN THE SCREW AND BATTERIES.
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THE SWITCH WILL NOW ALLOW THE 3RD COLUMN KEYS TO PRODUCE BOTH 3RD AND FOURTH
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COLUMN TONES. HAVE PHUN
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Page 203
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The Official Phreaker's Manual
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Well, this is just a page to protect the other pages.
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I hope you enjoyed the book!
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Page 204
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