147 lines
9.0 KiB
Plaintext
147 lines
9.0 KiB
Plaintext
File: STEP BY STEP OFFICES
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Read 10 times
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THE SIMPLE PLEASURES OF A STEP OFFICE
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[2600 -- May 1984]
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There are still more than a few step offices in the United States today.
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Most of them are in rural areas, but there are still a few cities (mostly in
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south, southwest, and west ares of the country) that have step. These
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antiquated telephone systems can best be described as a bunch of relays and
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wires--clicking and stumbling over themselves.
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It's easy to find out if you're in a step office--especially if you're using
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a rotary dial phone. (In many step areas, that's all you can have, particulary
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on the east coast since they don't have what's known as common control, which
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allows for touch-tones(R). Some offices have been converted, however, using
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some sort of tone to pulse converter--every time you hit a tone, you hear it
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being pulsed out.) With a rotary dial phone, you can hear the actual
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switching. If, say, you're dialing 675-9112--you'd dial a 6 and you'd hear
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what's known as the selector kick in (more on that later) with a kind of a
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clunk. Then you'd dial a 7, and hear a second thing kick in with a mild
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click--that's what's known as the digit absorbing relay. Depending on the
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office, this relay can kick in on any or none of the numbers. What it does
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basically is absorb an extra digit which is only needed to make the telephone
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number 7 digits long. So, in this case, the second digit of the number, which
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is 7, is the extra digit. You would probably be able to substitute any number
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for the 7 and still have the call go through, since that digit is ignored.
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Some offices absorb two of their digits, which means that they had five digit
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phone nmbers before uniformity struck. To continue with our Demonstration,
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you'd next dial a 5, and hear another click at the end of your dialing
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sequence. After dialing 9, you'd hear click, pop, snap--several things kicking
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in, then th 1, clunk-clink, and then the last two digits which wouldn't produce
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any sounds at the end of them. Then it will go into a ring cycle, assuming
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that's a valid number in the office.
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Step offices usually have a very mechanical sounding ring, similar to
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crossbar. Ring generators, though, can make step sound like ESS. Often you
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hear what sounds like a busy signal or static in the background as the number
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rings. An easy way to tell if you're dialing into a step office is to try
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dialing XXX-1111 and see how long it takes to get a ring or reorder or
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whatever. Then try calling XXX-0000. If it takes more time to get to the same
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point, it's a step office bacause step is the only system that actually pulses
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out the numbers all over again.
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A Phreaker's Delight
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It's much safer to blue box and phreak from a step office bacause they're
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very basic, crude offices with no safety features (safety for them, that is).
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And if you're lucky enough to live in a fairly large metropolitian area that's
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still on step, you might dial up a number that you know is ESS from you step
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area and flash the switchhook. You'll get what's known as a wink. That's the
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equivalent of whistling 2600 hertz for about a half second to reset the trunk.
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You'll hear click-click That's you cue to put in various multifrequency tones
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(KP + number + ST). 2600 hertz is not needed at all, and since that's the tone
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that usually sets off alarms, this is a very safe way to blue box.
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(Incidentally, this occurs more through a flaw with ESS and not step.)
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If you really know what you're doing and you know a few things about step
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switching, you can, on a touch tone(R) phone, dial up a number and listen in
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the background for the switch level. Let's say you're dialing 941-0226. You
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won't hear it rotary dial those numbers, but you will hear another number or
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series of numbers in rotary step pulses. That's the selector we mentioned
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earlier. Let's say that after you dialed 941-0226, you heard a 5 being pulsed
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out. What does that mean? The selector is the decision-making part of the
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phone call. Different prefixes are stored in different levels in each central
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office. In this particular case, 941 happens to be stored in level 5 in
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whatever office you're calling from. There's no rhyme or reason to it; the
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selector level could be anything up to three digits in length. (If it was
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three digits, you'd hear each individual digit get pulsed out.) The toll
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center is usually level 1 and the operator is usually level 0. So what can be
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done with this information? If, after dialing 941-0226, you enter your own
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rotary five, you'll once again hear the click-click which is your cue for MF
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tones.
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While step offices have no special phone phreak trapping capabilities, they
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a just as dangerous as any other office as far as being traced. They have
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what's known as trap and trace. If a certain person (or computer) is begin
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harrassed, they'll put a trap plug on a particular line. If you happen to call
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into that number, you won't be able to hang up until the other party does.
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Some More Tricks
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In some step areas, local calls are limited to certain exchanges that have
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th same first digits as yours. For example, the 222 exchange can dial 235 and
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263 as local calls. But in order to call the 637 exchange, you must first dial
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a 1 which makes the call non-local. If you dial a 6, you'll get an immediate
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reorder. But somewhere between you and the 637 exchange, is the 231, 233, 235,
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and 239 exchanges. There's no 237. So you dial 2. Clunk-clunk. You dial 3.
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Click. And then you dial 7. Ching-clunk. It goes to the 637 exchange!
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Similarly, a 281 from he 287 exchange could wind up in 471. Why? Because
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these numbers are all coming from the same switching center. That just happens
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to be the way step works (and in some cases crossbar). If you could seize the
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222 trunk, you'd enter KP+25500+ST to reach 222-5500. To reach 637-5500, you'd
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enter KP+755000+ST.
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Then there's "step crashing"--if the number you're calling is 675-2888, and
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it's busy, you can dial 675-2887, and in between the last pulse of your rotary
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dial and the time it would start to ring, you can flash you switchhook
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extremely fast. If you time it right, you'll hear an enormous loud click at
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your end. Then, all of the sudden, you'll cut into your party's conversation.
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(This works bacause of step's realy system. One relay has determined that the
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line you dialed is open. Then, before a second relay sends along the ring
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pulse, you throw in a 1, which jumps the number you dialed up by one, and fools
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the system into connecting you to a busy number.) There is one drawback to
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this, though. You, the party you've crashed in on, and the party they were
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talking to are all stuck together until you all hang up at the same time.
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If you're in a step office where 411 is used for directory assistance,
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chances are that there are test codes in the format of 11XXX. 1191 might be
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ringback, etc. In such places, dialing 1141 will also get you directory
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assistance, but at no charge! In some of the newer step offices, 410X is the
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format for tests. There, you can dial 4101 for free directory assistance.
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Other test numbers are (usually): 4100 -- off-the-hook recording, 4102 -- test
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board, 4103 -- miscellaneous, 4104 -- ringback, 4105 -- disconnects you line
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for about 5 minutes, 4106 -- various tests, 4107 -- pulse test, 4108 -- test
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board, 4109 -- your telephone number in touch tones (R).
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Different Varieties of Step
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There's more than one kind of step office. We've been talking about the
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most common type, used by both GTE and Western Electric (Bell). It was
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invented by Automatic Electric early in the century. 214-281 is a typical Bell
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step office (not the reorder in the background ring) while 214-256 is a typical
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GTE step office (the ring sounds like it's underwater). For both of these, a
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suffix of 1798 will always provide a busy signal, free of charge.
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There is also something known as XY step, which is strange, unusual, and for
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the most part put together very poorly. It looks similar to a crossbar in
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appearance. Instead of a round switch, it's tall and rectangular-shaped. To
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dial a number, it moves up and across a ladder of contacts, as if it was a
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piece of graph paper, hence the name XY. On these systems, the last digit in
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th phone number is usually up for grabs. You can accept collect calls on a
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number with a different last digit from yours. The calls will still reach your
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number, but it won't show up on your bill. Also, suffixes beginning with 9 and
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2 are usually interchangeable. A typical XY step office is 518-789. A suffix
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of 3299 will get you a standard step test.
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Great Britian uses the Stroger system and there is also the all-relay step,
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which is very rare. It was developed presumably to save switches. One such
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system exists in Heath Canyon, Texas with only 36 subscribers at 915-376. A
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neighboring town that's also all-relay can be found at 915-386.
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[Courtesy of BIOC Agent 003 & Sherwood Forest ][ -- (914) 359-1517]
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-----End of File
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