Founded By: | _ _______ Guardian Of Time | __ N.I.A. _ ___ ___ Are you on any WAN? Are Judge Dredd | ____ ___ ___ ___ ___ you on Bitnet, Internet ------------------+ _____ ___ ___ ___ ___ Compuserve, MCI Mail, \ / ___ ___ ___ ___ ___________ Sprintmail, Applelink, +---------+ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___________ Easynet, MilNet, | 20NOV91 | ___ ______ ___ ___ ___ FidoNet, et al.? | File 73 | ___ _____ ___ ___ ___ If so please drop us a +---------+ ____ _ __ ___ line at / \ ___ _ ___ nia@nuchat.sccsi.com ------------------+ __ Editors: | _ Network Information Access Judge Dredd | Ignorance, There's No Excuse. Lord Macduff | ------------------+ Issue 073 :: Volume 02 "Censorship reflects society's lack of confidence in itself. It is a hallmark of an authoritative regime." - Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart ============================================================================ 1. NIA073 Index ................................................NIA Editors 2. Valley of the Nerds..........................................Walter Kirn 3. Internet to Anywhere...................................Industrial Phreak 4. Globally Tymnet................................................Hi Fi Del 5. Report on Interexchange Carriers.................................The FCC 6. Vox Populi: NIA News.........................................Judge Dredd 7. Hacking the HP3000 [Part I]...................................Malefactor 8. ** XmasCon '91 Announcement **...............................Santa Claus 9. Editor's Comments............................................NIA Editors ============================================================================ / / / NIA073 / File 02 / / Valley of the Nerds / / by Walter Kirn / / / [Editor's Note: Walter Kirn has written about Spike Lee and John Updike for GQ. He's working in Montana on a new short-story collection.] The keys to our economic future are in the hands of Silicon Valley's young computer visionaries. And a lot of those visions are triggered by hallucinogens created in labs just yesterday. Welcome to the Second Psychedelic Revolution. They call themselves MacAddicts. They are hard-core users of the Apple Macintosh personal computer, and they've come to San Francisco by the tens of thousands for their annual tribal gathering, the Macworld Expo. Some have on suits and carry briefcases. Some have on Grateful Deat T-shirts and carry briefcases. More than a few of them look MacStoned. This is not just another convention; in many ways it's a cybernetic Woodstock, a be-in for the Information Age. Inside the vast Moscone Center, a dizzying sound-and-light show is in progress as corporate exhibitors with names such as Gizmo Technologies, MacroMind and Lifetree push their mind-bending wares, both hard and soft. The conventioneers stand mesmerized before the pulsing VDTs, absorbing each new data rush with giddy nods. A bearded man in an ill-fitting sport coat (he looks as if he wearrs a serape at home and subsists on ogranic trail mix) stares at a screen aswarm with 3-D graphics and grins beatifically. The Mac is beautiful, long live the Mac. Even the Japanese in attendance seem caught up in the digital euphoria. There is no doubt about it: The Apple PC, conceived in a garage by Stevens Jobs and Wozniak, has evolved from a kind of homegrown, countercultural calculator into a multibillion-dollar commercial miracle. But the Macintosh is not the only attraction at the Macworld Expo. On the sidewalk outside the convention hall, a trollish young man with shoulder-length hair and a funky brocade vest is drawing his own adoring audience. Ken Goffman, known to his public by the pen name R.U. Sirius, is the editor of _Mondo 2000_, a rapidly growing desktop-published glossy magazine that documents, among other things, the strange convergence of psychedelic-dru use and avant-garde computer science. Recent articles have included an interview with Timothy Leary on highter computer conscionsness (LSD meets the PC), a rundown of the latest intelligence-boosting pharmaceuticals and a talk with medical scientist John Lilly, the inventor of the sensory-deprivation tank and the trippy pioneer of human/dolphin communication. Today, Goffman has a new issue for sale, and MacAddicts, even the suited, Roledexed ones, are lining up to purchase it (at $5.95 a copy) at an astonishing rate. Possible thinking I'm with _Mondo_, one of the buyers apologizes to me for his Brooks Brothers costume ("My straight clothes") techie friends plan to drop 25D, a mild designer hallucinogen, and check out musician/computer-head Todd Rundgren's Utopia Grokware products. I look at the man's Macworld Expo badge and see that he's an employee of a major San Jose software firm. It doesn't surprise me at all. I've been in California for almost two weeks, deep in the psycho-silicon jungle, and I've met enough of its denizens to know that the "enemy" in the war on drugs includes quite a few of our country's best minds and leading scientific innovators. (Jobs, for example, is a self-confessed former acidhead.) If a massive nationwide raid were held today, it would net mathematicians, inventors, technicians and a multitude of free-lance visionaries--the very people we're counting on to beat out the Japanese, renew a stagnant economy and generally lead us in to the MacFuture. Indeed, this corps of turned-on nerds has already helped to change our lives, providing much of the high-test zeal that has joysticked us from the age of heavy industry into the point-and-click MacPresent of megabytes and mice, shrinking the modern office to the size of a laptop computer and enlarging the laptop computer, via such things as modems and networks, into a walkie-talkie for the global village. So before the crackdown goes any farther, perhaps it's time to ask: Can America afford to take the "high" out of high technology? Arnie Greif is the sort of young man who free-market conservatives applaud in principle but tent to ignore, or even to attack, in practice: a committed, free-thinknig entrepreneur. Along with his wife, Sherri, he operates a business, FractalVision, out of a modest one-story house in a Los Angeles suburb. He keeps a punishing schedule. By day, he toils full-time as a systems analyst for a large electronics corporation, then puts in another forty or fifty hours a week at the Sun workstation computer in his den. Fortunately, the long nocturnal hours are paying off. Unlike most small businesses these days, FractalVision is growing and has doubled income every year since 1987. Basically, what FractalVision produces is digitized hallucinations. Greif pops a tape into his VCR and plays some of the for me. Immediately, the screen is suffused with flowing fields of vibrant imagery. The images are abstract yet familiar, outrageous yet structured--the sort of shapes people often see after taking magic mushrooms. An iridescent snowbank melts away in time-lapse motion. Colonies of Martian microbes fuse and mutate and split apart. The effect on the viewer is slightly disconcerting; you feel as if you're peering into your own brain, watching neutrons fire by the millions. Greif explains that the forms are not random but are visual ranslations of cretain simple equations fed into his computer. This so-called "fractal geometry"--pioneered by Benoit Mandelbrot, an IBM research scientist--governs the behavior of natural phenomena from waterfalls to clouds to brainwaves. This is the new psychedelia, where math and mysticism mix. "On the Fourth of July, 1979," Greif says, "I stared at a blank white wall. I was doing a lot of hallucinogens at the time, and patterns like these are what I saw. Later, I discovered fractal geometry and learned that these shapes are the building blocks of the universe. Now I am able to reproduce these forms mathematically rather than chemically." Arnie goes on to detail the applications of his fractal designs. Some have appeared in music videos--in Cher's _Heart of Stone_, for example. Also, psychotherapists have used his tapes as relaxation aids for their patients. And the principles underlying the designs have implications for acoutic science. Currently, he is working with an engineer to improve studio recording techniques. Eventually, I ask the 30-year-old Grief if he still trips. It seems like an inappropriate question, given the squareness of our surrounding: a living room straight out of the Leviz catalogue, strictly suburban sub-modern. "No, but that doesn't mean I won't go out there again," he says, toying with a strand of shag run. "I've got kids now, so it's hard, it's hard to find the time. I don't really side with the war on drugs, however. Psychedelic drugs are like a chef's knife: dangerous in the wrong hands but useful to the professional." He nods at the video monitor and adds, "I don't think I could have accomplished what I have without them." Among high-tech entrepreneurs, Arnie Greif is not alone in feeling that chemicals and achievement really can mix, all those stern public-service announcements notwithstanding. Ron Lawrence and Vicki Marshall are the founders of a company called KnoWare, a Los Angeles publishing firm and Macintosh consultancy. "Whatever problem you're having with the Mac," Ron boasts, "we're here to solve it. Day or night." Most recently, KnoWare was summoned to troubleshoot the office system of a West Coast fashion magazine. Lawrence, a 45-year-old Vietnam eteran who returned from the war depressed and alienated, credits his personal salvation to three forces: the Macintosh computer, the writings of Timothy Leary (which KnoWare publishes) and psychedelic drugs. "Drugs for me were a catalyst," he says. "By taking sychedelics, you clean out the storage banks and have to reprogram yourself. Thats what I did. And that's what I do with this baby here." He pats his computer as if it were a pet, as if it were part of himself. "Just like with the mind," says Lawrence, "nothing appears on that screen that you don't put there. Psychedelics teach you that." David (not his real name) is a graduate of a top East Coast engieering program. He commutes from his communal house in Berkeley to a computing job at one of America's leading producers of professional video equipment. I interview him in hi home office, where he conducts a sideline business designing custom software packages. On the other side of the office door, at the kitchen table, his housemates are using razor blades to strip the tough green skin off a large San Pedro cactus, hoping to get at the mescaline inside. David's fingers wander lightly over his computer keyboard as he describes the appeal of psychoactive drugs for himself and some of his high-tech peers. his tranquil, cloistered manner reminds me of a friend of mine--an acidhead Ivy League computing major, who, last time I heard from him, was living near Palo Alto doing classified Star Wars research. "If you think about it," says David, "the computer is an alien presence. it takes a lot of courage to relate to such an amazing machine. Drugs help me to overcome my fear of the computer--especially the new drugs. For example, there was the time I used U4ia [a long-acting form of amphetamine] to solve a knotty programming problem. I'd been stuck on this problem for ages, and the drug help to free up my mind enough so I could see it in a while new way." The new drugs David is referring to come in an almost limitless variety. Because the drugs' molecular structures are somewhat malleable and can be changed around faster than the DEA can identify them, some of the newest have yet to made illegal. A number of the substances are designed and manufactured by respectable degree-holding chemists, one of whom is a full professor at a prestigious California university. There is MDMA, or ecstasy, which is said to evoke Aquarian feelings of love and brotherhood. There is ketamine, a potent operating-room anesthetic that I came across maybe a half-dozen times in my Silicon Valley travels. Ketamine, says David, "takes you on a submarine ride ton the bottom of the universe." Then there is DMT, the _Tyrannosaurus rex_ of psychedelics. Usually spoken of by users with a certain wide-eyed, trembling awe, DMT has the power, in the words of one programmer i met," to completely annihilate your ego in about a minute. Your body falls off like a peeled banana skin, and you rocket away in a ray of white light to the edge of known existence." Egoless, bodiless white-light astral travel sounds like pretty scary stuff, and those who have tried DMT readily admit its perils. One mathematics professor I interviewed put it this way: "YOu use the drug three times, and the words 'brain damage' literally appear before your eyes." Indeed, such sober warnings were common among the turned-on techies I encountered. For them, drug use is serious business, requiring meticulous preflight preparations. Prior to takeoff, a typical user fortifies his system with plenty of fruit juice and vitamins, then loads the CD player with congenial music--Bach, perhaps, for thte austerely intellectual; the Red Hot Chili Peppers for the more adventurous. He may even consult an instruction manual, such as the closely typed four-page leaflet that sometimes is provided by hyperresponsible dealers with doses of MDMA ("After an MDMA session, great care must be taken in swallowing solid food, since there is a minimem amount of anesthesia present..."). In the one DMT "experiment" I witnessed, the subject was carefully watched and attended to by a notetaking, water-drinking friends--the psychedelic equivalent of a designated driver. In this world of oddly stringent trippers, where so many genious IQs are on the line, there is little patience for sloppy procedure. The goal is intellectual adventure, not intoxication. Alcohol is widely dismissed as insufficiently insight-inducing. Cigarettes are scarce. Cocaine is charged with promoting aggression and stupidity. The drug-taking is discreet, almost monklike, and, consequently, busts are rare. None of my sources showed any interest in winning converts to higher chemical consciousness, let alone in making money off of drug sales. (Concerned parents will want to note that it doesn't seem likey DMT and ketamine will soon appear on your local playground, despite their popularity at your local high-tech research park.) Readers may logically wonder at this point just how people like David hold on to thier joob, considering the amount of time they spend riding cosmic submarines. What's more, in this age of widespread drug testing, how did they get their job in the first place? The answers to these questions lie in the nonconformist, fairly hallucinogenic nature of the computer industry itself. In a business that seeks to shrink the human mind and put it in a box for easy access, access to one's own mind is not a guilty pleasure but something approaching a duty. R.U. Sirius, whose journalistic rounds put him in constant contact with Siliconites of all descriptions, says, "In my experience, the most creative people in computers experiment with drugs. It's a very bizarre culture, where the freaks are the elite. At a company like Autodesk [a cutting edge developer of virtual-reality technology], the R&D department includes a little room full of people in sandals, with hair down to their ass. At Apple, they buy group tickets to the Grateful Dead show at the end of the year." But what about bad trips? What about those terrifying times when the submarine fails to surface? R.U.'s answer brims with common sense: "People in those fields, if they know what they're doing, seldom freak out. Say that a computer person takes some acid now, in 1991, and everything he sees and hears and feels in speeding by and changing shape. What's the difference between that and his everyday reality?" Chip Krauskopt is the manager of the Human Interface Programat Intel Corporation, the nation's top maker of microprocessors and also a Defense contractor. He corroborates R.U.'s impressions. That Krauskopf is willing--even eager--to speak for attribution underlines Silicon Valley's no-sweat attitude toward chemical recreation. "Some of the people here are very, very, very bright," says Krauskopf. "They were bored in school, and, as a result, they hung out, took drugs and got into computers. A lot of people I know took exactly that path. And remember, this is an industry that grew up in the Sixties, so there was never any stigma against so-called 'hippies.' People at Intel get judged strictly by how good they are. If their skills and arguments are strong, nobody cares if they wear tie-dye and sandals." But what about the urine tests often required by the federal government for suppliers such as Intel? Don't they weed out the heads? Well, no. For one things, urinalysis does not detect most hallucinogens--a fact that led cyberessayist Robert Anton Wilson to predict, in Mondo 2000, "The corporate structure of the short-term future will therefore this our the ranks of pot smokers and coke freaks while the acid heads climb merrily upward in the heirarchy." Furthermore, the tests can pick up only relatively high concentrations of drugs, and Intel's executives virtually see to it that potential employees have an opportunity to clean up their act, at least temporarily, before their pee is screened. "We tell candidates when they first come in for an interview that eventually they will be tested," says Krauskopf. "The levels that are tested at, you see, are such that you have to have taken drugs in the past forty-eight hours. Unless you're a total idiot and do drugs every day, you're going to test clean." If this comes as disturbing news to the straitlaced--the idea that inside the high inside the high-tech core of everything from your office PC to the guidance system of the Patriot missle lurks a psychedelic genie--just consider the alternative. If the drug testing were effective and if it had begun, say, twenty-five years ago, chances are that some of our country's most vital industries might not exist today. Software magnate Mitch Kapor, founder of Lotus Development, whose 1-2-3 spreadsheet forever changed accounting, has publicly credited "recreational chemicals" with helping him form his business outlook. David Bunnell, who started PC Magazine and helped create the Altair, oe of the first personal computers, remembers his co-poineers as looking as if "they were just coming down off a ten-year acid trip." (One of Bunnell's hippie colleagues, Microsoft's Bill Gates, is now one of the country's richest individuals, worth more than $4 billion.) It's time to face fact, America. With our buttoned-down financiers in prison, our uptight bankers in bankruptcy and our automotive titans in retreat, perhaps our freaks are our last, best hope. And it's not that they've been co-opted by the system--they've co-opted it. Yesterday's dropouts, in many cases, are todays insiders, and some of today's head honchos are heads. But what about tommorrow? If you're looking for a prophet of the scientific future, you could do worse than mathematician Ralph Abraham, a shaggy middle-aged professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz, who can use the word "grok" in casual conversation and get away with it. Abraham's revolutionary specialty, in which he is an acknowledged leader, has come to be known as "chaos math" or "dynamical system theory." What people such as Abraham try to do is graph and predict, with the help of computers, seemingly unpredictable events: global climatic change, the rise and fall of financial markets, even the social origins of war. What makes this math revolutionary, of course, is that no one has really mastered it yet, although aficianados believe it can be mastered and that the attempt is eminently worht making. The driving idea behind chaos math--that there is order in randomness and randomness in order--sounds like one of those drug-induced epiphanies you scrawl on a napkin at 3am and then throw away the next day. Well, in a rather literal sense, it is a drug-inspired notion, except that ralph Abraham kept the napkin and has been doodling on it ever since. "In the 1960s," he says, "a lot of people on the frontiers of math experimented with psychedelic substances. There was a brief and extremely creative kiss between the community of hippies and top mathematics. I know this because I was a purveyor of psychedelics to the mathematical community." Math and acid--not, on would think, a natural combination. It's like hearing a champion marathon runner credit his success to chain-smoking Camels. I'm confused. The image of a frying egg ("This is your brain on drugs") flashes in my mind's eye. Abraham explains, "To be creative in mathematics, you have to start from a point of total oblivion. Basically, math is revealed in a totally unconscious process in which one is completely ignorant of the social climate. And mathematical advance has always been the motor behind the advancement of consciousness. What's going on now with dynamical systems theory is at least big a thing as the invention of the wheel." He glances at his desk, at the ubiquitous Macintosh sitting the, with its blind gray screen. "Without this machine, of course," says Abraham, "what we're doing now would not be possible. The computer extends our intellect, which helps us create the future. It offers a door to perceiving complex space-time realities." Abraham explains, "To be creative in mathematics, you have to start from a point of total oblivion. Basically, math is revealed in a totally unconscious process in which one is completely ignorant of the social climate. And mathematical advance has always been the motor behind the advancement of consciousness. What's going on now with dynamical systems theory is at least as big a thing as the invention of the wheel." He glances at his desk, at the ubiquitous Macintosh sitting there, with its blind gray screen. "Without this machine, of course," says Abraham, "what we're doing now would not be possible. The computer extends our intellect, which helps us create the future. It offers a door of perception were cleansed every thing would appear to man as it is, infinite." But what, according to Abraham, will all this infinite portal-cleansing bring? Nothing less, he predicts, than global peace. "Social science, up until now, has not been very scientific. Now, with computers and the new mathematics, we may be able to change that. Soon we may be able to map and manipulate a certain set of parametes--social, cultural, economic, geographical--that will help us to anticipate and mediate international conflict. Loving on the largest possible scale will be enhanced by the intellectual capability to understand the complexity of the systems in which we live." Spoken like a true Macflower child. They are sitting in a darkened Berkeley living room, talking about virtual reality and smoking the milder, powdered form of ketamine. I'm with them but not with them, if you catch my drift. The ketamite is a bit way-out for me, and the conversation too. Because I don't wish these folks legal hassles, I won't say who they are, just that they know a lot about computers (on man runs a thriving electronics research firm) and more than a thing or two about drugs. Their speech, in case you're wondering, as perfectly coherent. Alarmingly coherent, when you consider its content. "You know that telephone-company saving," someone pipes up from the couch, " `Reach out and touch someone'? Well, soon, with the help of virtual reality, you will be able to do that, literally. You'll wear a kind of bodysuit with hundreds of little sensors and vibrators. You'll plug it into your computer, your partner across the country will plug in too, and you'll be able to feel each other up by moving around in the suits. There's a term for it already, `teledildonics.' The phenomenon of long-distance sex." The beautiful young woman sitting beside him--she's a computer musician, and we have just finished listening to her tape--takes a hit of ketamine, then says, "Perfect. No diseases. No unwanted pregnancies." "Here's something else," says another young man. "It's very, very possible that someday we will be able to transfer the contents of our brains straight onto a microchip." "Why?" I ask. "Why wouuld we want to do something like that?" "Come on," he says, "we do it already. We do it all the time, whenever we type our ideas into a compter. In the future, we'll just do it faster, more directly." I concede that, yes, it's a thought. They're all thoughts. Teledildonics, that's a thought too. And as the room fills up with thoughts--Utopian, stange, inspiring, ridiculous--it strikes me that this is precisely what Americans are supposed to do: think freely, then try to apply those thoughts, skeptics and solid citizens be damned. Ford did it, Eddison did it, Jobs and Wozniak did it, Eddison did it, Ralph Abraham is doing it now. It's what we're good at and, coincidentally, what some of our international competitors--with their ancient social rule books and close-order corporate calisthenic sessions--aren't so good at. In his recent book, _More Like Us_, Japan expert James Fallows argued convincingly that instead of trying tto ape Japan's regimented industrial economy, the United States would do better to unleash its individualistic potential. This may be another way of saying that weirdness can be an export commodity. Timothy Leary, who has welcomed the computer revolution with his characteristic cosmic enthusiasm, agrees. While Leary may be a prophet without honor in his own country, the Japanese think otherwise, and he is much in demand there as a lecturer and cultural consultant. "Japan is a tightly structured hive society, and they knokw it," says Leary. "So just as they go the Middle East for oil and Australia for wood, they come to California for creativity. They realize that creativity is a raw resource and that we have an abundance of it here." Part of the recipe for that abundance, like it or not, is chemical. When encountering some bizarre high-tech marvel, we often that we suspect, we're right. And how should we react to this? Is say: as tolerantly and calmly as possible. A little brain damage, in the end, may be a small price to pay for major brainstorms. And it's not as if we could stop these people even if we wanted to. As ever, the pioneers will continue to pioneer, assuming whatever risks they deem necessary. Judge them not by the trips they take but by the gifts they carry back. ============================================================================ / / / NIA073 / File 03 / / Internet 2 Anywhere / / Industrial Phreak / / / In the last issue of Phrack magazine was published the uucp to compuserve gateway material. In light of the recent happenings of Phrack magazine I have decided to write the uucp to anywhere material and send it to NIA. This file will tell you how to recieve and send mail to everywhere reachable from internet. This is meant for those just starting on using the internet and thus the experienced users and dry. --Industrial Phreak Current networks that are connected by a gateway are as follows: applelink AppleLink (Apple Computer, Inc.'s in-house network) attmail AT&T Mail,AT&T's commercial e-mail service. bitnet international academic network bix Byte Information eXchange: Byte magazine's commercial BBS bmug Berkeley Macintosh Users Group compuserve commercial time-sharing service connect Connect Professional Information Network (commercial) easynet Easynet (DEC's in-house mail system) envoy Envoy-100 (Canadian commercial mail service) fax Facsimile document transmission fidonet PC-based BBS network geonet GeoNet Mailbox Systems (commercial) internet the Internet mci MCI's commercial electronic mail service mfenet Magnetic Fusion Energy Network nasamail NASA internal electronic mail peacenet non-profit mail service sinet Schlumberger Information NETwork span Space Physics Analysis Network (includes HEPnet) sprintmail Sprint's commercial mail service (formerly Telemail) thenet Texas Higher Education Network Ok, here goes the rest: I'm at: applelink You're at: internet To mail you i write to "user@domain@internet#" in which the domian can be the form of "site.bitnet" w/the address being less than 35 characters I'm at: AT&T Mail (Herein: attmail) You're at: internet To mail you I write to "internet!domain!user". For any problems contact the AT&T Mail Customer Assistance Center at 1.800.MAIL.672 I'm at: bitnet You're at: internet There are a few ways of doing this depending upon your software. In most cases "user@domain" should work. If this doesn't, try "user%domain@gateway" where "gateway" is a regional Bitnet-Internet gateway site. I'm at: compuserve You're at: fax machine To send you something I simply send (in USA only) "FAX number". If you were at the number +1 512 666 1234 then in the number field I would put "15126661234". Not difficult. I'm at: compuserve You're at: mci If your address at mci was 666-6969 I would put ">MCIMAIL:666-6969". I'm at: connect You're at: internet I would send to CONNECT id "DASNET" and on the first line of the message put "\"user@domain\"@DASNET" I'm at: easynet You're at: bitnet The gateway is DECWRL::ADMIN. Therefore from VMS use NMAIL to send to "nm%DECWRL::\"user@site.bitnet\"". From Unix send to "user@site.bitnet" or if that fails send (via IP) "\"user%site.bitnet\"@decwrl.dec.com" or (via DECNET) send "DECWRL::\"user@site.bitnet\"" I'm at: envoy You're at: internet The gateway is ICS.TEST or ICS.BOARD. Therefore send to "[RFC-822=\"user(a)domain\"]INTERNET/TELEMAIL/US" and for special characters use @=(a) !=(b) _=(u) any=(three octal digits) I'm at: fidonet You're at: internet Just send to "uucp" at the nearest gateway site and in the first line put "To: user@domain" I'm at: geonet You're at: internet I would send to "DASNET" and in the subject line put "user@domain!subject" I'm at: GSFCMail You're at: internet The nearest gateway is cust.svc. Therefore at the "To:" type POSTMAN and at the first line of your message enter "To: user@domain" I'm at: GSFCMail You're at: NASAMAIL The gateway is cust.svc so send to "(C:USA,ADMD:TELEMAIL,P:NASAMAIL,O:NASA,UN:userid)" I'm at: GSFCMail You're at: span (now nsi-decnet) The gateway is cust.svc. At the "To:" type "POSTMAIN" and in the first line of the message type "To: user@host.SPAN.NASA.GOV" or use GSFCCNE gateway and send it to (C:USA,ADMD:TELEMAIL,P:GSFCCNE,O:SPAN,OU:host,SN:user) I'm at: GSFCMail You're at: sprintmail For public networks send it to "(C:USA,ADMD:TELEMAIL,O:organization,UN:userid)" and for private networkds send it to "(C:USA,ADMD:TELEMAIL,PRMD:private_net,O:organization,UH:userid)" I'm at: internet You're at: applelink Just send it to "user@applelink.apple.com" I'm at: internet You're at: attmail Again just send it to "user@attmail.com" I'm at: internet You're at: bitnet I would send it to "user%site.bitnet@gateway" where gateway is the gateway host like cunyvm.cuny.edu or mitvma.mit.edu. I'm at: internet You're at: bix Just send it to "user@dcibix.das.net" I'm at: internet You're at: bmug If your name was Jack Off then I would send it to "Jack.Off@bmug.fidonet.org" I'm at: internet You're at: compuserve If your ID was "76969.666" then I would send it to "76969.666@compuserve.com" I'm at: internet You're at: connect If your NAME was JACK the I'd send it to "JACK@dcjcon.das.net" I'm at: internet You're at: easynet Your field is HOST::USER so I would send it to "user@host.enet.dec.com" or "user%host.enet@decwrl.dec.com". I'm at: internet You're at: easynet Lets say you're Jack Off @CUM, then I would send it to "Jack.Off@CUM.MTSMDEC.COM" I'm at: internet You're at: econet The gateway is so I would send to "user@igc.org". I'm at: internet You're at: envoy I'd send to "att!attmail!mhs!envoy!userid@UUNET.UU.NET" or if that didn't work thru US Sprint's X.400 gateway to "/C=CA/ADMD=TELECOM.CANADA/O=ENVOY/DD.ID=userid/@SPRINT.COM" I'm at: internet You're at: fidonet If you were jack off at 1:2/13:69 then I'd send to "jack.off@p69.f13.n2.z1.fidonet.org" I'm at: internet You're at: geonet I'd send to "user:host@map.das.net". [NOTE: the American host is geo4 and European host is geo1]. I'm at: internet You're at: GSFCMail The gateway is postmaster@ames.arc.nasa.gov so I'd send to "user@GSFCMAIL.NASA.GOV" I'm at: internet You're at: mci You're Jack Off (123-4567) I'd send to "1234567@mcimail.com". I'm at: internet You're at: mfenet Then I'd send to "user%mfenode.mfenet@nmfecc.arpa" I'm at: internet You're at: nasamail The gateway is so I'd send it to "user@nasamail.nasa.gov" I'm at: internet You're at: peacenet The gateway is so I'd send it to "user@igc.org". I'm at: internet You're at: signet (through FidoNet) Ok, you're Jack Off again at 1:2/13:69 send it to Jack.Off@f527.n2.z2.fidonet.org (thats the Fido-SigNet gateway) and in the first line put "@DOMAIN SIGNet 1:2/13:69 FidoNet 2:2/527". [NOTE: The sysop of the gateway can be reached "andreas.levenitschnig@f527.n2.z2.fidonet.org". I'm at: internet You're at: sinet Your fields are node::user or node1::node::user so send to "user@node.SINet.SLB.COM" or "user%node@node1.SINet.SLB.COM" I'm at: internet You're at: span (now nsi-decnet) Your field is host::user and the gateway is netmgr@nssdca.gsfc.nasa.gov so send to "user@host.SPAN.NASA.GOV" I'm at: internet You're at: sprintmail The gateway is postmaster@sprint.com so for public networks send to "/C=US/ADMD=TELEMAIL/O=organization/DD.UN=userid/@SPRINT.COM" or if you know the recipients registered full name "/C=US/ADMD=TELEMAIL/O=organization/PN=firstname.lastname/@SPRINT.COM" for private networks send to "/C=USA/ADMD=TELEMAIL/PRMD=private_net/O=organization/DD.UN=userid/@SPRINT.COM" I'm at: internet You're at: thenet Send to "user%host.decnet@utadnx.cc.utexas.edu" I'm at: internet You're at: uninet (South Africa) (Thru FidoNet) Send the message to user.node@f4.n494.z5.fidonet.org (a list of uninet nodes can be obtained with a SEND UNINODE) I'm at: mci You're at: internet At the "To" prompt type "Jack Off (EMS)" at "EMS:" type "internet" and at the "Mbx:" type "user@domian". I'm at: nasamail You're at: internet At the "To:" prompt type "POSTMAN" and at the "Text:" (i.e. as the first line of your message) enter "To: user@domain". I'm at: sinet You're at: internet Send it to "M_MAILNOW::M_INTERNET::\"user@domain\"" or "M_MAILNOW::M_INTERNET::domain::user" I'm at: span (now nsi-decnet) You're at: GSFCMain The gateway is mssdca::netmgr so send to "AMES::\"user@GSFCMAIL.NASA.GOV"\" I'm at: span You're at: internet The gateway is nssdca::netmgr so send it to "AMES::\"user@domain\"" I'm at: sprintmail You're at: internet The gateway is (c:usa,admd:telemail,o:telenet.tele,fn:technical,sn:support,i:t) so send to "(C:USA,ADMD:TELEMAIl,PRMD:INTERNET,ID:)" I'm at: thenet You're at: internet So you send it to "UTADNX::WINS%" user@domain " Networks not connected American Online, British Telecom Gold, DialCom, Dialog, Easylink, Eurokom, Fidelity Investments, GEnie, GoldNet, HandsNet, Midas Internation HQ, Nifty-Serve, OMNET (thru CMR send mail to OMNET users by "[omnet.user/OMNET]MAIL/USA%TELEMAIL"@Inetermail.ISI.EDU", Paranet, PC-Relay, Prodigy [thank god], PROFS (general), PROFS (IBM), QUICK-COMM, SABRE, Telemail, VNET. For comments on the file I can be found on internet at uk05769@ukpr.uky.edu Ciao! / / / NIA073 / File 04 / / Globally Tymnet [01/02] / / by Hi Fi Del / / / The following countries and their connections with Tymnet I have organized information on. This is in list/table type format. These countries are detailed: Jamaca, Japan, Kuwait, Luxembourg, Malaysia, Mexico, Netherlands and New Zealand. For those of ya' that don't know very much about Tymnet, see one of the numerous files that have been done on the basics. Enjoy! --- JAMAICA --- JAMAICA - ENHANCED GLOBAL CONNECTION SERVICE 1. TYMUSA Gateway Host Number: 5368 2. Node Number: 3676 3. Rates: $10.00/hour and $.50/Kchar 4. Dialup Locations and Numbers: (1.809) 924-9915 300/1200 Bps Bell 212A 5. Trouble Reporting Center: Support (local) phone: (1.809) 921 5312 Hours of Operation: 24hrs Contact: JAMAICA - BASIC GLOBAL CONNECTION SERVICE Jamaica International Telecommunications Ltd. Net. Name: JAMANTEL 15, North Street DNIC: 3380 P.O. Box 138 Kingston, Jamaica Contact: Mr. Rickards (809) 921-5316/922-6063 Telex: (381) 112 OnTyme: INTL.JAMINTELCOMM 1. ACCESS/SPEEDS: Async dial-in/leased speeds: 300-1200 bps Synchronous leased speeds: 2400-9600 bps 2. PROTOCOLS: Async terminal interface, Sync X.25 3. PRICES: All Prices are in Jamaican Dollars. (1 $ U.S. = 5.35 Jam. $) Connect time: $ .75/minute Transmission: $ 2.25/Kchar. 4. COMMENTS: n/a --------------- OPERATIONAL/TECHNICAL INFORMATION ------------------- 1. FIRST LINE CUSTOMER SERVICE/TROUBLE REPORTING: Contact: Trouble Reporting Hours of Operation: 24hrs Phone: (809) 921 5312 Fax: (809) 921 5329 Ontyme: INTL.JAMINTEL 2. SERVICE INFORMATION ADDRESS: 3. TEST ADDRESS: 4. ASYNC ACCESS PROCEDURES: LOGON: TYMNET STYLE "please log in: " 5. TYMUSA AVAILABLE: Yes 6. DEFAULT PAD SETTINGS: 7. ASYNC DIAL-IN ACCESS TELEPHONE NUMBERS: City/Territory Modem/Speed Access Number ----------------------------------------------------------------- Kingston Bell 212A/300-1200bps (809)924-9915 --- JAPAN --- JAPAN (NIS) - ENHANCED GLOBAL CONNECTION 1. TYMUSA Gateway Host Number: 5404 2. Dialup Node(s): TYM2 Gateway Node(s): 222 3. Rates: $11.40/Hour $0.30/Kilocharacter 4. Dialup Locations and Numbers: City V.21/300bps V.22/1200bps V.22 1200/2400bps -------- ----------- ------------ --------------- Akita 0188-65-5735 0188-65-5733 Atsugi 0462-21-5331 0462-21-0404 Chiba 0472-27-0671 0472-27-0601 Fukui 0776-34-3308 0776-35-8840 Fukuoka 092-474-7076 092-474-7196 Hamamatsu 0534-56-7355 0534-56-7231 Hiroshima 082-241-6857 082-243-9270 Kagoshima 0992-22-8598 0992-22-8954 Kanazawa 0762-24-2351 0762-24-2341 Kobe 078-242-1097 078-242-1115 Kouriyama 0249-38-5396 Kumamoto 096-355-5233 096-354-3065 Kyoto 075-431-6205 075-431-6203 Matsuyama 0899-32-2975 0899-32-4207 Mito 0292-24-1675 0292-24-4213 Morioka 0196-54-8513 0196-54-7315 Nagasaki 0958-28-6088 0958-28-6077 Nagoya 052-911-1621 052-981-3221 Naha 0988-61-4002 0988-61-3414 Niigata 025-241-5409 025-241-5410 Nogano 0262-34-3900 Ohita 0975-38-2160 Okayama 0862-32-6760 0862-31-4993 Osaka 06-271-9028 06-271-9029 06-271-6876 Sendai 022-231-5741 022-231-5355 Sapporo 022-231-5741 022-231-5355 Shizuoka 0542-84-3393 0542-84-3398 Takamatsu 0878-23-0502 0878-23-0501 Takasaki 0273-23-9739 Tokuyama 0834-32-0991 Tokyo 03-555-9525 03-555-9526 03-555-9696 Toyama 0764-41-7578 0764-41-7769 Tsuchiura 0298-55-6123 0298-55-6121 Tuchiura 0298-55-5082 0298-55-6121 Urawa 048-833-9341 Utsunomiya 0286-34-8251 Yokohama 045-453-7757 045-453-7637 Yonago 0859-32-3201 5. Trouble Reporting Center: Support (local) Phone: (011.81.3)-551-6220 Hours of Operation: 24hrs/day, 7days/week. Contact: Network Control Center 6. Comments: Domestic Username has to be valid with access from Class 17. JAPAN - BASIC GLOBAL CONNECTION SERVICE SERVICE OFFERINGS: 4406/NISnet (National & International) Network Information Service Co. (Tymnet Japan) Net. Name: NISNET Marketing and Sales Division DNIC: 4406 1-13-5 Kudanshita Chiyoda-Ku Tokyo, Japan 102 Contact: Mr. Toshi Murakami Tel :(81.3)-262-8711 Fax :(81.3)-262-8757 Telex :(781)29720 Ontyme:NIS.HQ U.S. Contact: Mr. Nobuhiro Takayama Tel: (212)351-5059 Regional Manager of USA Fax: (212)351-5860 c/o BT Tymnet, Inc. 335 Madison Avenue, 11th Floor New York, New York 10017 1. ACCESS/SPEED: Asynchronous dial-in speeds: 300, 1200, 2400bps Asynchronous leased speeds : 300-2400bps, 9600bps Synchronous leased speeds : 2400-14400bps 2. PROTOCOLS: Async, X.PC, Sync, X.25, RJE, 3270 Bisync, SDLC, CMT & SNA. (IBM, HITACHI, FUJITSU dialects supported) 3. PRICES: Please reference COMMENTS. Service Lead Times: NUI 3 days; Leased lines 30-45 days 4. COMMENTS: I. Service description Service name: Pegasus 1) T2 (TYMNET) Gateway Services (NIS) (TYMNET) ASYNC ASYNC ASYNC X.25 X.25 ASYNC X.25 X.25 3270 BSC Native 3270 BSC Native (IBM, HITACHI, FUJITSU) (IBM HOST) 3270 XNA/CMT ASYNC 3270 BSC/CMT ASYNC (IBM, HITACHI, FUJITSU) ASYNC 3270 BSC/CMT(IBM) ASYNC 3270 SNA/CMT(IBM) SDLC SDLC 3780 3780 ** X.PC is available in ASYNC protocol. ** Public TymDial 9.6 is available at Tokyo. ** X.25, SDLC, XNA interface is available at Tokyo, Osaka, Nagoya, Sappolo, Sendai, Fukui, Okayama, Fukuoka,Toyama and Shizuoka. 2) X.75 Gateway Services (NIS) (TYMNET) ASYNC ASYNC ASYNC X.25 X.25 ASYNC X.25 X.25 3270 BSC/CMT ASYNC 3270 SNA/CMT ASYNC ASYNC 3270 BSC/CMT ASYNC 3270 SNA/CMT 3) International Dedicated Connection The IDC service is designed to provide any dedicated interface customer with a ceiling on connect time charges across their link. The customer will be charged a flat $1,000 or 140,000 yen connect time charge for each interface which receives billing (either U.S. or Japan), plus normal character charges (see below). This means that a customer with one interface on each network making, host to host calls, will pay one IDC charge. Two interfaces receiving IDC traffic will be assess one IDC fixed charge for each interface. This is an ideal service where PVC's are required, for back-up service to an international leased line, or any dedicated application that uses more than 85 to 90 hours per month. A separate order must be entered in OES to obtain this facility (see file, NIS.DOC). 4) TYMUSA Service: Yes II. Pricing. NIS INTERNATIONAL RATE SCHEDULE ------------------------------- Rates are classified into Dedicated port services and Public(Dial-up) services. (Note 1$ U.S. = 150.53 Yen as of 7/90). 1. Dedicated line services Monthly rate 1) General accounting charge 25,000 yen This charge applies to all leased line customers. (Note) Current users that already use NIS domestic service will be charged 5,000 yen only, in addition to domestic General accounting rate. 2) Dedicated port charge 8,000 yen This charge applies to all dedicated interfaces. 3) Each NUI 500 yen 4) Enhanced service charge 15,000 yen This charge applies to customers using BSC or SDLC. 5) International Dedicated Connection (P.V.C.) 140,000 yen or $1,000 per month. This eliminates all connect charges. IDC is charged on a per interface basis, $1,000 for all connect charges across a link (see description above). 6) Leased line charge including a pair of modems. (yen per month) I--------------------------------------------------------I I -10 km -20km -30km -60km -120km I I--------------------------------------------------------I I 2400bps line 28,000 43,000 74,000 102,000 156,000 I I 4800bps line 32,000 47,000 78,000 106,000 160,000 I I 9600bps line 44,000 59,000 90,000 118,000 172,000 I I19200bps line 97,000 112,000 143,000 171,000 225,000 I I--------------------------------------------------------I Installation fee(one time) 212,000 each line 30,000 each modem 7) Dedicated Outdial and TymDial 9.6 facility. Installation 10,000 yen Dedicated port charge 8,000 yen Business Line Charges at cost 8) CPE (Customer Premise Equipment) Purchase Price ATC-4 478,000 yen ATC-8 584,000 yen Pico-Engine 1,498,000 yen Micro-Engine 2 512kb 2,652,000 yen Micro-Engine 3 1024kb 3,536,000 yen Micro-Engine 4 1024kb 3,536,000 yen 9) CPE Rental Price ATC-4 25,000 yen/month 100,000 yen/install ATC-8 30,000 yen/month 100,000 yen/install Pico* 60,000 yen/month 250,000 yen/install Micro-2* 90,000 yen/month 250,000 yen/install Micro-3* 115,000 yen/month 250,000 yen/install Micro-4* 115,000 yen/month 250,000 yen/install * Pico and Micro Price include node code and one interface code. Price for additional interface code is 25,000 yen/interface/month and 250,000 yen/interface/ install. 2. Public (Dial-up) Service.* 1) General accounting charge None 2) Each NUI 500 yen *Available speeds are 300-2400bps, and 9600bps. There is no communication surcharge for 9600bps public dialup. 3. Communication charge 1) Caller paid 1.1 Connect charge 1,920 yen/hour IDC Customers do not pay connect charges. 1.2 Character transmission charge 45 yen/K-char Note step level discounts below. 2) Reverse Charge 2.1. Connect charge $11.40/hour 2.2. Character transmission charge $ .30/K-char 3) Step Level (Volume) discounts for transmission first 10,000 K-char $ .30 or 45 yen per K-char next 40,000 K-char $ .14 or 21 yen per K-char next 100,000 K-char $ .12 or 18 yen per K-char over 150,000 K-char $ .10 or 15 yen per K-char NIS Domestic Rates Schedule Last update: October 4, 1990 --------------------------------------------------------- These rates apply to domestic customers only. 1. Subscription Charge (one time charge) 1. Dial up (Dedicated) Service 100,000 yen/each line 2. Leased line service 140,000 yen/each line 2. General Charge 1. Common to all type of service Customer Account charge 20,000 yen/month Each user name 500 yen/month 2. Dial-up(dedicated) and leased line service only Dedicated port charge 8,000 yen/month (Modem and line surcharge-- conform to the NIS specifics) 3. Communication Charge 1. Access Charge Dial-up (public) service only. 300,1200bps 300 yen/hour 2400bps 450 yen/hour 2. Character transmission Charge I--------------------------------------------------------------I I Kilo byte per month peak time off peak time I I--------------------------------------------------------------I I First 25,000 Kbyte 6.0 yen/Kbyte 2.0 yen/Kbyte I I I I Next 125,000 Kbyte 4.5 yen/Kbyte 2.0 yen/Kbyte I I I I Over 150,000 Kbyte 3.0 yen/Kbyte 2.0 yen/Kbyte I I--------------------------------------------------------------I peak time --from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Installation Each modem 30,000 yen Upgrade, Downgrade, Move-- priced at the rate NIS specifies MODEM AND LEASED LINE SURCHARGE RATES 1. Dial-up (Dedicated) service only each 300bps modem 5,000 yen/month each 1200bps modem 6,500 yen/month each 2400bps modem 7,500 yen/month 2. Leased line service only I------------------------------------------------------------------I I line speed -10km -20km -30km -60km -120km I I -----------------------------------------------------------------I I 2400 bps line 28,000 43,000 74,000 102,000 156,000 I I 4800 bps line 32,000 47,000 78,000 106,000 160,000 I I 9600 bps line 44,000 59,000 90,000 118,000 172,000 I J1f0?s X%997,000 112,000 143,000 171,000 225,000 I I------------------------------------------------------------------I (yen per month) ------------------ OPERATIONAL/TECHNICAL INFORMATION --------------------- 1. FIRST LINE CUSTOMER SERVICE/TROUBLE REPORTING: Contact: Network Control Center Hours of Operation: 24hrs/day, 7days/week. Phone: (81.3)-551-6220 Fax : (81.3)-551-6355 Ontyme: NIS.NETCON NIS.TC 2. NETWORK INFORMATION ADDRESS: n/a 3. TEST ADDRESS: Drop Terminal: 440620000840 Echo Host: 44062000089901 4. ASYNC ACCESS PROCEDURE: LOGON: TYMNET STYLE "please log in: " 5. TYMUSA Available: Yes, see note IBAND: n/a, see note Note: IBAND does not apply as network server is not used 6. DEFAULT PAD SETTINGS: 7. ASYNC DIAL-IN ACCESS TELEPHONE NUMBERS: City V.21/300bps V.22/1200bps V.22 1200/2400bps ----------- ----------- ------------ ----------------- Akita 0188-65-5735 0188-65-5733 Atsugi 0462-21-5331 0462-21-0404 Chiba 0472-27-0671 0472-27-0601 Fukui 0776-34-3308 0776-35-8840 Fukuoka 092-474-7076 092-474-7196 Hamamatsu 0534-56-7355 0534-56-7231 Hiroshima 082-241-6857 082-243-9270 Kagoshima 0992-22-8598 0992-22-8954 Kanazawa 0762-24-2351 0762-24-2341 Kobe 078-242-1097 078-242-1115 Kouriyama 0249-38-5396 Kumamoto 096-355-5233 096-354-3065 Kyoto 075-431-6205 075-431-6203 Matsuyama 0899-32-2975 0899-32-4207 Mito 0292-24-1675 0292-24-4213 Morioka 0196-54-8513 0196-54-7315 Nagasaki 0958-28-6088 0958-28-6077 Nagoya 052-911-1621 052-981-3221 Naha (Okinawa) 0988-61-4002 0988-61-3414 Nogano 0262-34-3900 Ohita 0975-38-2160 Okayama 0862-32-6760 0862-31-4993 Osaka 06-271-9028 06-271-9029 06-271-6876 Sapporo 011-281-4343 011-281-4421 Sendai 022-231-5741 022-231-5355 Shizuoka 0542-84-3393 0542-84-3398 Takamatsu 0878-23-0502 0878-23-0501 Takasaki 0273-23-9739 Tokuyama 0834-32-0991 Tokyo 03-555-9525 03-555-9526 03-555-9696 Toyama 0764-41-7578 0764-41-7769 Tsuchiura 0298-55-6123 0298-55-6121 Urawa 048-833-9341 Utsunomiya 0286-34-8251 Yokohama 045-453-7757 045-453-7637 Yonago 0859-32-3201 Note: For NISNET-Tymnet IVAN Installation & Implementation guide, please reference (INTLINFO:38)IIGUD.NIS For NISNET-Tymnet IVAN Service trouble report, please reference (INTLINFO:38)TBLPRO.NIS For detailed NIS business & operation information, please reference (INTLINFO:38)NIS.DOC ======================== Kokusai Denshin Denwa Co. Ltd(KDD) Net. Name: VENUS-P NUI Marketing & Customer Service DNIC: 4408 2-2-2, Marunochi, Chi-Yoda-Ku Tokyo 100, Japan Contact: Mr Kohichi Ukegawa Tel : (81)3-347-5871 Telex : (781)22500 Ontyme: INTL.KDDMKTG Washington Liaison Office: Kokusai Denshin Denwa Company, Ltd. (KDD) 34K, Intelsat Building 3400 International Drive., NW Washington, D.C. 20008-3098 Tel : (202)944-7900 Telex : 440205 KDD UI Fax : (202)362-4365 Ontyme: INTL.KDD/DC New York Liaison Office: Kokusai Denshin Denwa Company, Ltd. (KDD) 535 Madison Avenue 33rd Floor New York, NY 10022 Contact: Mr Toshiki Ueda Tel : (212)832-3550 1. ACCESS/SPEEDS: Asynchronous dial-in speeds: 110-300, 1200bps Asynchronous leased speeds: 110-300, 1200bps Synchronous Leased speeds: 2400, 4800, 9600bps 2. PROTOCOLS: X.25, Bisync, HDLC, Asynchronous terminal interface 3. PRICES: ALL Prices are in Japanese Yen (1$ US = 130.20 yen 7/88) 1: Communication Charges Connect Time: Yen 40/minute Transmission: Yen 2.4/segment A. Installation charges (one time) (for tie line contract) Leased Line Installation Yen 72,000. for 300 bps Yen 102,000. for 1200-9600 DCE/Additional Service Installation: At cost B. Monthly Basic Charge 1. Tie Line Contract: Yen 21,400. for 300 bps Yen 28,200. for 1200 bps Yen 48,000. for 2400 bps Yen 75,000. for 4800 bps Yen 114,000. for 9600 bps Additional Net. Name: Multiple Logical Channel: Yen 90. per logical chnl. Abbreviated Dialing: Yen 1,080 for synchronous Yen 270. for asynchronous Yen 620. per line 2. Dial-up Contract: Yen 270. per NUI per month (abbreviated dialing) 4. COMMENTS: KDD's Liaison offices in New York & Washington are very helpful for any prospect. ------------------ OPERATIONAL/TECHNICAL INFORMATION ------------------------- 1. FIRST LINE CUSTOMER SERVICE/TROUBLE REPORTING: Contact: KDD IDSC Tokyo (Network Control Center) Hours of Operation: 24hrs/365 days Phone: (81)3-347-5221 Telex: (781)26600 Ontyme: INTL.KDDOPNS 2. NETWORK INFORMATION ADDRESS: n/a 3. TEST ADDRESS: 44082006001 4. ASYNC ACCESS PROCEDURES: LOGON: 1. On modem connect. 2. PAD prompt: .P=FA (FA is profile ID) 3. Login string: N-3106xxxxxx[Dcud] ^ ^ optional CUD ___|____| 5. TYMUSA AVAILABLE: Yes 6. DEFAULT PAD SETTINGS: 1:1, 2:1, 3:126, 4:0, 5:1, 6:1, 7:2, 8:0, 9:0, 10:0, 12:1, 13:0, 14:0, 15:0, 16:8, 17:24, 18:0, 19:1, 20:0, 21:0, 22:0 7. ASYNC DIAL-IN ACCESS TELEPHONE NUMBERS: 300bps(V.21) 1200bps(V.22) 2400bps(V.22bis) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Tokyo (81.3)-345-0300 343-1200 344-2400 Osaka (81.6)-944-0300 942-1211 944-2400 Note: These are toll free numbers that can not be accessed via IDDD. --- KUWAIT --- KUWAIT - BASIC GLOBAL CONNECTION SERVICE Ministry of Communications, KUPAC Section Kuwait Contact, Engineering: Tel: 965-2408906 1. ACCESS/SPEEDS: 2. PROTOCOLS: 3. PRICES: All prices are in Kuwaiti Dinars (KD) (1$ US = .29 KD 7/90) A. Fixed Charges: Speed Dial-up Access Leased Line Access -------------------------------------------------------- 300-2400 bps 150 KD 200 KD 4800 bps N/A 250 KD 9600 bps N/A 300 KD B. International Connection Charges: 0.050 KD /min all countries 0.005 KD/segment all countries C. Local Connection Charges: 0.010 KD/minute 0.003 KD/segment 4. COMMENTS: Service is also provided via Bahrain. ------------------OPERATIONAL/TECHNICAL INFORMATION--------------- 1. FIRST LINE CUSTOMER SERVICE/TROUBLE REPORTING: Contact: KUPAC Control Hours of Operation: 0400 - 1000 GMT Phone: 965-2408902/3/4 Telex: 496-30828 Fax: 965-2408907 2. SERVICE INFORMATION ADDRESS: n/a 3. TEST ADDRESS: Contact Customer Service for Test Address 4. ASYNC ACCESS PROCEDURES: 5. TYMUSA AVAILABLE: No 6. DEFAULT PAD SETTINGS: 1:1, 2:1, 3:126, 4:20, 5:2, 6:13, 7:2, 8:0, 9:0, 10:0, 12:1, 13:1, 14:0, 15:1, 16:127, 17:24, 18:18, 19:1, 20:0, 21:0, 22:0, 80:4, 81:88) 7. ASYNC DIAL-IN ACCESS TELEPHONE NUMBERS: NATIONWIDE ACCESS: Modem Speed Access Phone Number -------------------------------------------- 300 bps 143 1200 bps 142 2400 bps 141 --- LUXEMBOURG --- LUXEMBOURG - BASIC GLOBAL CONNECTION SERVICE Administration des P. et T. Net. Name: LUXPAC Division des Telecommunications DNIC: 2704 Bureau 211 5, rue de Hollerich L-2999 Luxembourg Contact: Mr. M. Barnig, Mr. P. Ney Tel. (352) 4991-710 (for information about Luxpac) Telex: (848)3410 ptdt lu Mr. Gilbert Hoscheid Tel. (352) 4991-722 (for subscription and tariffs) Fax (352) 493049 Telex: (402) 60520 OnTyme: INTL.LUXMKTG Mr. Paul Ney Tel: (352) 4991 732 (engineering/technical) Fax: (352)491221 Telex: (402) 3410 Network Supervision and Maint. Tel: (352) 4991 742 Fax: (352) 489324 1. ACCESS/SPEEDS: Asynchronous dial-in speeds: 300, 1200, 1200/75, 2400 bps Asynchronous leased speeds: 300, 1200, 1200/75, 2400 bps Synchronous leased speeds: 2400, 4800, 9600, 19200, 48000, 64000 bps 2. PROTOCOLS: X.25, X.28, X.32 3. PRICES: All prices are in Luxembourg Francs (LF) - Usage Charges for Traffic to the USA (for both types of access: direct or via PSTN) Call set-up charge LF 0.25/call Connect Time LF 4.00/minute Transmission LF 0.20/segment - Direct Access a) Installation Charges for X.28 direct connection LF 5 000,00 for X.25 direct connection LF 75 000,00 b) Monthly Charges for leased lines connection (includes one modem at customer's site and one logical channel for X.25 connection) 110-300 bps X.28 LF 1 500.00 1200/75 bps X.28 LF 2 000.00 1200 bps X.28 LF 3 000.00 2400 bps X.28 LF 4 500.00 2400 bps X.25 LF 5 000.00 4800 bps X.25 LF 7 500.00 9600 bps X.25 LF 10 000.00 19200 bps X.25 LF 17 500.00 48000 bps X.25 LF 30 000.00 64000 bps X.25 LF 35 000.00 c) Other Charges Additional logical channel: . Installation LF 500.00 . Monthly charge LF 100.00 . Access to Teletex conversion unit LF 1 000.00 NUI: . One-time charge LF 500.00 . Monthly charge LF 250.00 - Dial-Up Access X.28 and X.32 a) Installation Charges: NUI LF 1 000.00 b) Monthly Charges X.28: NUI LF 100.00 300 bps LF 200.00 1200 bps LF 1 200.00 2400 bps LF 2 000.00 c) Monthly Charges X.32: NUI LF 100.00 2400 bps LF 3 000.00 4. COMMENTS: --------------------- OPERATIONAL/TECHNICAL INFORMATION ------------------- 1. FIRST LINE CUSTOMER SERVICE/TROUBLE REPORTING: Hours of Operation: 24 Hours a day, 7 days a week Phone: 17 Telex: (402) 60745 Fax: (352) 492617 2. SERVICE INFORMATION ADDRESS: n/a 3. TEST ADDRESS: 027044800000, 027044900000 Echo NUA 027044800001, 027044900001 Drop NUA 4. ASYNC ACCESS PROCEDURES: 1. On modem connect, LUXPAC replies xxx yyy zzz (xxx yyy zzz is the port and node number) 2. Type N followed by your LUXPAC NUI, and by the called NUA, separated by '-' : N-0(cr) or + 3. LUXPAC will reply: COM 5. TYMUSA AVAILABLE: No 6. DEFAULT PAD SETTINGS: 1:0, 2:1, 3:126, 4:0, 5:1, 6:1, 7:2, 8:0, 9:0, 10:0, 11:not defined, 12:1, 13:0, 14:0, 15:0, 16:8, 17:24, 18:42 7. ASYNC DIAL-IN ACCESS TELEPHONE NUMBERS: (National wide) Modem/Speed Access Number ---------------------------------------------------------- X.28 100-300 bps/V21 0731 300 bps/V21 0733 1200/75 bps/V23 0734 1200 bps/V22 0735 2400 bps/V22bis 0736 X.32 2400 bps/V22bis 0732 --- MALAYSIA --- MALAYSIA - BASIC GLOBAL CONNECTION SERVICE Syarikat Telecom Malaysia Berhad (STM) STM Headquarters Jalan Raja Chulan 50200 Kula Lumpur Malaysia Contact: Ms. Rafiah Ibrahim PH: 03-2329494 Telex: MA 90196 NCCPJ 1. ACCESS/SPEEDS: Asynchronous 300, 1200 bps Synchronous 2400, 4800, 9600 bps 2. PROTOCOLS: 3. PRICES: All prices are in Malaysian Ringgit's (MR). (1$ US = 2.70 MR 10/90) Usage Charge Connect Time: $0.45 per minute or part thereof Transmission: $0.25 per 10 segments or part thereof (For dial-up subscribers calls to the MAYPAC exchange will be charged in the telephone bill). SPEED LINE RENTAL/MO. PORT RENTAL/MO. 300 MR 35.00 MR 135.00 1200 MR 35.00 MR 210.00 2400 MR 70.00 MR 320.00 4800 MR 70.00 MR 585.00 9600 MR 70.00 MR 720.00 Installation: Deposit. . . . . . . . . . $500.00 Connection Fee: 300 bps . . . . . . . . . $600.00 1200 bps . . . . . . . . . $850.00 2400 bps . . . . . . . . $1,300.00 4800 bps . . . . . . . . $ 850.00 9600 bps . . . . . . . . $ 850.00 Speed of Line Rental Port Rental NUI Modem per month per month per mo. Dial-In Access 300 bps Normal Telephone $65.00 $10.00 1200 bps rental applies $105.00 $10.00 4. COMMENTS: For leased line connections, modems are included in the rental of lines. -----------------------OPERATIONAL/TECHNICAL INFORMATION------------------- 1. FIRST LINE CUSTOMER SERVICE/TROUBLE REPORTING: 2. SERVICE INFORMATION ADDRESS: 50211320025600 3. TEST ADDRESS: 50211320014510 Echo Host 50211320014211 Drop Terminal 4. ASYNC ACCESS PROCEDURES: Upon modem connect . . . Send: Receive: Maypac Terminal = Send: Receive: User ID = Send: User ID (Issued by Maypac) Receive: Password = Send: Password (Issued by Maypac) Receive: Destination = Send: Network user address (NUA) of intended destination Receive: Connection message 5. TYMUSA AVAILABLE: No 6. DEFAULT PAD SETTINGS: (X.3 Profile) 1:64, 2:1, 3:2, 4:20, 5:0, 6:5, 7:2, 8:0, 9:7, 10:0, 11:X read only par., 12:0, 13:4, 14:7, 15:0, 16:8, 17:24, 18:18 NOTE: The value "X" of parameter no. 11 (speed of the X.28 DTE) is set by the PAD when the physical circuit is established when a carriage return is entered at the "terminal =" by the user during the logon procedure. At the "terminal =" prompt the user may also enter the ID of the standard profile (from an ID list) most suitable for the terminal type and application. 7. ASYNC DIAL IN ACCESS TELEPHONE NUMBERS: City/Territory Modem/Speed Access Number --------------------------------------------------------------------- Kuala Lumpur/Federal Ter. V.21/300 (6.03) 2328800 V.22/1200 (6.03) 2328855 Penang/Pulau Pinang V.21/300 (6.04) 375588 V.22/1200 (6.04) 360088 Kota Kinabalu/Sabah V.21/300 (6.088) 218800 V.22/1200 (6.088) 218855 Petaling Jaya/Selangor V.21/300 (6.03) 7926600 V.22/1200 (6.03) 7926655 Ipoh/Perak V.21/300 (6.05) 548533 V.22/1200 (6.05) 548444 Kuantan/Pahang V.21/300 (6.09) 508800 V.22/1200 (6.09) 508855 Johore Bharu/Johor V.21/300 (6.07) 248800 V.22/1200 (6.07) 248855 Kuching/Sarawak V.21/300 (6.082) 418800 V.22/1200 (6.082) 418855 Kota Bharu/Kelantan V.21/300 (6.09) 748800 V.22/1200 (6.09) 748855 Malacca/Melaka V.21/300 (6.06) 238800 V.22/1200 (6.06) 238855 Alor Star/Kedah V.21/300 (6.04) 715544 V.22/1200 (6.04) 716644 Kuala Terengganu/ V.21/300 (6.09) 638800 Terengganu V.22/1200 (6.09) 638855 Miri/Sarawak V.21/300 (6.085) 410011 V.22/1200 (6.085) 410055 Sandakan/Sabah V.21/300 (6.089) 273300 V.22/1200 (6.089) 273355 --- MEXICO --- MEXICO - BASIC GLOBAL CONNECTION SERVICE (-4h GMT) Last Update: October 15, 1990 Secretaria de Comunicaciones y Transportes Net. Name: TELEPAC Eje Lazaro Cardenas No. 567 DNIC: 3340 03020 Mexico, D.F. Mexico Contact: Jesus A. Ramirez Cordero (52.5) 530-2099 Telex: (383) 170932 OnTyme: INTL.SCTMKTG 1. ACCESS/SPEEDS: Public Dial-in : 110-300, 1200 bps Leased line: 2400, 4800, 9600 bps 2. PROTOCOLS: 3. PRICES: All prices are in U.S. dollars. All calls from Mexico should be sent reverse charged and billed in the U.S. Subscription Charge: $ 51.62 subscription $ 96.33 port usage dedicated line $ 24.08 port usage non dedicated line $17.20 rent for ID (NUI,monthly) These charges are one time charges and cover the subscription to Telepac. The NUI is a monthly charge. Domestic Usage: $240.00 monthly rent for dedicated (Intra Mexico) line $ 4.64 per hour $ 0.79 per kilosegment Traffic to the US: $ 6.50 per hour Transmission: $ 5.00/kilosegment (reverse chg.) Telephone Access Charge: None Telepac's customer service number is 905-530-2099. Calls to Tymnet from Mexico will be reverse charged billed. Tymnet can provide a NUI for access from Mexico. Our agent in Mexico is the best source of aid and information for communications from Mexico. For detailed information regarding the Tymnet NUI and Mexican dial-up access locations read ontyme file, "*** INTL.MEXICO", or consult your Tymnet Sales Representative. 4. COMMENTS: Tymnet Agent: Ing. Alejandro Acosta (525) 523-9421/543-0524 Sistemas Ciberneticos, S.A. OnTyme: INTL.MEXICO/SICISA Concepcion Beistegui No. 109 6 Piso Mexico City, Mexico ------------------------OPERATIONAL/TECHNICAL INFORMATION--------------- 1. FIRST LINE CUSTOMER SERVICE/TROUBLE REPORTING: 2. SERVICE INFORMATION ADDRESS: 3. TEST ADDRESS: 4. ASYNC ACCESS PROCEDURES: Dial access number, (see list below). Upon modem connect. . . Receive: CONNECT 1200 TELEPAC 905 401W TERMINAL= Send: Receive: @ Send: "ID/TYMNET" Receive: PASSWORD= Send: PASSWORD"030537" (password will not be echoed on screen) Receive: @ Send: "C031069 Receive: 3106 9 CONNECTED tymnet: please log in: Send: "host username;password)" 5. TYMUSA AVAILABLE: No 6. DEFAULT PAD SETTINGS: 7. PAD PARAMETER LIST 8. ASYNC DIAL-IN ACCESS TELEPHONE NUMBERS: City/Territory Modem/Speed Access Number -------------------------------------------------------------- ACAPULCO 300 bps (748) 2-33-92 * 300 bps 2-12-48 * 3-70-41 %%x 1200 bps 3-61-17 1200 bps 3-70-15 1200 bps 3-70-67 ** AGUASCALIENTES 1200 bps (491) 5-12-13 ** 300 bps 5-12-21 * 300 bps 5-12-76 2400 bps 5-12-52 2400 bps 5-16-94 COATZACOALCOS 300 bps (921) 2-15-20 300 bps 2-15-52 2-15-51 2-15-19 2-15-27 2-14-04 1200 bps 2-15-18 1200 bps 2-15-16 CUERNAVACA 1200 bps (73) 12-86-02 300 bps 12-83-03 1200 bps 12-86-01 1200 bps 12-86-00 CHIHUAHUA 300 bps (14) 16-73-30 300 bps 16-72-20 300 bps 16-74-75 1200 bps 16-75-75 1200 bps 16-75-95 1200 bps 16-77-47 16-79-50 16-79-00 16-78-00 16-77-57 DURANGO 1200 bps (181) 1-28-51 1200 bps 1-28-52 1-28-58 ** 1200 bps 1-28-60 300 bps 1-28-61 300 bps 1-28-76 1200 bps 1-28-85 GUADALAJARA 300 bps (36) 26-55-68 300 bps 26-56-02 300 bps 26-55-80 300 bps 26-55-86 1200 bps 26-56-25 1200 bps 26-56-51 1200 bps 26-56-38 1200 bps 26-56-67 1200 bps 26-58-36 1200 bps 26-57-76 1200 bps 26-50-64 1200 bps 26-07-82 HERMOSILLO 300 bps (621) 2-30-53 2-34-57 2-35-47 ** 2-38-39 1200 bps 2-39-60 2-72-10 2-71-09 2-74-88 ** LEON 300 bps (471) 4-81-89 4-80-79 1200 bps 4-86-13 4-87-60 ** 4-81-82 * 6-57-51 6-58-12 6-58-54 6-58-56 6-58-70 6-58-93 6-58-16 6-59-55 MAZATLAN (678) 2-03-77 * 2-09-31 * 2-04-87 * 2-05-86 * 1200 bps 2-01-29 2-02-77 MERIDA (99) 24-41-55 300 bps 24-42-90 24-43-89 24-45-08 1200 bps 24-41-02 1200 bps 24-48-19 1200 bps 24-48-56 1200 bps 24-44-19 24-47-89 24-49-20 24-46-90 MEXICALI (65) 53-63-01 ** 300 bps 53-63-04 ** 1200 bps 53-63-17 53-63-05 53-63-06 53-63-07 53-63-08 53-63-09 MEXICO CITY 1200 bps (905) 590-8888 696-6198 695-6005 696-6099 MONTERREY 1200 bps (83) 55-47-53 55-48-07 55-42-27 55-44-36 55-61-45 55-60-93 55-62-49 1200 bps 55-61-03 300 bps 55-45-46 300 bps 55-46-44 300 55-46-45 300 bps 55-41-75 OAXACA 1200 bps (951) 6-99-89 300 bps 6-99-75 6-99-77 6-99-91 1200 bps 6-99-00 PUEBLA 1200 bps 22 40-50-11 40-53-34 * 300 bps 40-53-00 1200 bps 40-54-91 300 bps 40-56-28 1200 bps 40-50-75 40-56-38 QUERETARO 1200 bps (463) 4-22-23 4-29-72 300 bps 4-04-31 ** 4-00-06 ** 1200 bps 4-02-77 SALTILLO 1200 bps (841) 4-54-88 1200 bps 4-55-39 300 bps 4-56-45 ** 4-53-62 ** TAMPICO (12) 15-77-90 * 15-76-10 ** 15-77-28 ** 1200 bps 15-71-90 15-79-97 15-71-99 ** 15-71-48 15-77-40 15-75-45 TOLUCA (721) 6-53-00 ** 6-53-30 ** 6-53-52 ** 6-53-18 ** 1200 bps 6-52-07 6-52-29 6-52-41 6-52-63 TORREON 1200 bps (17) 16-50-40 16-52-38 16-59-92 16-50-30 ** 16-50-82 ** 1200 bps 16-51-86 1200 bps 16-50-92 VERACRUZ (29) 31-40-33 31-41-58 1200 bps 31-42-83 31-44-08 31-45-33 31-46-58 31-47-83 31-49-08 31-50-33 31-51-58 31-52-83 31-54-08 31-55-11 ** 31-56-36 ** 31-57-61 ** 31-58-86 ** VILLAHERMOSA 300 bps (931) 3-14-02 ** 3-14-55 ** 3-15-69 ** 1200 bps 3-15-10 3-14-55 3-15-64 3-15-03 * * DA%O MODEM ** DA%O L.P. --- NETHERLANDS --- NETHERLANDS - BT TYMNET GLOBAL NETOWRK CONNECTION SERVICE BT TYMNET Network Name: BT TYMNET K.P. Van Der Mandelelaan 78 3062 MB Rotterdam The Netherlands Contact: Sales and Marketing Telephone: (31.10)452 3866 Fax: (31.10)453 2590 1. ACCESS/SPEEDS: Async dial-in speeds: 300-9600 bps Async leased speeds: 300-9600 bps Sync. leased speeds: 4800-14400 bps Higher speeds available upon request 2. PROTOCOLS: Async (X.28), X.25, IBM 3270 BSC, 3270 SNA/SDLC, SDLC, RJE/HASP, other services available upon request. 3. PRICES: All prices are in U.S. Dollars. Billing in local currency is available. Dial-up Async (X.28) Service: The following hourly rates ($/hour) apply depending on the destination of the call from the GNS public async port in the Netherlands. There are no data volume charges: -------------------------------------------------------------- FROM: | TO: | EUR-I EUR-II USA JAPAN PACIFIC -------------|------------------------------------------------ BT TYMNET | Netherland s | $8.00 $10.00 $18.00 $24.00 $24.00 (EUR-I) | -------------------------------------------------------------- EUR-I: France, Netherlands, United Kingdom, Germany, Belgium Denmark, Switzerland EUR-II: Italy, Sweden PACIFIC: Austrlia NOTE: Minimum session charge is 2.5 minutes CONTACT YOUR SALES REPRESENTATIVE FOR DETAILED INFORMATION AND ADDITIONAL SERVICES. 4. COMMENTS: ---------------------OPERATIONAL/TECHNICAL INFORMATION------------------- 1. FIRST LINE CUSTOMER SERVICE/TROUBLE REPORTING: Contact: Customer Support Hours of Operation: 8:30am - 6:30pm local/M-F Telephone: (31.10)452 3866 Fax: (33.10)453 2590 After hours contact the 24 Customer Support Center in Vienna, Virginia at (703) 442-0145 2. SERVICE INFORMATION BULLETIN BOARD ADDRESS: Username INFORMATION Username HELP 3. TEST ADDRESS: 3106000715 4. ASYNC ACCESS PROCEDURES: Upon modem connect. . . Receive: Please type your terminal identifier (NOTE: String of characters may appear at speeds higher than 300 bps) Send: "a" Receive: Please log in: Send: TYMNET username (NUI) Receive: Password: Send: Your password 5. TYMUSA AVAILABLE: Yes 6. DEFAULT PAD SETTING: N/A 7. ASYNC DIAL-IN ACCESS TELEPHONE NUMBERS: City/Territory Modem/Speed Access Number ------------------------------------------------------------------- Alkmaar 300-9600 MNP (011.31.72) 155190 Amsterdam 300-9600 MNP (011.31.20) 6610094 Eindhoven 300-9600 MNP (011.31.4902)45530 The Hague 1200 (011.31.70) 3814641 300-2400 MNP (011.31.70) 3475032 4800-9600 MNP (011.31.70) 3818448 Rotterdam 300-9600 MNP (011.31.10) 4532002 ------------------------------------------------------------------- NOTE: Local X.25 gateway to PTT Datanet-1 service NUA: international: 2041170495 national: 1170495 NETHERLANDS - ENHANCED GLOBAL CONNECTION SERVICE 1. TYMUSA Gateway Host Number: 5393 2. Dialup Node(s): 3462 3. Rate: $15.00/hour and $0.80/Kchar 4. Dialup Locations and Numbers: Alkmaar (011.31.72) 155190 3-2400 MNP Amsterdam (011.31.20) 6610094 300/1200/1200/75/2400/9600 MNP Eindhoven (011.31.4902)45530 3-12-2400 V.21/22/bis The Hague (011.31.70) 3814641 1200 (011.31.70) 3475032 300-2400 MNP (011.31.70) 3818448 4800/9600 MNP Rotterdam (011.31.10) 4532002 300/1200/1200-75/2400/9600 MNP 5. Trouble Reporting Center: Support (local) Phone: (011.31) 703820044 Hours of Operation: M-F 8am - 5pm local time Contact: Jean Van Waterschoot (Customer Support) Support (Regional) Phone: (011.33.1)49112121 Hours of Operation: M-F 9:00am - 5:30pm Paris, France Contact: Trouble Reporting Center NETHERLANDS - BASIC GLOBAL CONNECTION SERVICE PTT Telecom BV Net. Name: DATANET-1 Telematics Systems and Services DNIC: 2041 P.O. Box 30150 2500 GD's-Gravenhage The Netherlands Contact: Telematics Services Tel. (31.70) 43.86.11 Mr. Peter Heuseveldt Tel. (31.70) 43.61.77 Fax (31.70) 43.76.05 (31.70) 43.75.67 Telex: (844) 30515 or 31111 OnTyme: INTL.DCTDATA 1. ACCESS/SPEEDS: Asynchronous dial-up 300, 1200, 1200/75 and 2400 bps Synchronous leased lines: 2400, 4800, 9600, 48000 bps 2. PROTOCOLS: X.25, X.28, X.75 Asynchronous terminal access. MNP protocol is supported with async speeds of 1200 and 2400 bit/s. 3. PRICES: All prices are in Dutch Florins (DFL). (1$ US = 2.08 DFL 7/88) 1. Permanent X.25 Connection a) X.25 Single Connection - Installation Charge 2400 bps (one logical channel) DFL 500.00 2400 bps DFL 500.00 4800 bps DFL 500.00 9600 bps DFL 500.00 48000 bps DFL 2000.00 64000 bps DFL 2000.00 - Monthly Subscription 2400 bps (one logical channel) DFL 235.00 2400 bps DFL 375.00 4800 bps DFL 575.00 9600 bps DFL 750.00 48000 bps DFL 2000.00 64000 bps DFL 2000.00 Extra logical channels for DFL 5.00 incoming and outgoing calls b) X.25 Multiple Port Connection Installation Monthly Charge Subscription 2400 bps DFL 1500,00 DFL 1100.00 4800 bps DFL 1500,00 DFL 1350.00 9600 bps DFL 1500,00 DFL 1550.00 Per extra pair of modems DFL 175.00 c) Traffic Charges to the USA Connect Time - per minute DFL 0.25 Transmission - per segment DFL 0.0125 Call set-up - per call DFL 0.06 2. PAD Connection a) Monthly subscription per NUI DFL 30.00 b) Traffic Charges to the USA Connect Time - per minute DFL 0.25 Transmission - per segment DFL 0.015 Call set-up - per call DFL 0.06 c) Telephone Charges DFL 0.15 per 5 minutes. Telephone charges are billed separately. Service Lead Times: One week delay to obtain an NUI. 4. COMMENTS: PAD Connection: It is possible to communicate via the PAD in 2 ways: - identified, this means that you need a PTT identifier and a password ; - unidentified, you use no threshold access for which no identifier or password is required. The communication costs are charged to the Host and the user does not need a subscription to the PAD, a form of an electronic answer number is created for the users. --------------- OPERATIONAL/TECHNICAL INFORMATION------------------- 1. FIRST LINE CUSTOMER SERVICE/TROUBLE REPORTING: Contact: PTT - Datacommunications Hours of Operation: 24 Hours/7 Days Phone: (31) 2159 36604 Telex: (844) 43198 DACOM NL Fax: (31) 2159 17393 2. SERVICE INFORMATION ADDRESS: 20412900090 3. TEST ADDRESS: Echo: 2041900 4. ASYNC ACCESS PROCEDURES: LOGON: 1. On modem connect you will recieve the msg: TER 2. Login string: A;1;;;03106xxxxxx[P|DCUD] ^ ^ optional CUD __|______| 5. TYMUSA AVAILABLE: Yes (Please contact your sales representative for additional information and access numbers) 6. DEFAULT PAD SETTING: 1:1, 2:1, 3:2, 4:0, 5:0, 6:5, 7:21, 8:0, 9:0, 10:0, 11:x 12:1, 13:0, 14:0, 15:1, 16:127, 17:24, 18:18, 19:0, 20:0 21:0, 22:0 PAD Profiles: Interactive 1 PROF 10 = 1:1, 2:1, 3:2, 4:0, 5:0, 6:5, 7:21, 8:0, 9:0, 10:0, 11:x, 12:1, 13:6, 14:0, 15:1, 16:127, 17:24, 18:18, 19:2, 20:0, 21:0, 22:0 Transparent/File Transfer/Block Mode PROF 91 = 1:0, 2:0, 3:0, 4:20, 5:0, 6:0, 7:2, 8:0, 9:0, 10:0, 11:x, 12:0, 13:0, 14:0, 15:0, 16:127, 17:24, 18:0, 19:1, 20:0, 21:0, 22:0 7. ASYNC DIAL-IN ACCESS TELEPHONE NUMBERS: City/Territory V.21/300 V.23/1200/75 V.22/1200 and 2400 MNP --------------------------------------------------------------------- REGION 1 ALKMAAR (072) 624814 624814 624814 AMERSFOORT (033) 620492 620492 620492 AMSTERDAM (020) 460031 460031 460031 of (020) 6680531 6680531 6680531 HAARLEM (023) 358324 272134 276284 LELYSTAD (03200) 62040 62040 62040 UTRECHT (030) 310032 340414 321114 REGION 2 ARNHEM (085) 432778 432778 432778 DEVENTER (05700) 42011 42011 42011 EMMEN (05910) 42600 42600 42600 GRONINGEN (050) 143666 143555 143777 HENGELO (074) 438355 438555 438255 LEEUWARDEN (058) 128986 129188 129382 MAASTRICHT (043) 434900 434020 435700 NIJMEGEN (080) 600101 600015 600204 VENLO (077) 544411 544411 544411 ZWOLLE (038) 221133 221133 221133 REGION 3 BREDA (076) 227032 227040 226525 DORDRECHT (078) 310811 310811 310811 EINDHOVEN (040) 456345 440085 454585 GOES (01100) 31006 31006 31006 HERTOGENB. (073) 890840 890840 890840 ROTTERDAM (010) 4140877 4334211 4045377 TILBURG (013) 365440 365440 365440 ZOETERMEER (079) 214092 212001 521547 --- NEW ZEALAND --- NEW ZEALAND - BASIC GLOBAL CONNECTION SERVICE Last Update: June 29, 1990 Net. Name: PACNET Telecom Networks and International Ltd. DNIC: 5301 Telecom Networks House Switched Data Network Section 68-86 Jervois Quay P.O. Box 1092 Wellington 1, New Zealand Contact: Alan Townsend Phone: (64.4)496 6132 Telex: 791 31688 Fax: (64.4) 496 6125 1. ACCESS/SPEEDS: Dial-up: 300, 1200, 1200/75, 2400 Leased Line: 300 and 1200 bps asynchronous Leased Line: 2400, 4800 and 9600 bps synchronous 2. PROTOCOLS: X.25, Asynchronous terminal interface 3. PRICES: All prices are in New Zealand Dollars. (NZ Dls) (1$ US = 1.7 NZ Dls. 7/90) Traffic Charges to the USA: Time: NZ 12.00/hr Volume: NZ 12.00/ksegment Minimum Charge: For successful call: 6 segments For unsuccessful call: 2 segments Dial-Up Service: Registration Fee: NZ 18.18 (one time) Monthly Charge: NZ 5.00/NUI Leased Line Service: Async Connections: Installation Charge Monthly Charge 300bps NZ 240.00 NZ 190.00 1200bps NZ 280.00 NZ 255.00 Synchronous Connections: Installation Charge Monthly Charge 2400bps NZ 280.00 NZ 160.00 4800bps NZ 280.00 NZ 170.00 9600bps NZ 280.00 NZ 190.00 48kbps NZ 1680.00 NZ 660.00 ============================================================================ / / / NIA073 / File 05 / / Report On Interexchange Carriers / / Compiled By The FCC / / / The following list outlines all Long Distance carriers purchasing switched access as of March, 1991. The list also outlines the type of access purchased. With feature group A and B, the caller gains access to the carrier's facilities by first dialing a remote access site. Feature group D indicates equal access. SERVICE ACCESS TYPE ------------------------------------------------------------- 10 Plus Teleservices D Abcom A ACC Long Distance Corporation A B D Access Long Distance B D Access Plus A D Action Telecommunications Co. A B D Advanced Business Telephone, Inc. A B D Advanced Communication Technologies, Inc. A B D Advanced Communications Systems, Inc. A B D Advanced MKG, SVCS., dba Dial Anywhere A B D Aero Mayflower A Afford-A-Call A B D Allnet Comm. Svs., Inc. (LDX, Lexitel) A B D Altcom Corp. A Alternate Communication Technology, Inc. B D A.B.E. of Alabama, Inc., dba Econoline A Americall Corporation (Calif.) A B D Americall Systems of Louisville A B D American Long Distance Co. D American Long Distance Exchange, Inc. D American Long Lines A B D American National Telcom A B D American Network Exchange, Inc. A B D American Sharecom, Inc A B D American Telco, Inc. A B D American Telco Network Services, Inc. A B D American Telecommunications Holdings, Ltd. B D American Telesystems A B D Amerisystems, Inc B D Amvox D Ascom Autelca A Associated Telenet, Inc. A B D Associated Terminating Network A ATC A B D Atlantic Connection, Ltd. A ATX Telecommunications Services A B D AT&T Communications A D Austin Bestline A B D Automated Communications, Inc. B D Bay Communications A B D Bittel Telecommunications Corp. A B D Biz Tel Long Distance Telephone Co. D Biztel, Ltd. A B Bi-State Telephone Co. A Budget Telephone A Burlington Telephone Company A B D Business Communications Network, Inc. D Business Telecom, Inc. A B D Cable & Wireless Communications, Inc. (TDX) A B D Call America A B D Call America Business Comm. Corp. A B D Call America of Riverside A B D Call America/Palm Desert A B Call Savers of Fresno B D Call Technology Corp. of Philadelphia B D Call USA Corp. B D Call-USA, Inc. B Cambridge Communications A B D Cam-Net, Inc. A B D Capital Network System, Inc. A B D Capital Telecommunications, Inc. A B D Card*Tel A Centel Net D Central Lines A Central New York Talk-Transit A B Central Teleohone Systems, Inc. A B Central Texas Long Distance, Inc. A B D Century Area Long Lines A Century Network, Inc. A B Chadwick Telephone A B D Charter Corporation dba TRI-J A B D Charter Network A B D Chautauqua Tele-Saver A Checkrite A B Chicago Communications Services, Inc. A Cincinnati Bell Long Distance, Inc. B D Citynet Communications, Inc. B D Cleartel Communications B D Clifton Phone Systems D Coachella Valley Communications B D Coastal Telephone Company B D Colorado River Communications B D Com Systems Network Services A B D Comantel A Commander Systems, Inc. A Communication Cable Laying Co., Inc. A B D The Communigroup of N. Alabama A Communique Telecommunications, Inc. D Compu-Tel, Inc. A Com-Mar, Inc. A Conagra A Conifer Communications, Ltd. A B Conquest Communications Corporation B Conquest Long Distance Corp. A B D Conquest Operator Services Corp. B D Consolidated Network, Inc. B D Consortium Communications Inc. A Contact America A B D Contel ASC A B Continental Switching Corporation D Continental Telecommunications Group D Cont'l States Corp. dba TMC of Orlando D Coshocton L.D.S. A B CTI Telecommunications, Inc. A B D Custom Telecom. Network of Arizona D Cypress Telecommunications Corp. (CYTEL) A B D Dash Long Distance Service, Inc. A B D Data General Network Services A Datanet Communications, Inc. A B D Decco A Delta Communications, Inc. A B D Dial America, Inc. A B Dial-Net, Inc. A B D Digital Network, Inc. A B D Digital Signal, Inc. A Direct Communications, Inc. A B D Discount Communications Services A B Dunset A E & K Systems, Inc. A Eastern Microwave D Eastern Telelogic Corporation A D Eastern Telephone Systems, Inc. A B D Econo-Call, Inc. A B Econo-Line (Harrison, AR) B Econo. Call Long Distance Services A B D Econ-A-Call, Inc. of Heys A B D EDS A B Equicom Communications, Inc. B D Escondido Telephone Company B D Execuline of Sacramento A B D Execuline of the Northwest A B D Execulines, Inc. A FEB Corporation D Fiberfone of Florida, Inc. A B Fibernet Communications Corporation B D First Communications, Inc. (FDR) B First Data Resources, Inc. (FST) B D First Fone of Amarillo B D First Fone Long Distance B D First Interstate Service Co. B First Phone of New England A B D Flat Rate Communications B Flex Communications System A B D Fone America, Inc. A B D Fones West A Fox Communications Corp. B D Garden State Long Distance Telephone A D General Communication, Inc. A B D GEO Communications, Inc. A Glen Falls Long Distance Service A B GMW Company A B D Hart Communications Co. D Hi-Plains NTS Communications B Icon Communications, Corporation A B D Independant Long Distance D Indianapolis Telephone Corp., Inc. A Innovative Communications, Inc. B D Intelco A B D Inter Tel A International Pacific B D Internationsl Telecharge, Inc. A B D Internet Datacom, Inc. A Interstate Telephone Company A B Iowa Network Services, Inc. B D ITC Networks A B D J-Net Communications, Inc. A B D Kawahawi Company A KCC Communications D Ken-Tel Service, Inc. A B D Kentucky Telephone Corp. A B D Key System Corporation A Keystone Telecommunications, Inc. A B D Lake States Communications, Inc. D Lassman - Weber Communications, Inc. A B D LDB Corporation A B D LDDS A B D LDS of Alexandria B D LDS of Baton Rouge A B D LDS of Monroe A B D LDS of Shreveport A B D LDS of Tulsa A B D Lintel Sys. dba Lincoln Telephone L.D. B D Litel Telecommunications (Lightcall) A B D Lone Star Telecom D Long Distance Communications B D Long Distance Discount, Inc. A B D Long Distance for Less A B D Long Distance Management A B D Long Distandce Network, Inc. A D Long Distance Ohio, Inc. A B Long Distance Savers A B D Long Distance Service, Inc. A B D Long Distance Specialties Telephone Co. A B D Long Distance Telephone Savers, Inc. A B D Long Line Inc. A LTS, Inc. A B D Lufkin Tele. dba Star Tel of Lufkin A B Manitowoc Long Distance Service A D Marinette-Menominee LDS A B D Marshall LDDS A MCI A B D Metromedia/ITT A B D Metro Telephone, Inc. B D Metronet Long Distance Communications A D Mid Atlantic Telecom A B D Mid Atlantic Telephone Company A Midamerican Comm. (Midamerican L.D.) A B D Midco Communications A B D Midcom, Inc. B Midcom of Arizona, Inc. A D Midco-Tel of Aberdeen A Midwest Telephone Service, Inc. A B D Mid-Tel L.D., Inc., of Williston A B Minntelco A Mobile Comms., Corp. of America A Montana Long Distance, Inc. B D MSI Communications, Inc. B Nacogdoches Telecommunications, Inc. A B D NACT dba Network Telemanagement Services A B NAPA Valley Telecom Services A B D National Brands, Inc. B D National Network Corp. B National Technical Association dbs NTA B D National Telecommunications, Inc. A B D National Telephone Communications, Inc. A B National Telephone Exchange (N.Y.) A B D National Telephone Exchange (PA) A B National Telephone Exchange (TX) A B D National Teleservice A B D National Tele-Sav, Inc. B D NCHE Telecommunications Network, Inc. D Net Express Communications, Inc. D Netech Communications A B D Network 1, Inc. A B Network Communications, Inc. A Network Operator Services, Inc. B D Network Services, Ltd. B D Network Telecommunications A B D Network Telephone Services, Inc. D Nickle Fone A B D Norlight A North American Communications, Inc. A B D Northern Arizona Communications Corp. B D Northern Michigan L.D.S. A B Northern Wisconsin L.D.S. D Northland Telephone Systems, Ltd. A B D Northwest Network Communications, Inc. A B D Northwest Telecom, Ltd. A B D Northwest Telecomm, Co. A B D Novah of Michigan A NTS Communications, Inc. A B D NY Com, Inc. B D One Call Communications, Inc. A B D One-2-One Communications A B D Operator Service Company D Pace Long Distance Service A B D Page America Communications, Inc. A Panda Communications A Pass Word, Inc. B Payline Systems, Inc. B D Peninsula Long Distance Service, Inc. A D Penny Fone A B Petroleum Communications A Phoenix Communications Group, Inc. A B D Phoenix Network Corporation B D Phone America of Carolina A B D Phone Base Systems, Inc. D Phone One A B D Phonelink, Inc. A Phonenet, Inc. A Phonetel Technologies, Inc. D Pilgrim Telephone, Inc. D Prestwood Communications Co. A Professional Networks Management, Inc. A B D Pro-Com, Inc. A B D PSA, Inc. A B Qwest Microwave Corp. B Radius Telecommunications A RCI Long Distance A B D Resurgens Telecommunications D Roamer Services, Inc. D Rochester Telecomm Systems A San Marcos Long Distance, Inc. B Schneider Communications A B D Science Dynamics Corporation D Securitex dba Tylernet Long Distance A B D Sharecom A D Shared Use Network, Ltd. A B D Shared Use Network Service, Inc. A B D Shenandoah Long Distance Company B Sierra Telecommunications, Inc. B D SM Long Distance B D South Bay Communications, Inc. A B South Tel A B D Southern Interexchange Services, Inc. B Southnet Services, Inc. D Southwest Communications B Spectratel A St. Thomas & San Juan Telco, Inc. A Star Tel A B Star Tel of Abilene A B D Star Tel of Victoria A B D Star Tel Transmission Co., Inc. A B D Starline, Inc. B D Startec, Inc. D St. Joe Communications, Inc. D Sun Coast Comm Inc. A Sunshine Telephone, Inc. A B D Superior Telecom A B D Swiff Train Communications A B Switchboard of Oklahoma City A B Tacoma Telephone Exchange A Taconic Long Distance Service, Corp. A B D TCS Network Services A TEC West A Tel America, Inc. A B D Tel Com International, Inc. B D Tel Systems Management A Telamarketing Communications, Inc. A B D Telamarketing Communications of America D Telamarketing Communications of Arkansas A B D Telamarketing Communications of Bakersfield A B Telamarketing Communications of Baton Rouge D Telamarketing Communications of Birmingham A D Telamarketing Communications of Columbus A Telamarketing Communications of El Paso A D Telamarketing Communications of Evansville A B D Telamarketing Communications of Fresno A B Telamarketing Communications of Lafayette A D Telamarketing Communications of Louisville A D Telamarketing Communications of Milwaukee A B D Telamarketing Communications of Nashville A Telamarketing Communications of NW Indiana A Telamarketing Communications of Oklahoma A D Telamarketing Communications of Omaha A B D Telamarketing Communications of Piedmont A B D Telamarketing Communications of Providence A B D Telamarketing Communications of Raleigh A Telamarketing Communications of San Luis Obispo A B Telamarketing Communications of Savannah A Telamarketing Communications of Stockton A B Telamarketing Communications of Tri-States A B D Telamarketing Communications of Tulsa A D Telco of Baton Rouge, Inc. A B D Tele Tech, Inc. A B D Telecolumbus, USA dba Worldcom D Telecommunications Services Corporation A B D Telecommunications Consultants, Inc. B D Telecon Communications Corporation B Teledial America A B D Telefind Corporation B Telemanagement Consultants Corporation A B D Telenational Communications A B D Telephone Assoc., dba Fergus Falls LD B Telephone Assoc., dba Thief River Falls LD D Telephone Assoc. Long Distance SVCS. A B D Telephone Communications Corporation A D Telephone Connections, Inc. B Telephone Express A B D Telephone Express, Inc. A Telephone Systems A B Teleport Communications A Telepro dba Blue Ridge Telephone Company A B D Telesavers, Inc. A Telescan, Inc. B D Telesphere Network, Inc. A B D Telesphere of Houston B Tele$aver of New Mexico B D Tele-Fibernet Corporation A B D Tele-Sys, Inc. A B D Teltrust Network Service A B D Telvue Corporation B D Tel-America Network Services, Inc. A B D Tel-A-Save Communications Systems, Ltd. A B Tel-Central of Jefferson City A B D Tel-Com, Inc A B Tel-Share A B D Tel-Toll dba Econ-O Dial of Bishop A B Texas Long Distance Conroe A B Texustel, Inc. A B D The Communigroup A B D The Offshore Telephone Company A B The Pay Telephone Company B D The Switchboard A B Things, Inc. A B D Thrifty Telephone Ex. dba Ohio Digital Access B D TK Communications, Inc. A B D TMC of Lexington A B D TMC of San Diego A B D TMC of Southern Kentucky B D TMC of Southwest Florida A B D TMC of Washington, DC A B D Total-Tel USA, Inc. A B D Touch America, Inc. B D Touch-1 D To-Tel Comm Sys A Transamerica Telecommunications, Inc. A B D Transtel Comm Express Tel A Trans-Net, Inc. A B D Tri-Tel Communications A B D Tri-Tel Comunications Systems A B TRT Telecommunications Corporation A B D TTE of Charleston A D TTI Midland-Odessa B D Tuck Data Communications B Tyler Telecom A B D Tymnet A B T-Tel A B D United Comunications, Inc. B D United Telephone Co. dba Telamerica L.D. A B D United Telephone Long Distance D Unitel A D Universal Telephone Systems B D U.S. Link A B D U.S. Long Distance, Inc. D U.S. Sprint [Isacomm, Telenet, LD/USA] A B D U.S. Tele-Comm, Inc. D Valley Star-Tel A B D Valley Wats A B D Valu-Line of Amarillo A B D Valu-Line of Angletown A Valu-Line of Kansas, Inc. A B Valu-Line of Longview, Inc. A B D Valu-Line of of St. Joseph A D Valu-Line of of Wichita Falls A B D Vartec National, Inc. A B D Vertelco Systems A B Virtual Network Services Corp. A B D Vista-United Telecommunications A Vortel Communications, Inc. A B D VTA, Inc. D VYVX Telecom, Inc. A B D West Coast Telecommunications, Inc. A B D Westcom Data Tel A Westcom Long Distance A B Westel, Inc. A B D Westel Communications (Telamarketing Comm) A B D Western Express Communications, Inc. A Western Information Systems, Inc. A B Western Oklahoma Information Systems A B D Western Telenet, Inc. A D WI Amer Sharecom Inc. A Wiles Communication Service B D Williams Telecommunications Group A Wisconsin L.D.S. B D Wylon A B D Yavapai Telephone Exchange A B D ------------------------------------------------------------- ============================================================================= / / / NIA073 / File 06 / / Vox Populi: / / NIA News / / / --- Date: July 22, 1991 Source: AT&T Newsbriefs C. Sources: San Fransisco Chronicle (7/20/