T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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728.1 | There is a conference on the DTN | CVG::THOMPSON | Notes? What's Notes? | Thu Feb 16 1989 16:37 | 5 |
| Suggest that there may be more information at:
DIGITAL's Telephone Network AYOV18::DTN 379
Alfred
|
728.2 | Some CA facilities are on DTN | DR::BLINN | General Eclectic | Thu Feb 16 1989 17:25 | 24 |
| The topic note asserts that no Digital facilities in California
have DTN access, but this is apparently not true, based on a quick
scan of the facilities listing in the Digital Telephone Directory.
I found DTN listings for the following:
MVO -- Mountain View Office
WRO -- Santa Clara
WRA -- Santa Clara
ZVO -- Sunnyvale
I suspect that many of the other facilities have dial-out access
to the DTN, just no dial-in directly from the DTN except through
standard long-distance.
Alfred is right that this might more appropriately be asked in the
DTN conference, but if John Covert or someone else who's in the
know about the DTN wishes to answer here, I suspect the answer
would be of general interest.
BTW, if you have an SL100 at your site, you can probably program
it to remember the numbers you use most frequently.
Tom
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728.3 | DTN lives in Ca. | WR2FOR::BOUCHARD_KE | Ken Bouchard WRO3-2/T7 | Thu Feb 16 1989 18:16 | 5 |
| I guess I really don't understand .0.I'm located at WRO (Santa Clara
Ca.) and we all have normal DTN numbers.
If you're saying that *not all* Ca. sites have DTN,that's true...my
Santa Clara phone book lists some employees that have to be called
via outside lines.
|
728.4 | A Word From L.A. | BREAKR::GOHN | With the Wind | Thu Feb 16 1989 18:39 | 8 |
| Yes, it is a pain to look up outside extensions for other DEC sites.
When I started with DEC we were on the DTN network through Santa Clara.
I don't know who made the decision to pull us off, but I know they
should have had their heads examined. Believe me.....we hate it.
One of the orphan children,
Linda
|
728.5 | and another... | SRFSUP::GOETZE | just a cog. | Thu Feb 16 1989 20:53 | 14 |
| The Southern California offices have their own telephone network
called the STN or something like that.
This whole issue is quite symbolic of the fact that Digital Southern
California is cut off from the mainstream of Digital Maynard/Marlboro.
I get the feeling there is no place more distant from the Mill than
Los Angeles. In fact we have a term for it locally, and it forms
another acronym that looks something like this: DH.
Of course we have that infamous cartoonist here in LA, Matt Groenig,
who does the "Life in Hell" series. I thuink you'd have to be here
to understand.
e.
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728.6 | AZ is in the same boat | CANYON::ADKINS | Insert Relevant Phrase Here | Fri Feb 17 1989 00:41 | 12 |
| Why should we have DTN? They still use ponies out here for the mail.
;-)
When you live on-site 100% of your time, you have to make *all*
of your calls to outside numbers.
Trying to reverse-engineer a DTN number can be nearly impossible.
I often get passed around by a few switchboard operators before
I finally get the answering machine.
Jim
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728.7 | Have you asked your local management? | DR::BLINN | He's not a *real* Doctor.. | Fri Feb 17 1989 10:05 | 7 |
| It is, of course, possible that the reason many of the sites
in California are on their own "local" telephone network is
that local (Western Area) management decided that this was
what made the best business sense. Perhaps this is a question
that should be asked of local management.
Tom
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728.8 | no DTN if it raises the cost of calling | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Room 101, Ministry of Love | Fri Feb 17 1989 12:23 | 24 |
| Southern California was not put on the DTN for a simple reason:
The DTN exists to save money, and it would cost more to put those
sites on the DTN than to use the public network to dial them.
In the US, historically, the DTN has been just a tie line network.
With a few exceptions, DTN calls travel over dedicated lines.
Long-haul dedicated lines are very costly, so it didn't pay. That
might be changing, so DTN could eventually reach the area.
In Europe, where tie lines are often very costly, they use "virtual"
DTN by having the PBXs translate DTN codes into public network numbers.
(A few domestic sites have done this too, but it's rare.) Were
this done in the US, then people could dial DTN codes and still
reach the SCal sites. That's a question for US DTN management;
the SL-100s (and Rolm in CXO) can do it; the old Maynard Centrex
(gone for a few years) couldn't. I think the Dimension FP8 nodes
can do it too, but I'm not positive if it's "free". That, of course,
would only give the rest of the company 7-digit access to those
sites; the site PBX would need local DTN translation to get back
to the rest of the company. And that might not be possible.
Some of the smaller NorCal sites are not on DTN because they're
too small to warrant tie line access and/or didn't want it. Virtual
DTN could also be used, at least on a limited basis, from some of
those sites. But not everyone _wants_ to be on DTN...
|
728.9 | Yeah, but Saskatoon's on DTN ... | SRFSUP::MCCARTHY | Moe! Larry! Cheese! | Fri Feb 17 1989 17:18 | 26 |
|
re: .8
> Southern California was not put on the DTN for a simple reason: The DTN
> exists to save money [....] Long-haul dedicated lines are very costly,
> so it didn't pay. That might be changing, so DTN could eventually
> reach the area.
Puzzling sort of argument. When I first worked for Digital in Western
Canada (80-84), there was no DTN there. That seemed fairly reasonable,
given that it would seem to be a fairly costly and massive effort to
install DTN in such a large and sparsely populated geography (there
is a Canada outside of Toronto, you know).
Imagine my surprise when I discovered, after rejoining Digital in Los
Angeles in 1986, that Nowhere in the SW US Area is on DTN! And DTN is
now installed across Canada! I find it hard to believe that tie lines
around the US are more expensive than those across 2,000 miles of
(relatively) deserted bald-headed prairie in Western Canada.
Whether it's cost or not, the perception among many people in the area
is that SW Area management doesn't *want* us on DTN. As Erik observed
earlier, there is probably no place in the corporation that *feels*
further from GMA than the SW US Area - culturally, at least.
Larry.
|
728.10 | It's the mighty buck | TELGAR::WAKEMANLA | Another Eye Crossing Question! | Fri Feb 17 1989 19:50 | 14 |
| Well, Having worked in the San Francisco District for thirteen years, I
remember the day that the district went on DTN. Six years after I
hired into the company, I finaly got put in the phone book. (i was in
the Chevron Phone Book after three months on a residency, an I may
still be in it four years later.) When I heard that the District was
bing removed from the DTN, I asked the people involved. It seems that
every call on the DTN is charged to the caller in internal funny money.
It turns out that outgoing WATS service is cheaper then the internal
DTN. Now I have to look on two pages in the directory to get peoples
numbers and I always have to mention that we are not on DTN when
calling the greater Maynard area, but the phone lines are better. My
next question is why are we still using AT&T long distance?? ;-)
Larry
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728.11 | Don't compare absolute tie line cost, compare with other options | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Sat Feb 18 1989 11:15 | 12 |
| re the last two:
In Canada, tie lines are still less expensive than WATS and long distance,
which is not the case in the U.S. any more. Coast to coast in the U.S. is
now 27 cents a minute, half what it was just fifteen years ago! Ottawa to
Calgary is 68 cents ($C) per minute.
Why are we still using AT&T long distance? Because over all, it is cheaper
and more reliable than anything else! Just one example: during business hours,
MCI is more expensive than AT&T by about 1 cent per minute.
/john
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728.12 | AT&T is still has the connectivity, no thanks to Judge Greene | WKRP::CHATTERJEE | Too many Chiefs, the only Indian | Sun Feb 19 1989 15:14 | 9 |
| >>> Why are we still using AT&T long distance?
Probably because AT&T is the only company that provides us access
to the telephones of any country in the world that has phones.
And, we do business everywhere and are a world-wide operation.
The new guys on the block may claim fiber-optics, pin-drop silence,
etc., but they do not connect to a phone in Timbuktu, Morocco.
.......... Suchindran
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728.13 | Geographical Literacy | CALL::SWEENEY | Roads? Where we're going we don't need..roads | Sun Feb 19 1989 19:41 | 1 |
| Timbuktu is in Mali, West Africa, 1000 miles distant from Casablanca.
|
728.14 | GMA?? | SETH::CHERSON | create facts in the field | Sun Feb 19 1989 20:39 | 11 |
| Boy I love this notesfile, scratch something that seems innocuous
on the surface, and something else comes up smelling not so hot.
In this case it is the (perceived) cultural difference between the
coast and the "Greater Maynard Area". I hope you folks out there
know that there are other sites in Mass. and So. N.H. outside of
Maynard/Marlboro.
Anyways, I just wanted to say that I moved .0 to the DTN conference
where it should have been.
David
|
728.15 | Where's my DEC phone book??? | LAIDBK::RESKE | Life's a mystery & I haven't a clue | Mon Feb 20 1989 12:03 | 15 |
|
I've never thought that not having DTN out here in sunny southern
CA (also Arizona and Nevada) was yet another way to separate us from
the rest of DEC. Californians should be used to be a little
different from the rest of the country. ;^) My complaint is
having to translate those darn DTN's!!!! Wouldn't it be nice if
ELF asked for DTN as well as outside line??!! On that same note,
it would be nice if every Digital form that asks for a phone number
would allow an extra inch in the blank for us poor fools who have
to print the whole number!!!!!
Donna
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728.16 | DTN to real numbers | TILTS::WALDO | | Mon Feb 20 1989 13:06 | 4 |
| The Digital Telephone Directory has a conversion table from DTN
to regular numbers. It can be found in the blue pages at the front
of the book. It only lists US and Canadian sites.
|
728.17 | <Some of usn's do> | PNO::LATHAM | | Mon Feb 20 1989 14:21 | 3 |
| Contrary to what has been stated here about DTN's in the SW and
Arizona, PNO (Phoenix, AZ) does have DTN's. However, TFO (Tempe,
AZ) just 25 miles south does not have the DTN availability.
|
728.18 | now if I could only remember who's in area code 508 | MORO::NEWELL_JO | Recovering Perfectionist | Tue Feb 21 1989 22:33 | 12 |
| I am from the Southwest Area (Irvine, Calif.), I've been here for
13 years. We tried the DTN system for about two years with limited
success. The quality of service was poor and the cost could not
be justified. So back to DID (direct in-ward dial) for the local
folks and a lot of hassle for long distance calls. After 13 years
I've managed to memorize the important and most used DTN conversions
but I really feel sorry for the new kids on the block.
Rumor has it that the SWA may be getting on the DTN sometime in
the near future but I wouldn't hold my breath.
Jodi-
|
728.19 | Smoke and mirrors | CANYON::ADKINS | Insert Relevant Phrase Here | Tue Feb 21 1989 23:02 | 25 |
| Re: .17:
I'm not sure that you're real-life DTN. I think you've got the same
setup as TFO. You dial DTN and some automagic happens that dials
the outside line for you.
I'm *never* in the office (well, maybe once a month to pick up the
car check) so I've been trying to decipher the DTN numbers into
outside numbers. It's given me a great sense of adventure trying
to find the right number. I almost always get somebody in DEC on
my first try. And they are generally somewhere in the correct
vicinity (almost always in the right state). But pin-pointing
a person on the first 'digit' punch is pure black-magic.
I've met some neat people along the way. And I will give massive
credit that most along the way have been very civil and have gone
out of their way to help. I just apologize to those that I've
encountered on, say, my 6th transfer by which time I've grown a
little impatient. (Especially when I'm in *dire* need of help and
my customer has transisitioned from the pink to flouresescent red
range.)
Jim_who_misses_the_DCO_days_of_calling_the_switchboard_and_saying_
simply_"DTN"_number_number_number_and_getting_it
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728.20 | Last paragraph applies when you're off site | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Feb 22 1989 01:18 | 13 |
| > I'm not sure that you're real-life DTN. I think you've got the same
> setup as TFO.
Nope, PNO has enough traffic to justify real DTN. See AYOV18::DTN; there
is an automatically updated list "DTN.LIS" which indicates which locations
are "real" DTN in the U.S. and which are not.
>It's given me a great sense of adventure trying to find the right number.
If you don't have the number, call your local office and ask the attendant to
look it up in the blue pages for you, or call 508 493-5111.
/john
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728.21 | dtn access now | PIRU::GOETZE | std. of living stolen by privilege seekers | Sat May 19 1990 22:20 | 9 |
| Just as a point of trivia, most of southern california (Digital
offices) have become better connected to the Digital whole recently when
we got real access to DTN. What a difference! Now when speaking to key
GMA Digital people, I feel like I'm not some stranded penguin in
Antarctica. I realize some people may not see it as another factor
in makinbg us separate; but it all depends on what your awareness level
is.
erik
|