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Microcap & Penny Stocks : Globalstar Telecommunications Limited GSAT -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Maurice Winn who wrote (16875)9/16/2000 11:48:54 PM
From: dwight martin  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 29987
 
This, from the website previously posted, is Q* describing how G* calls are routed. There is a picture which makes clear that both ends of the conversation are G* phones.
qualcomm.com

A subscriber in Russia is calling her friend in San Francisco on her Globalstar satellite phone. Her signal is handled by a passing satellite.

The satellite relays the call to a Gateway in its footprint.

The Gateway converts the signal to work with the local PSTN and passes on the call. Depending on the distance between the callers, a Globalstar satellite call might pass through several Gateways and PSTNs before locating the receiving phone. The PSTN uses the call's routing information to connect to another Gateway that knows where the receiving phone is located.

The Gateway located closest to the receiving phone converts the signal to Globalstar format and uplinks it to a satellite. This Gateway knows that the receiving phone is in its contact area because an earlier satellite relayed that phone's power-on registration message to the Gateway. This information was stored in the Gateway's Visitor Location Register (VLR).

The call is relayed to the receiving phone and the call linkage is complete!


If the VLR has any real use, shouldn't it be shared in RT between all the gateways? And if all the gateways know which gateways all active G* phones are to be served through, why would a call have to "pass through several Gateways and PSTNs before locating the receiving phone?" Why wouldn't the first gateway go directly to the serving gateway for the receiving phone via the PSTN? Is it possible that the calls are given the most economical routing? Or is it something else?



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (16875)9/17/2000 7:05:20 AM
From: BobRealEstate  Respond to of 29987
 
Maurice, quoting George Thoroughbad...I mean -good. I thought such high elements of American culture stayed and rotted within our shores. Apologies to you for having besmirched the Kiwi cultural landscape with such fare.



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (16875)9/17/2000 11:50:40 AM
From: Don Limb  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 29987
 
OT..........Howdy again Pardner. I got lost trying to follow your explanation on how the West will lose it's financial grip on the World. Perhaps you have been up too late celebrating the Aussie's recent Olympic wins? I must say that my catratsnake project sounds more viable than your Gravitational Spin Reversal System and IT!(TM).
Glad to see you found QSMS, however it is definitely not a Y2K period group. Just a re-release on 8/5/00.
And for your search on the 13th Floor Elevators, try this link:
ed.brocku.ca
Well...back to the ranch.
Happy Trails.
Don



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (16875)9/19/2000 7:32:12 AM
From: maxgo  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 29987
 
Maurice,
you are not the first to have a vision of cybercash.

amazon.com

Very good read!

The book describes - inter alia - a start-up company setting up a data haven in a obscure asian country. It is planned to use the data haven also as a bank for cybercash backed by gold.