Date:  14 September 1982 17:06 mst
From:  Lippard.DSOP (James J. Lippard)
Subject:  Miscellaneous Digest V1 #23
Reply-To:  misc
To:   (Miscellaneous Mailing List)

Miscellaneous Digest                              Volume 1 : Issue 23

Today's topics:
		telephones (from TELECOM Digest)
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Today
From: Many sources in the DEC Engineering network
Subject: Read on...

17 jul 82

                              What I Like About The Telephone
                                          By Dave Barry


          What I like best about the telephone is that it keeps you in
          touch with people, particularly people who want to sell you
          magazine subscriptions in the middle of the night.  These
          people have been abducted by large publishing companies and
          placed in barbed-wire enclosures surrounded by armed men with
          attack dogs.


Caller:   Hello, Mr. Barry?
Me:       No this is Adolf Hitler.
Caller:   Of course.  My mistake.  The reason I'm calling you at 11:30
          at night, Mr. Hitler, is that I'm conducting a marketing
          survey, and...
Me:       Are you selling magazine subscriptions?
Caller:   Magazine subscriptions?  Me?  Selling them?  Ha Ha. No.
          Certainly not.  Not at all.  No, this is just a plain old
          marketing survey. (Sound of dogs barking.)
Me:       Well, what do you want to know?
Caller:   Well, I just want to ask you some questions about you
          household, such as how many people live there, and what
          their ages are and whether any of them might be interested
          in subscribing to Redbook?
Me:       I don't want to subscribe to anything, you lying piece of
          slime.
Caller:   How about Time? Sports Illustrated? American Beet Farmer?
Me:       I'm going to hang up.
Caller:   No!  (The dogs get louder) Please! You can have my daughter!
Me:       (Click.)

          The first telephone systems were primitive "party lines" where
          everybody could hear what everybody else was talking about.
          This was very confusing:

Bertha:   Emma? I'm calling to tell you I seen you boy Norbert shootin'
          his musket at our goat again, and if you don't...
Clem:     This ain't Emma.  This is Clem Johnson, and I got to reach
          Doc Henderson, because my wife Nell is all rigid and foaming
          at the mouth, and if she don't snap out of it soon the roast
          is going to burn.
Emma:     Norbert don't even own a musket.  All he got is a bow and
          arrow, and he couldn't hit a steam locomotive from six feet,
          what with his bad hand, which he got when your boy Percy bit
          it, and which is festerin' pretty bad.
Doc Henderson:      You better let me take a look at it.
Bertha:   The goat?  Oh, he ain't hurt that bad, Doc.  He's skittery
          on account of the musket fire.
Clem:     Now she's startin' to roll her eyes around.  Looks like two
          hard-boiled eggs.
Caller:   Hi I'm conducting a marketing survey is Mr. Hitler at home?
Clem:     No, but I'll take a year's worth of American Beet Farmer.


          The party line system led to a lot of unnecessary confusion
          and death, so the phone company devised a system whereby you
          can talk to only one person at a time, although not
          necessarily the person you want.  In fact, if you call any
          large company, you will Never get to talk to the person
          you're calling.  Large companies employ people who are paid,
          on a commission basis, solely to put calls on hold.  These
          people are trained by the airline reservations clerks.  The
          only exception is department stores, where all calls are
          immediately routed to whichever clerk has the most people
          waiting.

          But we should never complain about our telephone system.  It
          is the most sophisticated system in the world, yet it is the
          easiest to use.  For example, my 20-month-old son, who
          cannot perform a simple act like eating a banana without
          getting most of it in his hair, is perfectly capable of
          direct-dialing Okinawa, and probably has.  In another year,
          he'll be able to order magazine subscriptions.
--------------------

End of Miscellaneous Digest
***************************
