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488 lines
22 KiB
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488 lines
22 KiB
Text
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==Phrack Magazine==
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Volume Five, Issue Forty-Six, File 8 of 28
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****************************************************************************
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The Wonderful World of Pagers
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by Erik Bloodaxe
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Screaming through the electromagnet swamp we live in are hundreds of
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thousands of messages of varying degrees of importance. Doctors,
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police, corporate executives, housewives and drug dealers all find
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themselves constantly trapped at the mercy of a teeny little box:
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the pager.
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Everyone has seen a pager; almost everyone has one. Over 20 million
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pagers are on the streets in the US alone, sorting out their particular
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chunk of the radio-spectrum. Another fifty-thousand more are
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put into service each day.
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But what the hell are these things really doing? What more can we
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do with them than be reminded to call mom, or to "pick up dry-cleaning?"
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Lots.
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** PROTOCOLS **
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Pagers today use a variety of signalling formats such as POCSAG, FLEX
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and GOLAY. The most common by far is POCSAG (Post Office Standardization
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Advisory Group), a standard set by the British Post Office and adopted
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world-wide for paging.
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POCSAG is transmitted at three transmission rates--512, 1200 and 2400 bps.
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Most commercial paging companies today use at least 1200, although many
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companies who own their own paging terminals for in-house use transmit
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at 512. Nationwide carriers (SkyTel, PageNet, MobileComm, etc.) send
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the majority of their traffic at 2400 to make the maximum use of
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their bandwidth. In other words, the faster they can deliver pages,
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the smaller their queue of outgoing pages is. Although these
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carriers have upgraded their equipment in the field to broadcast at
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2400 (or plan to do so in the near future), they still send out
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some pages at 1200 and 512 to accommodate their customers with older
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pagers. Most 512 and 1200 traffic on the nationwide services is
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numeric or tone-only pages.
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POCSAG messages are broadcast in batches. Each batch is comprised of 8
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frames, and each frame contains two codewords separated by a
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"synchronization" codeword. A message can have as many codewords
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as needed to deliver the page and can stretch through several batches
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if needed. The end of a complete message is indicated by a "next address"
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codeword. Both addressing and user data are sent in the codewords, the
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distinction being the least significant bit of the codeword:
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0 for address data, and 1 for user-data.
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Standard alphanumeric data is sent in a seven-bit format, with each codeword
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containing 2 6/7 characters. A newer 8-bit alphanumeric format is
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implemented by some carriers which allow users to send data such as
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computer files, graphics in addition to regular alphanumeric messages.
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The 8 bit format allows for 2.5 characters per codeword.
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Numeric data is 4 bit, allowing up to 5 numbers to be transmitted per
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codeword. Tone and voice pages contain address information only.
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(NOTE: Pager data uses BCH 32,21 for encoding. I don't imagine
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very many of you will be trying to decode pager data by building your
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own decoders, but for those of you who may, take my interpretation
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of POCSAG framing with a grain of salt, and try to dig up the
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actual POCSAG specs.)
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** THE PAGING RECEIVER **
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Paging receivers come in hundreds of shapes and sizes, although the vast
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majority are manufactured by Motorola. Numeric pagers comprise over
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fifty percent all pagers in use. Alphanumeric comprises about thirty
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percent, with tone and voice pagers making up the remainder.
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Pagers are uniquely addressed by a capcode. The capcode is usually six
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to eight digits in length, and will be printed somewhere on the pager
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itself. Many pager companies assign customers PIN numbers, which are
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then cross-referenced to a given capcode in databases maintained by
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the service provider. PIN numbers have no other relationship
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to the capcode.
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Tone pagers are by far the most limited paging devices in use.
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When a specified number has been called, an address only message
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is broadcast, which causes the intended receiver to beep. Wow.
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Tone pagers usually have 4 capcodes, which can correspond to
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different locations to call back. Voice pagers are similar, except
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they allow the calling party to leave a 15 to 30 second message.
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The voice message is broadcast immediately after the capcode of the
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receiver, which unsquelches the device's audio.
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Numeric pagers, although seemingly limited by their lack of display
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options have proven otherwise by enterprising users. Most numeric
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data sent is obviously related to phone numbers, but numerous users
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have developed codes relating to various actions to be carried out
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by the party being paged. The most prolific users of this have
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been the Chinese who have one of the most active paging networks
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in the world. I suppose the next biggest users of code-style numeric
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paging would be drug dealers. (2112 0830 187 -- get to the fucking
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drop site by 8:30 or I'll bust a cap in your ass!) :)
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Alphanumeric pagers are most often contacted through a dedicated
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service that will manually enter in the message to be sent onto the
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paging terminal. One such service, NDC, offers its phone-answering
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and message typing services to various pager companies. Next time
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you are talking to a pager operator, ask him or her if they are at
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NDC. They probably are.
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In addition to the capcode, pagers will have an FCC ID number, a serial
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number, and most importantly, the frequency that the device has been
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crystaled for imprinted on the back of the device. Although technology
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exists that would allow pagers to listen on a number of frequencies
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by synthesizing the frequency rather than using a crystal, pager
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manufacturers stick to using crystals to "keep the unit cost down."
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Pagers may have multiple capcodes by which they can be addressed by.
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Multiple capcodes are most often used when a person has subscribed to
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various services offered by their provider, or when the subscriber is
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part of a group of individuals who will all need to receive the same
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page simultaneously (police, EMTs, etc.).
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Most low-cost pagers have their capcode stored on the circuit board
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in a PAL. Most paging companies will completely exchange pagers
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rather than remove and reprogram the PAL, so I don't think
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it's worth it for any experimenter to attempt. However, like most
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Motorola devices, many of their paging products can be reprogrammed
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with a special serial cable and software. Reprogramming software
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is usually limited to changing baud rates, and adding capcodes.
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Additionally, some units can be reprogrammed over the air by the
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service provider. Using a POCSAG feature known as OTP (over the air
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programming) the service provider can instruct the paging receiver to
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add capcodes, remove capcodes, or even shut itself down in the case
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of non-payment.
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** SERVICES **
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With the growing popularity of alphanumeric pagers, many service providers
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have decided to branch out into the information business. The most
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common of these services is delivery of news headlines. Other services
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include stock quotes, airline flight information, voice mail and
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fax reception notification, and email. Of course, all of these services
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are available for a small additional monthly premium.
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Email is probably the single coolest thing to have sent to your
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alpha pager. (Unless you subscribe to about a zillion mailing lists)
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Companies like SkyTel and Radiomail give the user an email address
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that automatically forwards to your paging device.
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IE: PIN-NUMBER@skymail.com. Several packages exist for forwarding
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email from a UNIX system by sending stripping down the email to
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pertinent info such as FROM and SUBJECT lines, and executing a script
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to send the incoming mail out via a pager terminal data port.
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One such program is IXOBEEPER, which can be found with an archie
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query.
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Radiomail's founder, (and rather famous ex-hacker in his own right - go
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look at ancient ComputerWorld headlines), Geoff Goodfellow had devised
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such a method back in the late 70's. His program watched for incoming
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email, parsed the mail headers, and redirected the FROM and SUBJECT
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lines to his alphanumeric pager. Obviously, not many people had
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alphanumeric pagers at all, much less email addresses on ARPANET
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back in the 70's, so Geoff's email pager idea didn't see much
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wide-spread use until much later.
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Two RFC's have been issued recently regarding paging and the Internet.
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RFC 1568, the Simple Network Paging Protocol, acts similarly to SMTP.
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Upon connecting to the SNPP port the user issues commands such as:
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PAGE followed by pager telephone number
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MESS followed by the alpha or numeric message
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SEND
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& QUIT
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RFC 1568 has met with some opposition in the IETF, who don't consider
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it worthwhile to implement a new protocol to handle paging, since it
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can be handled easily using other methods.
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The other RFC, number 1569, suggests that paging be addressed in a rather
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unique manner. Using the domain TPC.INT, which would be reserved for
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services that necessitate the direct connection to The Phone Company,
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individual pagers would be addressed by their individual phone numbers.
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Usernames would be limited to pager-alpha or pager-numeric to represent
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the type of pager being addressed. For example, an alpha-page being sent to
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1-800-555-1212 would be sent as pager-alpha@2.1.2.1.5.5.5.0.0.8.1.tcp.int.
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** PAGING TERMINAL DATA PORTS **
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Many services offer modem connections to pager terminals so that
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computer users can send pages from their desks using software packages
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like WinBeep, Notify! or Messenger. All of these services connect to
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the pager terminal and speak to it using a protocol known as
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IXO.
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Upon connection, a pager terminal identifies itself with the following:
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ID=
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(I bet you always wondered what the hell those systems were)
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Paging terminals default to 300 E71, although many larger companies
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now have dialups supporting up to 2400.
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Many such systems allow you to manually enter in the appropriate information
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by typing a capital "M" and a return at the ID= prompt. The system will then
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prompt you for the PIN of the party you wish to page, followed by a prompt
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for the message you wish to send, followed by a final prompt asking if you
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wish to send more pages. Not every pager terminal will support a manual
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entry, but most do.
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All terminals support the IXO protocol. As there are far too many
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site specific examples within the breadth of IXO, we will concentrate on
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the most common type of pager services for our examples.
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[ Sample IXO transaction of a program sending the message ABC to PIN 123
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gleened from the IXOBeeper Docs ]
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Pager Terminal YOU
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--------------------------------------------------------------
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<CR>
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ID=
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<ESC>PG1<CR>
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Processing - Please Wait
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<CR>
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<CR>
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ACK <CR>
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<ESC>[p <CR>
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<STX>123<CR>
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ABC<CR>
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<ETX>17;<CR>
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<CR>
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ACK <CR>
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<EOT><CR>
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<ESC>EOT <CR>
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The checksum data came from:
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STX 000 0010
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1 011 0001
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2 011 0010
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3 001 0011
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<CR> 000 1101
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A 100 0001
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B 100 0010
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C 100 0011
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<CR> 000 1101
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ETX 000 0011
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----------------
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1 0111 1011
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----------------
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1 7 ; Get it? Get an ASCII chart and it will all make sense.
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Note: Everything in the paging blocks, from STX to ETX inclusive are used
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to generate the checksum. Also, this is binary data, guys...you can't
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just type at the ID= prompt and expect to have it recognized as IXO.
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It wants specific BITS. Got it? Just checking...
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** PAGER FREQUENCIES - US **
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[Frequencies transmitting pager information are extremely easy to
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identify while scanning. They identify each batch transmission
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with a two-tone signal, followed by bursts of data. People with
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scanners may tune into some of the following frequencies to
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familiarize themselves with this distinct audio.]
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Voice Pager Ranges: 152.01 - 152.21
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453.025 - 453.125
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454.025 - 454.65
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462.75 - 462.925
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Other Paging Ranges: 35.02 - 35.68
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43.20 - 43.68
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152.51 - 152.84
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157.77 - 158.07
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158.49 - 158.64
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459.025 - 459.625
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929.0125 - 931.9875
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** PAGER FREQUENCIES - WORLD **
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Austria 162.050 - 162.075 T,N,A
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Australia 148.100 - 166.540 T,N,A
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411.500 - 511.500 T,N,A
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Canada 929.025 - 931-975 T,N,A
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138.025 - 173.975 T,N,A
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406.025 - 511.975 T,N,A
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China 152.000 - 172.575 N,A
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Denmark 469.750 N,A
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Finland 450.225 T,N,A
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146.275 - 146.325 T,N,A
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France 466.025 - 466.075 T,N,A
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Germany 465.970 - 466.075 T,N,A
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173.200 T,N,A
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Hong Kong 172.525 N,A
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280.0875 T,N,A
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Indonesia 151.175 - 153.050 A
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Ireland 153.000 - 153.825 T,N,A
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Italy 466.075 T,N,A
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161.175 T,N
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Japan 278.1625 - 283.8875 T,N
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Korea 146.320 - 173.320 T,N,A
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Malaysia 152.175 - 172.525 N,A,V
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931.9375 N,A
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Netherlands 156.9865 - 164.350 T,N,A
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New Zealand 157.925 - 158.050 T,N,A
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Norway 148.050 - 169.850 T,N,A
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Singapore 161.450 N,A
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931.9375 N,A
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Sweden 169.8 T,N,A
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Switzerland 149.5 T,N,A
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Taiwan 166.775 N,A
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280.9375 N,A
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Thailand 450.525 N,A
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172.525 - 173.475 N,A
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UK 138.150 - 153.275 T,N,A
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454.675 - 466.075 T,N,A
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T = Tone
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N = Numeric
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A = Alphanumeric
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V = Voice
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** INTERCEPTION AND THE LAW **
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For many years the interception of pages was not considered an
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invasion of privacy because of the limited information provided
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by the tone-only pagers in use at the time. In fact, when
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Congress passed the Electronic Communications Privacy Act in 1986
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tone-only pagers were exempt from its provisions.
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According to the ECPA, monitoring of all other types of paging signals,
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including voice, is illegal. But, due to this same law, paging
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transmissions are considered to have a reasonable expectation to
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privacy, and Law Enforcement officials must obtain a proper court
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order to intercept them, or have the consent of the subscriber.
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To intercept pages, many LE-types will obtain beepers programmed with
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the same capcode as their suspect. To do this, they must contact
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the paging company and obtain the capcode associated with the person
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or phone number they are interested in. However, even enlisting
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the assistance of the paging companies often requires following
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proper legal procedures (warrants, subpoenas, etc.).
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More sophisticated pager-interception devices are sold by a variety
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of companies. SWS Security sells a device called the "Beeper Buster"
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for about $4000.00. This particular device is scheduled as
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a Title III device, so any possession of it by someone outside
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a law enforcement agency is a federal crime. Greyson Electronics
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sells a package called PageTracker that uses an ICOM R7100
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in conjunction with a personal computer to track and decode pager
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messages. (Greyson also sells a similar package to decode
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AMPS cellular messages from forward and reverse channels called
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"CellScope.")
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For the average hacker-type, the most realistic and affordable option
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is the Universal M-400 decoder. This box is about 400 bucks and
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will decode POCSAG at 512 and 1200, as well as GOLAY (although I've never
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seen a paging service using GOLAY.) It also decodes CTCSS, DCS, DTMF,
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Baudot, ASCII, SITOR A & B, FEC-A, SWED-ARQ, ACARS, and FAX. It
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takes audio input from any scanners external speaker jack, and
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is probably the best decoder available to the Hacker/HAM for the price.
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Output from the M400 shows the capcode followed by T, N or A (tone, numeric
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or alpha) ending with the message sent. Universal suggests hooking
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the input to the decoder directly to the scanner before any de-emphasis
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circuitry, to obtain the true signal. (Many scanners alter the audio
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before output for several reasons that aren't really relevant to this
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article...they just do. :) )
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Obviously, even by viewing the pager data as it streams by is of little
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use to anyone without knowing to whom the pager belongs to. Law Enforcement
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can get a subpoena and obtain the information easily, but anyone else
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is stuck trying to social engineer the paging company. One other alternative
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works quite well when you already know the individuals pager number,
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and need to obtain the capcode (for whatever reason).
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Pager companies will buy large blocks in an exchange for their customers.
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It is extremely easy to discover the paging company from the phone number
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that corresponds to the target pager either through the RBOC or by paging
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someone and asking them who their provider is when they return your call.
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Once the company is known, the frequencies allocated to that company
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are registered with the FCC and are public information. Many CD-ROMs
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are available with the entire FCC Master Frequency Database.
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(Percon sells one for 99 bucks that covers the whole country -
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716-386-6015) Libraries and the FCC itself will also have this information
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available.
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With the frequency set and a decoder running, send a page that will be
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incredibly easy to discern from the tidal wave of pages spewing
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|
forth on the frequency. (6666666666, THIS IS YOUR TEST PAGE, etc...)
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|
It will eventually scroll by, and presto! How many important people
|
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|
love to give you their pager number?
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||
|
|
||
|
** THE FUTURE **
|
||
|
|
||
|
With the advent of new technologies pagers will become even more
|
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|
present in both our businesses and private lives. Notebook computers
|
||
|
and PDAs with PCMCIA slots can make use of the new PCMCIA pager cards.
|
||
|
Some of these cards have actual screens that allow for use without the
|
||
|
computer, but most require a program to pull message data out. These
|
||
|
cards also have somewhat large storage capacity, so the length of
|
||
|
messages have the option of being fairly large, should the service
|
||
|
provider allow them to be.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With the advent of 8-bit alphanumeric services, users with PCMCIA pagers
|
||
|
can expect to receive usable computer data such as spreadsheet
|
||
|
entries, word processing documents, and of course, GIFs. (Hey, porno
|
||
|
entrepreneurs: beeper-porn! Every day, you get a new gif sent to your
|
||
|
pagecard! Woo Woo. Sad thing is, it would probably sell.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
A branch of Motorola known as EMBARC (Electronic Mail Broadcast to A
|
||
|
Roaming Computer) was one of the first to allow for such broadcasts.
|
||
|
EMBARC makes use of a proprietary Motorola protocol, rather than
|
||
|
POCSAG, so subscribers must make use of either a Motorola NewsStream
|
||
|
pager (with nifty serial cable) or a newer PCMCIA pager. Messages are
|
||
|
sent to (and received by) the user through the use of special client
|
||
|
software.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The software dials into the EMBARC message switch accessed through
|
||
|
AT&T's ACCUNET packet-switched network. The device itself is used
|
||
|
for authentication (most likely its capcode or serial number)
|
||
|
and some oddball protocol is spoken to communicate with the switch.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Once connected, users have the option of sending a page out, or
|
||
|
retrieving pages either too large for the memory of the pager, or
|
||
|
from a list of all messages sent in the last 24 hours, in case the
|
||
|
subscriber had his pager turned off.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Additionally, the devices can be addressed directly via x.400
|
||
|
addresses. (X.400: The CCITT standard that covers email address
|
||
|
far too long to be worth sending anyone mail to.) So essentially,
|
||
|
any EMBARC customer can be contacted from the Internet.
|
||
|
|
||
|
MTEL, the parent company of the huge paging service SkyTel, is
|
||
|
implementing what may be the next generation of paging technologies.
|
||
|
This service, NWN, being administrated by MTEL subsidiary Destineer,
|
||
|
is most often called 2-way paging, but is more accurately Narrowband-PCS.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The network allows for the "pager" to be a transceiver. When a page
|
||
|
arrives, the device receiving the page will automatically send back
|
||
|
an acknowledgment of its completed reception. Devices may also
|
||
|
send back some kind of "canned response" the user programs. An example
|
||
|
might be: "Thanks, I got it!" or "Why on Earth are you eating up my
|
||
|
allocated pages for the month with this crap?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
MTEL's service was awarded a Pioneers Preference by the FCC, which gave them
|
||
|
access to the narrowband PCS spectrum before the auctions. This is a big
|
||
|
deal, and did not go unnoticed by Microsoft. They dumped cash into the
|
||
|
network, and said the devices will be supported by Chicago. (Yeah,
|
||
|
along with every other device on the planet, right? Plug and Pray!)
|
||
|
|
||
|
The network will be layed out almost identically to MTEL's existing paging
|
||
|
network, using dedicated lines to connect towers in an area to a central
|
||
|
satellite up/downlink. One key difference will be the addition of
|
||
|
highly somewhat sensitive receivers on the network, to pick up the ACKs
|
||
|
and replies of the customer units, which will probably broadcast at
|
||
|
about 2 or 3 watts. The most exciting difference will be the
|
||
|
speed at which the network transmits data: 24,000 Kbps. Twenty-four
|
||
|
thousand. (I couldn't believe it either. Not only can you get your
|
||
|
GIFs sent to your pager, but you get them blinding FAST!) The actual
|
||
|
units themselves will most likely look like existing alphanumeric pagers
|
||
|
with possibly a few more buttons, and of course, PCMCIA units will
|
||
|
be available to integrate with computer applications.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Beyond these advancements, other types of services plan on offering
|
||
|
paging like features. CDPD, TDMA & CDMA Digital Cellular and ESMR
|
||
|
all plan on providing a "pager-like" option for their customers.
|
||
|
The mere fact that you can walk into a K-Mart and buy a pager
|
||
|
off a rack would indicate to me that pagers are far to ingrained into
|
||
|
our society, and represent a wireless technology that doesn't scare
|
||
|
or confuse the yokels. Such a technology doesn't ever really go away.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
** BIBLIOGRAPHY **
|
||
|
|
||
|
Kneitel, Tom, "The Secret Life of Beepers," _Popular Communications_,
|
||
|
p. 8, July, 1994.
|
||
|
|
||
|
O'Brien, Michael, "Beep! Beep! Beep!," _Sun Expert_, p. 17, March, 1994.
|
||
|
|
||
|
O'Malley, Chris, "Pagers Grow Up," _Mobile Office_, p. 48, August, 1994.
|