Long Distance Phone Cards

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Keyword: long distance phone


entries 1-5 from 5 total

Long distance phone call saves Kiwi from fi

   1522 days 2 hours ago (03.09.2004 18:35)

When Aussie Dave Steel heard his Kiwi friend scream down the phone line that a fire had broken out in her home, he didn’t hesitate to leap into action.

Despite being more than 2400km away, the New South Wales man raised the alarm with his local Albury Fire Station.

Officers there contacted the NSW communications centre which in turn alerted emergency services in Wellington.

Fire communicators in New Zealand began a series of phone traces with the assistance of police to track the blaze to a Papakura address in south Auckland.

Firefighters were scrambled from the Papakura and Manurewa Fire Stations and on arrival found the kitchen alight and the house full of smoke. After searching the house it emerged the woman had fled the fire without contacting emergency services.

«The quick thinking actions of a friend living in Australia averted a potential tragedy,» said a fire brigade spokesman.

"Thanks to Mr Steel, the family has only smoke damage to deal with tonight.

The family, which has asked not to be identified, should have taken the simple option of picking up the phone and dialling 111, said the spokesman.



Smartpay Launches Payment Services in Shanghai

   1582 days 2 hours ago (21.07.2004 19:10)

Shopping Services brought to Mobile Subscribers in Shanghai

SHANGHAI, China, July 20 /Xinhua-PRNewswire/ -- Smartpay Jieyin Ltd. («Smartpay») today announced the launch of the first mobile shopping service in China’s most prosperous metropolitan region -- Shanghai -- partnering with Shanghai Unicom and China Merchants Bank (Shanghai Branch).

Starting today, over 3 million Shanghai Unicom subscribers can purchase pre-paid mobile «top-up» cards, long distance VoIP minutes, ISP access, online gaming time and other products and pay for them conveniently and electronically using Smartpay.

Customers can easily register for the service through dialing a phone banking system, accessing Shanghai Unicom’s consumer service website ([ >>> ] or logging on to either the Smartpay user registration website ([ >>> ] After registering, customers can simply send an SMS to access a menu of products available for sale.

In addition, Smartpay’s geographic reach is growing. In the coming two quarters, the Company expects services to commence in Anhui, Chongqing, Jiangsu and other provinces throughout China.



BellSouth Celebrates Super Bowl XXXIX With 2004 Real Yellow Pages(R) Directory

   1594 days 1 hour ago (11.07.2004 19:23)

JACKSONVILLE, Fla., July 9 /PRNewswire/ -- The 2004 edition of The Real Yellow Pages® from BellSouth celebrates Jacksonville hosting Super Bowl XXXIX in February 2005. An exciting new addition to the directory is the special Jacksonville Super Bowl XXXIX Host Committee section, featuring information on the Host Committee Membership Club as well as local events surrounding Super Bowl 2005. The new directory is available in its standard format, on CD-ROM and in a new smaller «Companion» book.
ADVERTISEMENT

«The Super Bowl is recognized around the world as the highlight of the football season and the host city selection process is very competitive,» said Lisa Almeida, BellSouth Regional Manager for Jacksonville. «By spotlighting this classic downtown scene, we pay tribute to the city of Jacksonville and communicate our enthusiasm for this big event.

More than 800,000 total copies of the new directory will be delivered to homes and businesses in the Jacksonville area. This latest edition will remain in circulation through the spring of 2005.

»Research shows that BellSouth’s directories are the directories of choice for Jacksonville Metro residents and businesses," said Almeida.

The new directory is currently being delivered to homes and businesses.

About BellSouth Advertising and Publishing

BellSouth Advertising & Publishing Corporation (BAPCO) is the leading provider of print and Internet Yellow Pages products in the southeast. BAPCO publishes 63 million copies of the print Yellow Pages in more than 500 editions in the nine-state BellSouth region. Users referred to The Real Yellow Pages® from BellSouth nearly 2 billion times last year and made nearly 160 million searches on RealPages.com ( www.realpages.com ). The Real Yellow Pages is a powerful information resource, linking buyers and sellers, with approximately 85 percent of consumers who reference the directories’ most frequently used headings making a purchase based on their findings.

About BellSouth Corporation

BellSouth Corporation is a Fortune 100 communications services company headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia. BellSouth serves nearly 50 million local, long distance, Internet and wireless customers in the United States and 12 other countries.

Consistently recognized for customer satisfaction, BellSouth provides complete communications solutions to the residential and business markets. In the residential market, BellSouth offers DSL high-speed Internet access and long distance, advanced voice features and other services. The company’s BellSouth Answers(SM) package combines local and long distance service with an array of calling features; wireless data, voice and e-mail services; and high- speed DSL or dial-up Internet service and Cingular Wireless. In the business market, BellSouth serves small, medium and large businesses providing secure, reliable local and long distance voice and data networking solutions. BellSouth also provides online and directory advertising services through BellSouth® RealPages.com(SM) and The Real Yellow Pages®.

BellSouth owns 40 percent of Cingular Wireless, the nation’s second largest wireless company, which provides innovative wireless voice and data services.



12/9 Phone audits to benefit county

   1807 days ago (10.12.2003 20:40)

By LOYD COOK/Daily Sun Staff
Navarro County commissioners will likely approve a contract with a company that will audit the county jail’s revenue stream from its public phones.

The company, Praeses Corporation, will make sure the call volume on the county’s pay phones are being properly counted for revenue and that the county is receiving the actual commissions it should be.

Richard Wright, Praeses’ representative at Monday’s meeting of the Navarro County Commissioners Court, said his 17-year-old company began making its money reselling long distance services before transitioning in recent years to offering public phone management services to different entities.

He said the idea of providing the same service to smaller entities, like counties, came to him as the Shreveport-based company was having a meeting about a large private prison company they were working for.

«In 18 months, on behalf of the private prison (company), we returned about $1.5 million in additional revenue,» Wright said. «I thought, why couldn’t we do this for our parishes (in Louisiana) and counties in the surrounding states?»

Since June, Praeses has reached agreements with five Texas counties and are slated to make their pitch to several others in coming months, Wright said.

Praeses gets 15 percent of all revenues received from the inmate telephones which are, in the Navarro County jail, collect call-only telephones. Wright said his company typically is able to generate 25 to 40 percent more revenues for an entity -- in about 90 percent of the audits Praeses performs -- just in billing error situations.

That leaves about 10 to 25 percent additional revenue for the county, he said.

Wright said the company the county presently uses for their public telephones, Everman, is the best that Praeses deals with. He said Praeses deals with about 25 to 30 such companies providing public telephones.

«I have to stress that these are intentional errors,» Wright said. «Everman is very good with their policy, that if a mistake is found they want to correct it and get the money back to a county because their feeling is that it belonged to (the county) in the first place.»

The billing errors found often unearth revenue the public phone company isn’t receiving either, he said. Those companies are reselling long distance as well -- in the case of Everman and the county, it’s likely AT&T long distance, Wright said -- and the billing errors can effect them as well.

Part of the audit includes researching past billings to see if the county has lost revenue there as well. If any is recovered in that situation, Praeses gets a 33 percent commission.

Presently, Praeses Corporation provides the same auditing services for Exxon, Circle K, Piggly Wiggly and Waffle House, among others.

Should the company not find enough savings to cover its commission, it will refund up to 100 percent of that commission amount back to the county. Wright said his company would move quickly to do so in that scenario, well before the end of the one-year contract.

«In about 10 percent of our contracts, that’s what happens,,» Wright said. «Worst case scenario … is that you would have the same revenue» as before.

Commissioners voted to accept the presentation. County Judge Alan Bristol said the item would be put on the commissioners’ Dec. 22 meeting agenda for formal approval, dependent on an examination of the contract.



Elves for the elders

   1811 days 3 hours ago (07.12.2003 17:35)

Holiday helpers take note: Restaurant gift certificates, postage stamps and a little help around the house are the presents that please seniors

For holiday elves with seniors on their gift lists, the cranberry-juice glass is both half empty and half full. The shopping is either very easy or impossible, depending on how you look at it.

The tangible things they want are simple: Most AARP members gathered at a meeting late last month said they’d be delighted with gift certificates to local restaurants, and moderately priced ones at that. But the top spot on the wish list for many of them was something that is not sold in stores -- or on TV or online, either. Peace is not for sale. Neither is safe passage back home for Raymond and Gloria Andry’s two grandsons, who are in Afghanistan. But truth be told, they wouldn’t look good in gift wrap, anyway.

So in the meantime, here are some holiday gift ideas from two groups of seniors, many Web addresses, assisted living centers, one Dear Abby column, and a little pelican in a pear tree (not really).

Paper pleasing: About half of the members of AARP Chapter 2624, which meets at Kenner City Hall, would be pleased as Christmas punch to receive gift certificates to local restaurants. They can be for «seafood, Italian, anything,» said 76-year-old Lucille O’Shello of River Ridge. A few put in pleas for department store gift cards, and a credit at Wal-Mart is just fine.

At the group’s most recent meeting much of the discussion centered on changes in the Medicare system, and members were very concerned. So we did some checking at local drug stores. The major chains offer gift cards, too, and they can be used for pharmacy purchases. If you can’t buy peace on Earth, maybe a little peace of mind will do.

Warm reception: Mary Pearson, 79, would welcome with open arms a black shawl. The gift of warmth was also the first thing that came to mind for Ruth Kidd, coordinator of the senior center at Bethany United Methodist Church in eastern New Orleans and a past president of the AARP chapter that meets there. Lap quilts make great gifts, said Kidd.

«Many of the aged people, their legs get cold when they sit and watch TV,» said Kidd, who’s 76. She also suggested ear muffs, gloves, wool socks, and knit caps that pull down over the ears -- for women and men both. «The men might (usually) wear caps, but their ears are cold.

»And we have so many now that move around on their own," Kidd said, echoing the Kenner seniors’ desire for gift certificates. Kidd suggested they be to restaurants, department stores or neighborhood groceries.

Miles to go: Indeed, many do get around, and plan to continue. A gift-giver with a bigger budget should know that many of the older people we polled want to hit the road. Give Aurora Cyprus, 71, an overnight trip to a casino; Sarah Wang, 82, wants to go to Branson, Mo., and Marjorie Backstedt, 77, to England. Sherry Vicknair has her heart set on Disney World. Tickets to a Louisiana State University bowl game would make Emile Bauer, 81, very happy. (Visions of Sugar Bowls surely dance in his head.)

For older adults who ride city buses, a pass for unlimited use for a month would likely be appreciated. The city of New Orleans RTA TransPass costs $55 and allows unlimited travel on all bus and streetcar routes. Passes go on sale the 25th of the month for the next month’s use; at press time, RTA folks were trying to arrange sale of January passes early Christmas week. They’re available at the RTA headquarters at 6700 Plaza Drive in eastern New Orleans between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, or from 60 area businesses. For more information, call 242–2600 or visit the Web site www.regionaltransit.org/passes/. Some seniors and disabled people qualify for reduced fares for fixed-route services; ask.

Please post: Debbie Koehler, a spokeswoman for Malta Park, said that residents of the assisted living facility would be glad to receive postage stamps, writing tablets and long-distance phone cards.

Consider suiting the stamp to the recipient, and adding a little lagniappe. Among 37-cent options at post offices now are stamps that commemorate the Louisiana Purchase, the Korean War, Thurgood Marshall, Irving Berlin, Cary Grant, Audrey Hepburn and a menagerie of animals and plants. Include the lyrics to a composition by Irving Berlin («White Christmas») for the music fan, a video or a celebrity biography for a movie lover, a book or fact sheet for the historian.

And when possible, skip the fine print. An assortment of large-print books is available in most bookstores. If the perfect book comes only in standard type, many vendors also sell some handsome and clever magnifiers. Choices include a bar that slides down lines of print, «cards» of various sizes that the reader places over the page, and the old-fashioned Sherlock Holmes-type magnifying glass. Prices range greatly, but start at about $2.

If arthritis is making unreasonable demands, perhaps the recipient would like the fold-up device we saw that holds a book for hands-free reading. (We also saw a contraption that allows a card-player to hold just the contraption, which holds all the player’s cards.)

In general, think big, if his or her vision isn’t what it used to be: telephones and universal TV remotes (that you program for them) with large number keys, a watch with jumbo numbers, an address book with big print.

Leaving a legacy: Everybody has a good story; some just need a little encouragement to tell it. Those who don’t need much prompting might enjoy a well-bound blank journal and some pens to record their memories of childhood and beyond. Reader’s Digest Books gives grandparents a little help with «Our Story: A Grandparent’s Record Book, Sharing Your History with Those You Love» ($24.95), with pages for categories such as «Price Comparisons,» «Changing Fashions,» «Our Wedding» and «Our Children.» A similar option is «Grandparents’ Memory Book, Or Did You Really Walk Five Miles to School?» by Teri Harrison (Great Quotations, $14.95); or try Jane Taylor McDonnell’s «Living to Tell the Tale: A Guide to Writing Memoir» (Penguin, $12.95).

In addition to well-chosen books of any kind, magazine subscriptions might be enjoyed, too.

Time and technicalities: «Personal Computers: A Guide for Seniors (and Other Computer Neophytes),» by Pat Coleman (Dorset Press, $16.95), looks like just what Great-Uncle needs, because he keeps saying that one day he’s going to try one of those machines at the library.

Coleman’s book is in large print with illustrations and diagrams that are easy to understand, about the basics and more. It covers screen savers, using a floppy disc, getting around in Windows, how to print and change computer volume, sending and receiving e-mail, setting up a home page and much more, and it’s jargon-free.

Other books that received positive reviews from readers include «The Senior’s Guide to Easy Computing,» by Rebecca Sharp Colmer (Eklektika Press, $14.95); «300 Incredible Things for Seniors on the Internet,» by Joe West (300Incredible.com, $8.95); and «The First Week with My New PC: A Very Basic Guide for Mature Adults & Everyone Else,» by Pamela R. Lessing (Capital Books Inc., $19.95). One reviewer said, «I wish I had this book when my mother got her computer as it would have saved me a lot of time on the telephone.»

Speaking of time, it may be the best idea yet. Koehler of Malta Park said, «The nicest thing to do is to take them out for the day, or just a little while. For ice cream, or lunch, or just a change of scenery.»

Time also goes a long way toward making more mobile seniors such as Linda Brayden happy.

«You know what I really want?» she asked. «Some help around the house. Pulling the weeds, washing the windows, painting the kitchen.»

And whoever has Ronald Phillips on a gift list will have to settle for a second-choice present. «A new president» probably won’t be under Phillips’ tree this year.

. . . . . . .

Staff writer Dayna Harpster can be reached at dharpster Most AARP members gathered at a meeting late last month said they’d be delighted with gift certificates to local restaurants, and moderately priced ones at that. But the top spot on the wish list for many of them was something that is not sold in stores -- or on TV or online, either. Peace is not for sale. Neither is safe passage back home for Raymond and Gloria Andry’s two grandsons, who are in Afghanistan. But truth be told, they wouldn’t look good in gift wrap, anyway.

So in the meantime, here are some holiday gift ideas from two groups of seniors, many Web addresses, assisted living centers, one Dear Abby column, and a little pelican in a pear tree (not really).

Paper pleasing: About half of the members of AARP Chapter 2624, which meets at Kenner City Hall, would be pleased as Christmas punch to receive gift certificates to local restaurants. They can be for «seafood, Italian, anything,» said 76-year-old Lucille O’Shello of River Ridge. A few put in pleas for department store gift cards, and a credit at Wal-Mart is just fine.

At the group’s most recent meeting much of the discussion centered on changes in the Medicare system, and members were very concerned. So we did some checking at local drug stores. The major chains offer gift cards, too, and they can be used for pharmacy purchases. If you can’t buy peace on Earth, maybe a little peace of mind will do.

Warm reception: Mary Pearson, 79, would welcome with open arms a black shawl. The gift of warmth was also the first thing that came to mind for Ruth Kidd, coordinator of the senior center at Bethany United Methodist Church in eastern New Orleans and a past president of the AARP chapter that meets there. Lap quilts make great gifts, said Kidd.

«Many of the aged people, their legs get cold when they sit and watch TV,» said Kidd, who’s 76. She also suggested ear muffs, gloves, wool socks, and knit caps that pull down over the ears -- for women and men both. «The men might (usually) wear caps, but their ears are cold.

»And we have so many now that move around on their own," Kidd said, echoing the Kenner seniors’ desire for gift certificates. Kidd suggested they be to restaurants, department stores or neighborhood groceries.

Miles to go: Indeed, many do get around, and plan to continue. A gift-giver with a bigger budget should know that many of the older people we polled want to hit the road. Give Aurora Cyprus, 71, an overnight trip to a casino; Sarah Wang, 82, wants to go to Branson, Mo., and Marjorie Backstedt, 77, to England. Sherry Vicknair has her heart set on Disney World. Tickets to a Louisiana State University bowl game would make Emile Bauer, 81, very happy. (Visions of Sugar Bowls surely dance in his head.)


For older adults who ride city buses, a pass for unlimited use for a month would likely be appreciated. The city of New Orleans RTA TransPass costs $55 and allows unlimited travel on all bus and streetcar routes. Passes go on sale the 25th of the month for the next month’s use; at press time, RTA folks were trying to arrange sale of January passes early Christmas week. They’re available at the RTA headquarters at 6700 Plaza Drive in eastern New Orleans between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, or from 60 area businesses. For more information, call 242–2600 or visit the Web site www.regionaltransit.org/passes/. Some seniors and disabled people qualify for reduced fares for fixed-route services; ask.

Please post: Debbie Koehler, a spokeswoman for Malta Park, said that residents of the assisted living facility would be glad to receive postage stamps, writing tablets and long-distance phone cards.

Consider suiting the stamp to the recipient, and adding a little lagniappe. Among 37-cent options at post offices now are stamps that commemorate the Louisiana Purchase, the Korean War, Thurgood Marshall, Irving Berlin, Cary Grant, Audrey Hepburn and a menagerie of animals and plants. Include the lyrics to a composition by Irving Berlin («White Christmas») for the music fan, a video or a celebrity biography for a movie lover, a book or fact sheet for the historian.

And when possible, skip the fine print. An assortment of large-print books is available in most bookstores. If the perfect book comes only in standard type, many vendors also sell some handsome and clever magnifiers. Choices include a bar that slides down lines of print, «cards» of various sizes that the reader places over the page, and the old-fashioned Sherlock Holmes-type magnifying glass. Prices range greatly, but start at about $2.

If arthritis is making unreasonable demands, perhaps the recipient would like the fold-up device we saw that holds a book for hands-free reading. (We also saw a contraption that allows a card-player to hold just the contraption, which holds all the player’s cards.)

In general, think big, if his or her vision isn’t what it used to be: telephones and universal TV remotes (that you program for them) with large number keys, a watch with jumbo numbers, an address book with big print.

Leaving a legacy: Everybody has a good story; some just need a little encouragement to tell it. Those who don’t need much prompting might enjoy a well-bound blank journal and some pens to record their memories of childhood and beyond. Reader’s Digest Books gives grandparents a little help with «Our Story: A Grandparent’s Record Book, Sharing Your History with Those You Love» ($24.95), with pages for categories such as «Price Comparisons,» «Changing Fashions,» «Our Wedding» and «Our Children.» A similar option is «Grandparents’ Memory Book, Or Did You Really Walk Five Miles to School?» by Teri Harrison (Great Quotations, $14.95); or try Jane Taylor McDonnell’s «Living to Tell the Tale: A Guide to Writing Memoir» (Penguin, $12.95).

In addition to well-chosen books of any kind, magazine subscriptions might be enjoyed, too.

Time and technicalities: «Personal Computers: A Guide for Seniors (and Other Computer Neophytes),» by Pat Coleman (Dorset Press, $16.95), looks like just what Great-Uncle needs, because he keeps saying that one day he’s going to try one of those machines at the library.

Coleman’s book is in large print with illustrations and diagrams that are easy to understand, about the basics and more. It covers screen savers, using a floppy disc, getting around in Windows, how to print and change computer volume, sending and receiving e-mail, setting up a home page and much more, and it’s jargon-free.

Other books that received positive reviews from readers include «The Senior’s Guide to Easy Computing,» by Rebecca Sharp Colmer (Eklektika Press, $14.95); «300 Incredible Things for Seniors on the Internet,» by Joe West (300Incredible.com, $8.95); and «The First Week with My New PC: A Very Basic Guide for Mature Adults & Everyone Else,» by Pamela R. Lessing (Capital Books Inc., $19.95). One reviewer said, «I wish I had this book when my mother got her computer as it would have saved me a lot of time on the telephone.»

Speaking of time, it may be the best idea yet. Koehler of Malta Park said, «The nicest thing to do is to take them out for the day, or just a little while. For ice cream, or lunch, or just a change of scenery.»

Time also goes a long way toward making more mobile seniors such as Linda Brayden happy.

«You know what I really want?» she asked. «Some help around the house. Pulling the weeds, washing the windows, painting the kitchen.»

And whoever has Ronald Phillips on a gift list will have to settle for a second-choice present. «A new president» probably won’t be under Phillips’ tree this year.

. . . . . . .

Staff writer Dayna Harpster can be reached at dharpster@timespicayune.com or at (504) 826–3444.



Keyword: long distance phone


entries 1-5 from 5 total