Re: [AFMUG] OT TV Show

2018-06-06 Thread D. Ryan Spott
It’s like adult children of alcoholics therapy live in TV!

ryan

-- 
D. Ryan Spott | NGC457, llc
broadband | telco | colo | communities
PO Box 1734 Sultan, WA 98294
425-939-0047

> On Jun 1, 2018, at 23:09, Chuck McCown  wrote:
> 
> American Chopper is back.  Mondays.  Watched the first two episodes tonight.  
> Philo.  $16/month


[AFMUG] OT TV Show

2018-06-01 Thread Chuck McCown
American Chopper is back.  Mondays.  Watched the first two episodes tonight.  
Philo.  $16/month

Re: [AFMUG] OT TV show review

2016-01-21 Thread Cameron Crum
Cell tracking didn't have to be that hard. We used to just run an rf call
trace in the switch and it would tell us every cell a person went through,
what time, and the current cell they were on. It was pretty easy to track
their path. Once we got to cdma with rake receivers and the phones talking
to multiple sites at the same time, it became easy to pin-point the
location based on the rx sig at each cell. The first cdma system I did this
on was in Salt Lake on the Cricket network. Some drug dealer they were
trying to find. We got it down to like a 2 block radius and they found him.

On Thu, Jan 21, 2016 at 7:27 PM, Chuck McCown  wrote:

> Not sure if I mentioned this or not.  Sorry if this is a repeat.I
> binge watched "Making a Murderer" and enjoyed it, err, perhaps enjoyed is
> not the correct word.  Was fascinated by it and the horrible way the system
> treats those without resources.  Similarly enjoyed the "Serial" podcast
> series. "Undisclosed" not so much.   Got terribly tedious when going over
> cell phone tracking technology that was from 20 years ago.
>


[AFMUG] OT TV show review

2016-01-21 Thread Chuck McCown
Not sure if I mentioned this or not.  Sorry if this is a repeat.I binge 
watched "Making a Murderer" and enjoyed it, err, perhaps enjoyed is not the 
correct word.  Was fascinated by it and the horrible way the system treats 
those without resources.  Similarly enjoyed the "Serial" podcast series. 
"Undisclosed" not so much.   Got terribly tedious when going over cell phone 
tracking technology that was from 20 years ago. 



Re: [AFMUG] OT TV show review

2016-01-21 Thread Chuck McCown
Sounded like  it was analog cell phone stuff.  

From: Chuck McCown 
Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2016 7:03 PM
To: af@afmug.com 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT TV show review

They were trying to figure out where a person was based on pretty sketchy data. 
 They knew which cell site and antenna but it could  have been off of a back 
lobe.  The podcast went over this stuff multiple  times. Truly ad nauseam.  

From: Cameron Crum 
Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2016 6:49 PM
To: af@afmug.com 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT TV show review

Cell tracking didn't have to be that hard. We used to just run an rf call trace 
in the switch and it would tell us every cell a person went through, what time, 
and the current cell they were on. It was pretty easy to track their path. Once 
we got to cdma with rake receivers and the phones talking to multiple sites at 
the same time, it became easy to pin-point the location based on the rx sig at 
each cell. The first cdma system I did this on was in Salt Lake on the Cricket 
network. Some drug dealer they were trying to find. We got it down to like a 2 
block radius and they found him. 

On Thu, Jan 21, 2016 at 7:27 PM, Chuck McCown <ch...@wbmfg.com> wrote:

  Not sure if I mentioned this or not.  Sorry if this is a repeat.I binge 
watched "Making a Murderer" and enjoyed it, err, perhaps enjoyed is not the 
correct word.  Was fascinated by it and the horrible way the system treats 
those without resources.  Similarly enjoyed the "Serial" podcast series. 
"Undisclosed" not so much.   Got terribly tedious when going over cell phone 
tracking technology that was from 20 years ago. 



Re: [AFMUG] OT TV show review

2016-01-21 Thread Chuck McCown
They were trying to figure out where a person was based on pretty sketchy data. 
 They knew which cell site and antenna but it could  have been off of a back 
lobe.  The podcast went over this stuff multiple  times. Truly ad nauseam.  

From: Cameron Crum 
Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2016 6:49 PM
To: af@afmug.com 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT TV show review

Cell tracking didn't have to be that hard. We used to just run an rf call trace 
in the switch and it would tell us every cell a person went through, what time, 
and the current cell they were on. It was pretty easy to track their path. Once 
we got to cdma with rake receivers and the phones talking to multiple sites at 
the same time, it became easy to pin-point the location based on the rx sig at 
each cell. The first cdma system I did this on was in Salt Lake on the Cricket 
network. Some drug dealer they were trying to find. We got it down to like a 2 
block radius and they found him. 

On Thu, Jan 21, 2016 at 7:27 PM, Chuck McCown <ch...@wbmfg.com> wrote:

  Not sure if I mentioned this or not.  Sorry if this is a repeat.I binge 
watched "Making a Murderer" and enjoyed it, err, perhaps enjoyed is not the 
correct word.  Was fascinated by it and the horrible way the system treats 
those without resources.  Similarly enjoyed the "Serial" podcast series. 
"Undisclosed" not so much.   Got terribly tedious when going over cell phone 
tracking technology that was from 20 years ago. 



Re: [AFMUG] OT TV show review

2016-01-21 Thread Jaime Solorza
Cell phone location accuracy convicted a local douche bag who killed mum on
east side of El Paso and dumped body by Rio Grande near Sunland Park
NM...his lawyer was claiming cell phone location was suspect because the
Franklin's block signals from east and west side.  The prosecutor had good
RF knowledge himself and brought in experts to show where phone was tracked
to disposal site.  He and girlfriend were at location for 1/2 hour hiding
body...
On Jan 21, 2016 7:03 PM, "Chuck McCown" <ch...@wbmfg.com> wrote:

> They were trying to figure out where a person was based on pretty sketchy
> data.  They knew which cell site and antenna but it could  have been off of
> a back lobe.  The podcast went over this stuff multiple  times. Truly ad
> nauseam.
>
> *From:* Cameron Crum <cc...@wispmon.com>
> *Sent:* Thursday, January 21, 2016 6:49 PM
> *To:* af@afmug.com
> *Subject:* Re: [AFMUG] OT TV show review
>
> Cell tracking didn't have to be that hard. We used to just run an rf call
> trace in the switch and it would tell us every cell a person went through,
> what time, and the current cell they were on. It was pretty easy to track
> their path. Once we got to cdma with rake receivers and the phones talking
> to multiple sites at the same time, it became easy to pin-point the
> location based on the rx sig at each cell. The first cdma system I did this
> on was in Salt Lake on the Cricket network. Some drug dealer they were
> trying to find. We got it down to like a 2 block radius and they found him.
>
> On Thu, Jan 21, 2016 at 7:27 PM, Chuck McCown <ch...@wbmfg.com> wrote:
>
>> Not sure if I mentioned this or not.  Sorry if this is a repeat.I
>> binge watched "Making a Murderer" and enjoyed it, err, perhaps enjoyed is
>> not the correct word.  Was fascinated by it and the horrible way the system
>> treats those without resources.  Similarly enjoyed the "Serial" podcast
>> series. "Undisclosed" not so much.   Got terribly tedious when going over
>> cell phone tracking technology that was from 20 years ago.
>>
>
>