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ISP Information:
A set of commands used to communicate with Hewlett Packard printers. Each printer company has its own language, but PCL has become a generic term to describe these languages. See also Postscript. ISP Glossary:
Printer Control Language - In article , Carl Moore wrote: (via AT&T) to a phone on 610-388, which is along the Delaware border (is local to Wilmington, Del.) and reaches up to a stretch of U.S. 1. AT&T bill which includes that call has arrived, and it gives the place name as Chadds Ford (do not recall seeing Chadds Ford in that context before), but nanpa.com (and the old phone books for that area) give 388 (which is a holdover from the 215 area) as Mendenhall.More than likely the person you called also has AT&T LD and the billshows the city associated with the other end's billing address insteadof the actual rate center name as defined by NANPA. Before I droppedAT&T LD a few years ago I noticed that calls to my parents in 706-866,who also had AT&T LD at the time, were listed on AT&T bills as "FtOglthrp GA" (which, oddly enough, is how "Fort Oglethorpe" was spelledby BellSouth on their local bill) instead of "Rossville GA" (which isthe rate center name as defined by NANPA, etc.), but calls tocustomers of other LD carriers in 706-866 were listed as "RossvilleGA". I also noticed differences in the way New Orleans was spelled("New Orlens LA" vs. "Neworleans LA") on calls to a known AT&T LDcustomer vs. calls to cell phones and so on in New Orleans...I've seen a couple of small LD carriers show calls to my home POTSline as being to "Chamblee GA" and not "Atlanta NE GA" since theyapparently don't know about Atlanta's rate center consolidation yet...;)Stanley Cline -- sc1 at roamer1 dot org -- http://www.roamer1.org/"Never put off until tomorrow what you can do today. There mightbe a law against it by that time." -/usr/games/fortune
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