Darth Vader
From the Dark Side
My understanding is that PSTN and ISDN devices will still work using an adapter that the telco will provide.
Cheers,
DV
Cheers,
DV
No - but I didDidn't they know how to tap the number?
I can't remember what I had for dinner a week ago, but memories from the 80s are still sharp. I've got a box of those TDK AD-90s too.It is the TDK cassettes that throw me back in time.
My understanding is that PSTN and ISDN devices will still work using an adapter that the telco will provide.
My last landline phone was 1999!It is hard to believe that will have seen my family's first and last telephone in the space of less than 50 years.
My last landline phone was 1999!
Your first cellphone was a Nokia or Ericsson? Fun times. Cheers.I only had one for 6 years, from 1989 to 1995.
Your first cellphone was a Nokia or Ericsson? Fun times. Cheers.
My last landline phone was 1999!
Your first cellphone was a Nokia or Ericsson? Fun times. Cheers.
ISDN I doubt. The network termination boxes don't understand pulse dialing either. I did use to have a DTMF keypad widget for use with pulse dial phones
I just checked mine and it does give a full 48 V line voltage. I know that some of the older NTEs in the ADSL days only gave 24 V like a PABX and presumably a weak ring voltage.
The railway project that I work on still specify phones everywhere. This gets expensive as they want desktop VOIP units.I can not remember a time when there was not a phone or two in the house
My parents never had a phone up until I left in 1966, but I knew how to do it in the old press button A/B phone boxes. IIRC it stopped working when STD* was introduced.Didn't they know how to tap the number?