Unnamed Administration sources reported that Ross Lindahl said: > > Gents > There is some really good info out there. The Macmallian Information > Super library (mcp.com). James Brice wrote a very useful book on using > ISDN. It really does depend on what you want to use it for. Most people > wanted ISDN for data and have their pots line free for voice stuff. DSL > pretty much took over that venue. ISDN never took off. Plus all calls > are metered.
You propagate some of the myths that dog ISDN. ISDN *is not* always metered. Some ILEC's, under some plans, meter it. Others do not. Remember we have ~100 different ILEC tariffs in the US. (Say 2 per state..) I use a "B" for ISP access. Each call costs me 8c. I tend to leave them up for a while. (Yes, it IS possible to have a really long call...) It is 100% true that the ILEC have done all they could to squash ISDN. This while they spend big money offering it. Left hand/Right hand. In some forms, such as PRI and BRI Centrex, ISDN is a major success. Here Inside the Beltway, Centrex is very important to Darth's bottom line. Now, I've no idea what the story is re: Panasonic's ISDN support. I've heard it is very limited. (I'm SHOCKED, just SHOCKED!) If it were done well: BRI: offer MSN {multiple subscriber number} support for the 64 DN's a BRI can handle. BRI *stations* as well as trunks. PRI: multi-tenant on one PRI; looking at the called number and handling appropriately. But does it? Not from what I've heard. -- A host is a host from coast to [EMAIL PROTECTED] & no one will talk to a host that's close........[v].(301) 56-LINUX Unless the host (that isn't close).........................pob 1433 is busy, hung or dead....................................20915-1433 _________________________________________________________________ KX-T Mailing list --- http://kxthelp.com/ Subscription changes: http://kxthelp.com/mailman/listinfo/kxt