Dave Phelps wrote: >Are you talking VoIP dialtone, or are you talking internet access? > >Sounds like internet, so that's what I'll answer. > >Dial-up access requires a device to answer the calls, then route the data >over another connection to the internet. > >You would need a RAS (remote access server) with as many modems as you would >like concurrent dialup users. So lets say you want 8 concurrent users, you >will need 8 RAS modems connected to 8 analog ports. On the other side of the >RAS, you simply connect the broadband connection. The RAS may have to do NAT >if you don't have enough public IPs to hand out to your dialup users. And >you will only get about 26400 through the phone system. > >Alternatively, you could do a DSL solution where you inject a DSL signal on >the copper pairs going to the station. This may or may not affect the >digital phones if you use the same pair, but most station cable has spare >pairs you could use. This would be much faster for the users. > >I would think the cheapest solution would be to install an ethernet network >and provide internet that way. I'm surprised that there is anyone left >without an ethernet network, but you never know. > >-----Original Message----- >From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of >N D >Sent: Friday, July 15, 2005 6:54 AM >To: kxt@kxthelp.com >Subject: [BULK] KX-T: Broad-band >Importance: Low > > >Hi all, > >Is there any way we can connect a Broadband Internet connection to >KX-TD/KX-TDA series and give dial up like access to extension users? > >any ideas or its just not possible.. > >Regards > >Nitin > > >_________________________________________________________________ >KX-T Mailing list --- http://kxthelp.com/ >Subscription changes: http://kxthelp.com/mailman/listinfo/kxt > > > > > ck out tut systems
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