On 8 October 2010 18:12, Torfinn Ingolfsen
wrote:
[...]
> I don't know how it works in other countries, but here (in Norway) it
> works like this: yes - ISDN technology is dying.
> However, like all other technologies that major telcos have invested a
> lot in, its death is very slow. Extremely sl
This is straying a bit, but I think it is important:
the only good measure of when a technology is too old, is when people
(who use FreeBSD in this case) stop using it.
On Fri, 08 Oct 2010 11:12:32 +0200
Oliver Brandmueller wrote:
> Maybe you don't really want to hear this, but...
>
> ISDN is a
Hello,
On Thu, Oct 07, 2010 at 12:35:01PM +, Peter Much wrote:
> Any clues, ideas, pointers, hints, ressources,... are greatly
> welcomed!!
Maybe you don't really want to hear this, but...
ISDN is a dying technology. Any time soon you won't get ISDN termination
by your telecom provider anym
> From: p...@citylink.dinoex.sub.org (Peter Much)
> Date: Thu, 7 Oct 2010 12:35:01 GMT
> Sender: owner-freebsd-sta...@freebsd.org
>
> aka Vadim Goncharov schrieb
> mit Datum Wed, 08 Sep 2010 04:31:46 +0700 in m2n.fbsd.stable:
>
> |You do not understand the problem. It is not in notices & volunte
On Thu, Oct 7, 2010 at 1:35 PM, Peter Much wrote:
> aka Vadim Goncharov schrieb
> mit Datum Wed, 08 Sep 2010 04:31:46 +0700 in m2n.fbsd.stable:
>
> |You do not understand the problem. It is not in notices & volunteers, but
> |rather in the Project's policy - delete something which could still wor
aka Vadim Goncharov schrieb
mit Datum Wed, 08 Sep 2010 04:31:46 +0700 in m2n.fbsd.stable:
|You do not understand the problem. It is not in notices & volunteers, but
|rather in the Project's policy - delete something which could still work.
|Personally, I don't use ISDN, so didn't said anythin