Have you considered VoIP? I know you said they don't have much of a data
network, but the monthly costs for dedicated Internet connections at each
location (if the don't have them already) could be significant less than a
point-to-point line from the ILEC. If they don't have the connection,
they w
In the Partner, you define a ring group (I believe that's what it's called).
I believe you access it by dialing 66x, where x=the ring group number). I'm
going off of memory though. Let me know if you need me to look in a book.
- Original Message -
From: "Daryl J. Wolff" <[EMAIL PROTECTED
Oops. I forgot I had the quick reference on my website.
www.tippenring.com/docs. Just scroll down to Avaya.
You want a calling group. Call the calling group by dialing 7x (where x is
the group number).
- Original Message -
From: "Daryl J. Wolff" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Almost certainly you can get a conditioned pair to connect a station port
to, if an analog set will suffice.
I suppose most order-takers now wouldn't have a clue how to put in the order
though, so that means their answer is "No, you can't do that." Maybe you'll
get lucky and get an order-taker tha
I recall that the EnGenious mobile phones have provisions for
external antennas. This might give the simplest solution.
More complicated solution:
802.11b wireless Ethernet with antennas to provide a
reasonably fast network bridge between the two locations
VoIP appliance on the far end to sup
Some 802.11b / a hardware has built-in VoIP. BreezeCom and Cisco come to
mind...
- Original Message -
From: Paul H. Gusciora <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: KX-T Help <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; Don Ritchie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2003 9:44 PM
Subject: Re: KX-T: General Questio
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