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#11
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Telephone Dialer?
And in New Zealand
a.. Equipment connected to the RS 232 port shall be certified to meet = the requirements of Reg. 18 of the New Zealand Wiring Regulations 1976.=20 b.. When the user manually initiates a call, via equipment connected = to the RS232 port, the equipment shall operate within the following = restrictions:=20 c.. Not more than 5 call attempts shall be made to the same number = within a one hour period.=20 d.. There shall be at least 60 seconds between call attempts.=20 e.. Not more than a total of 10 call attempts shall be made to the = same number for any single manual call initiation.=20 f.. Automatic calls to different numbers shall be not less than 5 = seconds apart.=20 FAILURE TO MEET THE ABOVE REQUIREMENTS MAY NEGATE THE USER RIGHTS UNDER = THE TELECOM TERMS OF SERVICE. --=20 ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.g2mil.com/Dec2003.htm "David Candy" wrote in message = ... 1. In both Austria and Germany a modem will block after 12 attempts. It = IS illegal to connect a non approved modem to the phone network. Modems = are different in each country sold. EG. Polish modems require extra = electronics to work on their sub standard phone lines.=20 [Minimum time between 1st and 2nd try: 5secs; " " " 2nd " 3rd try: 60secs; No more than 12 tries to the same number if no answering tone is received; After 12 failed tries, a minimum waiting time of 1 hour before = attempting the same number.] (I can't access my own countries web site - bloody DNS) --=20 ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.g2mil.com/Dec2003.htm " MS" wrote in message = ... Are you using Windows XP? I just looked in Network Connections at the dialing properties for dial-up to my ISP. I have the time between = redial attempts set to 1 second. (It hasn't landed either my modem or myself = in jail yet, perhaps we'll get caught soon. ;-) ) Number of redial = attempts is set to 300, and I think it can go higher. I don't think I've ever had = to redial my ISP 300 times to connect, but I don't think my modem will = "refuse to dial" after a certain number of attempts. So, I think you are = speaking of a limitation of your modem, not a government "law" concerning = redials. =20 No, David, automatic redialing is not "against the law", it does not = kill anyone ;-), and is not a problem with most modems. =20 Back to my original question--is there no way to do an automatic = redial for a voice call--so that if one is trying to dial a customer service = line, for example, that is usually busy, so that it will keep dialing = automatically until it connects, to save the person a lot of time and trouble of = doing it over and over manually with a telephone? =20 If none of the XP telephony apps will do that (I'm surprised that = "telephone dialer" won't) (or I didn't figure out how to do it), are there third = party apps that will do that? =20 "David Candy" wrote in message ... If one connects 240V to the phone line other's (esp the coroner) get = upset. But look at the default timing on the redial. Mine is 60 secs. I have = a very expensive modem, if somewhat old (I ain't using a faster $30 modem to replace my $400 modem). It will refuse to dial after x number of = attemps in x amount of time (been 5 years since I've dialed that many times) =20 --=20 ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.g2mil.com/Dec2003.htm " MS" wrote in message ... "David Candy" wrote in message ... It is actually illegal (for the modem not people) to repeatedly dial = a number. (telephone companies network won't survive millions of = modems doing it). The modem must have approval to connect to a phone line (mainly = to stop someone electrocuting their neighbours and workers at the exchange, = and destroying the exchange). Whoever (FTC or AusTel) will refuse = approval. Windows enforces it, the modem also will enforce it. The actual = rules depends on what country you live in (or more accurately what country windows/modem think you're in). MS Replied: Is there a jail for errant modems??? ;-) I don't see how that could be true? If I dial-up to my ISP (yes, I = have an ancient dial-up connection) and the line is busy, the modem will "repeatedly dial a number" (the ISP access number) until it connects. You can = set how many seconds between retries, etc. Why couldn't the same be done for a voice call? "Electrocuting their neighbors and workers at the exchange"? How? (I = guess those killer modems again.) (New science fiction flick--"the revenge = of the killer modems".) =20 |
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