Yes, but most analog telephone adapters (ATA) do not support it. The (now discontinued) Digium "IAXy" s101i single port ATA is an example of one that supports pulse/rotary dialing.
Whichever network your phone is connected to !
The wires are not connected, are severed, or your phone company changed the network. My old 500 rotary att did not ring, so i moved 2 wires inside
Usually a phone connected to a GSM network needs a sim card in the phone. To see, remove the battery cover from the phone and it is normally located under the battery.
They're usually connected by exclusive hi-speed phone lines. The phone lines do not connect to any phone network - just to each of the other computers. This makes the WAN a secure network for transferring data between sites.
Since you have no service connected to a phone network.
It is a communication that uses internet as a transmission network and a phone that has an IP. or a phone which is connected to a modem.
making phone calls
By using radio waves.
To browse the internet at home without being charged you would have to have access to a unsecured network, or know the password for a secured network. If your phone is connected to a home WiFi, then you do not incur any charges on your mobile network. So data plan or not, everything is routed through the Home system, you are not using your phone's normal provider.
It sounds like you need a network hub or router that lets you connect several network devices to the same network. In the UK a router costs from around £10.
The music goes through the wire that's connected to your phone and goes in to your phone.
No, but you won't be able to order movies without calling the customer service line.