They are separate systems in your phone line. The DSL is a digital signal that has nothing to do with the analog phone signal. The bandwidth of a phone line is large enough to handle both with no issues.
Telephone Exchange - In the field of telecommunications, a telephone exchange or telephone switch is a system of electronic components that connects telephone calls. A central office is the physical building used to house inside plant equipment including telephone switches, which make telephone calls "work" in the sense of making connections and relaying the speech information.
That depends on where you work. If you have an in-house phone system, you may need to dial 9 or some other prefix to get an outside line.
Dial Up Works with a Telephone modem installed in your computer when you login to your internet it calls AOL and sends a sound that triggers a internet line but the internet would be only be 56kps which is very slow
No the British Telephone line is not accessible from America. In order for it to work in America it has to be a 1 800 number. The British Telephone line is not a 1 800 number.
Yes, on a dial-up or DSL connection.
You need to connect a modem using the modem port and the telephone cable.
Ethel Lombard Best has written: 'Women workers in Flint, Mich' -- subject(s): Women, Hours of labor, Wages, Employment 'Conditions of work in spin rooms' -- subject(s): Textile workers, Cotton spinning, Factories, Heating and ventilation, Employment, Women 'The change from manual to dial operation in the telephone industry' -- subject(s): Dial Telephone, Telephone, Dial
I just did this with a vintage black phone which looks to date from the '30s (NOT the lighter plastic mid-century model, though this might work as well). twist the red and white wires together and attach to the red line on your phone jack, and twist the green and yellow wires together and attach to the green line on your phone jack. this gets a dial tone, as well as a ring. if you live in an area where pulse dialing still works, then that should work as well, otherwise you won't be able to dial out.
That depends on the level of antiquity. If you are referring to a telephone with a rotary dial, you pick up the receiver, make sure you have a dial tone, then for each digit you stick your finger in the hole in the dial next to the digit, turn the dial clockwise until your finger hits the end stop, then remove your finger and wait for the dial to rotate counterclockwise (anticlockwise) until it returns to its original position. Then there are the REALLY antique phones which I've never even seen except in old movies and TV shows. You remove the ear piece from its hook and turn the crank a couple of revolutions to ring the telephone operator. When the operator responds you tell her (it was almost always a her) the name or phone number you want, and she connects you.
Dial up is slow and can be expensive if you use it for long periods of time.
Yes, your Voice over IP provider will provide an adapter with a RJ11 female port. You can simply plug in you touch tone telephone into this port and it works just like a land line. I am not sure if a pulse type telephone will work, you know, the ones with the round dialers from the 1960's.
A hybrid between circular work flow of dial indexing machine and straight work flow of in-line system