AC and telephone should be in separate boxes.
When the bulb is lit it uses energy. When there is no bulb, no energy is used even if it is switched on.
electromagnetic force
No, the utility company wants nothing but the service wires in the service stack. Another weather head can be installed to accept your cable and telephone service positioned adjacent to the service stack. If underground service a separate conduit to the comunications pull box will be needed.
Sometimes. Metals will conduct both heat and electricity. Glass will conduct heat but not electricity.
you need the special equipment that can receive the wave from handphone signal then convert it to electricity(of course,this thingy is hard to find)......it is same to the bicycle's dinamo that convert the magnetic field to small quantity of power.....
No.
In general, cable electrons don't get along with battery electrons... electrons are electrons; it doesn't matter if they're in a cable, or a battery, they are the same. Batteries are always DC, but the electricity flowing through a cable does not necessarily have to be - it can be AC.
In electronics - it's a socket that has a thread on the outside - so that a plug with the same thread can be screwed into it, thus preventing accidental removal. One example would be the connector in your house for cable TV. The box on the wall has a threaded 'stud' socket - into which is screwed a plug, attached to the cable which goes to your TV.
Physically they are identical, all standard UK house phones will plug into either socket. The key difference in how some of the exchange end services are implemented. For example, house phone SMS services may use different protocol and might CLi. It you are using the line as simple phone you should have no trouble with any combination of phone/socket.
Had a similar problem. First try and check ALL your cable connections between your telephone line and your router. Even if they look secure, physically disconnect and reconnect them. Infact check all connection to the telephone socket in the same way.
Ethernet network traffic on a cat 5 cable only uses 4 wires of the 8 in the cable. Telephone voice transmission only uses 2 wires. Therefore, you can take any 2 of the unused network wires (pins 4 or 5, 7 or 8) and use it for voice. You would then have both data and voice transmission in the same cable.
if you mean the plug which you insert into an electrical socket, then you just pull it out. the same goes for the cable which is inserted into the camera
The strings' vibration is translated into electrical current which flows along the wire. The same as a telephone.
No you can not. Cable modems use RF or Radio Frequency to transmit data, usually converting that RF frequency into fiber optic via a node. DSL or Digital Subscriber lines use electricity like a phone line. You could also say Cable modems use coaxial cable and DSL use telephone wire. The two modems are not interchangeable.
Nope - Telephones use an RJ-45 connector, while cable TV uses a BNC-style connector. See related links for comparisons.
Yes I would reccommend changing your cable and phone servivce to the same company as you will usual be able to pay less for both of them together. The cable providers have a excellent digital phone service.
You would need a cable with a socket at one end - to connect your headphones, and two plugs at the other - to match the audio socket on each device.