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Any decent VoIP provider will offer analogue fallback - if you deregister from their servers then incoming calls can sent to a PSTN number, so if the event of a network failure you're still covered - obviously you'll probably drop the number of simultanous incoming calls you can handle.
Is this actually vodafone though? I used to get this all the time on 02, I'm sure half the time it's just some phone company "war dialing" a networks number range.
Just like all the calls we get from "BT" at work. Bangalore Telecom.
pbx....
...trixbox frickin' rules.
Been running this for ages with both VoIP terminated & pstn termianted lines, although just migrated all but one line (fax) to voip.
Trixbox will literally allow you to do anything you want, it's far better than the nortel pbx it replaced.
The routing is...
I have to say, I thought the same and was sceptical when I needed to use some, so I bought the tesco ones for £22 because if it didn't work I wouldn't really have lost much.....
They work bloody brilliant. We've now got 2 sets, wifi a dect phone and a wireless dect extender (with an extra...
I'm on sky broadband (max) and have no problems.
Btw, you're contractually obliged to use their router. They don't supply username or password for the service. There are various ways of extracting this from the old routers (DG834) that they used to supply.
They now supply 2 different...
And in a years time your setup will be worth virtually nothing and the mac will still be worth a considerable proportion of the purchase price... :rasp:
If it's a software issue, why would you lose both your OS X and Windows partitions?
On windows if you're configured to use zero configuration then this tool should do the trick:
http://www.nirsoft.net/utils/wireless_key.html
It'll be on your desktop or in devices in the finder.
The iPod will have to be have set to allow disk use though for this to happen. You can turn this on in iTunes when the iPod is connected.
The AP will have to know where it is (i.e latitude & longitude) and there will be a service running on it (or a server somewhere that knows the locations of the cloud hotspots) that the Touch will communicate with to retrieve this data.
Wouldn't be very accurate.
That depends on:
1) How long (if) it takes to find a way into 1.1.3.
2) What Apple actually provides as an SDK, there's a bit of speculation about what this "native sdk" is going to be.
3) You'll need 1.1.3 or higher to run SDK based applications.
By the way, 1.1.3 is a free upgrade - the apps...
I didn't get one because I'd spent so much on mice! I was only getting the big keyboard because it's easier for doing programming on than the laptop keyboard.
I lurve my Bluetooth Mighty Mouse....so much so I've got 2 of them, well actually that's because I accidentally put 2 of them in my shopping basket instead of 1 mouse and one keyboard....:o
If I had 3 boxed retail copies of that they'd be going straight on ebay! I had the trial on my machine at work and found the interface completely unusable.
....I want menus and lots of them!