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Date:      Mon, 14 Feb 2000 03:41:38 +0100 (CET)
From:      Marc Schneiders <marc@oldserver.demon.nl>
To:        Greg Lehey <grog@lemis.com>
Cc:        Julian Stacey <jhs@muc.de>, freebsd-isdn@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: free slow channel
Message-ID:  <Pine.BSF.4.10.10002140339330.67860-100000@propro.oldserver.demon.nl>
In-Reply-To: <20000214130408.P2699@freebie.lemis.com>

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On Mon, 14 Feb 2000, Greg Lehey wrote:

> On Monday, 14 February 2000 at  3:28:05 +0100, Marc Schneiders wrote:
> > On Mon, 14 Feb 2000, Greg Lehey wrote:
> >
> >> On Saturday, 12 February 2000 at  2:29:58 +0100, Marc Schneiders wrote:
> >>> On Sat, 12 Feb 2000, Greg Lehey wrote:
> >>>
> >>>> On Thursday, 10 February 2000 at 16:33:15 +0000, Julian Stacey wrote:
> >>>>> A friend told me in [last weekend's (5&6 Feb 2000)?] Suddeutsche Zeitung
> >>>>> `Computer & Co' supplement, it reported that, as of 9/2000 Deutsche Telekom
> >>>>> would offer free continuous ISDN connection at low bandwidth.
> >>>>> I presume this is buried inside the 16K D channel,
> >>>>> I hope it's not tied into their own ISP service, but is generic,
> >>>>> Anyone know more ?  If I find out more I'll post.
> >>>>
> >>>> I don't know about Germany, but I do know that another European
> >>>> carrier is experimenting with this idea.  I've been asked not to
> >>>> reveal which, though if you have been following the FreeBSD lists you
> >>>> should have seen the message and noticed what is going on.
> >>>
> >>> Please, give us a hint, someone. I suppose it won't be my country,
> >>> where the former state-owned telephone company still has a monopoly on
> >>> local calls. We pay $1.50 an hour for internet during office hours
> >>> (which are from 8 to 8 hours for this purpose).
> >>> If, it is us (NL=Netherlands=Holland), it might be nice to know asap
> >>> to start finding ways to set up things...
> >>
> >> Well, I forgot the name of the person who sent the mail message, but
> >> he was asking why his pings always took a multiple of 10 ms.  It
> >> turned out it had something to do with the way the exchange forwarded
> >> the packets.
> >
> > I will look for the message once the search is up and running again
> > at freebsd.org. Thanks!
> >
> > Though I fear my pings suggest it must be another country:
> >
> > propro:marc {101} ping venster.nl
> > PING venster.nl (212.204.195.108): 56 data bytes
> > 64 bytes from 212.204.195.108: icmp_seq=0 ttl=247 time=54.161 ms
> > 64 bytes from 212.204.195.108: icmp_seq=1 ttl=247 time=52.955 ms
> > 64 bytes from 212.204.195.108: icmp_seq=2 ttl=247 time=54.257 ms
> > 64 bytes from 212.204.195.108: icmp_seq=3 ttl=247 time=54.473 ms
> > 64 bytes from 212.204.195.108: icmp_seq=4 ttl=247 time=54.608 ms
> > ^C
> 
> You're not pinging over the D channel.
> 

Could I? If so, where do I found howto? 

--
Marc Schneiders

marc@venster.nl              http://zelf.net
marc@oldserver.demon.nl

propro         	  3:38am  up   6 days,   5:49,  load average: 2.07 2.05 2.05



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