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Xref: cantaloupe.srv.cs.cmu.edu soc.culture.usa:14001 soc.culture.europe:18539 soc.culture.nordic:18545 soc.culture.german:19832 sci.electronics:54224Path: cantaloupe.srv.cs.cmu.edu!rochester!udel!gatech!howland.reston.ans.net!ira.uka.de!news.dfn.de!mailgzrz.TU-Berlin.DE!cs.tu-berlin.de!sam!wdFrom: wd@cs.tu-berlin.de (Wolfgang Diestelkamp)Newsgroups: soc.culture.usa,soc.culture.europe,soc.culture.nordic,soc.culture.german,sci.electronicsSubject: Re: How universal are phones these days?Date: 26 Apr 1993 10:20:23 GMTOrganization: Technical University of Berlin, GermanyLines: 24Distribution: worldMessage-ID: <WD.93Apr26122020@sam.cs.tu-berlin.de>References: <1rg36hINNsr6@darkstar.UCSC.EDU>NNTP-Posting-Host: sam.cs.tu-berlin.deMime-Version: 1.0Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bitIn-reply-to: hugo@cats.ucsc.edu's message of 26 Apr 1993 07:32:33 GMTIn article <1rg36hINNsr6@darkstar.UCSC.EDU> hugo@cats.ucsc.edu (Hugo Calendar) writes:> I'm wondering if I can tote my American touch tone phone around with me> to Sweden and Germany. It's DC powered, and I can buy a special adapter> for that in Europe. The question is if the general electronics work> the same. I can buy a different wall plug and refit it (I'm sure I'd> have to), but would that do the trick?Two things to watch for:In Germany (and I think the same holds for Sweden) only someof the connections can handle tone dialing, so make sure thephone can be set to pulse dialing.In Sweden, the '0' is the first digit and all other digitsare pushed "down" by one position; this makes dialing (andin the process converting numbers) an interesting task.Otherwise, it is technically no problem to connect a foreignphone to either the German or Swedish phone system.OTOH neither you nor I would ever try that, as it is of courseillegal.-- Wolfgang Diestelkampwd@cs.tu-berlin.dewolfgang@first.gmd.de
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