Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
These two books are the perfect starting place to help you get to grips with one of the most vitally important aspects of our society - our homes and living environment. PLEASE NOTE: A download link for Volume 1 will be sent to you by email and Volume 2 will be sent to you by post as a book. |
Vanilla 1.0.3 is a product of Lussumo. More Information: Documentation, Community Support.
Posted By: WillInAberdeenWe make all those calls for free on WhatsApp or Zoom, does that work for you? Can choose video or audio-only.
Posted By: Jonticopper cable is going to disappear in the not too distant futureNot the copper, but its use for old fashioned trad 'landline' - in 2025. After that it'll be all-VOIP.
Posted By: RexThe bigger issue is that to use anything that needs the computer, means that the receiving computer has to be on or one has to make a time for the call.
Posted By: fostertomYes, the old PTSN network is due to be decommissioned then.Posted By: Jonticopper cable is going to disappear in the not too distant futureNot the copper, but its use for old fashioned trad 'landline' - in 2025. After that it'll be all-VOIP.
Posted By: philedgeAnyone know what BTs plans are for those with copper based equipment such as phones, card machine, security alarm dialler etc.The plan is that you and the supplier come up with a different solution. Yes, really, that is the plan...
Posted By: RexI have spoken with the CPS company and they are not certain either; basically, try it and see! But if it does not work, I cannot return to copper cable.Well if they cannot tell you, then their business model is about to go up in smoke. I'd be persistent and not talk to a drone, but ask for a supervisor or their technical department.
Posted By: Peter_in_HungaryWhatsapp is a (smart) phone basedPretty sure Rex still uses a Nokia 9110
Posted By: fostertomPosted By: Jonticopper cable is going to disappear in the not too distant futureNot the copper, but its use for old fashioned trad 'landline' - in 2025. After that it'll be all-VOIP.
Posted By: borpinKey point is that currently, when the power goes off in your house, the PSTN phone still works. Once VOIP is in, it doesn't.
Posted By: Ed DaviesThe bigger issue is that to use anything that needs the computer, means that the receiving computer has to be on or one has to make a time for the call.Not necessarily, VoIP providers like Sipgate and Skype allow calls from a computer to normal phones.
Posted By: WillInAberdeenI'm certainly not an expert either!
AiUI the common VoIP protocols require either an 0.07 or 0.09 Mb/s internet capacity. We were previously on a 3-mile copper line which delivered around 1Mb/s, so fine for VoIP (but useless for anything else!).
BT have a Universal Service Obligation to provide everyone at least 10MB/s, which they might do using 4G in rural areas, other 4G providers are cheaper. Fixed home installations with rooftop antennas can pick up a 4G signal even where smartphones can't find one. I suppose people could access their VOIP line that way, if the copper line is inadequate.
Posted By: RexI don't mind having VOiP (if it works) but the various call packages are more expensive than I am currently paying. I have Anytime with John Lewis for around £6 per month and with that, can call oversea with 18866 and the month bill is around £3 per month.You think you're confused, so am I by what you've written
The 18866 web site says that BT block the carrier numberI believe that may be true although I have no direct experience. You can always use the freephone access number instead I think, though the tariff might be slightly different. (it seems strange that BT can block access to a competitor????)
Posted By: RexYou may be right but as I understand it, one can only use the 18866 cheap rates from a registered phone. It makes sense because otherwise, who would 18866 invoice?