I would also add that it is only a physical media. Think of it as a T-1, T-3, sonet etc.. The encapsulation has no bearing on the physical media or farming in this
case. DDS is a older way of delivering a 56k circuit to ensure 1's density on the
T-1 by inserting a 1 in every 8th bit of that particular DS0.
 
 

Jesmond Psaila wrote:

  You can use both , you may even use frame over dds if you want, most of the times it is presented to you in X.21, so higher layer encapsulation should not matter, as long as both ends match.
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of John Covey
Sent: Tuesday, October 17, 2000 2:16 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: DDS encapsulation in Australia
 
I'd say, more than likely ppp
""M. A."" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message 001201c0380f$e3689240$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:001201c0380f$e3689240$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...Hi gang, This is a question related to the DDS (I think it stands for Digital Data Service) WAN links provided by Telstra in Australia.  What's the encapsulation to be used on DDS links?  Is it PPP or HDLC? Also, does anyone have an example configuration for DDS under serial interfaces? Much appreciate any help! Martin

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