RE: ISDN T [7:35441]

2002-02-14 Thread Pierre-Alex Guanel
: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Thursday, February 14, 2002 4:00 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: ISDN T [7:35441] The interface type S/T refers to a combination of a the S interface (between the TE and the NT2) and the T interface (between the NT2 and NT1). This implies

RE: ISDN T [7:35441]

2002-02-14 Thread Chris Charlebois
The interface type S/T refers to a combination of a the S interface (between the TE and the NT2) and the T interface (between the NT2 and NT1). This implies that the S/T interface will not function with an NT2 device in place. Don't know this for certain, bacause I'm never tried. This is typica

ISDN T [7:35441]

2002-02-14 Thread Pierre-Alex GUANEL
Stupid question that is bugging me Why are Cisco native ISDN interfaces labeled with S/T rather than T? Cisco routers do not provide an interface for other capable ISDN devices You plug the Ethernet cable to the NT1. So shouldn't the interface called a T? Pierre-Alex Message Post