Dennis Myers wrote:
[snip]
> Ozz, I put in the X3 in the initialization string, still no dialtone
> when I have a message on voice mail. Should it be Capital X or lower
> case x for the X3? I am trying to find out from Cox Cable if there is a
> nother way to signal voicemail other than the stutter
Hi I have,
British Telecom's call minder enabled on this phone there are currently about
12 messages and the modem dials out fine so we know it is possible
The settings on this system are just whatever the defaults are the modem is an
external US Robotics Sportster Vi 28.8
If you tell me where t
Paul wrote:
>
> It was Oct 6, 2000, 11:09, when Dennis Myers keyboarded:
>
> >Ozz, I put in the X3 in the initialization string, still no dialtone
> >when I have a message on voice mail. Should it be Capital X or lower
> >case x for the X3? I am trying to find out from Cox Cable if there is a
>
> Ozz, I put in the X3 in the initialization string, still no dialtone
> when I have a message on voice mail. Should it be Capital X or lower
> case x for the X3? I am trying to find out from Cox Cable if there is a
> nother way to signal voicemail other than the stutter tone.
What is your curr
It was Oct 6, 2000, 11:09, when Dennis Myers keyboarded:
>Ozz, I put in the X3 in the initialization string, still no dialtone
>when I have a message on voice mail. Should it be Capital X or lower
>case x for the X3? I am trying to find out from Cox Cable if there is a
>nother way to signal voice
The commas would not help. The problem is that when there are messages
waiting, the dialtone changes. The modem does not recognize this other
dialtone, hence the 'no dialtone' error.
Adding x3 to the modem init string should work - that tells the modem not to
wait for a dialtone.
Regards,
Ozz.
Carroll Grigsby wrote:
>
> Dennis:
> I'm not sure this will work on your setup, but I can increase the dial
> tone wait time from the dialler by picking setup, modem, and then
> changing the busy wait to whatever is comfortable. I use a four second
> wait -- long enough for me to hear the stutter
Dennis:
I'm not sure this will work on your setup, but I can increase the dial
tone wait time from the dialler by picking setup, modem, and then
changing the busy wait to whatever is comfortable. I use a four second
wait -- long enough for me to hear the stutter tone.
I don't think that the #70 tr
> Sent: Thursday, October 05, 2000 7:51 PM
> Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: [newbie] KPPP and "No Dialtone"
>
>
> I have not heard of voice mail causing this problem, but call
> waiting sure does. Just for grins, try '*70' followed by
Dennis Myers wrote:
>
> I will pose the question again, since I still have not been able to find
> an answer in the Mans and online howto's, knowledge base etc. I have
> voice mail on my phone line, when someone leaves a message the phone
> will signal with a stutter tone when you activate or pic
I was reading your message again and am wondering if I have the
problem correct. You are having problems dialing out after you
have received a voicemail? You can add commas to the dial out
string (phone number)which gives approx 1 sec pause per comma.
Barry :-)
On Thu, 05 October 2000, Dennis
I have not heard of voice mail causing this problem, but call
waiting sure does. Just for grins, try '*70' followed by the
number. The only way you may know for sure that it works
would be to have someone call while you are on line.
Barry :-)
On Thu, 05 October 2000, Dennis Myers wrote:
>
>
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