ISP Information:
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Interstitial Ad - On 25 Mar 2004 18:21:55 -0800, mlliw@joimail.com (Will) wrote: I am a newbie to this type of thing. The OfficeLink Solo looks good, but its a bit pricy for my budget. Could you please explain the "I setup DISA on a Samsung DCS." I don't really understand this.The point is that you only told part of the story. Is this maybe, "Iset up a line at a friend's house and I'd like to use it to dial freeservice points that I can't dial from my house"?Where I live, spending $100 or $500 to bypass local toll calls at 4.25CENTS per minute is not very productive, especially when my outboundLD bill is less than $5 per month..The old Teltone 106 box IIRC had THREE digit security and once youbroke the code, no dialing restrictions whatsoever. So, a compromisedcode could bring out a TON of misery.That brought the response from Tony P. that a Samsung DISA trunk had 2Million possible codes (the universe of 2,000,000,000 to3,999,999,999) as its password protection. It didn't apply to you soyou could ignore it, but, I hope, most of us understood.Outside of that, Teltone was never inexpensive.Carl Navarro Thanks mlliw P.S. The line I would be accessing would not be on a phone system, just a direct line. Tony P. wrote in message news:: In article , cnavarro@wcnet.org says: On 19 Mar 2004 19:05:27 -0800, mlliw@joimail.com (Will) wrote: Is there a box that when called to normally, it sends through, but when a code such as #22, It brings the caller to a _dialtone_ on another line? I have seen several boxes that do this (for computer/fax/telephone) that when #22 is dialed, they send to a separate place, but they don't give a _dialtone_ on a separate line. Thanks! It might depend on what type of phone system you have. Some systems have Direct System Inward Access (DISA) available. Teltone used to make a 106 box that was a bridging unit with amplifiers. They still make an Officelink Solo, but I bet it's a bit pricey. http://www.teltone.com/products/remotevoice/solo/home.htm One thing to keep in mind, DISA and the 106 is highly hackable. A teenager with a lot of time on his hands can key the universe of 3 digit numbers as a hobby to find out what makes it work. The Officelink is a callback device. I setup DISA on a Samsung DCS. It requires a seven digit passcode. So that ups the possibilities. The way the system was configured, the first digit had to be a 2 or 3, the next six could be 0 thru 9. So 2x10x10x10x10x10x10 = 2,000,000 possible combinations.
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