Path: utzoo!utgpu!cunews!bnrgate!brtph3!brchh104!brchs1!bnr.ca!rice.edu!sun-spots-request From: dupuy@cs.columbia.edu Newsgroups: comp.sys.sun Subject: Using Kermit on Sun Systems Keywords: Miscellaneous Message-ID: <1105@brchh104.bnr.ca> Date: 9 Jan 91 07:25:42 GMT Sender: news@brchh104.bnr.ca Organization: Sun-Spots Lines: 29 Approved: Sun-Spots@rice.edu X-Refs: Original: v10n3, Replies: v10n11 X-Sun-Spots-Digest: Volume 10, Issue 11, message 16 X-Note: Submissions: sun-spots@rice.edu, Admin: sun-spots-request@rice.edu DF100S@oduvm.cc.odu.edu (Sheila Foster) writes: > ... We are a University and must dial 9 to get an outside line. Everytime I > use kermit and try to dial out through the modem, the operator tells me I > need to hang up and try again. ... I can dial on campus lines with no > problem. It seems like everytime it dials 9 it changes to rotary dialing > instead of touch tone. And the Editor notes: > Make sure you have a delay between dialing 9 and your outside number to give > your phone system time to aquire an outside line before your modem continues > dialing. ... I've never heard of a modem spontaneously changing from tone to > pulse dialing. If adding a pause after the 9 isn't enough, it's possible that you are on a PBX which understands tone, but which has outside lines that only accept rotary pulse dialing (only a University would be chintzy enough to do something stupid like this). In that case, you should try dialing the whole number with rotary pulse (use ATP to set this). If your PBX doesn't understand rotary pulse dialing, your University telecom administrator deserves to be shot, but unfortunately you will probably be the one to suffer the consequences. Be thankful you don't have an extravagant telecom administrator (like we did) - you could be stuck with ROLM instead (ack pthffthp! :-). inet: dupuy@cs.columbia.edu uucp: ...!rutgers!cs.columbia.edu!dupuy