2010/12/9 Worley, Dale R (Dale) <dwor...@avaya.com>: > I just configure my display name "Iñaki" in the web interface of the > Linksys phone, so there is nothing special I can do. The web interface > or the phone should be intelligent enough to correctly write such > value, but it's not the case. > ________________________________________ > > But a hot soldering iron or a naked power wire applied to a few pins of the > integrated circuits may render the device inoperable, and then you can get > your employer to replace it with a better device.
And that is the reason to relax the parser, to allow such "wrong" devices :) > In regard to web interfaces, sometimes you can configure them so they will > return forms with a specific encoding. If the device's web interface is not > paying attention to the encoding with which a form is submitted, forcing your > browser to use UTF-8 may fix your problem. Very good point, forcing the encoding of the web interface to UTF-8 solves the problem. However this is obviously a bug in the phone's web interface (the whole HTML code is ugly, non standard, doesn't define a codification and so on, are you there Cisco?). Thanks. -- Iñaki Baz Castillo <i...@aliax.net> _______________________________________________ Sip-implementors mailing list Sip-implementors@lists.cs.columbia.edu https://lists.cs.columbia.edu/cucslists/listinfo/sip-implementors