On Sun, 2010-12-12 at 21:35 +0000, Gordon Henderson wrote: > On Sun, 12 Dec 2010, Hans Witvliet wrote: > > > But as BRI / (aso known as ISDN2) is more a thing of the past, i mean > > pre-adsl, for the general public, the number of people with bri and > > hence their potential market is (too) small, i fear. > > It's not a thing of the past in Europe - well, the UK and Germany and > maybe France... ISDN2e is still the standard for small/medium business > connectivity over here (UK). > > Probably mostly because there are still PBX installation monkeys selling > it in preference to VoIP because they don't know how to make VoIP work. > > Much as I'd like to, I do not see ISDN2e going away in the UK in the next > 10 years.
Well, the fact that it is (still) popular in the UK, is merely that the salespeople BT used some more of their braincels than the telco-providers in NL. (I used to work at a manufacturer of telco equipment, so i knew about pricing) Basic handsets were way overpriced (40 times more expensive than regular headsets) hence avoiding general interest. And if you wanted more than 2B channels, your were forced with a full E1 line, with subscription fee for each B-channel. No thing like fractional E1. Before the days of cable or dsl, it was the only way of getting a slightlier higher bandwith than with the V56-modems, but we had seriously the feeling that KPN was doing their best to frustrate/avoid general acceptance. hw -- _____________________________________________________________________ -- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com -- New to Asterisk? Join us for a live introductory webinar every Thurs: http://www.asterisk.org/hello asterisk-users mailing list To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users
