I suppose this is as much a telecommunications question as it is a Linux
question.  But there is at least a Linux component to it, so here goes.
My dial-up ISP contract expires soon so I'm looking at other ISP options.
One thing I'm considering is getting DSL to share with the neighbor
downstairs - both cost and bandwidth.  I think I would want to use an old
machine with Freesco or some other Linux gateway/router distro to share
the connection.  One thing I'd also want to do though is to make the
gateway/router accept incoming calls so I could log in from my office
across town and use the 'net connection.  From all I've gathered thus far,
Freesco - and likely other Linux routers - can handle this (accepting
incoming calls, establishing ppp communications and sharing a 'net
connection).  But my question really has to do with more fundamental
aspects of how this all would work.  Essentially, I'm talking about
calling my own phone from another location, having the computer answer the
call, then logging me on to that same line so that I can use it to surf
the 'net.  Sounds a bit self-serving, doesn't it? (har har)  Anyway, the
little I know about DSL tells me that this scheme should work.  But before
proceeding any further in it, I just want to check with others and see if
they see any reason why it should not work.  So, finally, my question: is
there any reason I could not dial into a computer that is hooked up to a
DSL line, using the same phone line through which the DSL signal is
travelling, and have that computer then allow me to share its DSL
connection to do things on the 'net?

Muddled, James
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