On Thu, 13 Jan 2022 at 22:24, Nathan Brookfield
wrote:
> I wonder if people still get faxes trying to sell them after market toner?
> Haha!
Yes.
$Company still has (and uses) a fax machine extensively because reasons.
We get ads for toner, LED light bulbs, indoor plants - you name it -
on an
I wonder if people still get faxes trying to sell them after market toner? Haha!
On 13 Jan 2022, at 20:59, Elliott Willink wrote:
And I've been wasting time encrypting GRE tunnels all these years!!
The best part of fax in the medical field is that 95% of healthcare providers
will
And I've been wasting time encrypting GRE tunnels all these years!!
The best part of fax in the medical field is that 95% of healthcare providers
will immediately (if not automatically, hello Gofax/Efax/every fax machine less
than 10 years old) digitise printed faxes back into their
On Thu, 2022-01-13 at 18:55 +1100, Adam Heathcote wrote:
> Whilst this is generally true, any SIP provider that isn’t using TLS
> can reconstruct the fax image with voip diagnostic software/packet
> sniffers. Whilst not an endpoint, the fax does travel through their
> systems.
I think being a SIP
On Thu, 2022-01-13 at 15:51 +0800, Chris Legg wrote:
> Interesting concept but how would this differ from email, apart from
> automatically printing?
Because (done right) you don't need a computer, a monitor, or skillz.
It is a Thing with an IP address that prints what it is sent from
Hi Just on this, aren't Telstra shutting down the ADSL and ADSL 2 networks at
some point in the next few years?
Also I don't think you can sell Dial up connections through Telstra anymore.
2015 they stopped selling it retail so if your still using it for some limited
services find a better
Great
Here come the anti *Faxers*
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