Hong Kong standards (they are located on the Hong Kong Telecom web site)
indicate service at "1544 Kb/s" but I have heard that they support a-Law
as well.  

Japan supports u-Law.

Jack

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jon D Curtis 
> Sent: Tuesday, September 08, 1998 9:26 AM
> To:   [email protected]
> Subject:      BOUNCE [email protected]:    Non-member submission from
> ["Ian Chapman" <[email protected]>]    (fwd)
> 
> From: "Ian Chapman" <[email protected]>
> Subject: RE: A law v U Law
> 
> Hi John,
>       u-Law USA and Canada and Rest of the world A-Law is a general
> statement.  When you get to Taiwan it gets awkward (I picked up
> somewhere)as
> half the place tends to follow US standards 115V 60Hz and the other
> 230V
> 50Hz but not sure if the phone is any better.  I'm interested if you
> get a
> better update on the world situation.
> 
>               Regards Ian.
> 
> > ----------
> > From:       John Pearson[SMTP:[email protected]]
> > Sent:       Monday, September 07, 1998 9:27 AM
> > To:         [email protected]
> > Cc:         Scott Nacarato (E-mail)
> > Subject:    A law v U Law
> > 
> > Hi
> > 
> > Can any one tell me which countries use which encoding technique
> world
> > wide.  Just those that you know will help me to complete the list
> > 
> > Thanks
> > 
> > JohnP
> > 

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