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 > >
