103 lines
6.7 KiB
Plaintext
103 lines
6.7 KiB
Plaintext
DEFEATING CALL WAITING - If you use a MODEM for telecommunications, you may
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have been told that you cannot have the Call Waiting service offered by the
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phone company. Call Waiting is a service that permits you to receive a call
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when your line is already busy. If you are talking to someone on the phone, and
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someone tries to call you, you will be momentarily disconnected from your first
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conversation and connected to a "beep" tone. The person on the other end will
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hear a moment of dead silence (as if you had depressed your phone switchhook for
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about half a second). Note that the Call Waiting tone is NOT superimposed upon
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the conversation in progress, rather, the existing connection is momentarily
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interrupted while the Call Waiting tone is online. You then have the option to
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hang up, in which case the original connection will be broken, your phone will
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ring, and you can answer the second call, OR you can switch between calls by
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momentarily depressing the switchhook - one caller will be on"hold", and you can
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talk to the other.
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This service works reasonably well on voice circuits, but when a phone line is
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used for both voice and data, some problems arise. For one thing, when a MODEM
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is in use, it is usually not possible to hear the Call Waiting beep tone, thus a
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second caller would probably never be answered, and might incorrectly conclude
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that no one is at home. However, in some circumstances, the momentary
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interruption of the circuit may cause one or both of the MODEMs in use to drop
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carrier and disconnect, or at very least may garble the data being transmitted.
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IF a commercial service or a Bulletin Board System is being accessed, the
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momentary carrier loss will almost always cause a disconnect (and if you are
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paying for the service, you may incur an extra charge because you didn't
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terminate the call properly).
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Unfortunately, many of us can't afford to have a separate phone line for our
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computer, so the question is, how do we defeat Call Waiting while our computer
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is using the phone? You may have been told that it's impossible (especially if
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you asked someone at the phone company), but that's not so. However, you must
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have one additional "Custom Calling" service - either Call Forwarding or Three
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Way Calling - for this to work.
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Before I describe the methods, I'll just state that the reason they work is
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that no matter how many "Custom Calling" features you have, your line will only
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handle a maximum of two calls at once. In other words, if you have two outgoing
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calls in progress on Three Way Calling, an incoming call will receive a busy
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signal even though you also have Call Waiting.
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The easiest method involves using Call Forwarding, providing you can fine a
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"permanently busy" number in your area. Most exchanges have one or more numbers
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that ALWAYS return a busy signal (in Michigan, for example, numbers ending in
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"9999" are often permanently busy). If you have friends in the phone company,
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they may be able to give you a permanently busy number. All you do is to set up
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Call Forwarding to forward all your incoming calls to that numbers. Callers
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receive a busy signal, and your line is not interrupted by Call Waiting. In
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some areas, you may be able to Call Forward calls to your own number, which
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would have the same effect (busy signal), or (less desirable) to a number that
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you are absolutely sure will never answer - perhaps a business you know is
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closed (this would give callers a ringing signal). Or, you could even forward
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calls to a friend, who could explain to callers that you're using your MODEM,
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and either take messages or ask callers to phone back later. Once you're
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through with your MODEM calls, be sure to cancel the call Forwarding!
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If you have Three Way Calling, you can place a call to a "permanently busy" or
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"permanently no answer" number, then press the switchhook momentarily to get the
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second dial tone, and then dial the number you want to call with your computer.
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The problem with this is that some phone companies have "timeouts" that will
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automatically disconnect a line that has been connected to a busy signal or no
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answer for a given amount of time. When the number disconnects it will
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momentarily interrupt your MODEM connection - the very condition you're trying
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to avoid! So, it may pay to experiment with a few numbers to see which will
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time out, and which won't. For example, it may be that on your exchange, busy
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signals will time out but "invalid number" recordings won't. Try dialing a
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local with a "1" in front of it, and see if you get a recording telling you not
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to dial the "1" (or try the opposite a long distance call with no "1"). That
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may get you a recording that will not time out.
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When you use the Three Way Calling method, there is an additional disadvantage
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in that if your MODEM call is busy or does not answer, you will have to set
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everything up again next time you try to call. In contrast, Call Forwarding
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remains enabled until you specifically disable it.
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You may find it advantageous to have BOTH Call Forwarding and Three Way
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Calling. This way, if someone calls YOU and wants to upload something to you
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(or you want to download to him), you call first excuse yourself, go onto Three
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Way Calling, and program your Call Forwarding from there, so that you won't be
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interrupted. Otherwise, you would have no way to set up Call Forwarding once a
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call is already in progress.
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Of course, by the time you have Call Waiting, Call Forwarding, and Three-way
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Calling, you'll be paying a pretty hefty monthly charge to the phone company.
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So you may find that getting rid of the Call Waiting is an attractive
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alternative. Or, perhaps you can limit your MODEM calls to after midnight, when
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no one in their right mind would be calling you anyway (of course, you may know
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a few folks that aren't in their right mind, or maybe you have a reputation as a
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night owl, like most computer hackers).
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Please note - the above methods of defeating Call Waiting are suggestions
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only. I assume no responsibility if your phone company gets mad at you for
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actually using one of them. HOWEVER, if the DO complain, you might suggest to
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them that if they are going to sell such a service, they might consider
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providing a way (maybe a one or two digit code) that people can temporarily
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disable it, so that important calls would not be interrupted. Even if you're
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NOT, using a MODEM, it is an awful nuisance to have a long distance call
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constantly interrupted by Call Waiting - which is probably one reason the
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feature isn't more popular than it is!
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This article re-printed from NORTHERN BYTES Newsletter.
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