Jez,
Thanks for confirming what I suspected to be the case. The only down side
that I see is that, when winter ice storms hit and the electric power is
interrupted, with the AT&T lines, we still have phone service, powered by
the copper phone line. Using house power, there will be no phone service.
Behind my house there is a power line fuse that powers our block and several
others. When squirrels or limbs short the line and blow the fuse link, I
guess I will have to resort to my cell phone to report the outage.
Jim Nichols
Tullahoma, TN USA
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jez Cunningham" <jez@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <olympus@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Monday, September 15, 2008 4:34 AM
Subject: [OM] Re: e330 question
>
> On Fri, Sep 12, 2008 at 8:33 AM, Jim Nichols
> <jhnichols@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>wrote:
> I read today that some
> installations use a home interface box that picks up power from the house
> power system to power ringers, etc, so maybe my worries are for naught.
>
> Jim,
>
> For sure the fiber will be terminated in a powered box - it will have an
> RJ11 phone jack on it (and a load of other sockets) just like a cable
> modem,
> and your current phone should work fine.
>
> br
> jez
>
>
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