On Sunday 29 June 2008 21:38, g wrote: > cr wrote: > > It's New Zealand Telecom's customers name for their favourite company > > :-) > > ok. from spelling, i thought that is what you meant. > > > No, I'm in the city on copper wiring. I've just bought a 'rural modem' > > (Dynalink V1456VQE - R1 Rural) which is intended for use in the country > > where signals are expected to be lousy. It's managing remarkably well > > against Telecom's line noise, considering I can hear the noise crackling > > in my phone. > > if it was maybe lightening induced, i would suggest a good line suppressor > like what is made by transtector, www.transtector.com. > > except that rain does not make spikes, it is shorts. yet, if there are > current rushes, spikes could be induced. No, it isn't spikes, it's a continuous irregular hiss like the 'static' on an old radio, in the background. > if you know someone with an oscilloscope, you should ask them to hook on > your line to see it you are getting spikes. if so, transtector would be who > to contact. > > pops and crackles could be reduced with filtering, but filtering is going > to attenuate frequencies used in modem signal carrier. this may not be as > much of a problem with a 'rural modem'. > > dynalink does make some nice equipment. have you consulted them? if they > recommend spike filter, again, go with transtector. check their site, even > if you have no electronic background, they do present in a way that you > should be able to understand why i favor them. I'll have a look at their site, certainly. > > About half of New Zealand. > > how about a boycott? like every one holds back paying bill for a month > would cause them a hurt. petitions to government can also work when you > have enough signatures from voting public. I wish :) But I have no idea whether any, or how many, of my neighbours suffer the same thing. I suspect it's just a local thing, one bad section of their line that gets waterlogged. (It goes away completely in dry weather). Could even be just a few line pairs with dodgy insulation. > > says it must be a fault in my wiring. (!!!) > > here again, as above. > > remember this, 1 voice is faint, 50 to a 100 starts a disturbance, like a > hyena, 1,000's will roar like a lion. 10,000's and you have a herd of bull > elephants. > > > That's where it is. Unfortunately there's nothing I personally can do > > about it. > > show some tusks. > > > I'm fairly sure Telecom are required to provide me with a decent > > connection. It's just nailing them down that's difficult. > > always is for one. many, no. start up a herd. got any computer groups > there? > > > Meanwhile, I'm trying to see what else I can do (like Kmail settings) to > > minimise the nuisance. > > i used kmail and evolution to get information for using yum to load > thunderbird on this system and i do not recall anything that would do > what you want. > > i did notice that mozilla has pulled a lot of what was in early netscape > that could have helped you do what you want. > > if you do not get help you need thru list, try google-linux. be specific > with your selections on first line, ie, use " " around your key words and > 'AND' [cap letters with out ' '] between them. then back page to entries > and use 'does not contain' line to cut down on what you see and do not > want. That's useful to know. Thanks. > something else you may want to consider, use a mail server to do what you > are needing. this may need to done thru a distrib list. i have seen some of > what you are wanting on fedora-list, but i do not recall what was > recommend. > > best of luck. will keep up with your post and let you know if i see > anything. > > wish i could help you more. Thanks for the input. cr ___________________________________________________ This message is from the kde mailing list. Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.