View allAll Photos Tagged Telephony

Frontier Central Office. San Bernadino, CA

the left pole is carrying electricity lines where as the right pole is carrying telephone lines

..Lepas pening dok dalam bilik seminar di Laguna, Redang.. meh kiter lepak luar japs ..perasan tak pulau kecil nampak tu ..kat pinggir pulau tu kalau snorkel perghhhh ..ikan ikan nyer buat kita dok kat situ sampai berjam-jam ..aper species yang takder ..jerung pun ader ..err haah yer tak yer ..heheh duyung jer takder ..selain dari xtvt laut ..xtvt daratnya Karaoke

Just what it says on the tin. Never seen so many dishes and drums in my life!

AsteriskSolution is the world's leading open source telephony engine and tool kit, offering flexibility in the world of proprietary communications. #Asteriskpbxsolution attached phones to make calls to each other, and to connect to other telephone services.

www.iqtelecom.net/voip-solutions/asterisk-solutions

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Old Candlestick telephone, from 1908 or thereabout, (connected and fully operational in my parents kitchen), An old Mobile phone from, I think, the late 80's(not working due to lack of carger, corroded battery and lackm of network support), and my current mobile, a 2008 model Nokia.

ThoughtBox wins Blueface Business Elevator Final

Pictured at the Blueface Business Elevator final, which took place in Dublin this weekend.

ThoughtBox educational software provider encourages children to discover educational principles throughout games in specific subject areas

Cristina Luminea, Founder and CEO, ThoughtBox won â¬60,000 worth of business services including telephony services (Blueface), mobile handsets and tablets (Carphone Warehouse), advertising (Newstalk 106-108FM), public relations (Heneghan PR), accountancy advice (Gorman Quigley Penrose) and legal advice.

Nine finalists from the technology, food, medical, sports and retail sectors travelled to Dublin to compete for the coveted prize. The business-pitch competition, which began in May, attracted applications from start-up companies and entrepreneurs around Ireland. Qualification events took place in Drogheda, Kilkenny, Cork, Dublin, Galway, Limerick and Carrick-on-Shannon, and featured a variety of business elevator pitches from a range of sectors.

Pictured is Cristina Luminea, Founder and CEO, ThoughtBox.

 

Kona=Kau Telephone & Telegraph Stock Certificate - (multiple types exist)

 

All certificates printed for this company regardless of type are engraved with 189x. Very limited runs (est. 200) of certificates in blue ink printing and artwork, by "Star Print" was common.

 

The Company was incorporated 1895 and (eventually, like all Hawaii telecoms,) bought by Mutual Telephone in 1913. This company operated on the Island of Hawaii, known as the "Big Island" where Luther S. Aungst was the de-facto leader of Big Island telephony. Not only holding office, he also personally took part in the construction of the pole and wiring across that island.

3G RF power amplifier teardown performed by Orcinus and Andrew.

 

Photo by Orcinus

3G RF power amplifier teardown performed by Orcinus and Andrew.

 

Photo by Orcinus

Seen on 20 Dec 2014 in mid Wales, this is the AA Box at Nantyffin, at the junction of the A40 and A479 between Brecon and Crickhowell.

 

The AA used to have hundreds of these boxes containing phones in which to summon assistance, located at key points (like major junctions) on trunk roads across the UK. Of course, the rise of mobile telephony has rendered them redundant though the box themselves was beginning to be phased out in the 1970s in favour of a phone on a post.

 

There are apparently only 19 of these left and this is one of the few.

Octavio Ruiz of Incuvox / Neocenter proudly displays the technical training completion certificate he received from Leonid Fainshtein, Xorcom CTO.

3G RF power amplifier teardown performed by Orcinus and Andrew.

 

Photo by Orcinus

3G RF power amplifier teardown performed by Orcinus and Andrew.

 

Photo by Orcinus

One of my early nemeses!

 

Telephony can be a challenge!

Radio Kootwijk is a shortwave transmitter built in 1918. The transmitters played an important role in the 20th century as a communication facility between the Netherlands and its then colony of Dutch East Indies. In 1923 Dutch PTT started trans-oceanic telegraphy using a longwave transmitter (a 400KW high frequency alternator) from the German Telefunken company under the callsign PCG, in the 24 kHz and 48 kHz. By 1925 the longwave transmitter was changed by a shortwave tube based, electronic transmitter which had a much better performance due to the better propagation of shortwaves. With this new technology, in 1928 a radio-telephonic connection was established. At the end of World War II, the German occupying forces blew up the transmitter. Afterward some of the radio towers were rebuilt

 

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Jos van der Heiden

From the shooting of a TV commercial EXCLUSIVE PREVIEW HEREconceived by my company, for the launch of fixed telephony and Internet by WIND telecom in Greece, using the cast of one of the most successful local TV series ever , "Para pente"

Communication gear—FM and TV transmission, mobile telephony, and microwave connections—atop Faloria Mountain overlooking Cortina d'Ampezzo in Italy's Dolomites. This one is mostly microwave.

3G RF power amplifier teardown performed by Orcinus and Andrew.

 

Photo by Orcinus

A rather fine booklet issued by the GPO - General Post Office - about the Faraday Building on Queen Victoria Street in London that was "the centre of the British telephone service". Here was centred not just two major local telephone exchanges - City and Central - but also the origination point for all international calls and radio services.

 

The original building had been opened in 1890 to serve the Post Office Savings Bank and part was first used for telephone purposes in 1904; long distance services were added in 1904. The booklet is undated but makes play of the opening of the purpose built International Telephone Exchange section in 1933, designed by A.R. Myers, architect in the H.M. Office of Works. Faraday House was further extended in 1938/39 to deal with increasing service requirements and, in 1942, a more secure wing known as the Citadel was constructed.

 

The booklet describes the various services in detail and a selection of pages are scanned here. In terms of graphic design it is very much in line with the corporate 'look' of the GPO at the time that was often very contemporary in terms of both design and typography. Oddly no designer nor printer is shown.

My sister, who like myself was raised in a South Florida Contamination Zone, demanded I send her pictures of what snow might look like if it fell from the sky and gathered on the ground, sloppily, with a very wide grin. The Cedars becomes as to a blindingly virgin bride, still though staggering drunk down the aisle, but with the garbage and graffiti and the trappings of the ghetto buried underneath some kind of air-fabric, woven from water apparently.

A very distinctive tower block, looming over Manchester St (A62) as one crests the long Werneth incline.

 

It was our home from 1971 to 74. The top left windows were our flat ( number 161)

 

The block is like a butterfly in that there is a central lobby with two two-bedroom flats (large wings) and two one-bedroom flats (small wings).

 

The telephony aerials make appropriate antennae.

San Francisco O'Rielly Emerging Telephony Conference

The control room of the Pentagon Press Briefing Room, as the Illinois National Guard hosts a telephonic press conference detailing Polish support to the state’s COVID-19 response, the Pentagon, Washington, D.C., April 29. 2020. Participants were Adjutant General of the State of Illinois, Air Force Brig. Gen. Richard Neely; Vice Director, Strategy, Plans, Policy and International Affairs, J5, National Guard Bureau, Air Force Brig. Gen. Thomas Hatley; and Polish Military Medical Corps Captain Jacek Siewiera. (DoD photo by Lisa Ferdinando)

PacketBase, Inc. is a Services Oriented Provider (SOP) of next-generation Unified Communications solutions, services and applications for mid to large enterprises. Specifically, we leverage the most powerful IP Telephony, Collaboration, Video and Messaging technologies on the market today with our unique incorporation of OnPremise, OnDemand and AdvancedServices experience.

Interactive Voice Response (IVR) is an automated telephony system that answers and routes the calls the appropriate team/agents. For optimal use of this technology, businesses must take care while designing the same.

 

Find out some great tips to design your IVR campaign:

 

1. Let callers easily talk to agents

Giving callers an option to readily talk to live-agents significantly reduces call abandonment rate

 

2. Avoid bot voice

Use human-like voice, while designing the IVR to facilitate more engaging communication.

 

3. Optimize Menu Options

Try to keep automated messages within 30 seconds and ensure easy navigation with a repeat menu option.

 

4. Minimize on-call advertising

Unnecessary on-call advertising can lead to call abandonment and poor customer relationships.

 

5. Easy access to customer information

With ready information, live agents can resolve issues in the first call itself.

 

6. Efficient call routing strategy

Determine the best routing technique for your business by analyzing your contact operation model.

 

7. Utilize callback feature

This option allows the business to reach the customer at their convenience ensuring reduced wait time.

 

North is towards bottom of photo.

 

Here you can see they took the right pair from the north and jumpered it over to the left pair headed south. The 2nd from the left pair is bridged straight across. No drops here.

 

See set comments for what this is all about.

m-Powering Development for a Better Tomorrow is an innovative and unique ITU initiative. Our goal is to extend the benefits of mobile telephony to all strata of society, in order to build a truly inclusive information society, with special focus on remote rural and underserviced areas.

(c) ITU/I.Wood

A rather fine booklet issued by the GPO - General Post Office - about the Faraday Building on Queen Victoria Street in London that was "the centre of the British telephone service". Here was centred not just two major local telephone exchanges - City and Central - but also the origination point for all international calls and radio services.

 

The original building had been opened in 1890 to serve the Post Office Savings Bank and part was first used for telephone purposes in 1904; long distance services were added in 1904. The booklet is undated but makes play of the opening of the purpose built International Telephone Exchange section in 1933, designed by A.R. Myers, architect in the H.M. Office of Works. Faraday House was further extended in 1938/39 to deal with increasing service requirements and, in 1942, a more secure wing known as the Citadel was constructed.

 

The booklet describes the various services in detail and a selection of pages are scanned here. In terms of graphic design it is very much in line with the corporate 'look' of the GPO at the time that was often very contemporary in terms of both design and typography. Oddly no designer nor printer is shown.

100 years ago tonight at 9:30pm, the first wireless telephony broadcast in Canada was made by a wireless license holder. Wireless telephony is now known as radio. The Marconi Wireless Telegraph company used it's eXperimental Wireless Apparatus (XWA) station to broadcast a young opera singer performing two songs, over 100 km away to a receiving station in the Chateau Laurier Hotel in Ottawa. Considered a successful experiment, it soon paved the way for radio broadcasting throughout the nation such that by end of the 1920s there were over 300,000 radio receiver sets in the country.

3G RF power amplifier teardown performed by Orcinus and Andrew.

 

Photo by Orcinus

Hosted Telephony and Internet connection. VoIP phone systems setup.

Communication gear—FM and TV transmission, mobile telephony, and microwave connections—atop Faloria Mountain overlooking Cortina d'Ampezzo in Italy's Dolomites.

From the shooting of a TV commercial EXCLUSIVE PREVIEW HEREconceived by my company, for the launch of fixed telephony and Internet by WIND telecom in Greece, using the cast of one of the most successful local TV series ever , "Para pente"

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