IBM 2.4 GHz Phone $49.99 at outpost

l0g0ut

Member
Oct 12, 2000
113
0
0
i hope it's good

here

edit: i don't know how to fix the link. you can check out the item under handheld/wireless
 

Souka

Diamond Member
Sep 25, 2000
4,728
1
76
Heh...instead of griping, why not fix it?

Here is a working link.
Link


I know 900mhz phones need a filter if being used in a DSL home...but what about 2.4ghz...hmmm....
 

Setral

Senior member
May 26, 2000
868
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If the link doesn't work. Goto OutPost.Com and search for sku #: 93737

Its a pretty nice phone and 2.4Ghz for $50 isn't bad.

ed: removed a period
 

KBtrade

Senior member
Jan 21, 2000
612
0
0
Souka I didn't fix his link because I never have luck with posting outpost.com links, looks like your link does not work either :p

Thanks Setral for the SKU#

 

Atrac

Golden Member
Mar 26, 2000
1,222
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As far as I can tell, Outpost is *down* right now (11:08 am PST). Nothing loads. I'm sure that's great for business.
 

Setral

Senior member
May 26, 2000
868
0
0
Don't follow those links. The problem is Outpost.com immediately uses some weird Session ID setup from the moment you open their page. Just follow the Outpost.Com link or open it up and search by the SKU #. If the Session ID link is old (15 minutes or so they recycle) and it will never pull anything up.
 

KBtrade

Senior member
Jan 21, 2000
612
0
0
Outpost.com working here, just go there and search by SKU# as Setral
said, since it seems no one can post a working link. :confused:
 

Atrac

Golden Member
Mar 26, 2000
1,222
0
0
OK, got it working.

So, I am assuming by the price that this is analog 2.4Ghz, and not digital like most of the phones that cost double than this?

Explains the price.

In fact, search for SKU #93612 and you'll find one with Digital Spread Spectrum and at more of an expected price.
 

jqpublic

Member
Oct 6, 2000
27
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0
Souka,
I have a DSL line and a 900mhz phone, but I don't have a filter. I wasn't aware that one was required. could you enlighten me?
 

ashandarei

Junior Member
Oct 8, 2000
19
0
0
About DSL and phones... the data for voice and DSL are on entirely different frequency ranges, but the DSL range does add annoyances on the voice level. The preferred (for me at least!) method of dealing with this is to simply have a POTS (plain old telephone service) splitter installed where the phone line enters the house, sending a data cable to the DSL device and all remaining phone lines function normally. Alternatively, the DSL line filters can be installed for each phone to remove the higher frequency DSL data. When I signed up for PacBell DSL service, a POTS splitter was provided and installed, but I am told that many services (including PacBell now) often simply provide a single line filter instead.