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We offer a REAL Wireless Phone Jack for phone, fax and modem (OEM)

http://www.wireless-phonejack.com
RTX has developed a nicely designed Wireless Phone Jack for phone, fax and modem as an OEM product.

The Wireless Phone Jack is a plug-and-play replacement of the phone cable with a wireless radio link.

The Wireless Phone Jack for phone, fax and modem is inserted into the phone plug, and without the presence of annoying and unsuitable electrical wires you get an extra phone line. The result is a real wireless solution, offering a higher speed than standard power line communication technology.

Do-it-yourself installation of the Wireless Phone Jack

The Wireless Phone Jack simplifies the installation process, as it is inserted directly into the power outlet without adding extra costs to the installation process. Installation time is thus much quicker since no physical phone line or electrical wires have to be installed. Just plug in and communicate – it's simple and easy with the RTX Wireless Phone Jack for phone, fax and modem.

Technical specification on the Wireless Phone Jack for phone, fax and modem

The Wireless Phone Jack for phone, fax and modem is based on the cordless DECT standard and creates no interference with television signals.The Wireless Phone Jack for phone, fax and modem uses RTX's DECT technology in a special configura-tion, which enables transmission of modem signals at speeds of up to 56 Kbit/s, based on the V.34 and V.90 standards. This was not possible with DECT in a normal configuration, but RTX's position as the unchallenged leader within DECT made it possible to extend from the normal transmission speed of 9 Kbit/s to 56 Kbit/s.

 

 

Why choose the RTX Wireless Phone Jack for phone, fax and modem?

- Proven product
- Plug-and-play concept
- Inexpensive installation
- Production ready
- Based on proven DECT software

Embedded Skype

 

 

 

 

VNU
“By and large, though, this is one of the best examples of internet telephony we've seen."

 
The Inquirer
“The INQ anticipated that setting up the whole system to work with Skype would be very tedious. The opposite was true.”