An ISDN (Integrated Services Digital Network) line is an all-digital phone line that is less widely used in the United States, but quite common, for example, in Europe, where an ISDN line is typically cheaper than two analog phone lines. The type of ISDN service for residential customers is Basic Rate Interface (BRI). BRI consists of two 64 Kbps (or 56 Kbps on some older systems in the United States) channels, each of which can be used independently for phone, fax, or data connections. Both channels can be combined (bundled) in a single data connection, allowing you to connect at 128 Kbps, over twice the speed of a fast dial-up line (at the cost of being unable to make or receive phone calls over the ISDN line for the duration of the bundled connection). Unlike DSL and cable modems, ISDN is not connected directly to the Internet, but rather to the telephone network, so you connect to the Internet by making a phone call to an ISP that offers ISDN access.
Tip | If your phone company offers DSL, choose it over ISDN, as DSL delivers higher speeds than ISDN, is usually cheaper, and usually lacks a per-minute charge. In the United States, ISDN lines are usually priced with a monthly charge that includes a base number of minutes of usage, plus a per-minute charge if you use the line for additional minutes. |
For more information about how ISDN works, see the ISDN Zone web site at http://www.isdnzone.com.
You can order an ISDN line from your local telephone company, but you should call your ISP first to confirm that it can also provide ISDN service. ISDN lines are more expensive than normal phone lines, and not all phone companies can provide them. Even companies that do provide ISDN lines often have trouble installing them correctly; so if your ISP can arrange to set up the line, order it through your ISP.
You also need an ISDN terminal adapter (also called an ISDN adapter, ISDN TA , or ISDN modem) to connect your computer's serial port to the ISDN phone line. Better yet, get an external ISDN TA with a USB (Universal Serial Bus) interface or an internal ISDN adapter card that installs inside your computer for faster communications (external ISDN adapters that connect to the serial port are limited by the 115 Kbps speed of the serial port). Your ISP (or whatever computer you are connecting to) must have ISDN phone numbers for you to connect to (see "Internet (PPP) Accounts" in Chapter 24).
Your telephone installer usually installs the ISDN adapter and configures Windows to use it, but here is information about how to do so yourself. See Chapter 14 for how to install an internal ISDN adapter. If you have an external ISDN adapter that connects to the serial port, connect its serial cable to a serial (COM) port on your PC (shut down Windows and turn your PC off first). If you have an external USB ISDN TA, plug it into a free USB connector on your PC (you don't have to turn off your PC first).
When you turn your PC back on or when you plug in an USB ISDN TA, Windows should detect the new hardware and run the Add Hardware Wizard automatically. If it doesn't, choose Start Control Panel, and click the Classic View link on the left pane. Double-click the Add Hardware icon and walk through the Add Hardware Wizard to set up your ISDN adapter.
When Windows has installed the drivers for the ISDN adapter, you (or your telephone installer) configure Windows to use it. The Add Hardware Wizard usually displays a dialog box asking for configuration information: if it doesn't, choose Start, then right-click Computer, click Properties, and then click the Device Manager link in the Tasks pane. Your ISDN adapter appears in Modems if it is external or Network Adapters if it is internal. Right-click the ISDN adapter and choose Properties from the menu that appears. Click the ISDN tab and select the Switch type or D-channel protocol your phone company uses (ask your phone company for this information). Then click the Configure button and enter the requested information, which you need to get from your phone company or ISP:
Phone Number The phone number(s) of your ISDN line for U.S. and Canada switch types. Your ISDN line may have one or two phone numbers.
Service Profile Identifier (SPID) Your ISDN phone number, plus a few extra digits that identify the type of ISDN switch. SPIDs are generally used only in the United States and Canada.
Multi-Subscriber Number (MSN) The phone number(s) of your ISDN line for European ISDN (DSS1)-this has nothing to do with MSN, Microsoft's ISP. European ISDN allows multiple phone numbers on an ISDN line. You only need to enter the MSNs you actually intend to use with your computer-the MSNs you want your computer to accept calls for, and the MSN to which you want outgoing calls to be billed. Note that outgoing calls you make with your computer will be billed to the first MSN in the list, which will always be the lowest number, since Windows sorts the list. If you enter no MSN, the calls will be billed to the primary MSN of your line.
Tip | You must be logged on using an administrator account to configure your ISDN adapter. |
A new option for connecting to the Internet is by two-way satellite. For example, StarBand (at http://www. starband .com) and HughesNet (at http://www.hughesnet.com) offer a satellite dish, satellite modem, Internet account, and optional satellite television service. It's more expensive to install than DSL or cable Internet, but it's available anywhere in the continental United States where you can see the Southern sky.
The satellite dish mounts on your roof, and connects using a coaxial cable and a satellite modem to either the USB or network adapter on your computer. A StarBand or HughesNet installer does the installation of both the dish and the modem.