nanog mailing list archives
Re: Clear Channel on a T1
From: "Peter Galbavy" <peter.galbavy () knowledge com>
Date: Mon, 26 Mar 2001 10:11:33 +0100
<Bell Atlantic Tech> "If it's a T1, then it's B8ZS" <Me> "Then why can't I send all zeroes, but every other pattern works?" <Bell> "Hmm... lemme check...(pause)...try now" <Me> "Ok, it's working. Did you find an AMI segment?" <Bell> "I didn't change anything." Ticket closed, "No problem found".
In BT speak (in the UK) this is a "FNF" - Fault Not Found. Notice the useful tense used there - so if later a fault is actually proven, then the phrase means something different to the normal immediate understanding people hear. I wonder how many marketing people they roped in for this engineering process. 30 years ago. (If people don't see what I mean, think "A fault was not found" vs. "The fault was not found".) Peter
Current thread:
- Re: Clear Channel on a T1, (continued)
- Re: Clear Channel on a T1 Terrence Chatfield (Mar 22)
- RE: Clear Channel on a T1 Christian Kuhtz (Mar 22)
- Re: Clear Channel on a T1 Douglas A. Dever (Mar 22)
- Re: Clear Channel on a T1 Rachel Warren (Mar 23)
- Re: Clear Channel on a T1 Terrence Chatfield (Mar 22)
- Re: Clear Channel on a T1 Ron Buchalski (Mar 22)
- Re: Clear Channel on a T1 Majdi S. Abbas (Mar 22)
- Re: Clear Channel on a T1 Ron Buchalski (Mar 23)
- Re: Clear Channel on a T1 Ron Buchalski (Mar 23)
- Re: Clear Channel on a T1 Christopher A. Woodfield (Mar 23)
- Re: Clear Channel on a T1 lucifer (Mar 23)
- Re: Clear Channel on a T1 Peter Galbavy (Mar 26)
- Re: Clear Channel on a T1 Christopher A. Woodfield (Mar 23)