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Hi, It is OK, I knew that it wasn't an alarm system, it is just that those connections are so expensive in my country these days, you only see them used for alarms :D
This is a whole new situation, as I and our fellow members, probably did not realise that you had a dedicated connection (line).
Now, I have a few more questions:
1. Do you need two computers at home to connect, or could you manage with one? I would include connecting the two at home if required, as a local network.
2. I assume that you need the two at work to be effectively independent?
Please ignore my comments on IP addresses, with a dedicated static link the addresses remain the same unless you choose to change them.
Also, as a dedicated line, there is no internet, so no security risk, UNLESS you let something onto a machine that does connect to the internet. :)
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Hi,
Ignore the two couples. I need to connect only two computers - one at home, and the other - at office. Only these. And this must work without human operator - all must be stand alone. I am making experiments now with some AT commands. I will write if I have any success ...
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Well there is a dialup solution.
You get an extra line at each end. You have the modems connect and then leave them connected forever. It will be expensive.
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I found a way, but cannot realize it at all. Here is what I found:
I connect the modems by "line" port. I use AT command ATD to connect the client to the server. This command makes the modem dial, without waiting for a signal. In the other side a must make the server modem to answer without waiting for a ring. This can be done by ATA command. The problem is that I cannot figure out how to initialize the server modem with this command. I connected them in this way only via Hyper Terminal, but it doesn't works for me.