Some friends of mine did this once. They found that if you had more than
8 (8?) phones in a ring at one time that ESS got slowed down in a big
way. It didn't crash, but phone calls took a long time. (This is their
claim. I wasn't there so I can't swear it is true).
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Sean Casey UUCP: se...@ukma.UUCP or
915 Patterson Office Tower {cbosgd,anlams,hasmed}!ukma!sean
University of Kentucky ARPA: ukma!se...@ANL-MCS.ARPA
Lexington, Ky. 40506-0027 BITNET: se...@UKMA.BITNET
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No. If phones A and B are on the same exchange, the software would detect it,
and would not allow the subscriber to forward B to A. Even if the phones were
on different exchanges, that would not work. Phone A is immediately marked busy
upon receipt of the incoming call, so is phone B when the forwarded call arrives.
So when B forwards back to A, it will find A busy, send busy tone back (to A)
which will send it to the caller. Not an infinite loop at all.
Sorry this answer isn't bizarre
--
Marcel-Franck Simon ihnp4!{mhuxr, hl3b5b}!mfs
" Sa ou pa konnin toujou pi fo pase' ou "
A. "Aardvark" Silberman
.
The phone company, which takes it out of the monthly fee you pay for having
call forwarding. The person who calls phone A pays for the cost of calling
A's location, evem if A is call-forwarded across the country.