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(222) Sun 3 Nov 91 22:02 By: Harold Hallikainen To: All Re: Caller ID Chip from Motorola St: ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ @PTH 1:340/201.0@Fidonet From: hhallika@nike.calpoly.edu (Harold Hallikainen) Newsgroups: comp.dcom.telecom Subject: Caller ID Chip from Motorola Organization: TELECOM Digest {Electronic Engineering Times}, 28 October 1991, page 79 Motorola's MOS digital-analog IC division has entered the telephone-caller identification market with a highly integrated CMOS chip designed to demodulate the Bell 202 1,200-baud frequency-shift- keying asynchronous data. The primary use for the MC145447 is in telephone adjunct boxes and telephone products that can receive and display the calling number or message-waiting indicators that's been sent to subscribers from participating central-office facilities of the public-switched network. The device contains a carrier-detect circuit and a ring detector that can be used to power-up the device. The chip operates from a single supply of 3.5 V to 6 V. The pin-selectable clock frequencies are 3.68 MHz, 3.58 MHz or 455 KHz. In quantities of 1,000, the caller-ID chip goes for 2.23 each. In quantities of 25,000, the price drops to $1.88 per unit. More info, call Dave Kolkman, 512 928 6733 -------- Note also that Yamaha has what they are calling a "Vodem" chip that does standard 2400 bps data modem communications, 9600 bps fax send/receive, DTMF detection and generation, voice generation (probably thru digitized voice instead of synthesis), and Caller-ID. Harold --- Fred-Uf 1.8(L)[BETA] * Origin: Megabyte BBS, UUCP, Fidonet, IMEx, total messaging (1:340/201.0) @Path: softwords!news.UVic.CA!ubc-cs!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rutgers!cs.utexas.edu!sdd.hp.com!spool.mu.edu!telecom-request @Message-ID: <telecom11.885.2@eecs.nwu.edu> @Date: 3 Nov 91 22:02:16 GMT @PID: FredMail 1.8-BETA @PATH: 340/201