George Pajari
2004-Jun-08 19:06 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] NetworkWorld article on Open Source Telephony
An interesting article for those needing ammunition to sell Asterisk within their organisation or to others: "Is open source IP telephony ready for prime time? Yes" by Zenas Hutcheson, St. Paul Venture Capital Network World, 06/07/04 http://www.nwfusion.com/columnists/2004/0607faceoffyes.html On a related note, they also have an article arguing the contrary position (see link within article). I'm too busy right now to write up a response showing the flaws in that column but others on the list might wish to contribute to the fray. George Pajari www.netvoice.ca www.IP-Centrex.ca
John Todd
2004-Jun-08 20:51 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] NetworkWorld article on Open Source Telephony
At 7:06 PM -0700 on 6/8/04, George Pajari wrote:>An interesting article for those needing ammunition to sell Asterisk within >their organisation or to others: > >"Is open source IP telephony ready for prime time? Yes" >by Zenas Hutcheson, St. Paul Venture Capital >Network World, 06/07/04 > >http://www.nwfusion.com/columnists/2004/0607faceoffyes.html > >On a related note, they also have an article arguing the contrary position >(see link within article). I'm too busy right now to write up a response >showing the flaws in that column but others on the list might wish to >contribute to the fray. > >George Pajari >www.netvoice.ca >www.IP-Centrex.caThe opposing view had some good points, though I don't agree with many of his comments. http://www.nwfusion.com/columnists/2004/0607faceoffno.html I'm not even going to try to post a reply on NetworkWorld's broken, ad-strewn, and ambiguous forum manager. I think I can disagree with all of Zeus' comments except this: management(*) for IP telephony is just as important as the telephony itself. Without the ability to measure, manage, and examine performance, it is a tough sell for open-source software in the enterprise. Perhaps that doesn't matter, actually. Enterprise isn't really where Asterisk is written and supported, so we don't see the robust features that an enterprise would require. Remember: there are no sales brochures for Asterisk, and the CTO who is looking to implement Solution C or Asterisk will not have anything to use in the Asterisk column except for (maybe) my feature spreadsheet and an enthusiastic network admin who runs it at home. This will not typically lead to Asterisk as the winner. I am not saying that this is good or bad, actually. It's neutral. The purpose of Open Source is not to defeat commercial implementations of the same features, but to provide a "better" solution for some people who want to get in there and make things work exactly they way they wanted, if they have the spare time, clue, and don't have any money to pay someone else to do it. JT (*): for a quick definition of what "management" means, here are some concepts: provisioning interfaces, per-stream QoS examination, overall QoS examination, call routing interfaces (GUI or otherwise), cost control and cost examination tools, etc. You're saying "Well, all of that can be easily built!" Sure it can, but careful with that word "easily." The question is: are these components a patchwork of third-party tools, or is it a well-planned whole-system design? Is management an afterthought? As an example of what enterprise users might need, view this post and note that there have been no movements towards answering these items: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-users/2003-July/014965.html Again, this is not a fault that these management reports don't exist. If nobody develops these reports, then maybe they're not used by the people that use Asterisk. Enterprise users aren't so hot on developing things themselves, so maybe this just languishes, and so they don't use Asterisk (yet?) because the combined effort of doing all that stuff is just more than it's worth when they can have the CFO sign a check for Vendor A to get it all done.
Steve Kennedy
2004-Jun-09 05:44 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] NetworkWorld article on Open Source Telephony
On Tue, Jun 08, 2004 at 07:06:22PM -0700, George Pajari wrote:> http://www.nwfusion.com/columnists/2004/0607faceoffyes.htmlThere are very valid arguments in the contra argument. If you have existing equipment it's all about integration. Traditional telcos are moving to VoIP as are enterprise players and SMBs (small to medium businesses) etc. It may be OK for a small business to replace what they've got, get a "techie" in to maintain it etc, but that doesn't work at the large side of things. There's also provisioning and other such matters to worry about. If you're a small player again that can be a manual process, or even maybe web based. If you're a larger player, you'll have existing systems in place and provisioning processes in place and any new devices have to fit into these processes. For * to really take off, it does need management interfaces etc. Steve (IMHO of course) -- NetTek Ltd Phone/Fax +44-(0)20 7483 2455 SMS steve-epage (at) gbnet.net [body] gpg 1024D/468952DB 2001-09-19
W. Kevin Hunt
2004-Jun-09 14:26 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] Re: NetworkWorld article on Open Source Telephony
I happen to feel that Cisco IOS is the most beautifull inteface known to present day man... W. Kevin Hunt CCIE #11841 www.huntbrothers.com -----Original Message----- Subject: [Asterisk-Users] Re: NetworkWorld article on Open Source Telephony> The power of asterisk comes from its method of config.yup. it meets the challenge of finding something more complex, less intuitive, less parsable, and less managable than crisco ios. randy
Randy Bush
2004-Jun-09 18:34 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] Re: Re: NetworkWorld article on Open Source Telephony
> I happen to feel that Cisco IOS is the most beautifull inteface known to > present day man...women know better. get a shrink. or better yet, take a compiler 101 course. randy
CW_ASN
2004-Jun-09 19:57 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] Re: NetworkWorld article on Open Source Telephony
Obviously, you have seen very few O&M interfaces. Regards, Gus ----- Original Message ----- From: "W. Kevin Hunt" <Kevin@hbcorporate.com> To: <asterisk-users@lists.digium.com> Sent: Wednesday, June 09, 2004 6:26 PM Subject: RE: [Asterisk-Users] Re: NetworkWorld article on Open Source Telephony> I happen to feel that Cisco IOS is the most beautifull inteface known to > present day man... > > W. Kevin Hunt > CCIE #11841 > www.huntbrothers.com > > -----Original Message----- > > Subject: [Asterisk-Users] Re: NetworkWorld article on Open Source > Telephony > > > The power of asterisk comes from its method of config. > > yup. it meets the challenge of finding something more complex, less > intuitive, less parsable, and less managable than crisco ios. > > randy > > _______________________________________________ > Asterisk-Users mailing list > Asterisk-Users@lists.digium.com > http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users > To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: > http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users
Randy Bush
2004-Jun-10 14:07 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] Re: Re: NetworkWorld article on Open Source Telephony
> Obviously, you have seen very few O&M interfaces. >> I happen to feel that Cisco IOS is the most beautifull inteface known to >> present day man... >>> The power of asterisk comes from its method of config. >> yup. it meets the challenge of finding something more complex, less >> intuitive, less parsable, and less managable than crisco ios.another exceedingly incorrect assumption randy --- Q: Because it reverses the logical flow of conversation. A: Why is top posting frowned upon?
gromit
2004-Jun-11 11:31 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] NetworkWorld article on Open Source Telephony
I hope we can get ISDN in Sao Paulo - we have been told it is available as we are planning to deploy an Asterisk box in Brazil. Having said this, Asterisk is what users make it. If you want R2 signalling (and I think a lot of people in South America do!) then please get on and write the module or put a bounty on it so that some enterprising software developer can do it for you. In the rest of the world ISDN BRI and PRI are THE standard telecomms building blocks for all but the smallest of telephone installations, and Asterisk support for this is improving on a regular basis because that is what most people outside the US are using. It is really only the US that seems not to understand ISDN (especially BRI) and there are some quirks relating to ISDN that I am sure will be ironed out sooner rather than later. As regards DTMF caller ID, I think the beginnings of this option are already there as I seem to recall that the CVS head now has experimental support for UK caller ID which requires line monitoring during ringing. Adding DTMF is not difficult. Rather than point out the areas where Asterisk is weak, fix it and make it do what you want, and add it in for the benefit of everyone!. That is what open source is all about. Rgds Tim Gelson Dias Santos wrote:> Brent Franks wrote: > >> Aside from echo issues that seem to be apparent with everyone >> occasionally >> (by everyone, those not running hardware T1 echo cans) I believe * is >> ready for the prime time. Integrators however should have a better > > > I add to the list: hangup detection on FXO interfaces is terrible. > The busy tone detection routines does not work right/reliably, at > least not for those outside USA. Same thing about callprogress, the > lack of support for DTMF CallerID and no R2 signaling. > Without these features * will never be a serious option outside US. > > Gelson > _______________________________________________ > Asterisk-Users mailing list > Asterisk-Users@lists.digium.com > http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users > To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: > http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users