Greetings, Is there a way to add artificial delay to the rtp stream? Due to regulations in our country, it is required to add 400ms delay to *some* VoIP calls. Is this possible with any module? regards, Vahan -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: vahan.vcf Type: text/x-vcard Size: 281 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-users/attachments/20041101/2536e350/vahan.vcf
*blink blink* --On Monday, November 01, 2004 18:33 +0400 Vahan Yerkanian <vahan@arminco.com> wrote:> Greetings, > > Is there a way to add artificial delay to the rtp stream? Due to > regulations in our country, it is required to add 400ms delay to *some* > VoIP calls.What country is that BTW? Just about the wierdest, and certainly one of the daftest regulations I've ever heard of.> > Is this possible with any module?
Vahan Yerkanian wrote:> Greetings, > > Is there a way to add artificial delay to the rtp stream? Due to > regulations in our country, it is required to add 400ms delay to *some* > VoIP calls. > > Is this possible with any module? >Sorry I don't know if it is possible with a module (none that I know of), but you could simply route your calls via New Zealand, and then through the UK and then to US to terminate to destination. This all begs the question WHY?@! Why do you have regulations in your country requiring you to make VOIP crap? Government owned telco? Which country? BTW: Depending on your volume of calls, I might be able to offer you the New Zealand leg of your crazy journey! :-) -- Cheers, Matt Riddell _______________________________________________ http://www.sineapps.com/news.php (Daily Asterisk News - html) http://www.sineapps.com/rssfeed.php (Daily Asterisk News - rss)
On Monday 01 November 2004 09:33 am, Vahan Yerkanian wrote:> Greetings, > > Is there a way to add artificial delay to the rtp stream? Due to > regulations in our country, it is required to add 400ms delay to *some* > VoIP calls. > > Is this possible with any module? > > regards, > VahanI'd get that regulation directly from the government, just to verify EXACTLY what they want. It could be just about anything. Even a false rumor spread from your phone company to suppress VoIP comptetition. Our battery manufacturers did the same to stop people from recharging them. They came out with this fantastic story of how batteries might explode if charged. Most everyone believed it too. -- Steve Szmidt "They that would give up essential liberty for temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." Benjamin Franklin
On Tue, 2 Nov 2004, steve szmidt wrote:> Our battery manufacturers did the same to stop people from recharging them. > They came out with this fantastic story of how batteries might explode if > charged. Most everyone believed it too.It is quite true for some classes of batteries. E.g. some Li-ion batteries will explode if charged (or in the case of rechargeable batteries charged with the wrong voltage / polarity). They pack quite a punch as well. The normal household alkaline batteries are safe as far as I know though. Peter