Is there a way to record your own voice messages ("Welcome to my PBX, Press 1 for ...") using asterisk and an analog phone, or do they need to be recorded using traditional voice recording software? Also, I am confused as to why my replies to the message board are never indented. Call this the ultimate newbie question, but how should the reply be worded so that I don't screw up the nicely formatted list? -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-users/attachments/20030521/5bec62ea/attachment.htm
Show Application Record -d At 03:32 PM 5/21/2003 -0400, you wrote:>Is there a way to record your own voice messages (Welcome to my PBX, Press >1 for &) using asterisk and an analog phone, or do they need to be >recorded using traditional voice recording software? > > > >Also, I am confused as to why my replies to the message board are never >indented. Call this the ultimate newbie question, but how should the >reply be worded so that I dont screw up the nicely formatted list?-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-users/attachments/20030521/5c53ede2/attachment.htm
On Wed, 2003-05-21 at 14:32, Derek Beaumont wrote:> Is there a way to record your own voice messages (?Welcome to my PBX, > Press 1 for ??) using asterisk and an analog phone, or do they need to > be recorded using traditional voice recording software? > >For a quick-and-easy way to record announcements using a phone and asterisk, you can leave yourself (or a dummy mailbox) a voicemail of the message you wish to record, which will be created in a properly formatted .gsm file in /var/spool/asterisk/vm/extensionnumber/INBOX/msg####.gsm Then, just copy/rename that file to /usr/lib/asterisk/sounds/whatevername.gsm and use it :) Not the higest quality way to do this, I'm sure, but it's quick, effective, and you don't have reconfigure your asterisk setup or get any other software to do it. If you make recordings from an analog phone, be very gentle with the switchhook when you hang up after recording the announcement... It can be a bit loud on the recording otherwise. Hope this helps!> > Also, I am confused as to why my replies to the message board are > never indented. Call this the ultimate newbie question, but how > should the reply be worded so that I don?t screw up the nicely > formatted list?This I'm not sure about. Perhaps a setting in your e-mail composition program? Just a guess... -Matthew Farley -- Matthew Farley <asterisk@wheatstate.net>
On Wednesday 21 May 2003 15:32, Derek Beaumont wrote:> Is there a way to record your own voice messages ("Welcome to my PBX, > Press 1 for ...") using asterisk and an analog phone, or do they need > to be recorded using traditional voice recording software? >See the Record application, or just record the desired messages as one or more voicemail messages, and pillage the resulting files as you see fit.> Also, I am confused as to why my replies to the message board are > never indented. Call this the ultimate newbie question, but how > should the reply be worded so that I don't screw up the nicely > formatted list?Your mail user agent is not providing an In-Reply-To header identifying the message to which you are replying. Many MUAs provide this as a matter of course when you reply to a message, but you are apparently afflicted with one which does not. Here are example headers from Tilghman Lesher's response to your prior message: From: Tilghman Lesher <tilghman@mail.jeffandtilghman.com> Subject: Re: [Asterisk-Users] Need basic help getting started In-reply-to: <07DE742049D32A418996A3D3C185BD13362B@MOTHER.Telantek.local> To: asterisk-users@lists.digium.com Message-Id: <200305211429.45852.tilghman@mail.jeffandtilghman.com>
*********************************************************************** Your mail user agent is not providing an In-Reply-To header identifying the message to which you are replying. Many MUAs provide this as a matter of course when you reply to a message, but you are apparently afflicted with one which does not. *********************************************************************** So, does anybody know if this feature can be turned on using Outlook? The paper-clip doesn't seem to know how to do it.