Alessio Focardi
2005-Jul-20 02:21 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] ATXFER discussion, what's your opinion ?
Hi, I'm experimenting attended calls tranfers and I'm a little bit confused. In usual pbx's normaly there is no difference between an attended call transfer and a blind one: you just hit "transfer" then dial the extension you want the call to be transfered. If you stay on the phone you can talk to the other party, then, when you hangup, he will get the call. If you hang immediately after the transfer sequence the call is just transfered, and if the other party is busy or does not answer the transfered call is bounced back to you again. That's how pbx's users are expecting call transfer to work, is there a way to reproduce this behavior in asterisk ? For what I can see it's not possible and you will have to select two codes, one for blind and one for attended tranfers .... What do you think about it ? -- Best regards, Alessio mailto:afoc@interconnessioni.it
Michael Puchol
2005-Jul-20 02:54 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] ATXFER discussion, what's your opinion ?
Alessio Focardi wrote:> Hi, > > I'm experimenting attended calls tranfers and I'm a little bit > confused. ><SNIP> I honestly think that transfers is one thing that Asterisk should improve a LOT to be able to stand up to even the most cheapo taiwanese no-name PBXs, which support attended transfers out of the box. I've had two possible clients refuse an Asterisk installation because attended transfers were unreliable. I honestly didn't know how to explain that a feature available in PBXs for decades was not available or didn't always work. I don't know how the current HEAD is going, but so far, attended transfers weren't available in stable. Regards, Mike
afoc@interconnessioni.it
2005-Jul-20 11:14 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] ATXFER discussion, what's your opinion ?
> > That's exactly my opinion: isn't ironic that the only function "joe > > sixpack" will use in a pbx is the worst implemented ?> Maybe because most asterisk PBX's are implemented using business class > softphones rather than analogue phones? Most business class SIP phones > (and even grandstream phones) allow attended/non-attended transfers with > asterisk-stable and/or asterisk-head...I think that's mostly right, but it should also be a "native" xfer function working the same way regarding of the user agent, some sort of common ground we can "trust" for installation with mixed devices. By the way: anyone got experience in attended trasfer with snom ? :) Alessio Focardi