Dave Platt
2011-Aug-26 17:52 UTC
[asterisk-users] Looking for ideas for nice **Asterisk** home phone system
> Great discussion, all of it. Thanks, people. > > How much power does the home asterisk box need ? > > I'm using Asus Eee Box (1012Ps) as Myth front ends in another project. > About $280 with 320 Gb hard drive and 2 GB RAM. Atom 510 processor. Built > in Wifi. Nearly silent. Runs F15 nicely. Would one of them suffice ?I'm running my small home Asterisk system on an Itox motherboard with an Atom N270, at 1.6 GHz. No CPU-related problems noted. In fact, I'd run it fairly successfully on a Pentium Pro 200, and it worked well enough for simple uses (e.g. no fancy codecs or transcoding).> It looks like I am going to need an ATA for the fax machines. Two. My wife > informed me yesterday she wants her own in her office. VOIP handles fax > machines, right ?This could very well be the most problematic (heart-breaking, frustrating) part of your whole intended installation. Fax -> modem -> very sensitive to jitter and dropouts. Making fax work over VoIP (using A-law or u-law) is often feasible within a LAN environment, because the jitter and packet-loss rates are low. Making fax work decently on VoIP over the Internet is much harder... jitter and packet-loss rates which would be slightly annoying for a voice conversation can seriously disrupt or abort a fax call. Some (relatively few) VoIP providers support a specialized mode called T.38. in which their "far end" equipment intervenes in the fax protocol in order to "smooth out" the process of making fax work over a lossy/jittery/high-latency VoIP connection. This isn't common and seems to be hard to count on. I suspect you'll be better off either: (1) maintaining one analog land-line, and using it for fax (and perhaps backup for VoIP), and/or (2) subscribing to a commercial "fax to email" gateway service, in which people send their faxes to a number owned by the service provider, and the resulting fax is converted to a compressed PDF and then emailed to you. I imagine that some of these providers also have an "email to fax" service, operating in the reverse direction... you email a PDF or other file to an address alias they provide, and it's faxed out for you. You *can* operate a sort of hybrid system in your house, if that's convenient to you... e.g. a SIP ATA for your fax machine, to Asterisk, to an analog land-line (via either a dedicated PCI bus card, or an outbound port on a channel bank or certain ATA devices). The jitter and delay on the home LAN would be low enough that this should work reliably. You could also run a combination of hylafax, and iaxmodem on the Asterisk system, and thus use the Asterisk server as a fax-to-email / email-to-fax / document-to-fax gateway.> I'm wondering what phones everyone is using. Should I stick with analog > wireless handsets or are there some good SIP wireless phones out there that > I don't know about ???Several companies make DECT SIP phones and systems... typically I think they'll handle 4 to 6 DECT handsets, and a couple of independent SIP calls at any given moment. These may or may not be less expensive than buying some one- or two-analog-line SIP systems, and some ATAs; they'd definitely involve less equipment and wiring.
linux guy
2011-Aug-26 18:10 UTC
[asterisk-users] Looking for ideas for nice **Asterisk** home phone system
I was thinking of using a PAP2T-NA for the ATA to handle the fax. It appears to have a large number of fax specific settings. Can anyone comment on using this device with a fax ? -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-users/attachments/20110826/a14d7bd9/attachment.htm>