On Wed, 4 Oct 2017, Jose Maria Terry Jimenez wrote:> El 4/10/17 a las 17:45, david escribi?: > >> Folks >> >> A have a PCIe modem (Conexant ChipSet, PCI id = 14f1:2f83.? It interfaces >> to my land-line (POTS) telephone line in the United States.? On Windows, I >> had a good answering machine package (Ventafax) that reported CallerID, >> recorded messages, sent/received fax, and had a scripting language that let >> me say "To leave a message for Alice, press 1; to leave a message for Bob, >> press 2", etc. >> >> I'm trying to move this function to a Centos-based system without going to >> the expense or complexity of Asterisk (expense because of specialized >> telephony cards). >> >> My research found a driver (at www.linuxant.com), but it required that I >> recompile the driver.? I got absolutely lost trying to follow the >> directions which seemed to be steering me towards a custom Kernel. >> >> So, my question to the group wisdom is: >> >> - Is there any hope in trying to find a suitable driver for this device >> without building a custom kernel?? And if a custom "module" is needed, I >> might need help compiling it. >> >> - Is there a inexpensive modem that Centos 7 supports with the needed >> functions?? and maybe some software applications that might help? >> >> Thanks in advance. >> >> David > Hello > > You can install an Asterisk with a "mini-gateway" like > http://www.grandstream.com/products/gateways-and-atas/analog-telephone-adaptors/product/handytone-503 > And is not so complex write a dialplan for the functions you say. There is > many tutorial over the HT503 and Asterisk in the wild!I know this is not the answer you are looking for but the standalone ATA's are not very expensive and there is http://nerdvittles.com/ to help you get going. This guy gives you various Centos, Debian, raspberry pi based iso's and other cookbooks to easily build your own PBX. The good news is most of it "just works" as long as you understand the terminology. I have had good luck with the Obihai 202 ATA. Never could get good call quality from the grandstream stuff but maybe that is just me. HTH, -- Tom me at tdiehl.org
At 10:20 AM 10/4/2017, you wrote:>On Wed, 4 Oct 2017, Jose Maria Terry Jimenez wrote: > >>El 4/10/17 a las 17:45, david escribi?: >> >>>Folks >>>A have a PCIe modem (Conexant ChipSet, PCI id = 14f1:2f83.? It >>>interfaces to my land-line (POTS) telephone line in the United >>>States.? On Windows, I had a good answering machine package >>>(Ventafax) that reported CallerID, recorded messages, >>>sent/received fax, and had a scripting language that let me say >>>"To leave a message for Alice, press 1; to leave a message for >>>Bob, press 2", etc. >>>I'm trying to move this function to a Centos-based system without >>>going to the expense or complexity of Asterisk (expense because of >>>specialized telephony cards). >>>My research found a driver (at www.linuxant.com), but it required >>>that I recompile the driver.? I got absolutely lost trying to >>>follow the directions which seemed to be steering me towards a custom Kernel. >>>So, my question to the group wisdom is: >>>- Is there any hope in trying to find a suitable driver for this >>>device without building a custom kernel?? And if a custom "module" >>>is needed, I might need help compiling it. >>>- Is there a inexpensive modem that Centos 7 supports with the >>>needed functions?? and maybe some software applications that might help? >>>Thanks in advance. >>>David >>Hello >> >>You can install an Asterisk with a "mini-gateway" like >>http://www.grandstream.com/products/gateways-and-atas/analog-telephone-adaptors/product/handytone-503 >>And is not so complex write a dialplan for the functions you say. >>There is many tutorial over the HT503 and Asterisk in the wild! > >I know this is not the answer you are looking for but the standalone ATA's >are not very expensive and there is http://nerdvittles.com/ to help you get >going. This guy gives you various Centos, Debian, raspberry pi based iso's and >other cookbooks to easily build your own PBX. The good news is most of it >"just works" as long as you understand the terminology. > >I have had good luck with the Obihai 202 ATA. Never could get good >call quality from the grandstream stuff but maybe that is just me. > >HTH, > >-- >Tom me at tdiehl.orgInteresting reference, but I see nothing that talks about using my POTS (plain old telephone service) from the local phone company as where my phone activity is. I do NOT use VOIP, SIP, nor a bunch of other acronyms. David
On 10/04/2017 03:18 PM, david wrote:> Interesting reference, but I see nothing that talks about using my POTS > (plain old telephone service) from the local phone company as where my > phone activity is.? I do NOT use VOIP, SIP, nor a bunch of other acronyms.An ATA with an FXO port will connect to your analog telephone service. -- =======================================================================Ian Pilcher arequipeno at gmail.com -------- "I grew up before Mark Zuckerberg invented friendship" -------- ========================================================================
El 4/10/17 a las 22:18, david escribi?:> > > Interesting reference, but I see nothing that talks about using my > POTS (plain old telephone service) from the local phone company as > where my phone activity is.? I do NOT use VOIP, SIP, nor a bunch of > other acronyms.This device has 1 FXO and 1 FXS port, you can connect 1 POTS and 1 Analog phone to it, they are "converted" to SIP and then you can manage that from Asterisk. The same that an analog card but instead connect to a computer slot, goes by Ethernet and cheaper (instead a DAHDI channel use a SIP channel).