search for: jackeniax

Displaying 5 results from an estimated 5 matches for "jackeniax".

2006 Mar 16
1
RFC 2833 and SIP? DTMF? What am I not getting?
...een, as I know that device seemed to work fine through the old HT-488 fxo(via rfc2833). I then changed my asterisk extensions for both the FXS and FXO on the wellgate to include dtmfmode=rfc2833. This has brought me to a point where both my hardphones (ATA's) and my softphones (IAXcomm, or JackenIAX) work perfectly with comedian mail. To me this means that asterisk is properly getting the RFC2833 events from the user agents. BUT, if I try to dial out the FXO, none of my phones (hard or soft) produce working touchtones for a PSTN based voicemail system. Even stranger to me, is the fact tha...
2006 Mar 23
4
Which Mac OSX softphone with IAX2 support?
Hi, which OSX softphone do you use that supports IAX2 protocol with Asterisk? thanks Mike
2006 Mar 28
1
Asterisk Tools for OSX
Hello Asterisk Users, I am an Objective-C enthusiast and have been writing some clever tools to integrate Asterisk functionality with Mac OS X applications. Please find my project on http://www.sf.net/projects/astrxtools4osx/ The objectives of my project are as follows 1. Implement an Objective-C framework to communicate effectively with the Asterisk Management Interface 2. Address Book
2006 Mar 16
0
(no subject)
...k > fine through the old HT-488 fxo(via rfc2833). > > I then changed my asterisk extensions for both the FXS and FXO on the > wellgate to include dtmfmode=rfc2833. > > This has brought me to a point where both my hardphones (ATA's) and > my > softphones (IAXcomm, or JackenIAX) work perfectly with comedian mail. > > To me this means that asterisk is properly getting the RFC2833 events > from the user agents. > > BUT, if I try to dial out the FXO, none of my phones (hard or soft) > produce working touchtones for a PSTN based voicemail system. > &...
2005 Jul 14
7
SoftPhones: Bad, or just bad QoS?
Hi again, folks. I've been getting feedback from this list and elsewhere that softphones are generally not considered good enough for hardcore business use. Can someone point me to where I can find more detail on this debate? Is the problem that the technology isn't mature, that the load on the computer is too high, or simply that it doesn't work well in a poorly designed