Displaying 20 results from an estimated 5000 matches similar to: "Looking for a wireless phone... wifiortraditionalwireless ?"
2005 Jan 13
2
Looking for a wireless phone... wifi ortraditional wireless ?
In that example you could make outgoing calls only correct? (since incoming
likely needs port forwards)
I guess the questions becomes "how often are you going to do that to justify
the extra $100 or so you going to pay for a wifi sip phone?"
Paul Fielding (paul.fielding@shaw.ca) wrote:
>
> I think some people are missing the point. You can't throw your cordless
>
2005 Jan 12
4
Is this a $50 wifi or wireless USB VOIP phone ?
http://www.pcphoneline.com/skype
"The VPT1000 is NOT a simple last generation USB phone audio device but
is rather a next generation integrated gateway and USB phoneset with
simultaneous dual mode Skype and SIP calling support. Skype is not
forecast to have "SkypeIn" available until June 2005 but you can have
the capability now via its built in SIP capabilities."
Is this a
2005 Jan 13
1
Re: Looking for a wireless phone...
Paul-
I have a ZyXel Prestige 2000W. It seemed to be junk at first,
(not saving settings, flaky network connectivity, etc.)
But upgrading it to the latest firmware seemed to fix the issues.
The only complaint I have with it currently is weak encryption. (64 or
128-bit WEP)
YMMV.
Brian
>
>Message: 1
>Date: Thu, 13 Jan 2005 10:34:45 -0700
>From: Paul Fielding
2007 Mar 14
3
DECT to SIP gateway experiences
G'day. I hope this isn't off-topic for the list.
I am looking at an Asterisk setup that includes cordless phones. The
three choices I can see, at this stage, are:
* wifi phones
* an ATA and a cordless analog phone
* a DECT to SIP basestation
The various wifi phone options don't grab us as suitable -- they are
costly, have poor battery life and even the best have pretty mixed
2009 May 04
3
wireless ATA
I have a need for an ATA that will register over wifi. *NOT* a DECT phone
or other cordless type phone plugged into a wired ATA.
Not seeing one right off, and following the recent discussions about
compact fanless systems, I thought a custom build-your-own might not only
be useful for my purpose, but may be a viable product in its own right.
So I started looking for mini-PCI based FXS cards.
2004 Dec 06
2
Budgetone 101 phones ? SIP through NAT ?
I'm new to VOIP. We are thinking of setting up a VOIP system between a
couple remote offices. I've been lurking on this group for a while.
What is the consensus on these phones:
http://www.netvoice.ca/grandstream/budgetone101.htm
I'm confused about the SIP protocol... can a SIP phone be located behind
a NATing firewall ?
When people use asterisk on a broadband connection used
2009 Nov 04
2
Cisco SPA3102 Thoughts & Other Recommendations
I'm looking to build a VoIP solution for 100+ service vehicles that have
WiFi hot spots installed (with cellular uplinks). Currently we are
trying out Skype wireless handselts and Majick Jack. I'd also like to
consider an Open Source solution that can bring the calls back to our
data center [possibly integrated without our existing BCM 3.x VoIP
PBX].
For hardware someone on the IRC
2005 Mar 13
3
cordless/wireless system with a ip base station?
does anyone know of a 2.4 or 5 ghz cordless phone system that has an
ip base station?
thanks
2006 Dec 14
1
FYI Panasonic Wireless Phone MWI
Last week I asked about MWI indicators on wireless phones that would work
with Asterisk. I sent a message off to Panasonic asking them about it
because in their ads they specifically stated that the indicator works
with and requires phone company voicemail subscription.
The is the model TG5631.
Specs here...
http://www.amazon.com/Panasonic-KX-TG5631S-GigaRange-Cordless-Answering/dp/B000F4C2CA
2007 Nov 28
0
Re :Recommendations for 100 Wifi SIP phone
Hi,
Try http://gigaset.siemens.com/shc/1,1935,hq_en_0_11729_rArNrNrNrN,00.html
you will have good selections there.
Regards,
Vidura Senadeera
================================
To: "Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion"
<asterisk-users at lists.digium.com>
Message-ID: <200711252201.lAPM1NUP005677 at mail871.megamailservers.com>
Content-Type:
2006 Jun 20
0
Anyone using VoIP WiFi phones?
The only advantage is when you travel. Last year I took my wifi sip
phone to Astricon in Madrid and everything worked as expected. I am just
packing it and heading for Paris...
Wojtek
-----Original Message-----
From: Mojo with Horan & Company, LLC [mailto:mojo@horanappraisals.com]
Sent: Tuesday, June 20, 2006 1:16 PM
To: Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion
Subject: Re:
2007 May 23
0
AW: WiFi SIP phones
Try a Nokia E61/E62... Version 3 supports SIP and WiFi and they have a big battery that allows long talking and standby times.
CS
-----Urspr?ngliche Nachricht-----
Von: asterisk-users-bounces@lists.digium.com [mailto:asterisk-users-bounces@lists.digium.com] Im Auftrag von Justin Moore
Gesendet: Donnerstag, 24. Mai 2007 10:16
An: Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion
Betreff:
2012 Aug 07
2
label_wrap_gen question
Hi, all
I am trying to use the label_wrap_gen function in this website.
https://github.com/hadley/ggplot2/wiki/labeller
I tried to make a long name like this
Light and heavy good vehicles (diesel) -\nGVX
f2 = facet_grid(vehicle ~ ., labeller=label_wrap_gen(width=15))
eventually, I got something like this in my label...
*Light and heavy
good vehicles
(diesel) - GVX*
I suppose the
2008 Aug 29
5
Wi-SIP vs. SIP-DECT
Anybody care to muse on Wi-SIP vs. SIP-DECT?
My limited research indicates that none of the WiSip phones will ever be
able to match the performance of DECT phones. Maybe I'm wrong but a
Wi-SIP phone seems like a DIESEL sports car. There is nothing wrong
with the technology, but it seems like a shoe-horned fit into the
requirements of a wireless endpoint. DECT uses a wireless radio layer
2006 May 16
5
WiFi VoIP Handsets..
Hi,
I am investigating getting a wifi VoIP phone because its may be a better
option than an ATA and a cordless phone..
Does anyone have any experience with the whats out there??
Do they support things like WPA etc??
I have heard the battery life can be a problem.. Is this the case?
Thanks..
2005 Jan 18
9
Best Grandstream firmware to use?
I've seen lots of stuff go around about Grandstream firmware levels (in my case specifically the BT101/102). I'm just wondering what the currently accepted 'best' firmware version is to use? After seeing stuff going around about buggy firmware I want to know what I'm getting into before upping past my current 1.0.5.11. It's relatively stable, and the last thing I want
2018 Jan 03
1
Re: dovecot v2.3.0: imap segfault when sieve_extprograms_plugin.so called
pigeonhole 0.5.0 has been already released...
---Aki TuomiDovecot oy
-------- Original message --------From: Daniel Kenzelmann <dovecot.org at k8n.de> Date: 03/01/2018 21:31 (GMT+02:00) To: Rhys Williams <lux+mailinglists at melted.me>, dovecot at dovecot.org Subject: Re: dovecot v2.3.0: imap segfault when sieve_extprograms_plugin.so
? called
Hi,
see the following thread:
2002 Sep 29
1
how to turn off NTLM?
Andrew, as you konw, I'm trying to get samba-3.0-alpha20 to authenticate
a user that logs in to an AD domain workstation with the user's AD
kerberos credentials. looking at the logs, it's not clear to me whether
samba is trying to do kerberos or NTLM authentication for the client.
in smb.conf I have:
[global]
security = ADS
realm = HSSOE.UCI.EDU
ads server =
2016 Apr 20
1
CentOS 7.2 laptop wireless Intel Corporation Centrino Wireless-N 2230 (rev c4)
On Wednesday 20 April 2016 18:57:30 Joost wrote:
> Is NetworkManager-wifi installed?
> I remember after I installed Centos first time (7.0) wifi worked.
> When I later did a reinstall (7.2) during installation wifi worked
> fine, but after a reboot not.
> Seems NetworkManager-wifi did not get installed by default.
>
> On Wed, Apr 20, 2016 at 12:40 PM, Andreas Benzler
>
2016 Feb 04
1
Issue with installation on wireless-only desktop workstation, CentOS 7(1511)
I realize that many on this list have likely applauded the
NetworkManager package split that removed wireless stuff into its own
package, NetworkManager-wifi, because for wired workstations and servers
it might be desirable to not have any wifi software installed. And I
believe it was a sound technical decision to do the split.
However, in doing a fresh installation of what most call CentOS