similar to: small homebrew pbx

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 11000 matches similar to: "small homebrew pbx"

2015 Jun 16
2
small pbx for the office [it was: small homebrew pbx]
Steve Edwards wrote: > 0) I hope you mean you want to run Asterisk at home instead of > 'Asterisk at Home.' A at H was an ancient distribution from around 2005. Yes of course I didn't mean an ancient distro from 2005. > > 1) Rent a DID (a 'PSTN number') from a reputable SIP provider. This > eliminates the need for a PCI/USB interface and you won't disrupt
2015 Jun 15
1
small homebrew pbx
On Mon, Jun 15, 2015 at 04:56:31PM +1000, Tim Groeneveld wrote: > > ---- On Mon, 15 Jun 2015 16:46:13 +1000 [Lucio] wrote ---- > >Hello all, > > > >I'm new here and I'm interested in building a small PBX with asterisk at > >home. I have one single PSTN line and ethernet cabling in place. I > >already have fairly decent PC that I can use (AMD FX
2015 Jun 17
4
small pbx for the office [it was: small homebrew pbx]
Lukasz Sokol wrote: > but have you considered a web-managed config-builder such as FreePBX? > Instead of building your dialplan from scratch ? I've never used FreePBX, but, after having looked at its website, I think I have a general understanding of what it can do. What I don't understand is how FreePBX answers my question about the Linksys SPA3102 being good for a mission
2015 Jun 15
0
small homebrew pbx
On Mon, 15 Jun 2015, lucio at sulweb.org wrote: > I'm new here and I'm interested in building a small PBX with asterisk at > home. I have one single PSTN line and ethernet cabling in place. I > already have fairly decent PC that I can use (AMD FX 8350 16GB of RAM > and RAID 10 SATA disks). I make and receive 10 calls a day on average. I > want 4 IP phones connected to
2015 Jun 15
0
small homebrew pbx
Hey Lucio, You will need a FXS port. I would recommend setting up something like Cisco SPA3102. The SPA3102 can be found cheap on Ebay, and will be easy to setup in Asterisk. http://www.infoworld.com/article/2633694/data-modeling/your-pstn-and-you--linksys-spa-3102-and-asterisk.html Once the FXS is set up, it's just a matter of adding a ring group/pickup group:
2015 Jun 15
2
small homebrew pbx
> I don't know this 'translates' to Italy, but this is what I would advise > somebody in the US to consider, assuming you have a reliable Internet > connection. > > 0) I hope you mean you want to run Asterisk at home instead of 'Asterisk > at Home.' A at H was an ancient distribution from around 2005. > > 1) Rent a DID (a 'PSTN number')
2015 Jun 16
0
small pbx for the office [it was: small homebrew pbx]
On 16/06/15 08:52, lucio at sulweb.org wrote: > Steve Edwards wrote: >> 0) I hope you mean you want to run Asterisk at home instead of >> 'Asterisk at Home.' A at H was an ancient distribution from around 2005. > > Yes of course I didn't mean an ancient distro from 2005. > >> >> 1) Rent a DID (a 'PSTN number') from a reputable SIP provider.
2015 Jun 17
0
small pbx for the office [it was: small homebrew pbx]
I think you are mixing up answers and general advice. FreePBX was intended to get you over the dialplan creation hurdle (the biggest challenge for people new to Asterisk). In regards to the LinkSys they are compatible and you do find them in enterprises, but admins are trying to get rid of adapters/converters so if possible you may wish to invest in SIP devices directly instead of an adapter.
2015 Jun 17
0
small pbx for the office [it was: small homebrew pbx]
On Wed, Jun 17, 2015 at 9:07 AM, <lucio at sulweb.org> wrote: > Lukasz Sokol wrote: > >> but have you considered a web-managed config-builder such as FreePBX? >> Instead of building your dialplan from scratch ? >> > > I've never used FreePBX, but, after having looked at its website, I think > I have a general understanding of what it can do. What I
2015 Jun 15
1
small homebrew pbx
James Cass wrote: > I picked up a cheap JS200-FX on ebay: http://x100p.com/products/js200fx.php for $30, and it works great for a home install. Very low power draw as well. > > James Cass <http://goog_987864563> > jcass78 at gmail.com <mailto:jcass78 at gmail.com> The JS-200 runs a very old ( 1.4 ) version of Asterisk I have set up more than 30 nodes using the HP thin
2008 Jul 11
1
Sipura 3000 replacement ---> SPA3102 how reliable is it?
I need another Sipura 3K and the replacement I think is Linksys SPA3102. Any input on how reliable is it? -- #Joseph GPG KeyID: ED0E1FB7
2015 Jun 15
0
small homebrew pbx
I picked up a cheap JS200-FX on ebay: http://x100p.com/products/js200fx.php for $30, and it works great for a home install. Very low power draw as well. James Cass <http://goog_987864563> jcass78 at gmail.com On Mon, Jun 15, 2015 at 10:50 AM, Kevin Larsen < kevin.larsen at pioneerballoon.com> wrote: > > I don't know this 'translates' to Italy, but this is what I
2009 Mar 16
1
ATA react to phone but unresponsive to fax modem
Hi, I'm rather new to this domain so I may be doing stupid things without being concious of that. I've got a Patton MATA I'm trying to setup as T.38 fax adapter. Whenever I connect a fax machine (Dell MFP1815dn) or a phone to it, I can successfully send a fax or talk to the other end. Whenever I connect a fax modem (Dell Inspiron 6400 laptop), I keep getting "No signal. Line is
2013 Nov 05
1
How to enable T.38 between SPA3102 PSTN Line port and ReceiveFAX app ?
Hello, I've got an analog phone which is currently receiving unsollicited FAX calls from PSTN. For learning purpose, I'm preparing an Asterisk/SPA3102 setup that would let voice calls come in and out and translate incoming FAX calls to TIF files (forwarded through email)). My target setup is : PSTN <-- analog--> SPA3102 Line Port <-- SIP --> Asterisk <-- SIP -->
2009 Oct 14
2
FXS to SIP gateway
Hello list ! I don't have the money to test out all the products and reading the manuals is not always that enlightening... Does someone here know a good gateway-product that lets analogue telephones communicate with an Asterisk-server. I have found the Grandstream GXW-400x to be able to add SIP-accounts to analogue telephone devices that are connected to the FXS-ports. Moreover this
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
2008 Oct 14
7
Panasonic x Asterisk if I can emulate Panasonic fast!
Im a 3-days-asterisk-newbie. In 3 weeks, I must have a PBX installed in a new office of ours: Panasonic or Asterisk. Asterisk would be, if I can emulate some Panasonic functions on Asterisk fast, to convince the executives. What I have done until now: Bought 1 Linksys pap2 (2 FXS), 1 Linksys SPA3102 (1 FXS + 1 FXO) for making asterisk tests. Configured Asterisk/Fedora 9 so I can make SIP->PSTN
2011 Sep 15
1
Monitoring second leg being dialed?
Hello My ISP provides an FXS port to plug a handset, which can be used to make free calls to (GSM) cellphones, similar to the Billion ADSL modems: http://au.billion.com/product/voip.php My plan is to install an SIP client on a smartphone, so that when I'm travelling, I can connect to a good wifi hotspot, register with an Asterisk server at home which has an FXO card, tell Asterisk the
2007 Jan 17
1
Question about FXO/FXS device.
Hello, I intend to buy a FXO/FXS device from Linksys. I'm thinking about SPA3102. What you guys think about it. Is ok, is working with asterisk, can i use it like voip peer. Thank you for your advice. Jonson. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-users/attachments/20070117/93bc7fdb/attachment.htm
2008 Jan 31
2
Analog Adapters ?
I have a friend with a small business running a small SIP based phone system. He was looking into providing some SIP phones for a couple of remote teleworkers, but as he started to look around and ask me questions he ran across analog adapters which made him curious. He proceeded to ask me if there was an analog adapter that provided the following functionality in which my reply was simply,