I echo (pun intended) Rich's response. The Spa3k is ~ok~ but echo has always been a problem for my home office. The A200D works flawlessly.
I'm looking to set up a home-office PBX/Asterisk lab using a VIA EPIA 
motherboard as an always on, low powered solution.
I have seen an A200D in a soekris 4801 (http://www.soekris.com) box running astlinux. I say "saw", because it was at a show and the box wasn't plugged in. It was Jim VanMeggelen - one of the authors of the O'Reilly Asterisk book. You might want to drop him a line. The Sangoma has a 4-pin molex for power supply connection to augment the PCI bus when you need to generate ring voltage for FXS ports. The soekris (by default) won't give you that so either you put FXS external or you figure out how to get +5/+12 VDC to the Sangoma. Actually, you may want to check with Sangoma ... maybe you only need 5 or 12 but they just match the molex to be compliant with all PC hardware.
I am trying to find out the differences between a solution using an external 
ATA (like the Sipura SPA-3000) or an internal PCI card (like the Sangoma A200 
with 2 FXO 2 FXS ports).

The nice thing about the SPA3K is that upon registration failure or power failure the FXO & FXS ports get hardwired together so you get a power safe environment.

The nice thing about the Sangoma is that it supports ring contexts by distinctive ring. I believe this is also called Ident-a-call in many places. For a home office this is great. I have a second number that rings my primary line with a different ring pattern for ~ 4.00/mth. rather than the expense of a second line. I program that ring pattern into zapata.conf and push those calls directly to Zap/4 (my fax) and other calls to Zap/3 (my house), etc....


dbc.
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