As Dave indicated over sat links will be pretty ugly, I've dealt with
one in the Caribbean and your looking at about 450-500ms each way, so
about 1sec roundtrip. Then you have the additional latency between the
sat link and the rest of the equipment. Conversation will seem like the
news reporters in foreign countries, "So Bob how is the weather?" .... 5
seconds later... "It's good"...  

 

Unlimitel is a good provider www.unlimitel.ca <http://www.unlimitel.ca/>
and can provide you with gta and surrounding area DIDs.

 

John

________________________________

From: Dave Donovan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Monday, March 20, 2006 10:49 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [on-asterisk] Advice on needs...

 

Chuck,

 

>From a quick glance, it looks like you can do this with Asterisk.  You
might consider Asterisk at Home.  It's a quick, easy install and the
client can do most of their Move-Add-Change work on their own.  I know
that there are other opinions on this matter, and there are certainly
other ways to do what you want and each has it's own set of benefits.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] also includes some fax capability I think, though I can't say 
I've
used it yet.  See http://asteriskathome.sourceforge.net

 

 

I would caution you about the satellite links.  I've talked to a couple
of satellite providers for service in rural areas.  Some, perhaps most,
satellite systems collect packets and then transmit them in bursts.  So,
instead of getting a steady stream of small RTP packets you'll get a
bunch, then a delay, then a bunch etc.  Also, because of the propogation
time of the signal etc, you're often dealing with 800ms and greater
latency.  If the customer can get terrestrial wireless, that is often
much better.  Terago is an example but there are others, they tend to be
regional so some research may be required.  You may just have to use the
PSTN to reach some remote users.  They could dial into their local ISP
and use VOIP for toll avoidance but you'd have to weigh the costs. 

 

Good luck,

Dave

 


 

On 3/20/06, Chuck Mariotti <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 

g) Some (not all) remote employees will have high-speed DSL/Cable. Is
there a cheap option to get them optional on this system (so
outbound/inbound calling can be done strictly over the internet)? They
have a number of users using Xplorenet's Satellite systems for internet
access, has anyone had any luck routing telephone functions to users on
Satellite? 

 

How would I go about doing this on Asterisk? What kind of hardware
should I purchase to allow this, keeping in mind some room to grow. They
don't want to spend a fortune? Are there solutions other than Asterisk
that might be better suited? 

 

Regards,


Chuck




-- 
David Donovan
Consultant
Fulcrum Solutions 

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