OK, I've tested it out and it'll work for my initial purposes, but is there
any way I can generalize this for any one in my company that wants to use
this?

At the moment I have a specific DID for my voicemail access.  Is there a way
to figure out the cell phone that is forwarding the call?  If I can get this
I can build a lookup table to match back to a voicemail box.

From my debug I'm guessing that it isn't possible - my RDNIS field is empty
and my DNIS field shows the final DNIS, not the original number dialed (the
cell phone).

Thoughts?

Thx.

On 7/5/07, David Steele <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Thanks all!

I knew that I would be treading over old ground with this one.  I'm going
to play around with a few of these options.

Cheers,
Dave.

On 7/5/07, Ian Darwin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> David Steele wrote:
> > Hi everyone, got a question for you.
> >
> > I've got my business number set to simultaneously dial my office phone
> > and cell phone.  If I don't pick up either it goes to my Asterisk
> > voicemail.  However, if my cell phone is turned off the call goes to
> my
> > cell voicemail immediately.
> >
> > I understand why this is the case, but I'm hoping there is a way
> around
> > this.  I want simultaneous dialing, I want centralized voicemail, I
> want
> > my cake and I want to eat it too.
>
> Stop paying your cell provider for voicemail; have your cell forward to
> * voicemail; it's probably cheaper and it gives you more control with
> fewer places to look for vmail.
>


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