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. >
