Re: [asterisk-biz] Paranoia, Dell 3COM

2008-02-05 Thread Ron Joffe
On Tuesday 05 February 2008 00:50, John Williams wrote:
 - Hard Drive Size for open source * or *BE?
You can't find a small enough hard drive :). But seriously, in our case it 
depends on the amount of online message recording that we want to keep. We 
utilize 146GB SAS drives in a Raid 1.

 -  # of Gps Ethernet ports  (1 or 2? )  (I noticed one poster using one
 port for incoming calls and 2nd port for outgoing calls)

2950 comes with 2 gigE ports on board.

 - Any value to 4 GB Ram?
Memory has gone down so far in price recently, that we spec all of our servers 
with 8GB.

 - How many PCI slots in this beast?
2950 has two separate riser slots. We configure slot 1 with PCIe and slot 2 
with 2 PCIe. But you can also get PCI-X as well.


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Re: [asterisk-biz] Paranoia, Dell 3COM

2008-02-04 Thread Bob Pierce
We are using a Dell 2950 with 2 Dual core 2GHz CPU, 2GB Ram and a
Sangoma A104d-x quad T1/E1 card (which now seems to be called the A104DE
on Sangoma's site). Using this system we are currently handling 82 users
quite easily. We have had at least 23 concurrent calls on a few
occasions with no problems. I'm pretty sure it could handle 48
concurrent calls as the load on this box averages around 0.11 and peaks
to about 0.4

-- 
Bob Pierce 
Network Analyst 
Westman Communications Group 

On Mon, 2008-02-04 at 09:04 -0500, John Williams wrote:
 Thanks for that wisdom, Bob.   For this current job, we have the
 luxury of running a separate network for voice, and can put aside QOS
 (for now).
  
 Being completely paranoid,  I want to buy equipment (switch 
 PC) proven to operate an *  PBX for 50-90 users and 48 concurrent
 calls. 
  
 --  Dell is our preferred PC vendor.  Can anyone recommend, based on
 actual experience, a Dell PC model for *, and 48 concurrent calls?
 (The Dell recommended models on the Wiki are out of date) 
  
 --  3COM is our preferred basic switch vendor.  Can anyone recommend,
 based on actual experience, a 3COM switch model for *, and 48
 concurrent calls?
  
 Thanks in advance for aiding my considerable paranoia!
  
  
 On Feb 3, 2008 5:46 PM, bob murphy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Once you start adding L3 to even L6 and 7 services the party
 gets smaller and more expensive.  At the point you are
 building a network that requires QOS, Priority, Per port
 VLAN's etc you may as well build with service provider class
 switching gear like Foundry and Cisco etc.  It will help us
 all by eliminating complaints about VOIP and Asterisk being
 not ready for prime deployment due to maturity issues when in
 reality, it works fine on a well designed and constructed
 network.  Most of the time the Telephony system get's blamed
 for what is actually a poorly designed network.  Low cost
 and Business grade may not coexist yet.  So just bite the
 bullet and use Foundry or Cisco.  We have deployed a couple
 systems with over 400 IP voice endpoints and things are lookin
 good because of the proper L3 and QOS functionality that was
 properly designed in to the final solution.
  
 Or, with cheap MAC switching you can just run seperate
 networks.  I mean, why complicate things by converging voice
 and data.  With L2 switching equipment so cheap.  But you'll
 have to run two cat6 drops everywhere.  It's a trade off.  We
 have done it both ways.
  
 Bob
 Arreva Communications
 
  
 On 2/3/08, John Williams [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: 
 Deal List,  Who are the low cost QOS LAN switch
 vendors with products supported by * for business
 grade voice service?  Thanks 
 
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 -- 
 Bob Murphy
 Principal
 
 
 Arreva Communications
 www.arrevausa.com
 
 949-334-2022-SIP Connect
 949-842-8450-Wireless
 949-349-0209-Fax 
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Re: [asterisk-biz] Paranoia, Dell 3COM

2008-02-04 Thread bob murphy
We have recommended and deployed Cisco 3750's a couple times and Foundry
switching.  HP procurves as well.

On 2/4/08, John Williams [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Bob,
 What are you using for a LAN switch?
 Thanks!


 On Feb 4, 2008 9:24 AM, Bob Pierce [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

  We are using a Dell 2950 with 2 Dual core 2GHz CPU, 2GB Ram and a
  Sangoma A104d-x quad T1/E1 card (which now seems to be called the A104DE
  on Sangoma's site). Using this system we are currently handling 82 users
  quite easily. We have had at least 23 concurrent calls on a few
  occasions with no problems. I'm pretty sure it could handle 48
  concurrent calls as the load on this box averages around 0.11 and peaks
  to about 0.4
 
  --
  Bob Pierce
  Network Analyst
  Westman Communications Group
 
  On Mon, 2008-02-04 at 09:04 -0500, John Williams wrote:
   Thanks for that wisdom, Bob.   For this current job, we have the
   luxury of running a separate network for voice, and can put aside QOS
   (for now).
  
   Being completely paranoid,  I want to buy equipment (switch 
   PC) proven to operate an *  PBX for 50-90 users and 48 concurrent
   calls.
  
   --  Dell is our preferred PC vendor.  Can anyone recommend, based on
   actual experience, a Dell PC model for *, and 48 concurrent calls?
   (The Dell recommended models on the Wiki are out of date)
  
   --  3COM is our preferred basic switch vendor.  Can anyone recommend,
   based on actual experience, a 3COM switch model for *, and 48
   concurrent calls?
  
   Thanks in advance for aiding my considerable paranoia!
  
  
   On Feb 3, 2008 5:46 PM, bob murphy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
   Once you start adding L3 to even L6 and 7 services the party
   gets smaller and more expensive.  At the point you are
   building a network that requires QOS, Priority, Per port
   VLAN's etc you may as well build with service provider class
   switching gear like Foundry and Cisco etc.  It will help us
   all by eliminating complaints about VOIP and Asterisk being
   not ready for prime deployment due to maturity issues when in
   reality, it works fine on a well designed and constructed
   network.  Most of the time the Telephony system get's blamed
   for what is actually a poorly designed network.  Low cost
   and Business grade may not coexist yet.  So just bite the
   bullet and use Foundry or Cisco.  We have deployed a couple
   systems with over 400 IP voice endpoints and things are lookin
   good because of the proper L3 and QOS functionality that was
   properly designed in to the final solution.
  
   Or, with cheap MAC switching you can just run seperate
   networks.  I mean, why complicate things by converging voice
   and data.  With L2 switching equipment so cheap.  But you'll
   have to run two cat6 drops everywhere.  It's a trade off.  We
   have done it both ways.
  
   Bob
   Arreva Communications
  
  
   On 2/3/08, John Williams [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
   Deal List,  Who are the low cost QOS LAN switch
   vendors with products supported by * for business
   grade voice service?  Thanks
  
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   To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
  
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   --
   Bob Murphy
   Principal
  
  
   Arreva Communications
   www.arrevausa.com
  
   949-334-2022-SIP Connect
   949-842-8450-Wireless
   949-349-0209-Fax
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Re: [asterisk-biz] Paranoia, Dell 3COM

2008-02-04 Thread Ron Joffe
On Monday 04 February 2008 09:04, John Williams wrote:
 --  Dell is our preferred PC vendor.  Can anyone recommend, based on actual
 experience, a Dell PC model for *, and 48 concurrent calls?  (The Dell
 recommended models on the Wiki are out of date)

Our current spec for an IVR based platform is:

Dell 2950 
  Dual Quad Procs (2.33Ghz)
  8GB Ram 
  Dual 146GB 15K SAS Drives

This easily handles 96 calls (Quad PRI) utilizing dual TE200B's.

We have 10 of these identical systems in production. I would be happy to help 
you with pricing as we are a dell reseller.

Ron



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Re: [asterisk-biz] Paranoia, Dell 3COM

2008-02-04 Thread John Williams
Bob,
What are you using for a LAN switch?
Thanks!


On Feb 4, 2008 9:24 AM, Bob Pierce [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 We are using a Dell 2950 with 2 Dual core 2GHz CPU, 2GB Ram and a
 Sangoma A104d-x quad T1/E1 card (which now seems to be called the A104DE
 on Sangoma's site). Using this system we are currently handling 82 users
 quite easily. We have had at least 23 concurrent calls on a few
 occasions with no problems. I'm pretty sure it could handle 48
 concurrent calls as the load on this box averages around 0.11 and peaks
 to about 0.4

 --
 Bob Pierce
 Network Analyst
 Westman Communications Group

 On Mon, 2008-02-04 at 09:04 -0500, John Williams wrote:
  Thanks for that wisdom, Bob.   For this current job, we have the
  luxury of running a separate network for voice, and can put aside QOS
  (for now).
 
  Being completely paranoid,  I want to buy equipment (switch 
  PC) proven to operate an *  PBX for 50-90 users and 48 concurrent
  calls.
 
  --  Dell is our preferred PC vendor.  Can anyone recommend, based on
  actual experience, a Dell PC model for *, and 48 concurrent calls?
  (The Dell recommended models on the Wiki are out of date)
 
  --  3COM is our preferred basic switch vendor.  Can anyone recommend,
  based on actual experience, a 3COM switch model for *, and 48
  concurrent calls?
 
  Thanks in advance for aiding my considerable paranoia!
 
 
  On Feb 3, 2008 5:46 PM, bob murphy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Once you start adding L3 to even L6 and 7 services the party
  gets smaller and more expensive.  At the point you are
  building a network that requires QOS, Priority, Per port
  VLAN's etc you may as well build with service provider class
  switching gear like Foundry and Cisco etc.  It will help us
  all by eliminating complaints about VOIP and Asterisk being
  not ready for prime deployment due to maturity issues when in
  reality, it works fine on a well designed and constructed
  network.  Most of the time the Telephony system get's blamed
  for what is actually a poorly designed network.  Low cost
  and Business grade may not coexist yet.  So just bite the
  bullet and use Foundry or Cisco.  We have deployed a couple
  systems with over 400 IP voice endpoints and things are lookin
  good because of the proper L3 and QOS functionality that was
  properly designed in to the final solution.
 
  Or, with cheap MAC switching you can just run seperate
  networks.  I mean, why complicate things by converging voice
  and data.  With L2 switching equipment so cheap.  But you'll
  have to run two cat6 drops everywhere.  It's a trade off.  We
  have done it both ways.
 
  Bob
  Arreva Communications
 
 
  On 2/3/08, John Williams [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Deal List,  Who are the low cost QOS LAN switch
  vendors with products supported by * for business
  grade voice service?  Thanks
 
  ___
  --Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by
  http://www.api-digital.com--
 
  asterisk-biz mailing list
  To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
 
  http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-biz
 
 
 
  --
  Bob Murphy
  Principal
 
 
  Arreva Communications
  www.arrevausa.com
 
  949-334-2022-SIP Connect
  949-842-8450-Wireless
  949-349-0209-Fax
  ___
  --Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by
  http://www.api-digital.com--
 
  asterisk-biz mailing list
  To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
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Re: [asterisk-biz] Paranoia, Dell 3COM

2008-02-04 Thread Bob Pierce
We are using Dell PowerConnect 3448P for voicedata switches with qos
and separate vlans for data and voice.

Bob

On Mon, 2008-02-04 at 09:55 -0500, John Williams wrote:
 Bob,
 What are you using for a LAN switch?
 Thanks!
 
  
 On Feb 4, 2008 9:24 AM, Bob Pierce [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 We are using a Dell 2950 with 2 Dual core 2GHz CPU, 2GB Ram
 and a
 Sangoma A104d-x quad T1/E1 card (which now seems to be called
 the A104DE
 on Sangoma's site). Using this system we are currently
 handling 82 users
 quite easily. We have had at least 23 concurrent calls on a
 few
 occasions with no problems. I'm pretty sure it could handle 48
 concurrent calls as the load on this box averages around 0.11
 and peaks
 to about 0.4
 
 --
 Bob Pierce
 Network Analyst
 Westman Communications Group
 
 
 On Mon, 2008-02-04 at 09:04 -0500, John Williams wrote:
  Thanks for that wisdom, Bob.   For this current job, we have
 the
  luxury of running a separate network for voice, and can put
 aside QOS
  (for now).
 
  Being completely paranoid,  I want to buy equipment (switch
 
  PC) proven to operate an *  PBX for 50-90 users and 48
 concurrent
  calls.
 
  --  Dell is our preferred PC vendor.  Can anyone recommend,
 based on
  actual experience, a Dell PC model for *, and 48 concurrent
 calls?
  (The Dell recommended models on the Wiki are out of date)
 
  --  3COM is our preferred basic switch vendor.  Can anyone
 recommend,
  based on actual experience, a 3COM switch model for *, and
 48
  concurrent calls?
 
  Thanks in advance for aiding my considerable paranoia!
 
 
  On Feb 3, 2008 5:46 PM, bob murphy [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 wrote:
  Once you start adding L3 to even L6 and 7 services
 the party
  gets smaller and more expensive.  At the point you
 are
  building a network that requires QOS, Priority, Per
 port
  VLAN's etc you may as well build with service
 provider class
  switching gear like Foundry and Cisco etc.  It will
 help us
  all by eliminating complaints about VOIP and
 Asterisk being
  not ready for prime deployment due to maturity
 issues when in
  reality, it works fine on a well designed and
 constructed
  network.  Most of the time the Telephony system
 get's blamed
  for what is actually a poorly designed network.
  Low cost
  and Business grade may not coexist yet.  So just
 bite the
  bullet and use Foundry or Cisco.  We have deployed a
 couple
  systems with over 400 IP voice endpoints and things
 are lookin
  good because of the proper L3 and QOS functionality
 that was
  properly designed in to the final solution.
 
  Or, with cheap MAC switching you can just run
 seperate
  networks.  I mean, why complicate things by
 converging voice
  and data.  With L2 switching equipment so cheap.
  But you'll
  have to run two cat6 drops everywhere.  It's a trade
 off.  We
  have done it both ways.
 
  Bob
  Arreva Communications
 
 
  On 2/3/08, John Williams [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 wrote:
  Deal List,  Who are the low cost QOS LAN
 switch
  vendors with products supported by * for
 business
  grade voice service?  Thanks
 
 
 ___
  --Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by
  http://www.api-digital.com--
 
  asterisk-biz mailing list
  To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
 
 
 http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-biz
 
 
 
  --
  Bob Murphy
  Principal
 
 
  Arreva Communications
  www.arrevausa.com
 
  949-334-2022-SIP Connect
  949-842-8450-Wireless
  949-349-0209-Fax
  ___
  --Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by
  

Re: [asterisk-biz] Paranoia, Dell 3COM

2008-02-04 Thread bob murphy
Yes I concur that the Dell switches are a good functional choice as well.
And priced right.

On 2/4/08, Bob Pierce [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 We are using Dell PowerConnect 3448P for voicedata switches with qos
 and separate vlans for data and voice.

 Bob

 On Mon, 2008-02-04 at 09:55 -0500, John Williams wrote:
  Bob,
  What are you using for a LAN switch?
  Thanks!
 
 
  On Feb 4, 2008 9:24 AM, Bob Pierce [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  We are using a Dell 2950 with 2 Dual core 2GHz CPU, 2GB Ram
  and a
  Sangoma A104d-x quad T1/E1 card (which now seems to be called
  the A104DE
  on Sangoma's site). Using this system we are currently
  handling 82 users
  quite easily. We have had at least 23 concurrent calls on a
  few
  occasions with no problems. I'm pretty sure it could handle 48
  concurrent calls as the load on this box averages around 0.11
  and peaks
  to about 0.4
 
  --
  Bob Pierce
  Network Analyst
  Westman Communications Group
 
 
  On Mon, 2008-02-04 at 09:04 -0500, John Williams wrote:
   Thanks for that wisdom, Bob.   For this current job, we have
  the
   luxury of running a separate network for voice, and can put
  aside QOS
   (for now).
  
   Being completely paranoid,  I want to buy equipment (switch
  
   PC) proven to operate an *  PBX for 50-90 users and 48
  concurrent
   calls.
  
   --  Dell is our preferred PC vendor.  Can anyone recommend,
  based on
   actual experience, a Dell PC model for *, and 48 concurrent
  calls?
   (The Dell recommended models on the Wiki are out of date)
  
   --  3COM is our preferred basic switch vendor.  Can anyone
  recommend,
   based on actual experience, a 3COM switch model for *, and
  48
   concurrent calls?
  
   Thanks in advance for aiding my considerable paranoia!
  
  
   On Feb 3, 2008 5:46 PM, bob murphy [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  wrote:
   Once you start adding L3 to even L6 and 7 services
  the party
   gets smaller and more expensive.  At the point you
  are
   building a network that requires QOS, Priority, Per
  port
   VLAN's etc you may as well build with service
  provider class
   switching gear like Foundry and Cisco etc.  It will
  help us
   all by eliminating complaints about VOIP and
  Asterisk being
   not ready for prime deployment due to maturity
  issues when in
   reality, it works fine on a well designed and
  constructed
   network.  Most of the time the Telephony system
  get's blamed
   for what is actually a poorly designed network.
   Low cost
   and Business grade may not coexist yet.  So just
  bite the
   bullet and use Foundry or Cisco.  We have deployed a
  couple
   systems with over 400 IP voice endpoints and things
  are lookin
   good because of the proper L3 and QOS functionality
  that was
   properly designed in to the final solution.
  
   Or, with cheap MAC switching you can just run
  seperate
   networks.  I mean, why complicate things by
  converging voice
   and data.  With L2 switching equipment so cheap.
   But you'll
   have to run two cat6 drops everywhere.  It's a trade
  off.  We
   have done it both ways.
  
   Bob
   Arreva Communications
  
  
   On 2/3/08, John Williams [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  wrote:
   Deal List,  Who are the low cost QOS LAN
  switch
   vendors with products supported by * for
  business
   grade voice service?  Thanks
  
  
  ___
   --Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by
   http://www.api-digital.com--
  
   asterisk-biz mailing list
   To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
  
  
  http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-biz
  
  
  
   --
   Bob Murphy
   Principal
  
  
   Arreva Communications
   www.arrevausa.com
  
   949-334-2022-SIP 

Re: [asterisk-biz] Paranoia, Dell 3COM

2008-02-04 Thread mroberts1818
What do these puppies go for?


Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry

-Original Message-
From: bob murphy [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Date: Mon, 4 Feb 2008 08:49:25 
To:Commercial and Business-Oriented Asterisk 
Discussionasterisk-biz@lists.digium.com
Subject: Re: [asterisk-biz] Paranoia, Dell  3COM


Yes I concur that the Dell switches are a good functional choice as well.  And 
priced right.

 
On 2/4/08, Bob Pierce [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]  wrote: We 
are using Dell PowerConnect 3448P for voicedata switches with qos
and separate vlans for data and voice.
 
Bob

On Mon, 2008-02-04 at 09:55 -0500, John Williams wrote:
 Bob,
 What are you using for a LAN switch?
 Thanks!


 On Feb 4, 2008 9:24 AM, Bob Pierce [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailto:[EMAIL 
 PROTECTED]  wrote:
  We are using a Dell 2950 with 2 Dual core 2GHz CPU, 2GB Ram
 and a
 Sangoma A104d-x quad T1/E1 card (which now seems to be called
 the A104DE
 on Sangoma's site). Using this system we are currently
  handling 82 users
 quite easily. We have had at least 23 concurrent calls on a
 few
 occasions with no problems. I'm pretty sure it could handle 48
 concurrent calls as the load on this box averages around 0.11
  and peaks
 to about 0.4

 --
 Bob Pierce
 Network Analyst
 Westman Communications Group


 On Mon, 2008-02-04 at 09:04 -0500, John Williams wrote:
   Thanks for that wisdom, Bob.   For this current job, we have
 the
  luxury of running a separate network for voice, and can put
 aside QOS
  (for now).
  
  Being completely paranoid,  I want to buy equipment (switch
 
  PC) proven to operate an *  PBX for 50-90 users and 48
 concurrent
   calls.
 
  --  Dell is our preferred PC vendor.  Can anyone recommend,
 based on
  actual experience, a Dell PC model for *, and 48 concurrent
  calls?
  (The Dell recommended models on the Wiki are out of date)
 
  --  3COM is our preferred basic switch vendor.  Can anyone
 recommend,
   based on actual experience, a 3COM switch model for *, and
 48
  concurrent calls?
 
  Thanks in advance for aiding my considerable paranoia!
  
 
  On Feb 3, 2008 5:46 PM, bob murphy [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 wrote:
  Once you start adding L3 to even L6 and 7 services
  the party
  gets smaller and more expensive.  At the point you
 are
  building a network that requires QOS, Priority, Per
 port
   VLAN's etc you may as well build with service
 provider class
  switching gear like Foundry and Cisco etc.  It will
 help us
  all by eliminating complaints about VOIP and
  Asterisk being
  not ready for prime deployment due to maturity
 issues when in
  reality, it works fine on a well designed and
 constructed
   network.  Most of the time the Telephony system
 get's blamed
  for what is actually a poorly designed network.
  Low cost
   and Business grade may not coexist yet.  So just
 bite the
  bullet and use Foundry or Cisco.  We have deployed a
 couple
  systems with over 400 IP voice endpoints and things
  are lookin
  good because of the proper L3 and QOS functionality
 that was
  properly designed in to the final solution.
 
   Or, with cheap MAC switching you can just run
 seperate
  networks.  I mean, why complicate things by
 converging voice
  and data.  With L2 switching equipment so cheap.
   But you'll
  have to run two cat6 drops everywhere.  It's a trade
 off.  We
  have done it both ways.
 
  Bob
   Arreva Communications
 
 
  On 2/3/08, John Williams [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailto:[EMAIL 
PROTECTED] 
 wrote:
   Deal List,  Who are the low cost QOS LAN
 switch
  vendors with products supported by * for
 business
  grade voice service?  Thanks
  
 
 ___
  --Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by
  http://www.api-digital.com-- 
http://www.api-digital.com-- 
  
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  To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options

Re: [asterisk-biz] Paranoia, Dell 3COM

2008-02-04 Thread bob murphy
Last time we deployed a system on dell switches it was aproximately $1,
400.00 for a 48 port POE switch.  Including the extra power pack that
enables POE on all 48 ports.

On 2/4/08, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 What do these puppies go for?


 Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry

 -Original Message-
 From: bob murphy [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 Date: Mon, 4 Feb 2008 08:49:25
 To:Commercial and Business-Oriented Asterisk Discussion
 asterisk-biz@lists.digium.com
 Subject: Re: [asterisk-biz] Paranoia, Dell  3COM


 Yes I concur that the Dell switches are a good functional choice as
 well.  And priced right.


 On 2/4/08, Bob Pierce [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailto:
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]  wrote: We are using Dell PowerConnect 3448P for
 voicedata switches with qos
 and separate vlans for data and voice.

 Bob

 On Mon, 2008-02-04 at 09:55 -0500, John Williams wrote:
  Bob,
  What are you using for a LAN switch?
  Thanks!
 
 
  On Feb 4, 2008 9:24 AM, Bob Pierce [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailto:
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]  wrote:
  We are using a Dell 2950 with 2 Dual core 2GHz CPU, 2GB Ram
  and a
  Sangoma A104d-x quad T1/E1 card (which now seems to be called
  the A104DE
  on Sangoma's site). Using this system we are currently
  handling 82 users
  quite easily. We have had at least 23 concurrent calls on a
  few
  occasions with no problems. I'm pretty sure it could handle 48
  concurrent calls as the load on this box averages around 0.11
  and peaks
  to about 0.4
 
  --
  Bob Pierce
  Network Analyst
  Westman Communications Group
 
 
  On Mon, 2008-02-04 at 09:04 -0500, John Williams wrote:
   Thanks for that wisdom, Bob.   For this current job, we have
  the
   luxury of running a separate network for voice, and can put
  aside QOS
   (for now).
  
   Being completely paranoid,  I want to buy equipment (switch
  
   PC) proven to operate an *  PBX for 50-90 users and 48
  concurrent
   calls.
  
   --  Dell is our preferred PC vendor.  Can anyone recommend,
  based on
   actual experience, a Dell PC model for *, and 48 concurrent
  calls?
   (The Dell recommended models on the Wiki are out of date)
  
   --  3COM is our preferred basic switch vendor.  Can anyone
  recommend,
   based on actual experience, a 3COM switch model for *, and
  48
   concurrent calls?
  
   Thanks in advance for aiding my considerable paranoia!
  
  
   On Feb 3, 2008 5:46 PM, bob murphy [EMAIL PROTECTED]mailto:
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  wrote:
   Once you start adding L3 to even L6 and 7 services
  the party
   gets smaller and more expensive.  At the point you
  are
   building a network that requires QOS, Priority, Per
  port
   VLAN's etc you may as well build with service
  provider class
   switching gear like Foundry and Cisco etc.  It will
  help us
   all by eliminating complaints about VOIP and
  Asterisk being
   not ready for prime deployment due to maturity
  issues when in
   reality, it works fine on a well designed and
  constructed
   network.  Most of the time the Telephony system
  get's blamed
   for what is actually a poorly designed network.
   Low cost
   and Business grade may not coexist yet.  So just
  bite the
   bullet and use Foundry or Cisco.  We have deployed a
  couple
   systems with over 400 IP voice endpoints and things
  are lookin
   good because of the proper L3 and QOS functionality
  that was
   properly designed in to the final solution.
  
   Or, with cheap MAC switching you can just run
  seperate
   networks.  I mean, why complicate things by
  converging voice
   and data.  With L2 switching equipment so cheap.
   But you'll
   have to run two cat6 drops everywhere.  It's a trade
  off.  We
   have done it both ways.
  
   Bob
   Arreva Communications
  
  
   On 2/3/08, John Williams [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailto:
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  wrote:
   Deal List,  Who are the low cost QOS LAN
  switch
   vendors with products supported by * for
  business
   grade voice service?  Thanks

Re: [asterisk-biz] Paranoia, Dell 3COM

2008-02-04 Thread John Williams
Folks,

Excuse my ignorance ... a couple more questions on server sizing  (Dell
2950)

- Hard Drive Size for open source * or *BE?

-  # of Gps Ethernet ports  (1 or 2? )  (I noticed one poster using one port
for incoming calls and 2nd port for outgoing calls)

- Any value to 4 GB Ram?

- How many PCI slots in this beast?

Thanks!



On Feb 4, 2008 9:24 AM, Bob Pierce [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 We are using a Dell 2950 with 2 Dual core 2GHz CPU, 2GB Ram and a
 Sangoma A104d-x quad T1/E1 card (which now seems to be called the A104DE
 on Sangoma's site). Using this system we are currently handling 82 users
 quite easily. We have had at least 23 concurrent calls on a few
 occasions with no problems. I'm pretty sure it could handle 48
 concurrent calls as the load on this box averages around 0.11 and peaks
 to about 0.4

 --
 Bob Pierce
 Network Analyst
 Westman Communications Group

 On Mon, 2008-02-04 at 09:04 -0500, John Williams wrote:
  Thanks for that wisdom, Bob.   For this current job, we have the
  luxury of running a separate network for voice, and can put aside QOS
  (for now).
 
  Being completely paranoid,  I want to buy equipment (switch 
  PC) proven to operate an *  PBX for 50-90 users and 48 concurrent
  calls.
 
  --  Dell is our preferred PC vendor.  Can anyone recommend, based on
  actual experience, a Dell PC model for *, and 48 concurrent calls?
  (The Dell recommended models on the Wiki are out of date)
 
  --  3COM is our preferred basic switch vendor.  Can anyone recommend,
  based on actual experience, a 3COM switch model for *, and 48
  concurrent calls?
 
  Thanks in advance for aiding my considerable paranoia!
 
 
  On Feb 3, 2008 5:46 PM, bob murphy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Once you start adding L3 to even L6 and 7 services the party
  gets smaller and more expensive.  At the point you are
  building a network that requires QOS, Priority, Per port
  VLAN's etc you may as well build with service provider class
  switching gear like Foundry and Cisco etc.  It will help us
  all by eliminating complaints about VOIP and Asterisk being
  not ready for prime deployment due to maturity issues when in
  reality, it works fine on a well designed and constructed
  network.  Most of the time the Telephony system get's blamed
  for what is actually a poorly designed network.  Low cost
  and Business grade may not coexist yet.  So just bite the
  bullet and use Foundry or Cisco.  We have deployed a couple
  systems with over 400 IP voice endpoints and things are lookin
  good because of the proper L3 and QOS functionality that was
  properly designed in to the final solution.
 
  Or, with cheap MAC switching you can just run seperate
  networks.  I mean, why complicate things by converging voice
  and data.  With L2 switching equipment so cheap.  But you'll
  have to run two cat6 drops everywhere.  It's a trade off.  We
  have done it both ways.
 
  Bob
  Arreva Communications
 
 
  On 2/3/08, John Williams [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Deal List,  Who are the low cost QOS LAN switch
  vendors with products supported by * for business
  grade voice service?  Thanks
 
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  --
  Bob Murphy
  Principal
 
 
  Arreva Communications
  www.arrevausa.com
 
  949-334-2022-SIP Connect
  949-842-8450-Wireless
  949-349-0209-Fax
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