RE: [Asterisk-Users] asterisk in real estate developments

2005-12-13 Thread Chris Bagnall
 I was wondering if anyone has used asterisk in a real estate 
 development project. I know someone that is developing a ~400 
 home project and thought asterisk might be a possible 
 alternative to the phone company and a way to offer more 
 service to buyers.

How about deploying asterisk to support the contractor responsible for the
construction of these sites? Instead of developers (who are often on-site
for 6 months plus) relying purely on cellphones or asking the ILEC to
install a load of phone lines for them, stick an asterisk server in their
site office linked to a net connection, shove a load of cordless phones on a
channel bank at convenient points around the site and contractors are never
far from a phone.

This is something we're hopefully doing for a property developer in the new
year. It'll be interesting to see how well it all works out.

Regards,

Chris
-- 
C.M. Bagnall, Director, Minotaur I.T. Limited
This email is made from 100% recycled electrons


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RE: [Asterisk-Users] asterisk in real estate developments

2005-12-13 Thread David Phelan
We are working with a few Developers, but asterisk is only one part of the
solutionbut we are using it for the telephony side of things, combined
with Channel banks etc...etc..etc..
The Biggest Bugbear is billing.

We are also rolling out and maintaining a GEPON structure...so everything
travels over FTTH.


Dave


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Chris Bagnall
Sent: Wednesday, 14 December 2005 11:08 AM
To: 'Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion'
Subject: RE: [Asterisk-Users] asterisk in real estate developments

 I was wondering if anyone has used asterisk in a real estate 
 development project. I know someone that is developing a ~400 home 
 project and thought asterisk might be a possible alternative to the 
 phone company and a way to offer more service to buyers.

How about deploying asterisk to support the contractor responsible for the
construction of these sites? Instead of developers (who are often on-site
for 6 months plus) relying purely on cellphones or asking the ILEC to
install a load of phone lines for them, stick an asterisk server in their
site office linked to a net connection, shove a load of cordless phones on a
channel bank at convenient points around the site and contractors are never
far from a phone.

This is something we're hopefully doing for a property developer in the new
year. It'll be interesting to see how well it all works out.

Regards,

Chris
--
C.M. Bagnall, Director, Minotaur I.T. Limited This email is made from 100%
recycled electrons


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RE: [Asterisk-Users] asterisk in real estate developments

2005-12-13 Thread Carlos
 hey chris,

The only issue you'll run into is that with all temp stuff like construction
trailers ect they like to cut there lines A LOT  with all there nice
machines.

Carlos Alcantar
Race Technologies, Inc.
101 Haskins Way
South San Francisco, CA 94080
P: 650.246.8900
F: 650.246.8901
E: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Chris Bagnall
Sent: Tuesday, December 13, 2005 5:08 PM
To: 'Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion'
Subject: RE: [Asterisk-Users] asterisk in real estate developments

 I was wondering if anyone has used asterisk in a real estate 
 development project. I know someone that is developing a ~400 home 
 project and thought asterisk might be a possible alternative to the 
 phone company and a way to offer more service to buyers.

How about deploying asterisk to support the contractor responsible for the
construction of these sites? Instead of developers (who are often on-site
for 6 months plus) relying purely on cellphones or asking the ILEC to
install a load of phone lines for them, stick an asterisk server in their
site office linked to a net connection, shove a load of cordless phones on a
channel bank at convenient points around the site and contractors are never
far from a phone.

This is something we're hopefully doing for a property developer in the new
year. It'll be interesting to see how well it all works out.

Regards,

Chris
--
C.M. Bagnall, Director, Minotaur I.T. Limited This email is made from 100%
recycled electrons


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RE: [Asterisk-Users] asterisk in real estate developments

2005-12-13 Thread Steve Totaro
Very true.  How about using WiFi and DEC phones?

Thanks,
Steve

 
  hey chris,
 
 The only issue you'll run into is that with all temp stuff like
 construction
 trailers ect they like to cut there lines A LOT  with all there nice
 machines.
 
 Carlos Alcantar
 Race Technologies, Inc.
 101 Haskins Way
 South San Francisco, CA 94080
 P: 650.246.8900
 F: 650.246.8901
 E: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Chris
 Bagnall
 Sent: Tuesday, December 13, 2005 5:08 PM
 To: 'Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion'
 Subject: RE: [Asterisk-Users] asterisk in real estate developments
 
  I was wondering if anyone has used asterisk in a real estate
  development project. I know someone that is developing a ~400 home
  project and thought asterisk might be a possible alternative to the
  phone company and a way to offer more service to buyers.
 
 How about deploying asterisk to support the contractor responsible for
the
 construction of these sites? Instead of developers (who are often
on-site
 for 6 months plus) relying purely on cellphones or asking the ILEC to
 install a load of phone lines for them, stick an asterisk server in
their
 site office linked to a net connection, shove a load of cordless
phones on
 a
 channel bank at convenient points around the site and contractors are
 never
 far from a phone.
 
 This is something we're hopefully doing for a property developer in
the
 new
 year. It'll be interesting to see how well it all works out.
 
 Regards,
 
 Chris
 --
 C.M. Bagnall, Director, Minotaur I.T. Limited This email is made from
100%
 recycled electrons
 
 
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RE: [Asterisk-Users] asterisk in real estate developments

2005-12-13 Thread Colin Anderson
been there done that

The biggest problems that we have had to deal with is stability. Stability
with respect to system stability and also stability of the user.  System
stability is extremely difficult to deal with when you have poor power,
power outages, guys pressing the buttons next to the blinkenlights because
they are curious (very difficult to control access to gear in a construction
trailer when everything is set up ad-hoc) and users doing stupid things like
moving their phone from their desk to another guys desk for god-knows-why
reason then not plugging into the cat5 cable. Then the users tend to say
that your phone system is shit, when these types of problems are largely
beyond your control. 

As to user stability, I don't refer to mental stability, I refer to churn.
Staff churn in the construction industry is brutal and combined with the
relative unsophistication of people in the construction industry, it's the
Training Session That Will Never End. 

My evolution of how to deal with this problem has gone from broadband to a
construction trailer, wifi and wired sip phones, to masking a user's cell
number behind a DID and cutting airtime with a GSM gateway. Really, it's the
best way, treating cell phones as extensions. Masking the cell number
behind a DID allows me to get the audio inside of Asterisk so I can do
VoIP-y things with it, the GSM gateway adds very little incremental cost (a
4 port GSM gateway adds only, for us, $100 Cdn a month to our cell costs and
saves us $2-3k a month at 25c / min) and there's not too much of a training
issue, since these blockheads grock their cell phones already. We even have
4 digit extension dialling from office staff to cells, and call transfer
from the cell. MWI and inbound fax reception notification is done via SMS
(each DID can recieve faxes, and the fax goes to the user's email, thanks
SpanDSP!). Overflow when the gateway is full goes out our PRI, and we eat
the airtime, but that's a good thing because if the GSM gateway is full, we
are saving money. 

-Original Message-
From: Steve Totaro [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, December 13, 2005 8:12 PM
To: Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion
Subject: RE: [Asterisk-Users] asterisk in real estate developments


Very true.  How about using WiFi and DEC phones?

Thanks,
Steve

 
  hey chris,
 
 The only issue you'll run into is that with all temp stuff like
 construction
 trailers ect they like to cut there lines A LOT  with all there nice
 machines.
 
 Carlos Alcantar
 Race Technologies, Inc.
 101 Haskins Way
 South San Francisco, CA 94080
 P: 650.246.8900
 F: 650.246.8901
 E: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Chris
 Bagnall
 Sent: Tuesday, December 13, 2005 5:08 PM
 To: 'Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion'
 Subject: RE: [Asterisk-Users] asterisk in real estate developments
 
  I was wondering if anyone has used asterisk in a real estate
  development project. I know someone that is developing a ~400 home
  project and thought asterisk might be a possible alternative to the
  phone company and a way to offer more service to buyers.
 
 How about deploying asterisk to support the contractor responsible for
the
 construction of these sites? Instead of developers (who are often
on-site
 for 6 months plus) relying purely on cellphones or asking the ILEC to
 install a load of phone lines for them, stick an asterisk server in
their
 site office linked to a net connection, shove a load of cordless
phones on
 a
 channel bank at convenient points around the site and contractors are
 never
 far from a phone.
 
 This is something we're hopefully doing for a property developer in
the
 new
 year. It'll be interesting to see how well it all works out.
 
 Regards,
 
 Chris
 --
 C.M. Bagnall, Director, Minotaur I.T. Limited This email is made from
100%
 recycled electrons
 
 
 ___
 --Bandwidth and Colocation provided by Easynews.com --
 
 Asterisk-Users mailing list
 To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users
 
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RE: [Asterisk-Users] asterisk in real estate developments

2005-12-13 Thread Robert Augustyn
Colin,
Nice summary, what gateway are you using and with what carrier.
Thanks,
robert 

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
 Colin Anderson
 Sent: Tuesday, December 13, 2005 10:53 PM
 To: 'Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion'
 Subject: RE: [Asterisk-Users] asterisk in real estate developments
 
 been there done that
 
 The biggest problems that we have had to deal with is 
 stability. Stability with respect to system stability and 
 also stability of the user.  System stability is extremely 
 difficult to deal with when you have poor power, power 
 outages, guys pressing the buttons next to the blinkenlights 
 because they are curious (very difficult to control access to 
 gear in a construction trailer when everything is set up 
 ad-hoc) and users doing stupid things like moving their phone 
 from their desk to another guys desk for god-knows-why reason 
 then not plugging into the cat5 cable. Then the users tend to 
 say that your phone system is shit, when these types of 
 problems are largely beyond your control. 
 
 As to user stability, I don't refer to mental stability, I 
 refer to churn.
 Staff churn in the construction industry is brutal and 
 combined with the relative unsophistication of people in the 
 construction industry, it's the Training Session That Will Never End. 
 
 My evolution of how to deal with this problem has gone from 
 broadband to a construction trailer, wifi and wired sip 
 phones, to masking a user's cell number behind a DID and 
 cutting airtime with a GSM gateway. Really, it's the best 
 way, treating cell phones as extensions. Masking the cell 
 number behind a DID allows me to get the audio inside of 
 Asterisk so I can do VoIP-y things with it, the GSM gateway 
 adds very little incremental cost (a
 4 port GSM gateway adds only, for us, $100 Cdn a month to our 
 cell costs and saves us $2-3k a month at 25c / min) and 
 there's not too much of a training issue, since these 
 blockheads grock their cell phones already. We even have
 4 digit extension dialling from office staff to cells, and 
 call transfer from the cell. MWI and inbound fax reception 
 notification is done via SMS (each DID can recieve faxes, and 
 the fax goes to the user's email, thanks SpanDSP!). Overflow 
 when the gateway is full goes out our PRI, and we eat the 
 airtime, but that's a good thing because if the GSM gateway 
 is full, we are saving money. 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Steve Totaro [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, December 13, 2005 8:12 PM
 To: Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion
 Subject: RE: [Asterisk-Users] asterisk in real estate developments
 
 
 Very true.  How about using WiFi and DEC phones?
 
 Thanks,
 Steve
 
  
   hey chris,
  
  The only issue you'll run into is that with all temp stuff like 
  construction trailers ect they like to cut there lines A 
 LOT  with all 
  there nice machines.
  
  Carlos Alcantar
  Race Technologies, Inc.
  101 Haskins Way
  South San Francisco, CA 94080
  P: 650.246.8900
  F: 650.246.8901
  E: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  
  -Original Message-
  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Chris 
  Bagnall
  Sent: Tuesday, December 13, 2005 5:08 PM
  To: 'Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion'
  Subject: RE: [Asterisk-Users] asterisk in real estate developments
  
   I was wondering if anyone has used asterisk in a real estate 
   development project. I know someone that is developing a 
 ~400 home 
   project and thought asterisk might be a possible 
 alternative to the 
   phone company and a way to offer more service to buyers.
  
  How about deploying asterisk to support the contractor 
 responsible for
 the
  construction of these sites? Instead of developers (who are often
 on-site
  for 6 months plus) relying purely on cellphones or asking 
 the ILEC to 
  install a load of phone lines for them, stick an asterisk server in
 their
  site office linked to a net connection, shove a load of cordless
 phones on
  a
  channel bank at convenient points around the site and 
 contractors are 
  never far from a phone.
  
  This is something we're hopefully doing for a property developer in
 the
  new
  year. It'll be interesting to see how well it all works out.
  
  Regards,
  
  Chris
  --
  C.M. Bagnall, Director, Minotaur I.T. Limited This email is 
 made from
 100%
  recycled electrons
  
  
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  To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
 http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users
  
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RE: [Asterisk-Users] asterisk in real estate developments

2005-12-13 Thread Colin Anderson
Rogers (Canada) + Ateus VoiceBlue 4 port - total bitch to set up but works.
Don't know if I'd recommend it though. I'm sure there's something else
better out there. Rogers is also difficult to deal with but then what
carrier isn't. But in the end everything works. There's other tricks you
have to do, too, like essentially lying to the enduser and telling them that
the DID is their cell number, and making sure you block the outbound caller
ID so the callee doesn't get confused by the actual phone number of the
cell. I have a DISA line set up so they can call in to Asterisk and
unblock their caller ID for paranoid callees that won't pick up unless
there's a number(actually I am just using SetCallerID() after they
authenticate) fortunately the procedure that Rogers uses to REALLY unblock
Caller ID is almost exactly the same procedure that I set up with my DISA
line so it doesn't smell funny to them.

There's some other cool benefits a rig like this brings to the table: 

-For users that work in the office and the field, a SIP phone at their desk,
a V510 on their belt and one number will follow them, great for business
continuity
-Single voicemail box, and we push out 500mw WiFi at the construction sites,
they walk around with laptops and can listen to their voicemails right from
Outlook; the WAPs are VPN'd back to head office and Outlook runs direct off
of our Exchange server no goofy synchronizing.
-The aforementioned fax to the DID. This they totally love. One of our
subcontractors makes a design change and faxes it to the enduser while they
are talking on the phone and it comes up in their Outlook in near real time.
(See, this is how construction guys are dumb: Why not email a PDF? But no,
in construction, everything is fax,fax,fax. Oh well.)

-And for me, call recording of cellular calls (inbound only) which is
extremely useful on 10 million dollar projects when it's a he-said /
she-said situation. We've never had to use it yet but boy it's going to save
us a lot of money when we do.



-Original Message-
From: Robert Augustyn [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, December 13, 2005 10:13 PM
To: 'Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion'
Subject: RE: [Asterisk-Users] asterisk in real estate developments


Colin,
Nice summary, what gateway are you using and with what carrier.
Thanks,
robert 

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
 Colin Anderson
 Sent: Tuesday, December 13, 2005 10:53 PM
 To: 'Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion'
 Subject: RE: [Asterisk-Users] asterisk in real estate developments
 
 been there done that
 
 The biggest problems that we have had to deal with is 
 stability. Stability with respect to system stability and 
 also stability of the user.  System stability is extremely 
 difficult to deal with when you have poor power, power 
 outages, guys pressing the buttons next to the blinkenlights 
 because they are curious (very difficult to control access to 
 gear in a construction trailer when everything is set up 
 ad-hoc) and users doing stupid things like moving their phone 
 from their desk to another guys desk for god-knows-why reason 
 then not plugging into the cat5 cable. Then the users tend to 
 say that your phone system is shit, when these types of 
 problems are largely beyond your control. 
 
 As to user stability, I don't refer to mental stability, I 
 refer to churn.
 Staff churn in the construction industry is brutal and 
 combined with the relative unsophistication of people in the 
 construction industry, it's the Training Session That Will Never End. 
 
 My evolution of how to deal with this problem has gone from 
 broadband to a construction trailer, wifi and wired sip 
 phones, to masking a user's cell number behind a DID and 
 cutting airtime with a GSM gateway. Really, it's the best 
 way, treating cell phones as extensions. Masking the cell 
 number behind a DID allows me to get the audio inside of 
 Asterisk so I can do VoIP-y things with it, the GSM gateway 
 adds very little incremental cost (a
 4 port GSM gateway adds only, for us, $100 Cdn a month to our 
 cell costs and saves us $2-3k a month at 25c / min) and 
 there's not too much of a training issue, since these 
 blockheads grock their cell phones already. We even have
 4 digit extension dialling from office staff to cells, and 
 call transfer from the cell. MWI and inbound fax reception 
 notification is done via SMS (each DID can recieve faxes, and 
 the fax goes to the user's email, thanks SpanDSP!). Overflow 
 when the gateway is full goes out our PRI, and we eat the 
 airtime, but that's a good thing because if the GSM gateway 
 is full, we are saving money. 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Steve Totaro [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, December 13, 2005 8:12 PM
 To: Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion
 Subject: RE: [Asterisk-Users] asterisk in real estate

RE: [Asterisk-Users] asterisk in real estate developments

2005-12-12 Thread Colin Anderson
We considered it for our multifamily and high rise projects as an additional
profit center but decided against implementation because there isn't enough
money on the table per-subscriber to make it financially worthwhile; it's
hard to make a case to be a baby telco when Vonage can lowball you without
even sweating. We concluded you would need at least a thousand subscribers
concentrated in a particular area before you started making any kind of
decent money, and even then it would be risky because what would happen if
you went down? You would have 1000 of your customers pissed at you and would
never buy another one of your housing products ever again. In the end it was
easier for us to concentrate on our core product and let the ILEC take the
blame for crappy phone service. ymmv

-Original Message-
From: Brad Pauly [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, December 12, 2005 2:18 PM
To: asterisk-users@lists.digium.com
Subject: [Asterisk-Users] asterisk in real estate developments

Hi,

I was wondering if anyone has used asterisk in a real estate
development project. I know someone that is developing a ~400 home
project and thought asterisk might be a possible alternative to the
phone company and a way to offer more service to buyers. I am new to
the asterisk world. I'm working my way through the O'Reilly book and
have been playing around with a test machine at my office. Any
thoughts or comments are appreciated.

Cheers,
Brad
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RE: [Asterisk-Users] asterisk in real estate developments

2005-12-12 Thread Steve Totaro
 
 Hi,
 
 I was wondering if anyone has used asterisk in a real estate
 development project. I know someone that is developing a ~400 home
 project and thought asterisk might be a possible alternative to the
 phone company and a way to offer more service to buyers. I am new to
 the asterisk world. I'm working my way through the O'Reilly book and
 have been playing around with a test machine at my office. Any
 thoughts or comments are appreciated.
 
 Cheers,
 Brad

It could be done is not a bad idea at all.  Were you thinking of running
cat5 to all the houses and offering data as well as phone?


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Re: [Asterisk-Users] asterisk in real estate developments

2005-12-12 Thread Brad Pauly
Thanks for the feedback! The development is still in the
planning/zoning stages so it would be possible to look at running cat5
or going wireless. Offering data service was another consideration.
Colin makes a great point about trying to be a telco. I sure wouldn't
want to be the one at the end of a pager if anything goes wrong. At
the same time perhaps it is an opportunity to set an example for how
voice service can be. I always dread dealing with phone companies and
I would love it if someone offered something better.

Brad
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