I have set up a couple of test Asterisk servers and have never had a problem
with sound.
I've just done a fresh install on a dual 1GHZ PIII Asus box running Fedora
Core3 with the Digium PCI Dev kit and following all the various Core 3
How-To's. I can make calls ok but when any sound is sent from
at 10:38 -0800, AHBLWEB wrote:
I have set up a couple of test Asterisk servers and have never had a
problem with sound.
I've just done a fresh install on a dual 1GHZ PIII Asus box running
Fedora
Core3 with the Digium PCI Dev kit and following all the various Core 3
How-To's. I can make
- Non-Commercial Discussion
Subject: RE: [Asterisk-Users] Help! - Unintelligible prompts and music
Sounds like you need to join a linux users group or some other linux
specific support group to help you through learning how to compile a kernel.
On Mon, 2005-01-10 at 12:15 -0800, AHBLWEB wrote
of disk subsystem do you have in this computer? I'd definitely
bring this up in IRC and I'm sure you'll find someone helpful to assist you.
Brian Greul
Texas Shirt Company
www.txshirts.com
713-802-0369 / 713-861-6261 (fax)
-Original Message-
From: AHBLWEB [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent
Aha! Remove the Digium card and everything sounds fine. Leaves me with a
SIP-only server though.
Looks like I'd better RMA that sucker.
-Original Message-
From: AHBLWEB [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, January 10, 2005 5:04 PM
To: 'Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial
7:44 PM
To: Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion
Subject: Re: [Asterisk-Users] Help! - Unintelligible prompts and music
AHBLWEB wrote:
Aha! Remove the Digium card and everything sounds fine. Leaves me with a
SIP-only server though.
Looks like I'd better RMA that sucker
Although I had no problems getting Asterisk up and running under RedHat 9
I'm running into problems under FC 3.
When running make linux26 I get:
make -C /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build SUBDIRS=/usr/src/zaptel modules
make[1]: Entering directory `/lib/modules/2.6.9-1.678_FC3/build'
CC [M]
Our current ROLM
switch uses two-digit Feature Access Codes (FACs) for long-distance calls to
force the entering of a set of seven digits representing a client and matter
number before giving a real dial tone. This sequence is passed as part of
the CDR record and is used to charge the phone
Bachmann [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, November 19, 2004 2:17 PM
To: Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion
Subject: Re: [Asterisk-Users] How to enter billing codes when dialling
AHBLWEB wrote:
Our current ROLM switch uses two-digit Feature Access Codes (FACs) for
long