-Commercial DiscussionSubject: RE:
[Asterisk-Users] A hypothetical question...
The
complete configuration of such a system requires a lot more of information that
the one you gave.But, at a glance, Asterisk + SER is a good choice for
this kind of venture. Asterisk can serve as the PSTN gateway (ISDN
The
complete configuration of such a system requires a lot more of information that
the one you gave.But, at a glance, Asterisk + SER is a good choice for
this kind of venture. Asterisk can serve as the PSTN gateway (ISDN PRI
connections primarily) and Voicemail server. SER can manage the b
If you want VoIP and accurate billing then
go with webvoip
w.webvoip.com
-Original Message-
From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Rod Bacon
Sent: Tuesday, February 15, 2005
5:30 PM
To: asterisk-users@lists.digium.com
Subject: [Asterisk-Users] A
hypot
Rod,
I know this is an Asterisk mailing list, but for larger installations,
you should probably go with one of the larger commercial vendors.
For a purely routing network, I would use Cisco routers and switches.
I'm recommending 28xx series routers to my customers at the minute;
they're very fl
Dean, which “M” would you have me read? I have
been “R”ing “T”he “F”ing “M” for
several months now, and have tried a number of products personally, but my very
point is that it is physically impossible to test ALL PSTN gateways, ALL
softswitches, ALL radius/billing solutions myself. I was c
On Wed, 2005-02-16 at 09:33, Stefan Gofferje wrote:
> Rod Bacon schrieb:
> > I know this is casting a wide net, but If you were charged with building
> > a large, public VOIP network with multiple PSTN gateways, the capacity
> > to carry a lot of traffic and bill clients accurately, what pieces
Lol, these questions crack me up.
Send me a large brown bag full of unmarked
bills and I’ll tell you how, in case you don’t have a large brown
bag the answer is RTFM and then come back.
From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Rod Bacon
Sent: Tues