> I wanted to run it on the server, but was just wondering of the CPU
> strength of the Thin Client had any influence on the audio quality. Sound
> like it does not. I guess the only thing to be sure of is to ensure the
> audio chipset is supported by LTSP.
More than by LTSP, ensure your chipset
Alberto Giménez wrote the following on 09/02/2007 14:44:
Does anybody on the list have experience with LTSP and a softphone
installation?
Take a look at this article. You can perhaps face some issues, but I
could solve all the problems (contact this list if in doubt):
http://www.linuxjour
> Does anybody on the list have experience with LTSP and a softphone
> installation?
Take a look at this article. You can perhaps face some issues, but I
could solve all the problems (contact this list if in doubt):
http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/8165
I'm still testing with just 1 client be
Does anybody on the list have experience with LTSP and a softphone
installation?
A client of ours wants to deploy a pure LTSP call center and would like
to use a softphone instead of a hardware based VoIP phone.
- What softphones would be best?
- Will this require a stronger CPU in the thin c
You will not be able to run a softphone on a server and displayed on a
terinal. I'm not sure if ESD can do recording at all, and it's probably
not a good idea to do it over the network.
It's not really all that hard to get a softphone running locally on the
terminals, and the Linux Journal articl
Alberto Giménez kirjoitti:
> Anyone has configured an LTSP system to work with VoIP? Any pointers?
>
Not me ;-). But here is one story:
http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/8165
Best regards Asmo Koskinen.
_
Ltsp-discuss mail
Hi, this is my first message to the list.
I'm having problems configuring the LTSP terminals to get a VoIP
service working for them.
I can get running sound (I can hear mp3 in xmms in the terminals) so
it seems sound is well configured, but microphone is not working at
all. I have the microphone v