Apple in particular has some advanced, enhanced, and proprietary methods to
locate devices. They have become so hard to steal. I don't know their
system at any deep level, but it uses technology that understands location
and direction. It can also pass on location data between Apple devices,
eve
Alex,
I can't speak to what's deployed, but I know that the IIT has been working on
location awareness for mobile users for a long while
This is from Cluecon 2018: https://youtu.be/A8i2psbeYT4
There was a similar session at Cluecon 2019, but it was not recorded.
Michael Graves
mgra...@mstvp.co
West Emergency Services supports routing by GPS, provided via SIP header.
They also support dynamic callback number assignment for internal routing
numbers.
I haven't used the GPS portion, but for the latter we would assign a unique
account per user location and attach that to the user's primary e
This may be a stupid question, but I know absolutely nothing about
mobile:
I'm deep inside an apartment building, and there are no windows on the
lower level. How does my phone know where I am?
I've heard much about deducing it through WiFi and/or Bluetooth, but
how?
-- Alex
On Thu, May 14, 202
GPS is useless inside most buildings. That's why mobiles have A-GPS, which
is assisted by wifi and bluetooth. Even in homes, GPS signals are mostly
blocked. In a commercial building, almost guaranteed to be blocked.
On Thu, May 14, 2020 at 1:23 PM Aaron C. de Bruyn
wrote:
> I'm still wonderin
I'm still wondering why desk phones don't have a small built-in GPS chip
yet? Soft phones on cell phones could have access to GPS. Web browsers
wouldn't work so well.
But having the phone out-of-band-signal the phone server with GPS info
(maybe a SIP header or something) would allow the phone ser
I *thought* I had read something about mobile apps being given a pass on
911, but not completely sure. And then where do we cross the line? Mobile
app, tablet running a WebRTC softphone...etc...
On Thu, May 14, 2020 at 12:41 PM Mike Hammett wrote:
> We're looking that we may have to allocate
We're looking that we may have to allocate a lot more DIDs, simply for the new
911 requirements. We have a lot of clients with work from home people. Some
have their own DIDs already, some don't.
Softphones make this a lot more complicated. We could have the same extension
connected via desk
The pitfalls of having my email address mirror the mailing lists I'm on, I get
list submissions. :-)
-
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions
http://www.ics-il.com
Midwest Internet Exchange
http://www.midwest-ix.com
- Original Message -
From: "Christopher Aloi"
That's probably up to the ULC contract but my
expectation would be Indeterminate Jurisdiction.
~Glen
On 5/14/2020 10:33, Calvin Ellison
wrote:
On Thu, May 14, 2020 at 10:02 AM Glen Gerhard
On Thu, May 14, 2020 at 10:02 AM Glen Gerhard wrote:
> I agree with Paul. From what I know the 8YY ANIs are handled like any
> other ANI.
>
Are underlying carriers treating these as indeterminate, or given their own
jurisdiction and rates?
___
VoiceOps
This is great information, thank you all. I did find out that the voice
adapters time (which it syncs with NTP) was 2 hours off on timezone, so
hopefully setting the Poly ATA adapter's time zone to the correct one will
update the time on the caller ID.
On Thu, May 14, 2020 at 11:58 AM Ken Mix wro
I agree with Paul. From what I know the 8YY ANIs are
handled like any other ANI.
~Glen
On 5/14/2020 9:08, Paul Timmins wrote:
What's the news on using TFN as a caller ID?
People have been doing
Hello,
Date and time can be provided over analog lines as part of the caller-ID data
burst (SDMF or MDMF). On an Adtran TA9xx, you can see the raw data by running
“debug voice toneservices”.
Regards,
Ken Mix
From: VoiceOps On Behalf Of Colton Conor
Sent: Thursday, May 14, 2020 09:43
To: Voic
1. What's the news on using TFN as a caller ID?
1. People have been doing it for years
2. Does this require a local charge number in P-Charge-Info or
P_Asserted_Identity or elsewhere?
1. It does if you want calling other toll-free numbers or 911 to
work, otherwise it doesn't real
Calvin,
I wonder if you got any insight to this question?
Regards,
Oren
On Tue, May 12, 2020 at 5:01 PM Calvin Ellison
wrote:
> It looks like Somos is pushing TFN CNAM, press release below from Mar 30,
> 2020. I've always understood TF ANI to be invalid.
>
> What's the news on using TFN as a c
The caller-ID signaling between rings 1 and 2 should include time. If they
answer too quickly, no name, number, or time. Remember the old AT&T caller-id
display boxes? You never had to set the time on those as it was signaled with
the call.
In this case, your ATA needs to send time with calle
A lot of older systems will set the clock from the incoming caller ID
data - the time and date are in the stream of FSK along with the number
and name. You'd want to make sure that ATA has valid time and timezones
set, then send a call into them and the PBX should jump to the correct
time and d
We had a customer that had Frontier Analog phone lines going into their
Panasonic TDA-50 PBX system. We recently ported the numbers from Frontier
to our Broadsoft, and deployed a Poly OBI508 ATA onsite. We also replaced
their router and internet connection.
Customer is complaining that their phone
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