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What SER is and isn’t

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com

VoIP IP Telephony @ http://snapvoip.blogspot.com

Sys Admins view of SER guts!
The following information is from SER site news report, which in turn plucked from a discussion on a Developers mailing list. It is so important so that I have entirely reproduced the post, for my own reference.
"Consider a more simple SIP proxy like repro. All you can do there is start the damn thing and give it the user data (what would be subscribers, aliases, and parts of the usr_preferences in SER 0.9). Sounds all nice and simple.

Now, as an VoIP operator, my world will be a little bit more complicated. I may have different services that run on separate proxy farms. I may have interesting add-on services like call forwarding, voicemail, IVRs, whatever else product management comes up with. Somewhere in a dark corner, I have some PSTN gateways or, instead, I have an agreement with some telco to do that for me.

If you draw this, you’ll get at least half a dozen boxes with weird connections between. If this doesn’t scare you, start sketching the call flows. You will suddenly find little funny quirks, that of course you can put into C code but if why? SER provides you with the opportunity to solve pretty much all of them in a very simple language.

Better yet: You write your script, you do a test call. If it doesn’t work, you make a trace, you fix your script and try again. No compiling, no packaging, just a restart (BTW, something for the wish list: reloading the config on a SIGHUP). Another trace, another round.

Now we fast forward a bit. Your system is running just fine. But one of your PSTN interconnect partners updates their software and — surprise — all the calls to them fail. Sure, you could use another partner. But your friends in billing will tell yet that their prices for some destinations are just insane. We _really_ have to have that first partner.

Sure, you quickly figure out what the problem is. Sure, you call them and try to explain to the unfortunate fellow on the other end how SIP works and why their stuff isn’t really SIP. Sure, after a while they give in and promise to fix it. But can they do that quickly? Nope. They have to go and talk to whoever delivers their software.

Half a year passes and nothing much happens.

Now, with SER all I need to do is find the route for the specific partner, do the magic with subst() and maybe some other horrible things and voila, it works. Everyone is happy. And should the partner actually ever get their stuff fixed, I can just remove those three lines I had to add.

With repro, things would have been quite different. I have to know enough C++ to actually grok their design or have to have someone doing this. Implementing the three line fix, testing it, producing it easily takes a man-day. With SER I did that in three minutes. Including
the test call.

What it comes down to is, that there is no universal thing. For NATi, there isn’t six funny devices that you find a work around, report to the good folks at iptel, who then add another flag. NAT routers change with every software revision. Old things go away, new things pop up. It is your responsibility as a provider to stay close. That’s what people pay you good money for.

Sure, SER is hard to get into as a beginner. If you want to stay a beginner and don’t care about SIP, use repro. It’ll probably work for you out of the box. If you expect to have to do more, invest the time, learn SIP, learn the ser.cfg. It will pay off later. Everything will be "SER gut" (Sorry, that just had to happen)."

SER Home

Published on February 17th, 2007 under , , , , , , , , ,

All incoming calls are free at Grandcentral

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com

My one number for life provider, GrandCentral, which is in beta now, is offering all incoming calls for free. So what is GrandCentral and how are these free calls work?
From a posting on GrandCentral blog;
"So what does free incoming calls mean? Since GrandCentral is a virtual number, every time someone calls your GrandCentral number, GrandCentral forwards the call to your underlying phones (work, cell, home), tells you who is calling and lets you decide if you want to take the call, send the caller to voicemail, ListenIn as the caller leaves a message, or record the call. Well, all of that is FREE. We’ll have more details about the paid features in the future as we leave beta, but rest assured you can continue to use GrandCentral for all your calls for free even after beta."
Which is further assured by;
"We’ve built GrandCentral to be your phone number for life and you shouldn’t have to worry about counting minutes or being charged for “overage” when taking a call. We will offer paid premium features in the future, but they will be optional and you’ll be able to turn them on and off at will without commitment. We are convinced that you’ll love the free service and want to move up to the paid service as you want to get more and more out of your GrandCentral number. But if you want to stay as a free user, we’ll let you get all your calls through GrandCentral for free."

Although the GrandCentral is based in Oakland California, it is expanding to other areas in the country. They just added Texas, Arizona and Oregon to the ever expanding list.
If you go to the home page you can choose number by entering your desired area code.
As stated above it is a simple service and you don’t have to go through myriad of configurations. I setup my account under one minute.
All I can say for now is that I am a happy GrandCentral user. I am sure you might be too if you pay a visit.

Links;
GrandCentral Home

Published on December 3rd, 2006 under , ,

SMB plus VOIP is SIPxNANO from Pingtel

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com


Pingtel has teamed up with Patton Electronics to create SIPxNANO, a small, mac mini style, IPPBX designed for small businesses with no more than 30 extension needs.
Although it is small in size, it is designed to deliver enterprise class, SIP based VOIP IP Telephony to SMBs. The hardware consists of Patton’s NanoServ ultra compact server technology. The software is based on Pingtels SIPxChange ECS and tailored to fit the hardware.
This combination is able to provide, Integrated voice mail, email, auto attendants, IVR, and web based configuration and management at a low cost. According to the information, the SIPxNANO is compatible with industry standard IP Telephony devices. So it is plug, configure and play for most of the IP phones.
From the other devices on the market, SMB targeted devices in this class are not feature set similar to SIPxNANO. They are manufactured to wet the appetite and if the user to ask for any of the mentioned features, they are asked to upgrade to the next level, enterprise IPPBXs.
SIPxNANO seems to fill a void created by other manufactures themselves at a low cost and a small space in the hardware closet.

Feature list from Patton;
Full Function Enterprise PBX — Complete call control, voicemail and administrative systems.

Drives Intra-Enterprise Calling Costs Down — All voice traffic is transported as data across your data connection on the enterprise IP network.

Geographically Unified Calling Features — All employees with an Internet connection can have access to the same PBX features from any location.

Easy to Use System Configuration — Full system and user administration via web interface.

Voice mail and Email Integration — Sends your voice mail to your email.

Web-Based Self-Administration — Users can specify call forwarding, call routing and voice mail preferences through the web interface.

Links;
Pingtel SIPxNANO
Patton Electronics


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