You don't event need a T1. Use asterisk as the pbx and a sip trunk and pay by 
the minute. Use any ata at the customer site and your sip trunk provider can 
port the numbers. The sticky part is 911 service.

Sent from my iPhone

> On Feb 6, 2015, at 8:07 PM, Josh Reynolds <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> A single $500 pbx connected to a E1/T1 or and some forward numbers can handle 
> that, and a few $50 ATAs, assuming you can VPN them to a central point.... I 
> guess that was my point.
> 
> If you're just looking for a provider, maybe 
> http://www.vitelity.com/services_voip/ might work for you? We've been kind of 
> limited up here in "western Canada" when it comes to voip providers simply 
> due to latency.
> 
> Josh Reynolds
> CIO, SPITwSPOTS
> [email protected]
> www.spitwspots.com
> On 2/6/2015 4:48 PM, TJ Trout wrote:
>> Looking for provider recommendations, I think the ATA any will work
>> 
>>> On Fri, Feb 6, 2015 at 5:39 PM, Josh Reynolds <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> I'd look at grandstream. Asterisk based, stupid simple, they even have an 
>>> android client.
>>> 
>>> Josh Reynolds
>>> CIO, SPITwSPOTS
>>> [email protected]
>>> www.spitwspots.com
>>> 
>>> 
>>>> On 2/6/2015 4:35 PM, TJ Trout wrote:
>>>> So I have a customer who owns 40 pizza restaurants, each has 2 phone 
>>>> lines, when the customer calls the phone number of each location the first 
>>>> phone rings, then if busy the second phone rings (hunting lines). They are 
>>>> paying aprox $350 per month per store and use about 250 minutes on average 
>>>> per month.
>>>> 
>>>> What voip solution/provider can I go with, where I will be able to port 
>>>> the main line from each location and be able to use a 2 port ATA device 
>>>> with 2 POTS dumb phones plugged into it, where they will hunt like before?
>>>> 
>>>> I use callcentric at my office, but their price is a little high I 
>>>> think... Any opinions?
> 

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