Of course you could think of to run your Android device as a server
like system, but be aware that in case of cellular you have to deal
with NAT. This means all your clients have to know how to reach you.
One possibility to deal with this problem would be to use a cloud
service and notify the cloud about your new IP address.

In general you can easily support data traffic which does not need to
be in a session context (no streaming) like browsing. In this cases
you always can re-establish a connection.

To run your mobile Android server in a Wifi environment might be
easier to handle than cellular but this depends again how your Wifi
LAN is setup.

--
Roman Baumgaertner
Sr. SW Engineer-OSDC
·T· · ·Mobile· stick together
The views, opinions and statements in this email are those of the
author solely in their individual capacity, and do not necessarily
represent those of T-Mobile USA, Inc.

On Sep 23, 3:18 am, Masoom Alam <[email protected]> wrote:
> Can Android be used as Virtual PBX. This means that, it can work as a
> virtual attendant for playing specific music files, call fowarding,
> recording messages. SipDroid is already available but it is just a client
> soft phone.
>
> Regards,
> M Alam
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