Astlinux is one potential solution. I remember reading about GumStix whic you first showed at Astricon. One of the applications suggested for Gumstix was to enable local phones behind a NAT to communicate with a remote Asterisk server. That would enable the local phones to bypass the Asterisk server and exchange the audio between the phones directly.
Is what you are suggesting with AstLinux?
Thanks.
On 11/3/06, Kristian Kielhofner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
Brett wrote:
> You guys need to look into the Ranch Networks solution. With a Hosted
> PBX, you can put the Asterisk box at you location. Then we take a Ranch
> Networks box and put it at the customers site. the Ranch Networks box
> does all the NAT traversal, qos, firewall, etc. plus it will bring the
> media locally so you don't have to go over the internet for simple
> branch to branch calls. Plus, the ranch Networks box provides high
> availability or clustering if you need that.
>
> There ya go, one box fixes all.
>
Brett,
What does it do that AstLinux:
http://www.astlinux.org
doesn't do?
P.S. - As the creator of AstLinux, hopefully I can "fix" whatever
limitations it might have...
--
Kristian Kielhofner
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