> Asterisk... > Linux... > You get what you pay for. And it's free > :P > > Thats true but free (cost) doesn't have to mean cheap (quality). Maybe what we need is to collect business requirements and build a configuration for a typical system. (hardware spec. and actual config files) What Dave has listed is a good start. Then folks will have a starting point.
If cost is the driving factor then obviously there has to be a compromise in functionality. Knowing what a specific functionality costs to implement would help people quoting installations. (example the transfer situation that GS phones don't handle but seem to work with one of the more expensive phones and the rest as GS). While I don't have the hardware or even Asterisk knowledge (yet) to do this, I'll be glad to document results in a set of webpages (or maybe we should use one of the already existing sites). Robert _______________________________________________ Asterisk-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users
