Quoting Dave Donovan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > Sorry I'm a little late to the thread but this question has puzzled me as > well. My key thing for me is hardware.
I hear you loud and clear - I am in much the same situation. from what I know about the cards (which isn't much) there are 2 types just like there are modems and "winmodems", the hard bri cards understand all the signalling in hardware (its different between na/euro much like a modem has different standards it can adhere to when connecting to different remotes even though they are all carried on the same physical type of line) so if you get a "hardware" card you need one that understands our signalling here. The soft cards are pretty much universal since they are implemented in software only, but you need a driver that understands the NA signalling - I am not sure about the state of this situation right now. just like their analog cousins the soft cards are cheap, the hard cards are costly, and the NA ones rare. > > On 6/27/07, Joe Greco <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >>> Thoughts? Who here has used BRI in North America? And when you did, what >>> interface hardware did you use? >> >> Well, at the time, there was pretty much nothing that was considered to be >> "reliably" supported by Asterisk for NA BRI. >> >> I picked up an Adtran Atlas 550 with a 4BRI-U interface and an octal FXS, >> and I use the unit's built-in T1 network port to connect to an Asterisk >> box. This works nicely, except for the things for which it doesn't work >> nicely. The box is fundamentally being used as a BRI<->PRI translator, >> but gives me some neat extras. ..... > > > Has anyone else seen a working hardware solution that didn't cost an arm and > a leg? It seems to me that a BRI card should cost less than $100. I think > I remember a German friend telling me that they go for around $40 dollars. > > I know that I can get a BRI with voice service out of Bell. I think they > have to provide it because of the CRTC tariffs. > > The thing that has stopped me from trying it in the past is the uncertainty > around hardware. Do I understand correctly that NA (North American?) BRI is > different from the European version and that European hardware won't work? > > If I could get a card for a few hundred bucks then I'd be willing to give > this a shot. Unfortunately, I can't afford a few grand for the Adtran setup > described, although it does sound cool and the BRI<->PRI conversion approach > is a clever way of overcoming the hardware scarcity. > > For the number of times that I see people trying to get digital style > features out of analog lines, and banging their head against the wall, I'd > love to get a BRI working and be able to tell you all how it worked out. > > Dave Jon Pounder _/_/_/ _/ _/ _/ _/_/_/ _/ _/ _/_/_/_/ _/ _/_/ _/ _/ _/ _/_/ _/ _/_/ _/ _/ _/_/ _/ _/ _/ _/_/ _/ _/_/_/ _/ _/ _/_/_/_/ _/_/_/ _/ _/ _/_/_/_/ Inline Internet Systems Inc. Thorold, Ontario, Canada Tools to Power Your e-Business Solutions www.inline.net www.ihtml.com www.ihtmlmerchant.com www.opayc.com ---------------------------------------------------------------- This message was sent using IMP, the Internet Messaging Program. _______________________________________________ --Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com-- asterisk-users mailing list To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users