You have to get the local calling information from the carrier that the lines go through. We have 6 local T1s in our office and they are in 3 different groups of local calling zones(what is a local call on one T1 can be a intra-state long distance[expensive per minute!] call in another T1) It's all a real pain in the ass actually. We are in the process of switching all 6 of our T1's and their local numbers to the one with the nice wide local calling area, but this too is a pain, should be done some time next summer.
I would recommend getting a local calling LATA table from you carriers in all locations that you want to use for local calling. Also keep in mind that most carriers update these tables every month, so make sure they send you the updates. Hope that helps, MATT--- -----Original Message----- From: Clif Jones [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, December 11, 2003 11:21 PM To: asterisk users Subject: [Asterisk-Users] Dialing area question I am wanting to perform toll bypass using multiple gateways for outgoing calls. For example, if I call from location A to location B and I have a gateway in location B I obviously want to use location B's gateway to make it a local call. I understand how to get the local prefixes from NANPA but my question is: If there are additional numbers that are local (non-toll) calls from a particular calling area, how do I discover them. Many adjacent calling areas are accessible via 7-digit dialing but you get usage sensitive charges which are undesirable. I just want to easily figure out which ones are free for an area without going through a huge search. Anyone know how this works? This has got to be stored somewhere. _______________________________________________ Asterisk-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users _______________________________________________ Asterisk-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users
