Dave Fullerton wrote: > If you want to know what a card's capabilities are you're better off > just memorizing each part number. Maybe there's a scheme I'm just not > capable of understanding here.
We gave up (intentionally) on trying to have model numbers that reflected all the capabilities of each card, because they would turn into unintelligible (and unmemorizable) part numbers. We now have 'part numbers' that represent a given card with the options it was ordered with (analog module(s), echo canceler, etc.), and we've stopped trying to use suffixes to indicate bus type and instead just use a different model number. This why the TE122 (which replaced the TE120P) no longer has a 'P' suffix; the PCI-Express version is a different model number entirely. With that said, for some reason our marketing department decided to change the *prefix* for PCI-Express analog cards from TDM to AEX, but they still follow the rest of the model naming scheme (no suffix letter and no different model numbers that indicate included optional modules). -- Kevin P. Fleming Director of Software Technologies Digium, Inc. - "The Genuine Asterisk Experience" (TM) _______________________________________________ -- 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
