On Thu, Feb 12, 2009 at 4:04 PM, Vikas <[email protected]> wrote: > My three questions are: > 1. Is there any technical reason behind why the ISP will not sell more > then 512 Kbps of b/w on a single port to us ?
Yes. Somebody programmed their equipment that way and didn't train anybody else on Cisco before they got a better job. A Cisco 2950 can do 100Mbps per port (or 1000Mbps if it's a 2950G), and while you can't send all of that upstream, you can send way more than 12Mbps upstream. > 2. Can I do something to over come the restriction put by the ISP. Yep, lots of things, none of which are going to be as direct as telling them that you've found another ISP who will give you what you want, and either they can remain your ISP and rehire the guy who knows how to program Cisco gear, or you are terminating your contract. Unless you live truly in the middle of nowhere, you will be able to find somebody else who can provide your phone service. Also, twenty simultaneous connections sounds a lot like a traditional T1. Call your phone company and compare the price of getting a T1 versus what these clowns are charging you. Just because you have voip now, doesn't mean it's cheaper than POTS. Asterisk does a great job of acting as a T1 to voip gateway. You can even get appliances for that task. > 3. Is there an automated script that can load balance the asterisk > calls across these 4 connections ? It will be way easier to write your termination letter than to write that script. This is a human problem, and not an asterisk problem. _______________________________________________ -- 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
