Hi Gilles, > Sorry about that. It's a PNG file and it opens in the two browsers I > tried.
It opens here too. It's very simple though. I would put it like this: VOIP phone <---SIP over the internet---> Asterisk <---internal FXO card---> PSTN-outlet <---PSTN---> PSTN phone > Can Dahdi/Asterisk do that? Has anyone used a small Asterisk box at > home connected to their ADSL modem so that they can make free calls > from overseas? I have asimilar situation. Except, I don't have an internal card but an external SPA3102 -box which converts my PSTN line to SIP and connects that to my Asterisk box. The SPA3102 was far cheaper than any FXO card I could find. I have other SIP (hard or soft) phones connect to my Asterisk as well. Some on the LAN, some over internet. I can use all the phones to dial out on the PSTN line and incoming calls just the same (in real life I only allow a few phones to call out and only one or two will ring when a call come in). I think this is a very common situation, so I'm not really sure what your problem is. Perhaps it's because I don't use an internal card, but in my situation it works just fine. I dial a number on my SIP phone, Asterisk goes through the dialplan, and puts the call out via the SPA3102. In my ear I hear ringing sounds, busy, wrong number or someone talking to me just like if I had connected a "normal" phone to the PSTN line. I'm probably not understanding why you think that the FXO card should provide you with the call progress status. I don't think it works like that on a PSTN line, you just have to listen to the sounds yourself. Best regards, Jeroen Eeuwes -- _____________________________________________________________________ -- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com -- New to Asterisk? Join us for a live introductory webinar every Thurs: http://www.asterisk.org/hello asterisk-users mailing list To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users
