http://newsvac.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=05/07/11/141244

Anthony Minessale writes "In 1995, Brendan Eich changed the face of
the Internet forever with the introduction of JavaScript; an object
orientated scripting language that came standard on the once dominant
Netscape Navigator Internet Browser. Ten years later amidst the
aftermath of the browser wars of the late 90's and the bursting
Dot-Com bubble, JavaScript still stands tall, implemented in just
about every web browser available and now you can use it on your
telephone!

Anthony Minessale, a software developer, one-time-webmaster in the
days of old, has taken the trusty tool and added it to an open source
phone system called Asterisk. This makes it possible to make a phone
call to the system and have that call answered and maintained by a
JavaScript file of your choice. Using the language, you can record
audio, play it back, collect digits, interface with an external system
and even transfer the call to another destination. "The main reason I
developed this was so people who want to make interactive voice
response systems could use a familiar interface to do so." Anthony
commented. The project, dubbed "res_js", is based on the Spider Monkey
JavaScript engine which is the same engine developed by and used in
the Mozilla project for their web browser. Minessale, who has done a
great deal of development on the Asterisk project, also has embedded
Perl and SQLite into respective plug-in modules. The lead developers
of several open source PBX systems are going to speak at the upcoming
ClueCon convention in Chicago, IL Aug 3-5 (http://www.cluecon.com./
The Asterisk PBX is available at (http://www.asterisk.org/ and
Anthony's add-ons are published at PBX Freeware
(http://www.pbxfreeware.org./";

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