Hi Matthew, There is no difference, just as there isn't any difference for the GK feature up to the IOS version were this became a licensed feature. I got a mail a while back from Vik with that version, it's post 12.4(15)T8 that you won't have the GK without the proper license.
But as of now this isn't the case with the CUBE, not that I'm aware of anyway. So to put it short, it's just your conscience that stops you from using features you haven't paid for ;-) Roger Källberg Unified Communication Consultant Cygate AB From: Berry, Matthew J. [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: den 23 februari 2010 12:28 To: [email protected] Subject: [OSL | CCIE_Voice] IP-to-IP Gateway Question I was going though Mark Snow's VoD for v3. In the call routing video, Mark touches on IP-to-IP gateway functionality, but I felt there was quite a bit left out. It didn't seem to complete to me. One of the questions that came out of watching that video is what is the big difference in features between a normal gateway and a licensed CUBE? Cisco gives an example configuration of a CUBE on their website at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/voicesw/ps5640/products_configuration_example09186a00808ead0f.shtml (see below). All of these commands I can do on a gateway without the CUBE license. So what are you paying for when you get the CUBE license? voice service voip allow-connections h323 to sip allow-connections sip to h323 allow-connections sip to sip allow-connections h323 to h323 dial-peer voice 1 voip session target ipv4:10.13.8.150 incoming called-number 8... dtmf-relay h245-alphanumeric codec g711ulaw ! dial-peer voice 2 voip destination-pattern 8... session protocol sipv2 session target ipv4:10.13.8.16 dtmf-relay rtp-nte codec g711ulaw Digital Footprint: Skype: ciscovoiceguru
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