Or have they been superceded by voip stacks that abstract away the isdn
layer? I would contend, at least in the US, ISDN is alive and well. Your 
basic smb softpbx installation is going to be talking to a digium card that 
is connected to a Basic/Primary Rate ISDN (B/PRI) or T-line.

If the OP is using I4B to do voice data processing, perhaps he would
be better served migrating to either freeswitch and/or asterisk ports?

On 2010-10-08 12:27:56PM -0700, Doug Barton wrote:
> On 10/8/2010 2:12 AM, Oliver Brandmueller wrote:
> > ISDN is a dying technology.
> 
> That sort of isn't relevant to the questions of:
> 1) Are there developers willing to support it, and
> 2) Are there users that want to use it.
> 
> If both of those are true, then we need to do support it.
> 
> 
> Doug (tools, not policy)
> 
> -- 
> 
> Breadth of IT experience, and    |   Nothin' ever doesn't change,
> depth of knowledge in the DNS.   |   but nothin' changes much.
> Yours for the right price.  :)   |            -- OK Go
> http://SupersetSolutions.com/
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-- 
===========================================================
Peter C. Lai                 | Bard College at Simon's Rock
Systems Administrator        | 84 Alford Rd.
Information Technology Svcs. | Gt. Barrington, MA 01230 USA
peter AT simons-rock.edu     | (413) 528-7428
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