Will let you know - I first need to know if the HIC will give us provder numbers ( we still fall under the 10 year moratorium) and can then give the Developer the go ahead for the Fitting out of the rooms - that will take at least 2 months. T
-----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of David Guest Sent: Thursday, 26 January 2006 8:18 AM To: OzdocIT Subject: Re: [GPCG_TALK] Setting up new practice - To VoIP or not to VoIP? Thinus van Rensburg wrote: >Any suggestions on the PBX? > > Hi Thinus I have no knowledge or experience of PABXs except when I peer into the motherboard of our 9 year old Samsung system I can see a 286 processor. That is to say, when the PABX was first installed they were using 10 year old technology. However, all our slots in the board were used up by our last extension 18 months ago and I am in the market for a new system. After sitting in the whirlpool (e.g. http://forums.whirlpool.net.au/forum-replies.cfm?t=438869) for a while there seems to me to be four broad alternatives:- 1. Stick with PSTN but run some outgoing lines through VoIP as per Tony's suggestion. This is least cost and least risk. 2. Get a standard PABX solution but query the dealers about what VoIP options their systems have. I gather these are fairly standard add-ons for the likes of Ericsson, Nortel, Alcatel, etc. 3. Go the whole hog with VoIP everywhere. You could do this yourself (which would be high risk and potentially high maintenance) or get a VoIP specialist to do it. (I'd query sensis.com.au for voip or pabx in your city for suppliers.) The VoIP guy I spoke with in Brisbane 18 months ago was high tech and high cost but the market has matured a fair bit in the last six months and prices should be more reasonable. 4. Forget completely about VoIP and screw the phone company for a deal that gives you less than 10 cents per local call (which is the amount you'll pay from most of the VoIP providers). This option is probably only achievable for larger businesses. If you are getting ADSL2+ QoS should not be too great a problem. You will still need QoS traffic shaping but your internet connection will probably run faster than parts of my LAN. I'd be interested to hear how you go with this if only for purely selfish personal financial benefit. Cheers. David -- "UFW. Deb does linux." SIP [EMAIL PROTECTED] NodePhone +61 7 31290168 _______________________________________________ Gpcg_talk mailing list [email protected] http://ozdocit.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/gpcg_talk
