Thanks for all this information Neil

FWIW I bought a (discounted) SAMS 'teach yourself' Linux book and have
developed reasonable confidence with core aspects of open source - well
enough to be contemplating installation of Asterix anyway.

On the topic of 'online appointmenting', Googling using 'appointment
scheduling' produces a good yield of B2B links. Also can see evidence of
many clinics offering online scheduling. But so far cannot find a service
also offering voice support. I had hoped a call centre type service was out
there...hang on...did you say 14 extensions...would your clinic be up to
this in the foreseeable future...?

Sincerely


Michael

Dr Michael Daly MB BS GradDip(Integrative Medicine) GradCert(Evidence Based
Practice) M Bus(Information Innovation) GradDip(Document Management)
Tel: 03 9533 1977
Mob: 0413 879 029
http://www.holisticgp.com.au








 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Neil McAliece
Sent: Wednesday, 5 April 2006 8:49 PM
To: General Practice Computing Group Talk
Subject: Re: [GPCG_TALK] Online appointmenting - with voip

There is a couple of ways you can go. I think traditional proprietary phone
systems with voicemail, queues, etc are probably less expensive than they
were a few years ago. I think you can get systems from Alcatel that support
VoIP using SIP (supported by pretty much all VoIP providers) that also have
a lot of other features for reasonable dollars that can be installed by
traditional phone system businesses.

Others in the gpcg list are familiar with the Asterisk project. It's stirred
up a lot of excitement because you can take PC hardware, load it with linux
and the Asterisk software and build PABX solutions anything from a home
office through to hundreds of extensions with a feature list that seems
almost endless.

I guess the trick to using it in a business situation is finding someone who
knows Asterisk very well and also having support options for it. I've spoken
to a few traditional phone contractors who's jaws have droped at the
flexibility of it all, but weren't sure that they could learn to do it.
(It's sort of telephony crossed over into server configuration and
administration). Alternate support options for these guys are a couple of
regional IT companies who are learning Asterisk so they can offer it as a
solution (so they aren't there yet) or remote support from people who know
Asterisk very well.

Off the top of my head equipment for the install mentioned:


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