sorry, i though the point of asterisk was that you buy a card, shove in some 
ISDN or analog lines and you are in business.

You can even have incoming lines from different telcos so you can do some neat 
least-cost-routing.

There is even an asterisk-at-home version, that is how basic this stuff can 
get (which doesnt mean its easy)

Still, its quite interesting to know if you can hook a prepaid CDMA or GSM 
phone into an analogue VOIP card for simple testing.

If you want to run a full blown VOIP provider (as a makerere study project), 
than dont forget to have a look at www.freeswitch.org

rgds,

Reinier Battenberg
Director
Mountbatten Ltd.
+256 782 801 749
www.mountbatten.net

Be a professional website builder: www.easysites.ug


On Thursday 30 October 2008 17:37:57 Mark Tinka wrote:
> On Thursday 30 October 2008 19:51:51 Dennis M S wrote:
> > Dear all,for a project im working on,i was wondering if
> > its possible 2 have normal asterisk pbx voip2 gsm, and
> > gsm2 voip calls.,with only a voip gsm sip
> > gateway..without having to shake hands with any local
> > operator..also would normal voice call charges suffice
> > for both calling and recieving entities?
>
> Well, it's not entirely impossible, but it would be crude
> for me to say how :-\.
>
> What I can say is the only scalable way to get this done is
> to interconnect with the other carrier. Either at the
> TDM/SDH level, or at the IP level.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Mark.


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