I sent a few e-mails to the Cisco accessibility desk and just essentially
gave up.

My Cisco IP phone on my desk has a button that allows me to speak a name
and it will dial it. I have memorized the voice mail button and luckily my
office did not enable the roaming feature that requires one to login to the
phone every morning in order to receive calls.

There is a cisco branded IP communicator for Windows that I can get to
answer and make calls with but I have to remember that F2 is to pick up or
hang up a call.  I think Cisco also mentioned jabber clients would work,
but I did not pursue.

I should still have the conversation lurking in my Exchange mailbox
somewhere if you want some start up points.

I believe the accessibility desk for Cisco might be maintained out of NZ or
AU so at least you wouldn't have a time differential when communicating
with them.
In fact when I worked on a daily basis with Cisco support, I usually found
the Australian office better than the UK or US offices for resolving
issues. though that was a dozen years ago.

Contact me off list if you want to find a solution together.

Best Wishes,

Jonathan


On Wed, Dec 27, 2017 at 3:34 AM Simon Fogarty <si...@blinky-net.com> wrote:

> So on this softphone question,
>
>  Havs anyone used a cisco softphone for enterprise environments?
>
> It's one we're currently looking at for work
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: 'Janina Sajka' via MacVisionaries [mailto:
> macvisionaries@googlegroups.com]
> Sent: Tuesday, 26 December 2017 10:08 PM
> To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
> Subject: Re: To Janina Sajka Soft phones?
>
> Hi, Donna:
>
> My apologies for the slow response. I've been distracted by noncomputer
> responsibilities these past few weeks.
>
> To answer your question  I'd need to know a bit more what your needs are.
> Let me explain:
>
> Probably the most widely known soft phone is Skype. Howegver, I myself
> don't use Skype. Depending on your platform, you might find Skype
> accessible--or not. For instance it's not accessible on Linux today.
>
> On Apple products we have Face Time. I've used it slightly, and my
> experience suggest it's accessibility is excellent.
>
> There are other soft phone clients that people use for voice
> communications such as Face Book's Whatsapp, or Cisco's GoToMeeting or
> their Webex product. Accessibility of these varies from very accessible,
> e.g. Webex on Android, to not very accessible for anyone even when you're
> not using assistive technology, e.g. Webex on Mac.
>
> Now, my situation is somewhat different. I have the particular requirement
> for an old fashioned phone number. I need the ability to recieve calls from
> any phone anywhere, and to call any traditional telephone number anywhere.
> I do this in two ways using the SIP protocol and a gateway service that
> routes calls between my SIP devices and the standard telephony world,
> usually abrieviated PSTN, which stands for "Public Switched Telephone
> Network."
>
> 1.)     I have hard ware devices that look all the world like old
> fashioned telephones, but they're different. They're hardware SIP phones,
> and they connect over computer type network cables--what we call
> Cat5 (or Cat6) ethernet cables.
>
>         My current device of choice is the Snom D715, primarily because
>         it's able to use IPv6, where Polycom phones do not. I have not
>         investigated use of the SIP handsets from Digium--though they're
>         on my list to look at the next time I'm in the market for a
>         hardware phone.
>
>         2.)     I use linphone, and sometimes the fs_cli application
>         provided by FreeSwitch on my Linux computers for placing and
>         recieving SIP calls. This functionality is critical to my work
>         because it allows me to use a high quality headset that connects
>         to my computer using USB, and still allows me to route the audio
>         through a 12 channel audio hardware mixer on my desk. This way
>         I'm able to have my screen reader as well as my telephone
>         conversation in my ears, without the people I'm talking with
>         hearing my screen reader.
>
> Of course SIP phones can be used to place direct calls to other SIP
> phones, just like Skype and FaceTime calls can be made to others who are
> also using Skype or FaceTime. I believe Skype also provides the ability to
> call to and from the PSTN, but I don't know anything specific about that,
> or about any similar functionality among the other soft phones mentioned.
>
> The biggest problem with all these services is that they don't
> interoperate natively, e.g. Webex can't call FaceTime, or vice versa.
> The standards world is hoping to solve this with specifications called
> WebRTC. Time will tell how that goes.
>
> Hope this helps!
>
> Janina
>
>
> Donna Goodin writes:
> > Hi all,
> >
> > I'm directing this question to Janina as she mentioned using a soft
> phone, but would be interested in hearing from anyone else who uses one.
> >
> > Can anyone recommend good accessible soft phone options?
> > TIA,
> > Donna
> >
> > --
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> Janina Sajka,   Phone:  +1.443.300.2200 <(443)%20300-2200>
>                         sip:jan...@asterisk.rednote.net
>                 Email:  jan...@rednote.net
>
> Linux Foundation Fellow
> Executive Chair, Accessibility Workgroup:       http://a11y.org
>
> The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI)
> Chair, Accessible Platform Architectures        http://www.w3.org/wai/apa
>
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