Interesting ... I'm not aware of a wireless ATA rigt now. There are routers with wireless and phone ports but I think they work on the assumption that the calls are coming in on the ethernet side of the router rather than the wireless network.
> Terry: Well, my answer is two-fold. When power goes out, I still have wireless as a fallback. So, my thinking is, there's my computer with openpbx, receiving incoming PSTN calls, sip phones, fax receiving/sending, etc. When needed, there's FXO, and then there's wireless option. Next level: a community-based wireless network should love openpbx. If the city hosts openpbx for residents (my community is 8-10 thousand), a lot of chamber of commerce news, alerts, events, garage sales, town hall meetings, etc., can be provided for the wireless end-users. I barely know how to turn a computer on, but if I can get a handle on setting this thing up, I'm going to see if the senior citizens center wants to do one and donate it as a project for the city. Seems doable. Lots of volunteers to man the call center, and I know once it's operating the stability should be good. Just imagine a bunch of 80-year-old coots doing their version of linux geeks! Tom -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by Lukins & Annis, P.S. NOTICE: This email may contain confidential or privileged material, and is intended solely for use by the above referenced recipient. Any review, copying, printing, disclosure, distri- bution, or any other use, is strictly prohibited. If you are not the recipient, and believe that you have received this in error, please notify the sender and delete the copy you received. Thank You! _______________________________________________ Openpbx-users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.openpbx.org/mailman/listinfo/openpbx-users
