:
> No need to bump these things as this is a mailing list and it annoys
> quite a few people when you do that
>
>
> From: Nandy Dagondon
> Reply-To:
> Date: Sun, 5 Jul 2009 10:41:18 +0800
>
> To:
> Subject: Re: [Freeswitch-users] Compact, fanless appliance?
>
&
ate: *Sun, 5 Jul 2009 10:41:18 +0800
> *To: *
> *Subject: *Re: [Freeswitch-users] Compact, fanless appliance?
>
> just bumping this topic.
> -nandy
>
> On Fri, May 8, 2009 at 12:44 AM, Fred-145 wrote:
>
>
>
> Antonio Gallo wrote:
> > Alix cases are like 6/9 €
No need to bump these things as this is a mailing list and it annoys quite a
few people when you do that
From: Nandy Dagondon
Reply-To:
Date: Sun, 5 Jul 2009 10:41:18 +0800
To:
Subject: Re: [Freeswitch-users] Compact, fanless appliance?
just bumping this topic.
-nandy
On Fri, May 8, 2009
just bumping this topic.
-nandy
On Fri, May 8, 2009 at 12:44 AM, Fred-145 wrote:
>
>
> Antonio Gallo wrote:
> > Alix cases are like 6/9 € from their shop site. I think its easy to find
> > someone who work with aluminium that can make for you custom boxes for
> > like like 6/20 € at pcs
>
> Unfo
Antonio Gallo wrote:
> Alix cases are like 6/9 € from their shop site. I think its easy to find
> someone who work with aluminium that can make for you custom boxes for
> like like 6/20 € at pcs
Unfortunately, none of the PCEngines cases (www.pcengines.ch/order1.php?c=2)
allow for a PCI slot, e
Fred-145 ha scritto:
> Thanks Antonio for the links on Acrosser and PCEngines. It seems like PCE's
> alix1d is a good solution, provided 256MB is enough to hold Linux +
> Freeswitch + some tiny LAMP stack. Still, it looks like an Atom-included
> mobo like those from Asus or Gigabyte would be cheape
Thanks Antonio for the links on Acrosser and PCEngines. It seems like PCE's
alix1d is a good solution, provided 256MB is enough to hold Linux +
Freeswitch + some tiny LAMP stack. Still, it looks like an Atom-included
mobo like those from Asus or Gigabyte would be cheaper. The biggest issue is
find
> The cheapest PC's I find are > 230€ (Asus' EeePC), and with not enough room
> to stick a PCI card.
>
Well actually a barebone with VIA C7 + 1 slot for PCI card (carefull you
have to remove some metal part otherwise Sangoma/Digium card will not
fit *LOL*)
and external PSU are around 190/215€
Mitch Capper wrote:
> You may want to look at the Intel Atom combo machines you can get a 1.6
> ghz machine probably for around $100-150 USD in a very small form factor
> and very powerful.
Thanks for the tip. Any link where I could check this out?
The cheapest PC's I find are > 230€ (Asus' Ee
Sounds like the MSI Wind :P I had to do the same thing!
/b
On Apr 30, 2009, at 11:16 PM, Nandy Dagondon wrote:
rhino used the dual-core atom mobo d945gclf2 but it requires
downloading/building the linux r8168 LAN driver.
-nandy
Brian West
br...@freeswitch.org
-- Meet us at ClueCon! http
rhino used the dual-core atom mobo d945gclf2 but it requires
downloading/building the linux r8168 LAN driver.
-nandy
On Fri, May 1, 2009 at 11:40 AM, Brian West wrote:
> I have two intel atom boxes sitting on a shelf above my desk ... works like
> a charm!
> /b
>
> On Apr 30, 2009, at 10:31 PM
I have two intel atom boxes sitting on a shelf above my desk ... works
like a charm!
/b
On Apr 30, 2009, at 10:31 PM, Mitch Capper wrote:
You may want to look at the Intel Atom combo machines you can get a
1.6 ghz machine probably for around $100-150 USD in a very small
form factor and v
You may want to look at the Intel Atom combo machines you can get a 1.6 ghz
machine probably for around $100-150 USD in a very small form factor and
very powerful.
~Mitch
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hi guys,
i've installed FreeNas using CF-to-IDE adaptor and SanDisk 128MB CF. it's
working fine. but i want to try FS on a 16GB Kingston CF. anyone tried this?
if none, i can also settle down for 8GB. pls mention which brand/size works.
tks,
nandy
On Thu, Apr 30, 2009 at 10:46 PM, Fred-145 wr
Thanks guys for the links on CF-to-IDE adaptors.
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On Wed, 2009-04-29 at 04:47 -0700, Fred-145 wrote:
>
> EdPimentl wrote:
> > Here is a list of the resources posted on this thread
>
> After giving it more thoughts, I got to the conclusion that I'd rather a
> stand-alone miniPC that can take a PCI card with a riser, instead of a
> really tiny box
By IDE, I'm assuming you mean the all too familiar 40 pin PATA.
Yes, as a matter of fact:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList.aspx?Submit=ENE&N=2003240636+1421530855&Configurator=&Subcategory=636&description=&Ntk=&SpeTabStoreType=&srchInDesc=
Do some research since they're not all created
EdPimentl wrote:
> Here is a list of the resources posted on this thread
After giving it more thoughts, I got to the conclusion that I'd rather a
stand-alone miniPC that can take a PCI card with a riser, instead of a
really tiny box that relies on an external box to connect to a PSTN line.
Mini
Here is a list of the resources posted on this thread
http://www.logicsupply.com/products/dex4501
http://www.logicsupply.com/products/de945_fl
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NSLU2
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gumstix
http://www.cheaprouter.us
http://www.avm.de/en/Produkte/FRITZBox/FRITZ_Box_Fon_WLAN
Thanks for those pointers. There's several nice-looking devices in this
list:
http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT2016997232.html
Ideally, I'd like a compact box that can fit a PCI card horizontally so I
don't have to provide a second, external device to connect the server to a
POTS line.
Fanless Devices
http://fit-pc2.com
http://www.cappuccinopc.com/solutions/fanless.asp
http://www.wdlsystems.com/ebox/ebox.shtml
--- On Sat, 4/25/09, Fred-145 wrote:
From: Fred-145
Subject: Re: [Freeswitch-users] Compact, fanless appliance?
To: freeswitch-users@lists.freeswitch.org
Date
Thanks a lot for the pointers :)
At this point, alternatives < $100 to a regular PC or some appliance like
the FritzBox or the Pika Asterisk appliance:
Planex MZK-W04NU $60
Sheeva Plug $99
(Deprecated) Linksys NSLU2 $50
Does someone know of other solutions that can run Linux/FreeBSD along with
Did you mean?
http://www.pikatechnologies.com/
http://pikawarp.org/?page_id=172
-E
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Guys, I was trying to do the same to the Pika Warp. Too bad their
support and development enviroment sucks. The best I could do (without
too much effort) was run FS without the analog support.
www.pika.com
jmesquita
On Apr 25, 2009, at 11:30 AM, Carlos Talbot wrote:
Dave,
it's not hard.
Dave,
it's not hard. I suppose I should add this to the wiki:
http://forum.openwrt.org/viewtopic.php?pid=83701#p83701
Carlos
On Thu, Apr 23, 2009 at 3:02 PM, David Knell wrote:
> You might want to take a look at this:
>
> http://www.amazon.com/IEEE802-11N-Wireless-Broadband-MZK-W04NU-Designed/
-boun...@lists.freeswitch.org
[mailto:freeswitch-users-boun...@lists.freeswitch.org] On Behalf Of Peter P
GMX
Sent: April-24-09 7:24 AM
To: freeswitch-users@lists.freeswitch.org
Subject: Re: [Freeswitch-users] Compact, fanless appliance?
A perfect device is also the FitzBox 7270, which is very popular
1. Hell no.
-Original Message-
From: Fred-145
To: freeswitch-users@lists.freeswitch.org
Sent: Fri, 24 Apr 2009 3:30 am
Subject: Re: [Freeswitch-users] Compact, fanless appliance?
Fred-145 wrote:
>
> I think it'd be very useful if the wiki included a list
A perfect device is also the FitzBox 7270, which is very popular over
here in Germany (more than 5 Mio Installations).
http://www.avm.de/en/Produkte/FRITZBox/FRITZ_Box_Fon_WLAN_7270/index.php
It offers
- ISDN port
- 2 analogue ports (perfect for fax)
- DECT (GAP) for up to 6 devices
- 4 LAN port
Hadley Rich wrote:
> That's what the wiki's for. If you create a login you can start a page
> and start adding devices.
Yup, I'll start an article when I get enough information.
--
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Sent
Fred-145 wrote:
>
> I think it'd be very useful if the wiki included a list of devices that
> can run Freeswitch in addition to a regular PC, especially those that cost
> < $150.
>
Here's a list of makers of basic routers per www.cheaprouter.us:
2Wire, 3Com, ADTRAN, Apple, Belkin, CNet, CP Te
On Fri, 2009-04-24 at 03:06 -0700, Fred-145 wrote:
> I think it'd be very useful if the wiki included a list of devices
> that can
> run Freeswitch in addition to a regular PC, especially those that cost
> <
> $150.
That's what the wiki's for. If you create a login you can start a page
and start a
David Knell wrote:
> You might want to take a look at this:
> http://www.amazon.com/IEEE802-11N-Wireless-Broadband-MZK-W04NU-Designed/dp/B000YDS0YG
>
Interesting :-) Thanks for the pointer.
I think it'd be very useful if the wiki included a list of devices that can
run Freeswitch in addition t
You might want to take a look at this:
http://www.amazon.com/IEEE802-11N-Wireless-Broadband-MZK-W04NU-Designed/dp/B000YDS0YG
- twice as much everything as the NSLU2, and is supposed to run OpenWRT
just fine. I've one sat in front of me right now, although I've not yet
plugged it in - have to work
BTW, at 85€, the Linksys NSLU2 looks like a bargain:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NSLU2
Has someone successfully ran Freeswitch on this to handle a couple of
simultaneous SIP conversations?
What about the more expensive but very tiny Gumstix?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gumstix
--
View this
EdPimentl wrote:
> This company may have what you are requesting:
Thanks. The "SolidLogic Little Falls 2699 Mini-ITX" @ $212 looks nice.
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This company may have what you are requesting:
http://www.logicsupply.com/products/dex4501
http://www.logicsupply.com/products/de945_fl
-E
Gpro.ws
http://AskTwitR.com (Real Time Twitter Search & Reputation Management)
http://WatchNtweet.Me (Watch and Chat/Tweet)
http://TwebEX.com (Twit
Hello
For those SOHO customers (ie. at most, a couple of POTS/ISDN connections and
simultaneous SIP calls) who'd rather not use a big, noisy PC to run
Freeswitch, I'd like to offer an alternative that has the following
features:
- not old hardware sold on eBay, ie. it must be up-to-date hardware
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