Re: [asterisk-users] Stumped with Dial - $50 for answer - closed!
the answer sucks, but is apparently correct. imho Andrew Kohlsmith is The Man, although there was someone in Germany who emailed about the T option which actually works about as well - please email me. Andrew Kohlsmith please email me. Will pay paypal if that's ok. --- Andrew Kohlsmith [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Tuesday 16 January 2007 2:31 pm, chester c young wrote: however, it takes about SEVEN seconds after the called party hangs up before the next priority is executed - same as with the T option. What kind of last leg are these calls? to POTS (even CAS T1) or PRI? as contrast to h option, when called party hits asterisk, the next priority is almost immediate. This is because Asterisk knows you want a hangup. My hunch is that you're terminating to POTS instead of PRI, and that is how long it takes for your telco provider to supply CPD signaling on the analog interface. I know Bell Canada is about that long. -A. ___ --Bandwidth and Colocation provided by Easynews.com -- asterisk-users mailing list To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users Need Mail bonding? Go to the Yahoo! Mail QA for great tips from Yahoo! Answers users. http://answers.yahoo.com/dir/?link=listsid=396546091 ___ --Bandwidth and Colocation provided by Easynews.com -- asterisk-users mailing list To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users
Re: [asterisk-users] Stumped with Dial - $50 for answer - closed!
Am Dienstag, den 16.01.2007, 15:04 -0800 schrieb chester c young: the answer sucks, but is apparently correct. If your application involves the caller (e.g. an employee of your company) to rate the call he just did, or to enter any data to a mysql database over the phone right after the call, you could use the H option (neither T nor h, then) and tell your phone personell about it: After the call finished, press * and answer the questions the computer reads out to you. That way, Asterisk would (expectedly) stay in the Audio path and even find out that the call ended if your employee did not *g* - and your employees could cut those 7 second delays. Your IVR for aprés-call interaction should skip the first digit if it happens to be an * though, because it could happen that Asterisk sees the far end hangup just a blink before the user hits the * key. imho Andrew Kohlsmith is The Man, although there was someone in Germany who emailed about the T option which actually works about as well - please email me. Andrew Kohlsmith please email me. Will pay paypal if that's ok. If you mean me (being in Germany and all that), and if you intend to hand out any money to me (which is not absolutely clear from that statement), please donate to openvpn.org - they accept paypal :-). It is one of the many open source projects whose software I use regularly and have no time ressources (let us not talk about skills :-) to contribute to. BR Anselm ___ --Bandwidth and Colocation provided by Easynews.com -- asterisk-users mailing list To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users
Re: [asterisk-users] Stumped with Dial - $50 for answer - closed!
$25 to openvpn.org - thanks to Anselm Martin Hoffmeister --- Anselm Martin Hoffmeister [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Am Dienstag, den 16.01.2007, 15:04 -0800 schrieb chester c young: the answer sucks, but is apparently correct. If your application involves the caller (e.g. an employee of your company) to rate the call he just did, or to enter any data to a mysql database over the phone right after the call, you could use the H option (neither T nor h, then) and tell your phone personell about it: After the call finished, press * and answer the questions the computer reads out to you. That way, Asterisk would (expectedly) stay in the Audio path and even find out that the call ended if your employee did not *g* - and your employees could cut those 7 second delays. Your IVR for aprés-call interaction should skip the first digit if it happens to be an * though, because it could happen that Asterisk sees the far end hangup just a blink before the user hits the * key. This is for volunteers calling other members of their organization, so need to keep everything low key and polite. A volunteer will call in, either by POT or SIP and will stay connected as Asterisk dials the number of the fellow member whom they've selected on a browser. The seven seconds is bad because that's a bit too long between calls - people tend to loose their concentration. Be a PS3 game guru. Get your game face on with the latest PS3 news and previews at Yahoo! Games. http://videogames.yahoo.com/platform?platform=120121 ___ --Bandwidth and Colocation provided by Easynews.com -- asterisk-users mailing list To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users