Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

2014-05-16 Thread Erik Anderson
On-list would be greatly appreciated.

On 5/15/2014 10:26 PM, Faisal Imtiaz wrote:
 Nathan,

 Can you share the recipe for running Asterisk on a Routerboard ?

 On-list or off list will be greatly appreciated.

 I am interested in testing this ...

 Regards


 Faisal Imtiaz
 Snappy Internet  Telecom
 7266 SW 48 Street
 Miami, FL 33155
 Tel: 305 663 5518 x 232

 Help-desk: (305)663-5518 Option 2 or Email: supp...@snappytelecom.net

 - Original Message -
 From: Nathan Anderson nath...@fsr.com
 To: sc...@brevardwireless.com sc...@brevardwireless.com, WISPA General 
 List wireless@wispa.org, Bryce
 Duchcherer bduc...@netago.ca
 Sent: Thursday, May 15, 2014 5:46:54 PM
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

 Yeah, I've thought about trying a Raspberry Pi as a cheap, IP-only PBX.
 Should have more than enough oomph for a small office environment.

 We have had great success running Asterisk directly on MikroTik RouterBoards,
 inside of a MetaROUTER VM.  Of course, both this solution and the Raspberry
 Pi can only be used in a pure IP environment.

 Those Blackfin-based embedded Asterisk systems that Atcom et al. manufacture
 (http://www.rowetel.com/blog/?page_id=440) are also intriguing, but I
 haven't been able to find a good U.S.-based supplier/distributor.

 -- Nathan

 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of Scott Carullo
 Sent: Thursday, May 15, 2014 6:53 AM
 To: Bryce Duchcherer; sc...@brevardwireless.com; WISPA General List
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

 Oh yeah - I should have noted - we have one running at customer site for 16
 phones and its a blueberry pie or whatever those things are called lol.
 Cost less than 100 bucks and we even have two network interfaces on them
 (one usb)
   
 Scott Carullo
 Technical Operations
 855-FLSPEED x102

   http://www.flhsi.com/files/emaillogo.jpg
   
 

 From: Bryce Duchcherer bduc...@netago.ca
 Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 6:16 PM
 To: sc...@brevardwireless.com sc...@brevardwireless.com, WISPA General
 List wireless@wispa.org
 Subject: RE: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM
   

 I have one of these coming in to try out, they're dirt cheap and are supposed
 to be decent. They support up to 8 calls and are supposed to run on
 asterisk.

 http://www.atcom.cn/IP02.html

   

   

 Bryce D

 NETAGO

   

 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of Scott Carullo
 Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 16:08
 To: WISPA General List; WISPA General List
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

   

 I've never been a fan of anything grandstream has ever made so I wouldn't go
 there.  JMO

   

 Get some other solution for the PBX (running your own software on a nice
 little atom works great / some flavor of asterisk) and do yourself a favor
 and pick up some yealink phones.  The name kept me away from the longest
 time but I have tried dozens of phones and right now a T46G is on my desk
 and I won't give it up.  Great price too.  Best phone I have ever used and
 previously I had polycom soundpoint 650.  This one hands down is a better
 solution and its half the price.

   

 Sh...  don't tell everyone I need them in stock!

   

 Scott Carullo
 Technical Operations
 855-FLSPEED x102

   http://www.flhsi.com/files/emaillogo.jpg

   

 

 From: Chris Fabien ch...@lakenetmi.com
 Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 1:29 PM
 To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

   

 It seems like a box on site would make routing/nat issues easier to manage
 especially for customers who may not have our Internet or want to keep a
 second internet provider for redundancy.  It seems like a bunch of ip phones
 behind nat connecting up to our switch or a hosted solution would be
 problematic.

If you have a suggestion on a solid solution i'm all ears, want to learn
whats available and how others are doing this.

 On May 14, 2014 1:21 PM, Faisal Imtiaz fai...@snappytelecom.net wrote:

  Why do you want to put  a 'box' on-site ?

  

  Why not hosted PBX, and have IP Phones  ?

  

  Regards.

  

  Faisal Imtiaz
  Snappy Internet  Telecom
  7266 SW 48 Street
  Miami, FL 33155
  Tel: 305 663 5518 x 232 tel:305%20663%205518%20x%20232

  

  Help-desk: (305)663-5518 tel:%28305%29663-5518  Option 2 or Email:
  supp...@snappytelecom.net

  

 

  From: Chris Fabien ch...@lakenetmi.com
  To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
  Sent: Tuesday, May 13, 2014 11:40:10 PM
  Subject: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

  

  Anyone tried out this Grandstream IP PBX? Looking for a low 
 cost option we
  can use for small businesses with 4-8

Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

2014-05-15 Thread Scott Carullo
Oh yeah - I should have noted - we have one running at customer site for 16 
phones and its a blueberry pie or whatever those things are called lol.  Cost 
less than 100 bucks and we even have two network interfaces on them (one usb)

 Scott Carullo
Technical Operations
855-FLSPEED x102




 From: Bryce Duchcherer bduc...@netago.ca
Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 6:16 PM
To: sc...@brevardwireless.com sc...@brevardwireless.com, WISPA General 
List wireless@wispa.org
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

I have one of these coming in to try out, they're dirt cheap and are supposed 
to be decent. They support up to 8 calls and are supposed to run on asterisk.

http://www.atcom.cn/IP02.html





Bryce D

NETAGO



From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On Behalf 
Of Scott Carullo
Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 16:08
To: WISPA General List; WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM



I've never been a fan of anything grandstream has ever made so I wouldn't go 
there.  JMO



Get some other solution for the PBX (running your own software on a nice little 
atom works great / some flavor of asterisk) and do yourself a favor and pick up 
some yealink phones.  The name kept me away from the longest time but I have 
tried dozens of phones and right now a T46G is on my desk and I won't give it 
up.  Great price too.  Best phone I have ever used and previously I had polycom 
soundpoint 650.  This one hands down is a better solution and its half the 
price.



Sh...  don't tell everyone I need them in stock!



Scott Carullo
Technical Operations
855-FLSPEED x102





From: Chris Fabien ch...@lakenetmi.com
Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 1:29 PM
To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM



It seems like a box on site would make routing/nat issues easier to manage 
especially for customers who may not have our Internet or want to keep a second 
internet provider for redundancy.  It seems like a bunch of ip phones behind 
nat connecting up to our switch or a hosted solution would be problematic.

  If you have a suggestion on a solid solution i'm all ears, want to learn 
whats available and how others are doing this.

On May 14, 2014 1:21 PM, Faisal Imtiaz fai...@snappytelecom.net wrote: 

Why do you want to put  a 'box' on-site ?



Why not hosted PBX, and have IP Phones  ?



Regards.



Faisal Imtiaz
Snappy Internet  Telecom
7266 SW 48 Street
Miami, FL 33155
Tel: 305 663 5518 x 232



Help-desk: (305)663-5518 Option 2 or Email: supp...@snappytelecom.net





From: Chris Fabien ch...@lakenetmi.com
To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
Sent: Tuesday, May 13, 2014 11:40:10 PM
Subject: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM



Anyone tried out this Grandstream IP PBX? Looking for a low cost option we can 
use for small businesses with 4-8 phones. Also need to redo our office phones 
so I have a nice chance to try out a new product before selling one to a 
customer. Any suggestions other than the grandstream are welcome too.

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Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

2014-05-15 Thread Faisal Imtiaz
First of all, thank you for this great discussion, while we are discussing the 
finer points of how we approach things, I would like to state for the record, 
it is not my intent to critique one method over the other, rather a discussion 
on how we solve the common issues related to providing the service to our 
customers.

It is also refreshing to get some overview details on how each of our inhouse 
systems are created / configured / integrated. Speaking for myself, I always 
get some good ideas / feedback from such discussions, and hopeful provide the 
same for yourself and or others.

BTW, thanks for the detailed explanation on B2BUA, I had attempted to do a 
brief explanation for the benefit of others who may be following this thread.

What I find very interesting is how each of our solutions tend to be influenced 
by external factors, business practices, technologies, and our understanding / 
implementation.

Our inhouse Voip platform is built on Virtual Hosting hardware (we are using 
Proxmox) for our hosting cluster.
Some of us are using OmniOS as a Storage Box, others are using local Raid 10 
HDD for storage.

We are using A2billing as LCR call routing, and internal account management, we 
use the post paid capabilities to limit any clients exposure to LD Charges in 
case of a compromise, we are in the process of implementing 3rd iteration of 
the platform, adding scalability, local and geographic redundancy, and 
integration of Freeside billing.

We provision Sip Trunks to IAD for Sip Trunking clients (Sip to pri), and or 
Sip Trunks to a dedicated Hosted PBX (VPS) Freepbx/asterisk instance for Hosted 
PBX Clients.

The IP phones at client site register to the Hosted PBX.. We use proactive 
security on the Hosted PBX Instances. (these days we are favoring OSSEC over 
some of the other usual tools / scripts).

Interesting point to note, while common thinking is that Phone Hacking happens 
at the PBX level, in reality, VM and IP Phone compromise are much more the 
norm in such cases the PBX is not able to determine a compromise.

Having a solid Virtual Hosting Platform, solved a number of other problems for 
us, than just Voice Service Offerings, as such it is easier (less taxing) to 
address security / updates / maintenance / redundancy / scaleability etc etc at 
a central location.

While there is nothing wrong with an on-premises PBX deployment, I know some 
ISP's who prefer doing onsite hardware deployment, but then they also put in a 
larger box, and enable additional services for the client thus getting a better 
ROI... (backup/ router / virtual Hosting etc).

While you and I may choose to follow different strategies, one thing neither 
one of us will disagree on is that having options and choices to do things one 
way or the other is always a good thing.

I hope this discussion, encourages others to test the waters, and not scare 
them away from considering offering services to their clients.
The key is doing it right, with the bigger picture in mind, trying to deal with 
/ put up with limited hardware options from any mfg. whether it is Cisco or 
Grandstream, does not need to be tolerated. :)

Regards.

Faisal Imtiaz
Snappy Internet  Telecom
7266 SW 48 Street
Miami, FL 33155
Tel: 305 663 5518 x 232

Help-desk: (305)663-5518 Option 2 or Email: supp...@snappytelecom.net 

- Original Message -
 From: Nathan Anderson nath...@fsr.com
 To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Sent: Thursday, May 15, 2014 1:40:12 AM
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM
 
 After re-reading what I wrote, I guess I should clarify the following:
 
 We have a homegrown SIP-based telephony service that is built on top of
 Asterisk, but which is emphatically not hosted PBX.  We can provision an
 account as either a single line (one DID, one SIP registration from an ATA,
 2 channels for call-waiting) or a SIP trunk (multiple DIDs, one SIP
 registration from a PBX, multiple channels), and whether it is a single-line
 or trunk account, the customer has the option of specifying an emergency
 call forward number that calls are sent to if either their ATA or PBX goes
 down for whatever reason, or if our main NOC goes down completely
 (worse-case scenario where all connectivity and power redundancy utterly
 fails).
 
 So we are using Asterisk, but we are not using it on our side in our NOC as a
 PBX in the traditional sense or understanding.  We are using it more like a
 telephony software platform or SDK.  If a customer needs a PBX and doesn't
 have a preference, we will sell them an Asterisk-based one (an Asterisk
 instance that is configured more traditionally) to live on their premesis,
 and typically also set up VPN access to it so that we can manage and
 troubleshoot it remotely.  That on-site PBX will get calls sent to it from
 our Asterisk-based server.
 
 We do have enterprise-ish customers that do want BYOPBX, and they
 successfully peer (via SIP) with our Asterisk server using

Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

2014-05-15 Thread Nathan Anderson
Yeah, I've thought about trying a Raspberry Pi as a cheap, IP-only PBX.  Should 
have more than enough oomph for a small office environment.

We have had great success running Asterisk directly on MikroTik RouterBoards, 
inside of a MetaROUTER VM.  Of course, both this solution and the Raspberry Pi 
can only be used in a pure IP environment.

Those Blackfin-based embedded Asterisk systems that Atcom et al. manufacture 
(http://www.rowetel.com/blog/?page_id=440) are also intriguing, but I haven't 
been able to find a good U.S.-based supplier/distributor.

-- Nathan 

-Original Message-
From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On Behalf 
Of Scott Carullo
Sent: Thursday, May 15, 2014 6:53 AM
To: Bryce Duchcherer; sc...@brevardwireless.com; WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

Oh yeah - I should have noted - we have one running at customer site for 16 
phones and its a blueberry pie or whatever those things are called lol.  Cost 
less than 100 bucks and we even have two network interfaces on them (one usb)
 
Scott Carullo
Technical Operations
855-FLSPEED x102

 http://www.flhsi.com/files/emaillogo.jpg 
 


From: Bryce Duchcherer bduc...@netago.ca
Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 6:16 PM
To: sc...@brevardwireless.com sc...@brevardwireless.com, WISPA General 
List wireless@wispa.org
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM 
 

I have one of these coming in to try out, they're dirt cheap and are supposed 
to be decent. They support up to 8 calls and are supposed to run on asterisk.

http://www.atcom.cn/IP02.html

 

 

Bryce D

NETAGO

 

From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On Behalf 
Of Scott Carullo
Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 16:08
To: WISPA General List; WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

 

I've never been a fan of anything grandstream has ever made so I wouldn't go 
there.  JMO

 

Get some other solution for the PBX (running your own software on a nice little 
atom works great / some flavor of asterisk) and do yourself a favor and pick up 
some yealink phones.  The name kept me away from the longest time but I have 
tried dozens of phones and right now a T46G is on my desk and I won't give it 
up.  Great price too.  Best phone I have ever used and previously I had polycom 
soundpoint 650.  This one hands down is a better solution and its half the 
price.

 

Sh...  don't tell everyone I need them in stock!

 

Scott Carullo
Technical Operations
855-FLSPEED x102

 http://www.flhsi.com/files/emaillogo.jpg 

 



From: Chris Fabien ch...@lakenetmi.com
Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 1:29 PM
To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM 

 

It seems like a box on site would make routing/nat issues easier to manage 
especially for customers who may not have our Internet or want to keep a second 
internet provider for redundancy.  It seems like a bunch of ip phones behind 
nat connecting up to our switch or a hosted solution would be problematic.

  If you have a suggestion on a solid solution i'm all ears, want to learn 
whats available and how others are doing this.

On May 14, 2014 1:21 PM, Faisal Imtiaz fai...@snappytelecom.net wrote: 

Why do you want to put  a 'box' on-site ?

 

Why not hosted PBX, and have IP Phones  ?

 

Regards.

 

Faisal Imtiaz
Snappy Internet  Telecom
7266 SW 48 Street
Miami, FL 33155
Tel: 305 663 5518 x 232 tel:305%20663%205518%20x%20232  

 

Help-desk: (305)663-5518 tel:%28305%29663-5518  Option 2 or Email: 
supp...@snappytelecom.net

 



From: Chris Fabien ch...@lakenetmi.com
To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
Sent: Tuesday, May 13, 2014 11:40:10 PM
Subject: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM 

 

Anyone tried out this Grandstream IP PBX? Looking for a low 
cost option we can use for small businesses with 4-8 phones. Also need to redo 
our office phones so I have a nice chance to try out a new product before 
selling one to a customer. Any suggestions other than the grandstream are 
welcome too.


___
Wireless mailing list
Wireless@wispa.org
http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless

 


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Wireless@wispa.org
http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless
 

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Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

2014-05-15 Thread Nathan Anderson
On Thursday, May 15, 2014 11:49 AM, Faisal Imtiaz  wrote:

 First of all, thank you for this great discussion, while we are
 discussing the finer points of how we approach things, I would like to
 state for the record, it is not my intent to critique one method over the
 other, rather a discussion on how we solve the common issues related to
 providing the service to our customers.
 
 It is also refreshing to get some overview details on how each of our
 inhouse systems are created / configured / integrated. Speaking for
 myself, I always get some good ideas / feedback from such discussions,
 and hopeful provide the same for yourself and or others.   

Agreed on both counts!

-- 
Nathan Anderson
First Step Internet, LLC
nath...@fsr.com
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Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

2014-05-15 Thread Faisal Imtiaz
Nathan,

Can you share the recipe for running Asterisk on a Routerboard ?

On-list or off list will be greatly appreciated.

I am interested in testing this ...

Regards


Faisal Imtiaz
Snappy Internet  Telecom
7266 SW 48 Street
Miami, FL 33155
Tel: 305 663 5518 x 232

Help-desk: (305)663-5518 Option 2 or Email: supp...@snappytelecom.net 

- Original Message -
 From: Nathan Anderson nath...@fsr.com
 To: sc...@brevardwireless.com sc...@brevardwireless.com, WISPA General 
 List wireless@wispa.org, Bryce
 Duchcherer bduc...@netago.ca
 Sent: Thursday, May 15, 2014 5:46:54 PM
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM
 
 Yeah, I've thought about trying a Raspberry Pi as a cheap, IP-only PBX.
 Should have more than enough oomph for a small office environment.
 
 We have had great success running Asterisk directly on MikroTik RouterBoards,
 inside of a MetaROUTER VM.  Of course, both this solution and the Raspberry
 Pi can only be used in a pure IP environment.
 
 Those Blackfin-based embedded Asterisk systems that Atcom et al. manufacture
 (http://www.rowetel.com/blog/?page_id=440) are also intriguing, but I
 haven't been able to find a good U.S.-based supplier/distributor.
 
 -- Nathan
 
 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of Scott Carullo
 Sent: Thursday, May 15, 2014 6:53 AM
 To: Bryce Duchcherer; sc...@brevardwireless.com; WISPA General List
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM
 
 Oh yeah - I should have noted - we have one running at customer site for 16
 phones and its a blueberry pie or whatever those things are called lol.
 Cost less than 100 bucks and we even have two network interfaces on them
 (one usb)
  
 Scott Carullo
 Technical Operations
 855-FLSPEED x102
 
  http://www.flhsi.com/files/emaillogo.jpg
  
 
 
 From: Bryce Duchcherer bduc...@netago.ca
 Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 6:16 PM
 To: sc...@brevardwireless.com sc...@brevardwireless.com, WISPA General
 List wireless@wispa.org
 Subject: RE: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM
  
 
 I have one of these coming in to try out, they're dirt cheap and are supposed
 to be decent. They support up to 8 calls and are supposed to run on
 asterisk.
 
 http://www.atcom.cn/IP02.html
 
  
 
  
 
 Bryce D
 
 NETAGO
 
  
 
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of Scott Carullo
 Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 16:08
 To: WISPA General List; WISPA General List
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM
 
  
 
 I've never been a fan of anything grandstream has ever made so I wouldn't go
 there.  JMO
 
  
 
 Get some other solution for the PBX (running your own software on a nice
 little atom works great / some flavor of asterisk) and do yourself a favor
 and pick up some yealink phones.  The name kept me away from the longest
 time but I have tried dozens of phones and right now a T46G is on my desk
 and I won't give it up.  Great price too.  Best phone I have ever used and
 previously I had polycom soundpoint 650.  This one hands down is a better
 solution and its half the price.
 
  
 
 Sh...  don't tell everyone I need them in stock!
 
  
 
 Scott Carullo
 Technical Operations
 855-FLSPEED x102
 
  http://www.flhsi.com/files/emaillogo.jpg
 
  
 
 
 
 From: Chris Fabien ch...@lakenetmi.com
 Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 1:29 PM
 To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM
 
  
 
 It seems like a box on site would make routing/nat issues easier to manage
 especially for customers who may not have our Internet or want to keep a
 second internet provider for redundancy.  It seems like a bunch of ip phones
 behind nat connecting up to our switch or a hosted solution would be
 problematic.
 
   If you have a suggestion on a solid solution i'm all ears, want to learn
   whats available and how others are doing this.
 
 On May 14, 2014 1:21 PM, Faisal Imtiaz fai...@snappytelecom.net wrote:
 
   Why do you want to put  a 'box' on-site ?
 

 
   Why not hosted PBX, and have IP Phones  ?
 

 
   Regards.
 

 
   Faisal Imtiaz
   Snappy Internet  Telecom
   7266 SW 48 Street
   Miami, FL 33155
   Tel: 305 663 5518 x 232 tel:305%20663%205518%20x%20232
 

 
   Help-desk: (305)663-5518 tel:%28305%29663-5518  Option 2 or Email:
   supp...@snappytelecom.net
 

 
 
 
   From: Chris Fabien ch...@lakenetmi.com
   To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
   Sent: Tuesday, May 13, 2014 11:40:10 PM
   Subject: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM
 

 
   Anyone tried out this Grandstream IP PBX? Looking for a low 
 cost option we
   can use for small businesses with 4-8 phones. Also need to redo 
 our

Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

2014-05-15 Thread can...@believewireless.net
We didn't have much luck with running Asterisk on the Routerboard. I wish
it would have
worked as it would simply things greatly!


On Thu, May 15, 2014 at 10:26 PM, Faisal Imtiaz fai...@snappytelecom.netwrote:

 Nathan,

 Can you share the recipe for running Asterisk on a Routerboard ?

 On-list or off list will be greatly appreciated.

 I am interested in testing this ...

 Regards


 Faisal Imtiaz
 Snappy Internet  Telecom
 7266 SW 48 Street
 Miami, FL 33155
 Tel: 305 663 5518 x 232

 Help-desk: (305)663-5518 Option 2 or Email: supp...@snappytelecom.net

 - Original Message -
  From: Nathan Anderson nath...@fsr.com
  To: sc...@brevardwireless.com sc...@brevardwireless.com, WISPA
 General List wireless@wispa.org, Bryce
  Duchcherer bduc...@netago.ca
  Sent: Thursday, May 15, 2014 5:46:54 PM
  Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM
 
  Yeah, I've thought about trying a Raspberry Pi as a cheap, IP-only PBX.
  Should have more than enough oomph for a small office environment.
 
  We have had great success running Asterisk directly on MikroTik
 RouterBoards,
  inside of a MetaROUTER VM.  Of course, both this solution and the
 Raspberry
  Pi can only be used in a pure IP environment.
 
  Those Blackfin-based embedded Asterisk systems that Atcom et al.
 manufacture
  (http://www.rowetel.com/blog/?page_id=440) are also intriguing, but I
  haven't been able to find a good U.S.-based supplier/distributor.
 
  -- Nathan
 
  -Original Message-
  From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
  Behalf Of Scott Carullo
  Sent: Thursday, May 15, 2014 6:53 AM
  To: Bryce Duchcherer; sc...@brevardwireless.com; WISPA General List
  Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM
 
  Oh yeah - I should have noted - we have one running at customer site for
 16
  phones and its a blueberry pie or whatever those things are called lol.
  Cost less than 100 bucks and we even have two network interfaces on them
  (one usb)
 
  Scott Carullo
  Technical Operations
  855-FLSPEED x102
 
   http://www.flhsi.com/files/emaillogo.jpg
 
  
 
  From: Bryce Duchcherer bduc...@netago.ca
  Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 6:16 PM
  To: sc...@brevardwireless.com sc...@brevardwireless.com, WISPA
 General
  List wireless@wispa.org
  Subject: RE: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM
 
 
  I have one of these coming in to try out, they're dirt cheap and are
 supposed
  to be decent. They support up to 8 calls and are supposed to run on
  asterisk.
 
  http://www.atcom.cn/IP02.html
 
 
 
 
 
  Bryce D
 
  NETAGO
 
 
 
  From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
  Behalf Of Scott Carullo
  Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 16:08
  To: WISPA General List; WISPA General List
  Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM
 
 
 
  I've never been a fan of anything grandstream has ever made so I
 wouldn't go
  there.  JMO
 
 
 
  Get some other solution for the PBX (running your own software on a nice
  little atom works great / some flavor of asterisk) and do yourself a
 favor
  and pick up some yealink phones.  The name kept me away from the longest
  time but I have tried dozens of phones and right now a T46G is on my desk
  and I won't give it up.  Great price too.  Best phone I have ever used
 and
  previously I had polycom soundpoint 650.  This one hands down is a better
  solution and its half the price.
 
 
 
  Sh...  don't tell everyone I need them in stock!
 
 
 
  Scott Carullo
  Technical Operations
  855-FLSPEED x102
 
   http://www.flhsi.com/files/emaillogo.jpg
 
 
 
  
 
  From: Chris Fabien ch...@lakenetmi.com
  Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 1:29 PM
  To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
  Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM
 
 
 
  It seems like a box on site would make routing/nat issues easier to
 manage
  especially for customers who may not have our Internet or want to keep a
  second internet provider for redundancy.  It seems like a bunch of ip
 phones
  behind nat connecting up to our switch or a hosted solution would be
  problematic.
 
If you have a suggestion on a solid solution i'm all ears, want to
 learn
whats available and how others are doing this.
 
  On May 14, 2014 1:21 PM, Faisal Imtiaz fai...@snappytelecom.net
 wrote:
 
Why do you want to put  a 'box' on-site ?
 
 
 
Why not hosted PBX, and have IP Phones  ?
 
 
 
Regards.
 
 
 
Faisal Imtiaz
Snappy Internet  Telecom
7266 SW 48 Street
Miami, FL 33155
Tel: 305 663 5518 x 232 tel:305%20663%205518%20x%20232
 
 
 
Help-desk: (305)663-5518 tel:%28305%29663-5518  Option 2 or
 Email:
supp...@snappytelecom.net
 
 
 
  
 
From: Chris Fabien ch...@lakenetmi.com
To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
Sent: Tuesday, May 13, 2014 11

Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

2014-05-14 Thread James Howard
We ordered one as soon as they were available.   We haven't put into use yet 
though.  We currently have an Asterisk (PbxInaFlash version) server in place 
and we would have lost a fair amount of capabilities if we had switched 
already.  Every update that comes out adds in some of the stuff that we are 
using on PBIAF so we're getting closer to starting to use it I think.  We're 
having to redesign our entire IVR setup though because they use time conditions 
completely different than FreePBX or Asterisk does.   It does have some neat 
features.

As far as phones, the Grandstream GXP2124 is WAY better than the old GXP2000s 
were.  The new Grandstream phones with HD audio are definitely noticeably 
better quality on the calls.

From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On Behalf 
Of Chris Fabien
Sent: Tuesday, May 13, 2014 10:40 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

Anyone tried out this Grandstream IP PBX? Looking for a low cost option we can 
use for small businesses with 4-8 phones. Also need to redo our office phones 
so I have a nice chance to try out a new product before selling one to a 
customer. Any suggestions other than the grandstream are welcome too.

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Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

2014-05-14 Thread Eric Rogers
Our consulting firm put one in at a lawyer’s office, to replace an OLD Nortel 
system.  They wanted the simple ability to have an inbound call ring all 
phones, but if it times out after 3 rings, goto an IVR.  We have been doing 
this for a long time with FreePBX, but it is limited with GS.

 

The other bad thing about GS is there are SEVERAL bad bugs that done in a 
certain order, will deem the phone system unsuable… and you cannot restore from 
backup, you have to build it back from scratch.

 

Eric Rogers

Precision Data Solutions, LLC

(317) 831-3000 x200

 

 

From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On Behalf 
Of Darin Steffl
Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 12:28 AM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

 

I put it in for a 12 extension small business and it's working great. Lots of 
firmware updates and new features being added every month or so. They're 
actively developing the platform which is nice. It's cost effective and free 
updates. 

Pair this with flowroute for your sip trunks and you have a solid solution. We 
used yealink for the phones but the grandstream phones should work great too 
and have auto provisioning then. 

On May 13, 2014 10:40 PM, Chris Fabien ch...@lakenetmi.com wrote:

Anyone tried out this Grandstream IP PBX? Looking for a low cost option we can 
use for small businesses with 4-8 phones. Also need to redo our office phones 
so I have a nice chance to try out a new product before selling one to a 
customer. Any suggestions other than the grandstream are welcome too. 


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Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

2014-05-14 Thread Faisal Imtiaz
Why do you want to put a 'box' on-site ? 

Why not hosted PBX, and have IP Phones ? 

Regards. 

Faisal Imtiaz 
Snappy Internet  Telecom 
7266 SW 48 Street 
Miami, FL 33155 
Tel: 305 663 5518 x 232 

Help-desk: (305)663-5518 Option 2 or Email: supp...@snappytelecom.net 

- Original Message -

 From: Chris Fabien ch...@lakenetmi.com
 To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Sent: Tuesday, May 13, 2014 11:40:10 PM
 Subject: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

 Anyone tried out this Grandstream IP PBX? Looking for a low cost option we
 can use for small businesses with 4-8 phones. Also need to redo our office
 phones so I have a nice chance to try out a new product before selling one
 to a customer. Any suggestions other than the grandstream are welcome too.

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Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

2014-05-14 Thread Chris Fabien
It seems like a box on site would make routing/nat issues easier to manage
especially for customers who may not have our Internet or want to keep a
second internet provider for redundancy.  It seems like a bunch of ip
phones behind nat connecting up to our switch or a hosted solution would be
problematic.

  If you have a suggestion on a solid solution i'm all ears, want to learn
whats available and how others are doing this.
On May 14, 2014 1:21 PM, Faisal Imtiaz fai...@snappytelecom.net wrote:

 Why do you want to put  a 'box' on-site ?

 Why not hosted PBX, and have IP Phones  ?

 Regards.

 Faisal Imtiaz
 Snappy Internet  Telecom
 7266 SW 48 Street
 Miami, FL 33155
 Tel: 305 663 5518 x 232

 Help-desk: (305)663-5518 Option 2 or Email: supp...@snappytelecom.net

 --

 *From: *Chris Fabien ch...@lakenetmi.com
 *To: *WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 *Sent: *Tuesday, May 13, 2014 11:40:10 PM
 *Subject: *[WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

 Anyone tried out this Grandstream IP PBX? Looking for a low cost option we
 can use for small businesses with 4-8 phones. Also need to redo our office
 phones so I have a nice chance to try out a new product before selling one
 to a customer. Any suggestions other than the grandstream are welcome too.

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Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

2014-05-14 Thread Scott Carullo
I've never been a fan of anything grandstream has ever made so I wouldn't 
go there.  JMO
  
 Get some other solution for the PBX (running your own software on a nice 
little atom works great / some flavor of asterisk) and do yourself a favor 
and pick up some yealink phones.  The name kept me away from the longest 
time but I have tried dozens of phones and right now a T46G is on my desk 
and I won't give it up.  Great price too.  Best phone I have ever used and 
previously I had polycom soundpoint 650.  This one hands down is a better 
solution and its half the price.
  
 Sh...  don't tell everyone I need them in stock!
  
 Scott Carullo
Technical Operations
855-FLSPEED x102

  


 From: Chris Fabien ch...@lakenetmi.com
Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 1:29 PM
To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM   

It seems like a box on site would make routing/nat issues easier to manage 
especially for customers who may not have our Internet or want to keep a 
second internet provider for redundancy.  It seems like a bunch of ip 
phones behind nat connecting up to our switch or a hosted solution would be 
problematic.  

  If you have a suggestion on a solid solution i'm all ears, want to learn 
whats available and how others are doing this.  On May 14, 2014 1:21 PM, 
Faisal Imtiaz fai...@snappytelecom.net wrote: Why do you want to 
put  a 'box' on-site ?
  
 Why not hosted PBX, and have IP Phones  ?
  
 Regards.
  
 Faisal Imtiaz
Snappy Internet  Telecom
7266 SW 48 Street
Miami, FL 33155
Tel: 305 663 5518 x 232   
Help-desk: (305)663-5518 Option 2 or Email: supp...@snappytelecom.net
  


 From: Chris Fabien ch...@lakenetmi.com
To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
Sent: Tuesday, May 13, 2014 11:40:10 PM
Subject: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM   
 Anyone tried out this Grandstream IP PBX? Looking for a low cost option we 
can use for small businesses with 4-8 phones. Also need to redo our office 
phones so I have a nice chance to try out a new product before selling one 
to a customer. Any suggestions other than the grandstream are welcome too.

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Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

2014-05-14 Thread Bryce Duchcherer
I have one of these coming in to try out, they're dirt cheap and are supposed 
to be decent. They support up to 8 calls and are supposed to run on asterisk.
http://www.atcom.cn/IP02.html


Bryce D
NETAGO

From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On Behalf 
Of Scott Carullo
Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 16:08
To: WISPA General List; WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

I've never been a fan of anything grandstream has ever made so I wouldn't go 
there.  JMO

Get some other solution for the PBX (running your own software on a nice little 
atom works great / some flavor of asterisk) and do yourself a favor and pick up 
some yealink phones.  The name kept me away from the longest time but I have 
tried dozens of phones and right now a T46G is on my desk and I won't give it 
up.  Great price too.  Best phone I have ever used and previously I had polycom 
soundpoint 650.  This one hands down is a better solution and its half the 
price.

Sh...  don't tell everyone I need them in stock!

Scott Carullo
Technical Operations
855-FLSPEED x102

[http://www.flhsi.com/files/emaillogo.jpg]


From: Chris Fabien ch...@lakenetmi.commailto:ch...@lakenetmi.com
Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 1:29 PM
To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.orgmailto:wireless@wispa.org
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM


It seems like a box on site would make routing/nat issues easier to manage 
especially for customers who may not have our Internet or want to keep a second 
internet provider for redundancy.  It seems like a bunch of ip phones behind 
nat connecting up to our switch or a hosted solution would be problematic.

  If you have a suggestion on a solid solution i'm all ears, want to learn 
whats available and how others are doing this.
On May 14, 2014 1:21 PM, Faisal Imtiaz 
fai...@snappytelecom.netmailto:fai...@snappytelecom.net wrote:
Why do you want to put  a 'box' on-site ?

Why not hosted PBX, and have IP Phones  ?

Regards.

Faisal Imtiaz
Snappy Internet  Telecom
7266 SW 48 Street
Miami, FL 33155
Tel: 305 663 5518 x 232tel:305%20663%205518%20x%20232

Help-desk: (305)663-5518tel:%28305%29663-5518 Option 2 or Email: 
supp...@snappytelecom.netmailto:supp...@snappytelecom.net


From: Chris Fabien ch...@lakenetmi.commailto:ch...@lakenetmi.com
To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.orgmailto:wireless@wispa.org
Sent: Tuesday, May 13, 2014 11:40:10 PM
Subject: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

Anyone tried out this Grandstream IP PBX? Looking for a low cost option we can 
use for small businesses with 4-8 phones. Also need to redo our office phones 
so I have a nice chance to try out a new product before selling one to a 
customer. Any suggestions other than the grandstream are welcome too.

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Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

2014-05-14 Thread Faisal Imtiaz
We find it easier to manage nat/routing issues via a hosted pbx. 
(Pbx is hosted on a Virtual Server VPS at the DataCenter) 
Using Mikrotik's as client routers (managed router service) is very practical. 
Setting up Dual ISP with Failover is a bit daunting task, however if you 
follow this, recipe to get it done.. 
http://mum.mikrotik.com/presentations/US12/tomas.pdf 

Plus it is my opinion, that it is easier to manage / monitor / secure the PBX 
at the datacenter than one at client site. 

Regards. 

Faisal Imtiaz 
Snappy Internet  Telecom 
7266 SW 48 Street 
Miami, FL 33155 
Tel: 305 663 5518 x 232 

Help-desk: (305)663-5518 Option 2 or Email: supp...@snappytelecom.net 

- Original Message -

 From: Chris Fabien ch...@lakenetmi.com
 To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 1:29:14 PM
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

 It seems like a box on site would make routing/nat issues easier to manage
 especially for customers who may not have our Internet or want to keep a
 second internet provider for redundancy. It seems like a bunch of ip phones
 behind nat connecting up to our switch or a hosted solution would be
 problematic.

 If you have a suggestion on a solid solution i'm all ears, want to learn
 whats available and how others are doing this.
 On May 14, 2014 1:21 PM, Faisal Imtiaz  fai...@snappytelecom.net  wrote:

  Why do you want to put a 'box' on-site ?
 

  Why not hosted PBX, and have IP Phones ?
 

  Regards.
 

  Faisal Imtiaz
 
  Snappy Internet  Telecom
 
  7266 SW 48 Street
 
  Miami, FL 33155
 
  Tel: 305 663 5518 x 232
 

  Help-desk: (305)663-5518 Option 2 or Email: supp...@snappytelecom.net
 

   From: Chris Fabien  ch...@lakenetmi.com 
  
 
   To: WISPA General List  wireless@wispa.org 
  
 
   Sent: Tuesday, May 13, 2014 11:40:10 PM
  
 
   Subject: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM
  
 

   Anyone tried out this Grandstream IP PBX? Looking for a low cost option
   we
   can use for small businesses with 4-8 phones. Also need to redo our
   office
   phones so I have a nice chance to try out a new product before selling
   one
   to a customer. Any suggestions other than the grandstream are welcome
   too.
  
 

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Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

2014-05-14 Thread Nathan Anderson
Working around NAT issues with SIP and RTP has little-to-nothing to do with 
whether the PBX lives in the cloud or is a local piece of hardware.  We do 
not (at this time) do hosted PBX ourselves, and NAT is generally not a problem.

Our strategy isn't even to use something like STUN or TURN.  It is simply to 
employ a B2BUA architecture, where both the SIP and RTP traffic is always 
guaranteed to come from a single IP, the same one that the customer phone or 
PBX initiated communication with when it registered itself to our SIP+RTP proxy 
(and we require SIP registration and don't offer static IP authentication as an 
option).  We also use a low SIP registration expiration timer.  That way the 
necessary port mappings are already in the NAT router's connection tracking 
table, so when an unsolicited SIP message hits their router, it gets sent to 
the right place, and those entries in the table are constantly getting 
refreshed.

It probably doesn't hurt that in many cases, we also end up selling the 
customer a router that actually has a decent SIP ALG implementation 
(MikroTik/Linux).  But I've found that even with the ALG turned off, everything 
still works fine.

Security of a local PBX is also relatively straightforward.  DO put the PBX 
behind a NAT, and DON'T create any static port forwards to it on the NAT 
router.  Just let NAT/conntrack and the ALG do their jobs.  Then unsolicited 
SIP traffic coming from hosts other than your own SIP proxy will never reach 
their PBX.  Any attacker would first have to compromise the NAT router, and if 
they didn't have any reason to believe that you were running an IP PBX behind 
it anyway (and why would they if external scans never generated a response to a 
SIP message?), they would have no reason to go to the trouble of attempting to 
break into the router in order to gain access to the PBX, unless they were 
targeting your organization specifically (so, a person who had a beef with 
you/your customer, and not some automated bot spewing SIP INVITEs to thousands 
of public IPs).

I am personally not a fan of the whole hosted PBX craze myself, although we may 
eventually feel the pressure of coming out with a product like that for our 
customers if the demand becomes such that we can no longer ignore it.  I don't 
really get why people want it or where the benefit is.  I think most people 
just have it in their heads that if they pay per port for a hosted solution, 
that method of pricing service has some inherent cost-savings built into it.  
That, and they think that having the PBX in the cloud rather than local means 
that it's one less piece of gear for them to maintain.  But there is nothing 
preventing somebody (like the provider) from selling or renting the end-user a 
piece of hardware and also maintaining it for them remotely.  The end result is 
the same: the customer doesn't have to worry about it.  The huge downside I see 
with hosted PBX is that if the internet connection goes down or the cloud PBX 
becomes unreachable for some other reason, then all the 
 phones that happen to be in the same building and connected to the same LAN 
don't work at all, even for, say, local phone-to-phone intercom calling in the 
same building, or group paging, or what-have-you.  If you tried to sell a 
business individual internet connections for each computer in their 
organization, where all of the computers would have to go through the internet 
in order to exchange data with each other, people would think you are nuts.  So 
why are people so eager to sell (and buy) phone service that works on the same 
principle?

But I digress.

--
Nathan Anderson
First Step Internet, LLC
nath...@fsr.com

-Original Message-
From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On Behalf 
Of Faisal Imtiaz
Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 4:32 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

We find it easier to manage nat/routing issues via a hosted pbx.
   (Pbx is hosted on a Virtual Server VPS at the DataCenter)
 Using Mikrotik's as client routers  (managed router service) is very practical.
 
Setting up Dual ISP with Failover is a bit daunting task, however if you 
follow this, recipe to get it done..
  http://mum.mikrotik.com/presentations/US12/tomas.pdf

Plus it is my opinion, that it is easier to manage / monitor / secure the PBX 
at the datacenter than one at client site.

Regards.

Faisal Imtiaz
Snappy Internet  Telecom
7266 SW 48 Street
Miami, FL 33155
Tel: 305 663 5518 x 232


Help-desk: (305)663-5518 Option 2 or Email: supp...@snappytelecom.net 





From: Chris Fabien ch...@lakenetmi.com
To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 1:29:14 PM
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM



It seems like a box on site would make routing/nat issues easier to 
manage especially for customers who may

Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

2014-05-14 Thread Faisal Imtiaz
Agreed, that SIP/RTP   NAT issues are non-issue when you are using a consistent 
Router such as Mikrotik.

B2BUA (Back to Back user agent, e.g. asterisk to asterisk) has its advantage 
and also it's own set of issues (typically in Codec Conversion ...

STUN or TURN are not necessary either, all depends on the deployment.

We don't depoly sip proxy either, we spin small instances (openvz) for each 
customer, have a scripted install for Freepbx, security etc.. let the phones 
register to the pbx directly.

I strongly disagree about security for the pbx, it is irrelevant if the pbx is 
hosted or on client premises, security has to be proactive and reactive, static 
security is not sufficient, I believe it is less work maintaining a number of  
VPS vs a number of distributed hardware devices located at multiple client 
premises.

As to the question of Hosted vs On-Premise, the right answer has to do with 
what I call external factors...
e.g. in our neck of the woods, travel time is a significant factor, and cost of 
professional labor is high...
being able to manage VPS, provisioning, backup, etc etc (we do all of this 
remotely from our office on machines located at the Data Center), we are able 
to do things much more efficiently than dealing with travel time and running 
around town. (Heck, only today,  I turned up two new extension, one in 
Oklahoma, and another in Tennessee, for a Client based out of Carmel,IN, with 
local DID's, and these two extension are ready to be in service for tomorrow's 
business day !)  

I will agree with you that, having an on-premise pbx is advantageous when there 
is an internet outage (local ext. to ext calls work), this is the reason why 
most of our implementations have dual internet connections (which is easier for 
us to do in our neck of the woods), thus the hosted solution offering being 
more advantageous, (most folks are also carrying Cell Phones, and heavily 
utilize failover to cell in case of an outage).

The flip side is, that if the hosted pbx is in the Data Center with redundant 
internet, it does not go down in case of internet outage the calls get directed 
to VM, or forwarded to Cell. Which is not true in-case of onsite pbx.

I believe that Service Providers, need to learn how to deal with Voice on their 
network, and offer voice services to their customers, when done properly, it is 
most likely to be the MOST PROFITABLE service. If not done properly, it can be 
the biggest headache.

SIP, Voice are mature and accepted Technologies, customers are receptive to it, 
and philosophically speaking I like to keep consistent with the Service 
Provider mentality... vs Hardware Sales mentality When we can offer 
anything as a service for recurring revenue, Why would we want to settle for a 
one time revenue from Hardware Sale and Integration ?

I agree with you, that this is 75%  NSP Business Owner philosophy, and about 
25% actual Tech reasoning. 

I am glad to have this discussion on the list, hopefully this will get folk to 
consider / re-consider their position on offering Voice Services..

:)


Faisal Imtiaz
Snappy Internet  Telecom
7266 SW 48 Street
Miami, FL 33155
Tel: 305 663 5518 x 232

Help-desk: (305)663-5518 Option 2 or Email: supp...@snappytelecom.net 

- Original Message -
 From: Nathan Anderson nath...@fsr.com
 To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 9:39:39 PM
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM
 
 Working around NAT issues with SIP and RTP has little-to-nothing to do with
 whether the PBX lives in the cloud or is a local piece of hardware.  We do
 not (at this time) do hosted PBX ourselves, and NAT is generally not a
 problem.
 
 Our strategy isn't even to use something like STUN or TURN.  It is simply to
 employ a B2BUA architecture, where both the SIP and RTP traffic is always
 guaranteed to come from a single IP, the same one that the customer phone or
 PBX initiated communication with when it registered itself to our SIP+RTP
 proxy (and we require SIP registration and don't offer static IP
 authentication as an option).  We also use a low SIP registration expiration
 timer.  That way the necessary port mappings are already in the NAT router's
 connection tracking table, so when an unsolicited SIP message hits their
 router, it gets sent to the right place, and those entries in the table are
 constantly getting refreshed.
 
 It probably doesn't hurt that in many cases, we also end up selling the
 customer a router that actually has a decent SIP ALG implementation
 (MikroTik/Linux).  But I've found that even with the ALG turned off,
 everything still works fine.
 
 Security of a local PBX is also relatively straightforward.  DO put the PBX
 behind a NAT, and DON'T create any static port forwards to it on the NAT
 router.  Just let NAT/conntrack and the ALG do their jobs.  Then unsolicited
 SIP traffic coming from hosts other than your own SIP proxy will never reach
 their PBX.  Any

Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

2014-05-14 Thread Nathan Anderson
 which one is more inherently secure.  (Of 
course, just beca
 use it is behind a NAT does not mean you can eliminiate active vigilance and 
policing of the PBX itself, or that you don't need to enforce any additional 
security policies.)

There is also absolutely nothing that prevents us from setting up call 
forwarding to cell phones or from having a backup voicemail box take calls in 
the event that our communication with the end-user's PBX is interrupted.  Our 
home-grown platform absolutely allows us to do this, and I'm sure it is not 
unique in this regard.

I agree that ultimately what this comes down to is a business philosophy, but 
business philosophies can have either a positive or negative impact on the end 
product and the customer experience.  I hear you on trying to avoid truck-rolls 
to customers, but for the majority of the stuff that you might be asked to do 
for a customer's PBX if it was on-site, you could do all of those things 
remotely, just the same as if the PBX was some VM that existed on some public 
server out there.  For example, if a remote client wanted us to turn up a new 
extension for them with a new local DID, I could do all of that from the 
comfort of my desk without dispatching anyone, just the same as you.  The only 
thing I can think of that would be an exception to that is hardware failure, 
which is a real possibility.  So what I am hearing is that hosted PBX has all 
of these supposed benefits, but all of those benefits are ones that favor the 
provider of the service by making things more convenient for them, an
 d which doesn't necessarily provide additional value-add for the end-user (and 
in fact might take away some value, depending on how you look at it).

I also agree about looking at it from a service provider perspective, but I 
guess I disagree with what that actually looks like.  Like you, I am not 
interested in making money by selling hardware.  I want to sell service.  To 
me, what that means is selling either a single line of service (e.g., residence 
using an ATA) or a SIP trunk that peers with a PBX of that user's choice.  In 
either case, what I care about are the recurring monthlies.  If the customer 
doesn't have an ATA or PBX that they are bringing to the table, then we can 
sell them one and even set it up for them and configure it such that we can get 
into it remotely to actively manage it for them.  This is the *exact same 
philosophy* that we follow when it comes to internet connectivity: if the 
customer has a router that they want to use, fine.  If they don't, we'll sell 
them one.  If they want us to help with its configuration (either one-time or 
on an ongoing basis), we can do that, too.  But all of that is just to keep t
 he monthly service revenues coming in.  We are simply trying to be consistent 
in the way that we approach both data and voice services.  Treating IP routing 
one way (local router + LAN) and PSTN routing another (everything is hosted/in 
the cloud) just doesn't make sense to me.

Again, thanks for the discussion!

--
Nathan Anderson
First Step Internet, LLC
nath...@fsr.com

-Original Message-
From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On Behalf 
Of Faisal Imtiaz
Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 8:54 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

Agreed, that SIP/RTP   NAT issues are non-issue when you are using a consistent 
Router such as Mikrotik.

B2BUA (Back to Back user agent, e.g. asterisk to asterisk) has its advantage 
and also it's own set of issues (typically in Codec Conversion ...

STUN or TURN are not necessary either, all depends on the deployment.

We don't depoly sip proxy either, we spin small instances (openvz) for each 
customer, have a scripted install for Freepbx, security etc.. let the phones 
register to the pbx directly.

I strongly disagree about security for the pbx, it is irrelevant if the pbx is 
hosted or on client premises, security has to be proactive and reactive, static 
security is not sufficient, I believe it is less work maintaining a number of  
VPS vs a number of distributed hardware devices located at multiple client 
premises.

As to the question of Hosted vs On-Premise, the right answer has to do with 
what I call external factors...
e.g. in our neck of the woods, travel time is a significant factor, and cost of 
professional labor is high...
being able to manage VPS, provisioning, backup, etc etc (we do all of this 
remotely from our office on machines located at the Data Center), we are able 
to do things much more efficiently than dealing with travel time and running 
around town. (Heck, only today,  I turned up two new extension, one in 
Oklahoma, and another in Tennessee, for a Client based out of Carmel,IN, with 
local DID's, and these two extension are ready to be in service for tomorrow's 
business day !)

I will agree with you that, having an on-premise pbx is advantageous when there 
is an internet outage

Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

2014-05-14 Thread Nathan Anderson
After re-reading what I wrote, I guess I should clarify the following:

We have a homegrown SIP-based telephony service that is built on top of 
Asterisk, but which is emphatically not hosted PBX.  We can provision an 
account as either a single line (one DID, one SIP registration from an ATA, 2 
channels for call-waiting) or a SIP trunk (multiple DIDs, one SIP registration 
from a PBX, multiple channels), and whether it is a single-line or trunk 
account, the customer has the option of specifying an emergency call forward 
number that calls are sent to if either their ATA or PBX goes down for whatever 
reason, or if our main NOC goes down completely (worse-case scenario where all 
connectivity and power redundancy utterly fails).

So we are using Asterisk, but we are not using it on our side in our NOC as a 
PBX in the traditional sense or understanding.  We are using it more like a 
telephony software platform or SDK.  If a customer needs a PBX and doesn't have 
a preference, we will sell them an Asterisk-based one (an Asterisk instance 
that is configured more traditionally) to live on their premesis, and typically 
also set up VPN access to it so that we can manage and troubleshoot it 
remotely.  That on-site PBX will get calls sent to it from our Asterisk-based 
server.

We do have enterprise-ish customers that do want BYOPBX, and they successfully 
peer (via SIP) with our Asterisk server using things like (e.g.) Cisco 
CallManager/UCM.  So I feel that by attacking the voice provisioning problem in 
the same way that we attack data provisioning, we give customers options and 
flexibility that allow us to serve customers we would otherwise have to turn 
away, or who wouldn't even give us a passing glance.

--
Nathan Anderson
First Step Internet, LLC
nath...@fsr.com

-Original Message-
From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On Behalf 
Of Nathan Anderson
Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2014 10:17 PM
To: 'WISPA General List'
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

Lots to address here. :)  Thanks for engaging.

By B2BUA, I don't mean Asterisk to Asterisk.  I mean something like Asterisk 
itself...Asterisk is, by its very nature, a self-contained back-to-back user 
agent.  That is, it doesn't just forward SIP messages from a proxy or UA 
upstream.  It pretends to be both the final endpoint as well as the original 
calling UA, inserting itself into the middle of the conversation at all levels: 
it answers the incoming INVITE itself, and then generates a brand-new INVITE 
with a different ID/sequence number that it sends on, as if the originating 
INVITE is coming directly from that Asterisk instance.  Asterisk also can proxy 
the RTP audio as well, such that the SDP content in the INVITE points back at 
itself rather than whatever the originating media gateway is.

In a typical SIP switching/proxy architecture, this is just not done...the host 
that the target UA gets its marching orders from (SIP INVITE, etc.) is not 
necessarily where the audio stream comes from.  It's also not necessarily the 
same proxy that future SIP messages for that particular session are expected to 
come from or go to.  The RTP media gateway is oftentimes at a completely 
different IP address.  All of this can serve to make the whole scheme very 
NAT-unfriendly and also makes crafting competent ALGs more tricky than one 
might assume.  So NAT issues can arise even with known-good routers, and my 
point was not really that we are solving the problem by using good routers, 
but that we are trying to eliminate the problem at a different level so that we 
don't have to care 99% of the time what router a customer is using.  Reducing 
the multitude of IP addresses that are involved in a typical SIP session from 
the destination UA's perspective down to a single IP plays a huge part i
 n this.

Asterisk is a B2BUA in the SIP context not because that's what the authors of 
Asterisk consciously intended when it came to adding SIP support, but is rather 
that way by its very nature, because it was written from the ground up to be a 
technology-agnostic telephone platform, not a SIP-specific platform.  Asterisk 
needs to be able to bridge channels from disparate interfaces and technologoes 
(TDM to SIP, analog to TDM, etc.).  Asterisk treats SIP-to-SIP calls no 
differently internally than it treats SIP-to-ISDN or analog-to-PRI.  The 
Asterisk core actually has no clue what technologies are behind the two channel 
legs that it is being asked to bridge together...that all gets abstracted away 
by the channel drivers.  And at its core, Asterisk already knows how to do 
audio transcoding because it needs to be able to do that in order to fulfill 
its stated mission, even if it didn't have SIP support at all.  In actuality, 
if all you are dealing with is pure SIP, a B2BUA such as Asterisk i
 s technically not as efficient from a resources perspective...because it is 
having to keep track of state

[WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

2014-05-13 Thread Chris Fabien
Anyone tried out this Grandstream IP PBX? Looking for a low cost option we
can use for small businesses with 4-8 phones. Also need to redo our office
phones so I have a nice chance to try out a new product before selling one
to a customer. Any suggestions other than the grandstream are welcome too.
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Re: [WISPA] Small IP PBX - Grandstream UCM

2014-05-13 Thread Darin Steffl
I put it in for a 12 extension small business and it's working great. Lots
of firmware updates and new features being added every month or so. They're
actively developing the platform which is nice. It's cost effective and
free updates.

Pair this with flowroute for your sip trunks and you have a solid solution.
We used yealink for the phones but the grandstream phones should work great
too and have auto provisioning then.
On May 13, 2014 10:40 PM, Chris Fabien ch...@lakenetmi.com wrote:

 Anyone tried out this Grandstream IP PBX? Looking for a low cost option we
 can use for small businesses with 4-8 phones. Also need to redo our office
 phones so I have a nice chance to try out a new product before selling one
 to a customer. Any suggestions other than the grandstream are welcome too.

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 Wireless@wispa.org
 http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless


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