On 07/02/2008, Brent Davidson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> We're deploying an asterisk-based phone system at all of our branch
> offices in an effort to eliminate long-distance costs incurred from the
> constant branch to branch calls. We're using the Snom 300's at all
> offices for the desk phone
Brent Davidson wrote:
> I thought I had the echo out of the system, but it keeps coming back...
> What I'm being told is that when the users call out from their snom
> phones they hear their own voice. There's no delay, but it's extremely
Does it happen on all-digital calls (e.g., intercom be
I thought I had the echo out of the system, but it keeps coming back...
What I'm being told is that when the users call out from their snom
phones they hear their own voice. There's no delay, but it's extremely
loud. If I cut their mic volume down to the point where the sidetone is
not a pro
After Andrew's suggestion, if that isn't the problem, spend some more
time on OSLEC to be darn sure it's operating properly -- that thing
works like a champ for my crappy lines!
Moj
Brent Davidson wrote:
> We're deploying an asterisk-based phone system at all of our branch
> offices in an effo
They could be reporting glare back from the phone because the mic or
ear volume is miss matched, normalize the volume on the phones.
On Feb 7, 2008 12:40 PM, Brent Davidson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> We're deploying an asterisk-based phone system at all of our branch
> offices in an effort to e
We're deploying an asterisk-based phone system at all of our branch
offices in an effort to eliminate long-distance costs incurred from the
constant branch to branch calls. We're using the Snom 300's at all
offices for the desk phones and X100P cards to interface to 2 analog
lines. I'm having