Hello all,
thanks to all of you for your truly excellent ideas and suggestions, greatly
appreciated!
You have definitely given me a lot of things to play around with in the coming
days.
For starters, I think I will try the built-in Follow Me feature as suggested by
Karl, as it seems like this
On 29/04/2016, at 3:46 am, A J Stiles wrote:
>
>
>
> There is no reliable way to distinguish whether a phone was answered by a
> human being or a machine.
>
> If you can't just disable voicemail on all your SIMs then you will need to
> find out how long
Followme can be configured to accept a keypress to accept or decline the
call. Put something like this in followme.conf:
[general]
featuredigittimeout=>5000
takecall=>1
declinecall=>2
call_from_prompt=>followme/call-from
norecording_prompt=>followme/no-recording
options_prompt=>followme/options
On Thursday 28 Apr 2016, Robin Kipp wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> sorry if the subject is a bit confusing, but I just couldn’t think of a
> good way of better describing the situation…
>
> Basically, I travel a lot and have several SIM cards for my phone from
> local carriers. What I’d like to do now is
Theoretically, I could use the dial function to call one number, then
wait a few seconds and then dial another number. In practice, this
won’t work because as soon as a call is answered by the mobile
carrier’s voicemail the caller would be connected to that, no other
numbers would be called.
Just a few ideas...
1. Disable all mobile carrier's voicemail and configure a voicemail on
your Asterisk. Let Asterisk handle the unanswered calls.
2. If your SIP provider allows multiple calls at the same time,
configure Asterisk to call all your SIMs at once (instead of calling the
first,
I know if you use freepbx on top of asterisk, you get a followme which
calls one or more cell phones and ask for confirmation, maybe the
regular asterisk followme does this as well, but basically this is the
way to do it.
Robin Kipp wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> sorry if the
On Thursday 28 Apr 2016, Mamadou NGOM wrote:
> Hello,
> it doesn't work my dahdi yet .for information, i use debian 8 .
> I put the file dahdi.bash in /etc/init.d and I gave it the permission 755
> but i have the same error: bash: /etc/init.d/dahdi: No such file or
> directory
You need to
Hi all,
sorry if the subject is a bit confusing, but I just couldn’t think of a good
way of better describing the situation…
Basically, I travel a lot and have several SIM cards for my phone from local
carriers. What I’d like to do now is to setup Asterisk, so that people who want
to reach me
On Thu, Apr 28, 2016 at 1:10 AM, Dmitriy Serov wrote:
> Today was another attempt to upgrade to version 13.9 (git).
>
> 1. The result was https://issues.asterisk.org/jira/browse/ASTERISK-25970
>
> Had to temporarily block this contact and look forward to advice of how to
>
Zitat von Mamadou NGOM :
Hello,
it doesn't work my dahdi yet .for information, i use debian 8 .
I put the file dahdi.bash in /etc/init.d and I gave it the permission
755 but i have the same error:
bash: /etc/init.d/dahdi: No such file or directory
Well, if the
Hello, it doesn't work my dahdi yet .for information, i use debian 8 .I put the file dahdi.bash in /etc/init.d and I gave it the permission 755 but i have the same error:bash: /etc/init.d/dahdi: No such file or directoryThanks for your help.> Le 28 avril 2016 à 13:27, A J Stiles
There is an opus patch for asterisk 11.
https://github.com/seanbright/asterisk-opus/tree/asterisk-11 . But it
doesn't have Packet Loss Resilience or Forward Error Correction, both of
which are important for voip.
2.1.6. Packet Loss Resilience
Audio codecs often exploit inter-frame
Today was another attempt to upgrade to version 13.9 (git).
1. The result was https://issues.asterisk.org/jira/browse/ASTERISK-25970
Had to temporarily block this contact and look forward to advice of how
to fix it.
2. Also, an unpleasant surprise was the increase in CPU usage from
10-50%
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