Its not that abvious.

It depends on the identity sent through your ITSP. I'm assuming in this case
PSTN means a sip trunk, because most analog providers do not allow you to
assert the caller-d (some do on PRI or ISDN, but not POTS). Since yours says
sipxbridge, it must be something to do with the caller-id being sent through
sipXbridge. I would look at the p-asserted-identity.


Use default asserted identity(Default: checked)If checked (default), use the
default asserted identity. Otherwise, you must enter a usern...@domain to
override the default.
Asserted identity
On Fri, Jan 8, 2010 at 9:20 PM, Robert B <[email protected]> wrote:

>  I recently placed a call from my Aastra to a user over the PSTN to a
> Polycom 550 handset on Asterisk.
>
> The strange thing is, the caller ID showed up on the remote end as
> "sipXbridge" -- according to the person I called, who I believe since they
> have no idea what sipXecs is.
>
> I did not think that this was possible... Anyone have any ideas? Is this
> obvious and I just don't know it?
>
> -- Robert
>
>
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>



-- 
======================
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Fax: 434.984.8431

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