(because faxes using t.38 are able to recover from latency and jitter, thats the point of using t.38 in fax over ip, rtp for audio is a totally different thing)
On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 12:47 PM, [email protected] <[email protected]>wrote: > On Wed, 4 Jan 2012 17:22:54 +0000, Wyland, Tony wrote: > > In theory if given adequate CPU and network bandwidth, sipxecs should be > > able to run in vmware without notice. I know it installs and “works” in > > testing but am curious if people are doing this in production and if any > > unexpected issues > > arose. > > I've set them up for development environments, before backup up and saving > to a physical production server. > Not only do you sometimes hear ripples in the audio (for lack of a better > term) but you really need to ensure the clock is accurate on the vs. You > could get away with it if the vmware server isn't doing else what so ever > but random things will still show up now and then. > > Having said that, I've been running fax servers as the only vs on a host > (actually, one of them has a dns server on it as well) and have never had > one single problem with faxes coming in broken. > > > _______________________________________________ > sipx-users mailing list > [email protected] > List Archive: http://list.sipfoundry.org/archive/sipx-users/ > -- ====================== Tony Graziano, Manager Telephone: 434.984.8430 sip: [email protected] Fax: 434.465.6833 Email: [email protected] LAN/Telephony/Security and Control Systems Helpdesk: Telephone: 434.984.8426 sip: [email protected] Helpdesk Customers: http://myhelp.myitdepartment.net Blog: http://blog.myitdepartment.net Linked-In Profile: http://www.linkedin.com/pub/tony-graziano/14/4a6/7a4 Ask about our Internet Fax services!
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