[kwlug-disc] Unlimitel/ATA pricing
unsolicited
unsolicited at swiz.ca
Thu Mar 12 20:28:36 EDT 2009
Paul Nijjar wrote, On 03/12/2009 5:59 PM:
> --- On Thu, 3/12/09, L.D. Paniak <ldpaniak at fourpisolutions.com>
> wrote:
>> Each FXS port on the 2102 has to register to its *own* DID.
In the 'programming' (web interface) for the spa, you indicate what
provider to 'log in' to, and what your number is, for EACH port / DID.
Therefore, the one 2102 will handle two DID lines. (And you'll patch
two sets of 4 (2?) wires into your Nortel.
Not to say you can't have two registrants to the same DID, but IIRC
unlimitel specifically forbids that. For those providers that do allow
it, this is how you register your hard IP phone, wi-fi IP phone, soft
phone, and ATA (and forward to your cell?), to the same number so all
ring at once on an incoming call, and whatever you have closest to you
at the time is what you pick up. Other variations might have them ring
in sequence rather than simultaneously.
In your home, you would patch the SPA in place of your current
internal phone connection so that all your phones ring at the same
time. Further, with the 2102, you could split your home sets in two,
each of which may be multiple phones, creating extensions. Because in
that case you're registering with your local Asterisk box, which
itself registers with unlimitel. [Which creates the possibility of
distinctive ring, and we start to get strange, as these 'analogue'
concepts don't translate exactly to VoIP / Unlimitel - you'd have to
inquire further on this for exact details.]
[With multi-handset cordless phones, REN limits are less onerous - the
one system ringer / REN value in turn rings all the handsets on its
own, without additional REN load.]
>
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> So the two ports on the box act as a shared line? Say I hook up two
> analog phones to the 2102. Now I pick up one phone and make a call.
> If I pick up the other phone I am going to listen in on the
> conversation?
No, see above. And not even necessarily if they're both registered to
the same DID. A call is a point to point connection - we're in the
digital ip/port realm, not a phone creating an additional electrical
circuit to another speaker/microphone on the same pair of analogue
copper wires.
That's not to say you can't conference the other port in, the SPA has
that feature, but at this point the other end of your digital phone
connection is to the Nortel, not the SPA. You can conference the other
phone in (whomever the other DID is associated with), but you're
creating that conference within the Nortel - it will be doing the
collating.
At home, the SPA would be doing it. If you didn't have an Asterisk box.
>
> Could I purchase two DIDs and configure the 2102 to use them both?
> Or is this also foolish thinking?
This is correct thinking. And the only correct thinking. The SPA is
acting as a voice router in this aspect, just as your internet browser
on your computer goes out over the ip router connected to your ISP.
>
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> This is good advice. I am going to have to see how the logistics of
> this will work out. We are actually thinking about this for a brand
> new building we are setting up, for which we would like multiple
> Bell lines but can't afford them.
This is your opportunity to move to Asterisk.
Earlier, when looking for info. for you regarding Nortel / CICS /
VoIP, I came across threads where they talked about a branch office
hooking into the current office's voice infrastructure, without
additional phone line, key or pbx system purchasing. IIRC.
http://www.voip-info.org/ (which, IIRC, John recommended as a decent
web resource, a long time ago.)
Recommended appears to be your local key system working in concert
with an asterisk box, connected to a remote asterisk box. The local
asterisk box keeping track of where the non-key system things are, and
when the thing needed is at the remote site, it just hands off to the
remote asterisk. (I get the feeling multi-asterisk installations are
all but dead easy, the asterisk boxes forming an easily /
automagically administered coherent whole. It's a feeling, I've never
done it, and what do I know.)
As Lori suggested, take a couple of computer recycling clunkers, and
throw an asterisk distro install cd at it. For that matter, it could
be a Linux router / firewall / front-end for the new site, saving you
the cost of a new router. (Presuming you'll need another ISP
connection. And from what Lori has said, in that case you'll actually
create an OpenVPN tunnel between the two sites to get around NAT
problems. Which you probably would already have done anyways in order
to allow your remote users access to internal files over the public
internet.)
But you'll still need to buy phones for the new location. Doesn't mean
you can't buy a used key system, no more than it means you can't sell
your current one once you're completely migrated to Asterisk. But a
proprietary key system will need proprietary phones - and even if not,
you'll want ATA's (eventually) for the non-proprietary phones. Vs.
just going with VoIP IP phones out of the gate.
The possibility of the second location just proves my point - you need
to form a plan / migration strategy. Even if you don't affect all of
it any time soon. Look further out than just picking off a perceived
piece of low hanging fruit. Data and voice infrastructures are
converging for you here, not just pieces of low-hanging fruit. e.g.
ultimately, implementing QoS within your enterprise, for your revising
voice infrastructure to hand off to. The plan would be more for
keeping everyone in your organization on the same page and in the
know. Begin to combat user antipathy to change and possible negative
reaction to VoIP (e.g. Lori's comments regarding soft phones), making
your users into facilitators instead of barriers.
Lori's note of the SPA9000 may be appropriate for you at the new
location, too. (Asterisk on a stick?)
VoIP is coming - telephony via ip. You can pay the learning curve now,
or you can pay it later. Taking pot shots along the way. You'll end up
in the same place, perhaps with more, or less, pain along the way.
Convergence.
Replacing your fax lines may be an even lower hanging fruit. At, what,
$55 a month? Designate an e-mail recipient, or group of recipients -
no different than whomever is closest to the fax machine at the time
is the one who in turn distributes it to the actual recipient.
Analogue faxing to digital reception is itself culture change. Let
alone voip.
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