Difference between revisions of "Main Page"
From TD-er's Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to searchLine 6: | Line 6: | ||
*** [[Dial-patterns]] - Patterns used to match a dialed number, for routing purposes. | *** [[Dial-patterns]] - Patterns used to match a dialed number, for routing purposes. | ||
** [[DUNDi configuration]] | ** [[DUNDi configuration]] | ||
+ | ** [[videoconferencing]] - configuration to make a videocall | ||
** [[SIP vs IAX]] | ** [[SIP vs IAX]] | ||
* [[X-Lite]] - Free SIP soft-phone | * [[X-Lite]] - Free SIP soft-phone |
Revision as of 10:47, 30 January 2007
GBE-Case study for Thales
- Trixbox - A Linux-distro specially configured for Asterisk
- Asterisk - A free PBX-system
- VoIPBuster - A provider that can connect VoIP-calls to the PSTN.
- Dial-patterns - Patterns used to match a dialed number, for routing purposes.
- DUNDi configuration
- videoconferencing - configuration to make a videocall
- SIP vs IAX
- VoIPBuster - A provider that can connect VoIP-calls to the PSTN.
- X-Lite - Free SIP soft-phone
- DUNDi - Distributed Universal Number Discovery
- Used software
- Documents
- Links
Glossary
- Extension - an additional telephone that operates on the main line. Each extension has its own (internal) number, which often can only be reached via the internal telephone network.
- PBX - A Private Branch eXchange (also called PBX, Private Business eXchange or PABX for Private Automatic Branch eXchange) is a telephone exchange that serves a particular business or office, as opposed to one a common carrier or telephone company operates for many businesses or for the general public. (Source)
- Termination - When used in telephony-context, the line or route reaches an end-user. When connecting from a VoIP telephone to an end-user on the PSTN, somewhere a PBX should make te connection between those two networks and this PBX can terminate the route.
- Trunk - A trunk is the telephony service line that you will be using to make an external call on, e.g. the Telstra telephone line that you have at home is a trunk (or it can be used as a trunk if you wish but not necessarily so). A VOIP service provider (VSP) that you have signed up with is also a trunk. (Source, p.29)