[Asterisk-Users] Asterisk, Small Business, and Teliax

Andrew Berman atberman at gmail.com
Sat Dec 10 08:24:39 MST 2005


Thank you very much for your responses.  I like the idea of having Teliax as
well as some PSTN lines in the event of the T1 going down.  I've just
started to read the Asterisk book by O'Reilly, so my understanding of
Asterisk is limited right now.  Consequently, if I get a TDM400P for the
PSTN lines and get Teliax, can Asterisk be set up in such a way that if
Teliax cannot be reached it uses the PSTN lines?  If yes, I'm assuming it
has to do with the proper diaplan, which I'll be reading up on soon.

Thanks again for your help,

Andrew

On 12/10/05, Rich Adamson <radamson at routers.com> wrote:
>
>
> > I'm a beginner here and am interested in Teliax.  I own a small business
> and was
> wondering if you guys could help
> > me out here.  I'm basically looking for 6-8 telephone lines, but I
> notice that Teliax
> supports 4 simultaneous calls on
> > their Corporate plan.  So could I get two Corporate plans and set
> Asterisk to use
> both of them and then have, in
> > essence, 8 people talking at the same time?  If someone tries to call,
> would the
> phone ring busy or would it still go
> > through?
> >
> > I plan on having a T1.....
>
> I'd suggest you call their sales folks as teliax is rather flexible; they
> will likely work something out for you that fits your needs.
>
> As others have mentioned, the bundled plans (eg, residential or corporate)
> have a soft cap that essentially translates into $0.018 / minute, assuming
> you use every single minute within the plan. If you don't use every
> minute,
> the average cost/min goes up (1,000 minutes of corp plan use = $0.045 /
> min).
>
> So, you are probably better off with their "Pay as you go" plan which
> ensures your cost is always $0.02 / min with an unlimited number of
> simultanous calls.
>
> If you combine the above with some thought as to what you are going to do
> when calls can't be completed via teliax (for whatever reason), then you
> are likely to conclude that having two providers at some flat cost per
> minute is a positive move.
>
> If you add to that thought process some probability that you can't
> complete
> _any_ Internet-based calls (due to T1 failure or whatever), then you're
> likely to approach a combination of itsp's and pstn lines for your
> business.
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> --Bandwidth and Colocation provided by Easynews.com --
>
> Asterisk-Users mailing list
> To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
>    http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-users/attachments/20051210/e4020f00/attachment.htm


More information about the asterisk-users mailing list