<br><font size=2><tt>asterisk-users-admin@lists.digium.com wrote on 05/19/2003
11:45:21 PM:<br>
<br>
> > The problem is not that the channel doesn't exist: it does. Asterisk<br>
> > even thinks it's dialing it. It also thinks it's busy later...<br>
> <br>
> In that case, I noticed that when I first installed the hardware,
the<br>
> led seemed to come on on one of the ports. I plugged the phone
into<br>
> that port. I sat down and figured out how to load the drivers
and<br>
> startup asterisk. <br>
> <br>
> With asterisk running I had no juice (electricity) to the phone. (You<br>
> can tell when the phone is powered even when there is no dial-tone.)<br>
> When I pulled the machine out, the port that was lighted was at the<br>
> far end of the card from the phone line. <br>
> <br>
> Maybe I just plugged the phone into the wrong port originally. Maybe<br>
> it was a figment of my imagination. The machine is in an inconvenient<br>
> location. Small apartment.<br>
</tt></font>
<br><font size=2><tt>Well, I know that I was plugging it into the correct,
lit-led port, but I too have no juice. Dead phone: no echo,
no lit numbers, etc. I've tried several phone cables (including one
with an RJ-45 end) and phones to no avail. I don't know what else
to try: it's a very simple configuration lifted 100% from the FAQ,
yet it doesn't work.</tt></font>
<br>
<br><font size=2><tt>Sigh.</tt></font>
<br>
<br><font size=2><tt>Tim Massey</tt></font>
<br>