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<DIV><SPAN class=413342219-07012006><FONT face=Arial color=#0000ff size=2><FONT
color=#000000>></FONT> </FONT></SPAN>Of course that's not a problem to
use hylafax, but I just want to have it on one machine (I'm afraid that Asterisk
and hylafax <SPAN class=413342219-07012006><FONT face=Arial color=#0000ff
size=2><FONT color=#000000>></FONT> </FONT></SPAN>won't run on the same
machine :( )<BR><SPAN class=413342219-07012006><FONT face=Arial color=#0000ff
size=2></FONT></SPAN></DIV>
<DIV><SPAN class=413342219-07012006><FONT face=Arial color=#0000ff size=2>[Colin
Anderson] I am experimenting with IAXmodem to Hylafax running on an
Asterisk server. It works. Last Thur, I had 98 virtual modems recognized and
running under Hylafax. So far, I can send and recieve faxes reasonably well but
there's some configuration issues I have to get out of the way before I would
beta it on my users. I expect that Hylafax to a couple of plain old USR modems
running on /ttys0 and /ttys1 would work fine enough even if Asterisk was on the
box. Even though the postscript conversion is done on the server that can be
controlled with -nice. After that all that Hylafax has to do is service the
modems and the clients. This seems to be pretty low overhead - I think the
client protocol is FTP on a nonstandard port, and servicing a couple of modems
at 9600 can't be too taxing. Hell, 25 modems shouldn't be taxing, on a modern
machine.</FONT></SPAN></DIV>
<DIV><SPAN class=413342219-07012006> </SPAN></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=Arial><FONT color=#0000ff><SPAN class=413342219-07012006><FONT
size=2>BTW I have used, installed, admin'd etc about a dozen big Windows
faxing solutions</FONT></SPAN><FONT size=2><SPAN
class=413342219-07012006> (basically all of the big players) and I've never
used Hylafax before, and I was really impressed. It's better than 80% of the
Windows product offerings, IMO.
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