<div>I don't know if this may at sometime help mr Wood, but BT, with their ISDN30* actually offer something called <STRONG>Site Assurance</STRONG> - the problem is that it does not automatically fail over, and according to the last memo I read - failover takes about 1 hr.</div> <div> </div> <div>A problem is that, due to outsourcing, product ranges, size issues, etc, a lot of people on BT's frontline are not really keyed up to their product offerings. Who knowns, maybe the failover process has been automated at this point in time.</div> <div><BR><B><I>Conrad Wood <asterisk-users@conradwood.net></I></B> wrote: </div> <BLOCKQUOTE class=replbq style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px solid"> <DIV>><BR>> making the call. I guess I could just add the call route to the other<BR>> campus just below the my default call route. So if the primary call<BR>> route fails, it will just go to the next line being the other
campus.<BR>><BR>That's precisely what I do with the main route out on ISDN, if that <BR>fails, it switches over to various voip providers and even down to a <BR>bluetooth enabled mobile ;).<BR>it works quite allright for outgoing calls.<BR>I believe for incoming calls you need to persuade your isdn supplier do <BR>forward the call to ISDN-B if ISDN-A is hosed.<BR>Here in UK I couldn't persuade BT to do so yet ;(<BR><BR>Conrad<BR><BR>_______________________________________________<BR>--Bandwidth and Colocation provided by Easynews.com --<BR><BR>asterisk-users mailing list<BR>To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:<BR>http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users<BR></DIV></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><p> 
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