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<DIV>Andrew,</DIV>
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<DIV>I don't know about your first question ... but my experience with IPcomms was not that good ...</DIV>
<DIV>I was trying their service ... (DIDs) and I got a lot of dead spots in the voice calls ... One guy from support was very friendly, trying to resolve the issue, but I cancelled the service and nothing about the money back guaranteed ...</DIV>
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<BLOCKQUOTE style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px solid">-------------- Original message -------------- <BR>From: "Andrew Joakimsen" <joakimsen@gmail.com> <BR>A long time ago (Asterisk 0.x, 1.0.x) my experience is that there were alot of interoperability issues, a common troubleshooting issue was to make sure all endpoints where using the latest version of Asterisk. I have not seen these issues in a while. <BR><BR>However I've been working with a customer of mine and this ITSP called IP Communications (IPComms.net) well turns out we have had constant problems since the first day. Turns out (I found this out approx 1 month ago) that the "version of Asterisk" they are using is " Asterisk@Home 1.x" So basically is there any way to determine the version of Asterisk being used? I cant trust anything IP Communications says.<BR></BLOCKQUOTE></body></html>