Setting Up a Polycom IP 430 Phone with FreePBX
Mark Berry November 20, 2008
I want to use a true SIP phone for my office phone. I was initially attracted to the Polycom SoundPoint IP 430 because of its support for electronic hookflash with my Jabra GN9350 wireless headset. By using a special adapter cable, I can answer the phone from the wireless headset without the need for a mechanical handset lifter.
Things I Wish I’d Known
More...Setting Up PBX in a Flash, Part 4: Configuring a Linksys SPA3102
Mark Berry November 6, 2008
I’ve just posted a series of articles on selecting a VoIP PBX and setting it up under Microsoft Virtual Server. To read the series from the beginning, see Getting Into VoIP.
Setting up an Analog Terminal Adapter (ATA) for a VoIP system is normally something you do while configuring the PBX. However, since it is configured as a separate device using its own web interface, it seemed to warrant its own blog entry.
More...Setting Up PBX in a Flash, Part 3: Configuring FreePBX
Mark Berry November 6, 2008
If you’ve been following along through the introduction, part 1, and part 2, you now have a PBX in a Flash (PiaF) setup running under Microsoft Virtual Server. It’s keeping time, it knows who it is and can send out mail. Now it is finally time to configure the PBX itself!
Setting up the PBX involves a few steps:
Updating and Adding FreePBX modules
Configuring Trunks, Extensions, and Routes
Configuring Other Features
Setting Up PBX in a Flash, Part 2: Before Running FreePBX
Mark Berry November 6, 2008
The first article in this series, Getting Into VoIP, gave an overview of VoIP systems that I tested and why I chose to implement PBX in a Flash (PiaF). The next post, Setting Up PBX in a Flash, Part 1: Configuring a Virtual Machine talked about setting up PiaF under Microsoft Virtual Server. In this post, we’ll finish all the steps needed to complete our basic installation before configuring the PBX itself.
More...Setting Up PBX in a Flash, Part 1: Configuring a Virtual Machine
Mark Berry November 6, 2008
The introduction to this series, Getting Into VoIP, explained some of the requirements and testing that went into choosing a VoIP environment and application. One really-want (if not must-have) requirement is getting it to run in a virtual machine. There are so many advantages to virtualization: easy backups and moving VMs to different hosts, to name two. However…
More...Getting Into VoIP
Mark Berry November 6, 2008
It all started with my new Magicjack. Plug this little gizmo into your PC and you get unlimited domestic calling, $40 for the first year and $20/year thereafter. That’s hard to pass up. But it also means that I now have three phone lines coming into the home office. So I either needed to get a bigger analog phone, or get into a PBX.
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