No idea where to start.4 lines, 1 fax i think. option to have more lines would help or however it works.Need a fractional T-1?What kind of equipment will I need?What's a good older used phone system I could pick up for a decent price (smaller budget).Need: voice mail, line forwarding (for receptionist), speaker, able to plug in headsets, and i guess conference calling (although not too important).Anyone with any info please help me out here.[Edited on July 11, 2006 at 12:22 AM. Reason : ]
7/11/2006 12:22:05 AM
I'm not sure of the hardware, but we just got setup with a linux based phone systems called asterisk. The UI is great and easy to use. We have T-1 line coming into our building.[Edited on July 11, 2006 at 12:37 AM. Reason : ]
7/11/2006 12:37:18 AM
yea we have some asterisk stuff here at work.Buy a 1u rackmount server + a digium TE110PThey can be had for less if you buy them from a reseller instead of digium.Then buy some sipura phone adapters. Either the spa-2002 or spa-2100. Those are the most cost effective.Last time i checked the 2100's were ~$85 a piece. And each has 2 phone ports and a built in nat router so you dont have to run an extra network cable. 12 people/2 ports per device = 6 devices =$510.Alternatively you could buy a station board for your asterisk switch. But thats gonna be more expensive than using sip.After that its just configuration.
7/11/2006 12:47:33 AM
so we're looking at initially (w/ 6 phones) ... $380 for the digium card... $free for the server as i have pc hardware i can use... $255 for 3 2100's... then ip phones at around $100 a piece for another $600... = $1235what all am i missing from this? can i get cheaper ip phones that can do voicemail per phone?the digium TE110P handles the T1 that then routes traffic over the network how?
7/11/2006 1:25:26 AM
2wire used to have some real slick gateway devices back in the day that would run voip with multiple mailboxes, work as a router, let you setup an extension system, etc. I dunno if you can buy them direct anymore but maybe check out ebay?
7/11/2006 10:10:54 AM
7/11/2006 10:30:11 AM
7/11/2006 10:45:22 AM
and where might you suggest one should purchase some QoS capable equipment [Edited on July 11, 2006 at 11:00 AM. Reason : eheh]
7/11/2006 11:00:04 AM
yeah, therein lies the problem. Managed hardware (switches and routers) with QoS capability are probably gonna take you over budget, though you might be able to find something on eBay.
7/11/2006 1:46:49 PM
or you could just create a physically seperate network for voice.honestly, with 6-12 devices on a lan i really doubt you'd see any issues with jitter.
7/11/2006 2:00:25 PM
yeah, maybe, maybe not. I've just seen too many examples of the problems that do occur.Then again, nobody calls me to tell me that everything is working fine.
7/11/2006 2:03:22 PM
guy i talked to today said he had 8 voip phones on a 100mb network with RR business class and not one problem.
7/11/2006 7:30:28 PM
We use mostly Edgewaters for QoS managementhttp://www.bandwidth.com
7/11/2006 7:48:50 PM
what's a good cheap QoS router i can use with 5-10 ports that can delegate upstream to VoIP traffic?
7/14/2006 2:46:08 PM
We use a Digital Voice One DVO-1C and it would probably fill your needs. Not sure how much they paid for it, but it works.
7/14/2006 2:51:58 PM
I think what we're going to do is get 2 seperate DSL lines (6mb down, 512kbps up)... one for voip, one for data. $109/month each.can't get TWC where we're at b/c the builder fucked up a conduit line and won't fix it.
7/14/2006 6:18:48 PM