Larry;

Your confusing apples and oranges.
The discussion  is about
STATIONS off of the KXT,
 not LINES into the KXT

I have been watching this thread, and it has gone far afield from Dave's 
original question
about extending a "proprietary" STATION  off site via VoIP.
If I wasn't confused before, I am now.
VoIP trunks or "pots" stations are about the same thing, BUT a 
"proprietary" STATION
off site would require a VoIP device that
 "understands" and 'talks" Pana  "proprietary" STATION language


Don Century Communications -- Cleveland



Larry wrote:
> I saw a post responding to mine on Mailwasher, but it never got to me
> so excuse if I get this wrong.
>
> Someone said that he didn't want to lose the pbx.  He doesn't have to.
> The adaptors to which I referred simply convert an IP protocol to a
> POTS line.  Instead of hooking the pbx to POTS, you hook those lines
> he wants to change on the pbx to the adaptor.  So far as the pbx is
> concerned, it is talking to a conventional telephone line.  
>
> I might be wrong, but I think that's the cheapest way to convert the
> system over to VOIP.  I'm planning on doing that here.  I am leaving
> one line conventional pots and converting the other three to VOIP.
> Using Packet8, I keep the same telephone numbers, and the same
> KX-TD1232 and the same 30 odd extensions.  Nothing changes except the
> addition of the converters and the substantially lower price for
> service. 
>
> --
>
> Larry
> rapp at lmr dot com  
>
>
> _________________________________________________________________
> KX-T Mailing list --- http://kxthelp.com/
> Subscription changes: http://kxthelp.com/mailman/listinfo/kxt
>
>
>   


-- 
Artificial intelligence is no match for natural stupidity


_________________________________________________________________
KX-T Mailing list --- http://kxthelp.com/
Subscription changes: http://kxthelp.com/mailman/listinfo/kxt

Reply via email to