On Sun, Mar 25, 2007 at 10:36:37PM +0200, Joachim Schipper wrote:
> On Sun, Mar 25, 2007 at 09:48:35PM +0200, Karel Kulhavy wrote:
> > On Fri, Mar 23, 2007 at 03:26:25PM -0700, J.C. Roberts wrote:
> > > On Friday 23 March 2007 12:13, Tobias Weisserth wrote:
> > > >  From the emails in this thread we know he needs it for work, so he  
> > > > hasn't really got a choice. There's no other client to the Skype  
> > > > network. Maybe there's a way to lockin Skype in systrace. On openSUSE
> > > >   I locked Skype in with AppArmor for my parents. If you need to talk
> > > > to people on Skype you don't really have a choice.
> > > 
> > > Well, it might not work for everyone but I took a different approach to
> > > solving the skype problem. I decided to be a prick and require people
> > > using Skype to have a standard phone number via SkypeIn. Being locked
> > > into the insecure, proprietary skype world is really their problem and
> > > I refuse to join them.
> > > 
> > > Once you have a standard way to contact the skype user via a normal
> > > phone number, then you are free to deploy and use whatever you want on
> > > your end to reduce your costs...
> > > 
> > > -http://www.asterisk.org/
> > Tried on OpenBSD, doesn't work.
> 
> Then you did something wrong, as there's a port.

No in the port Asterisk cannot work as a SIP client.

Asterisk works as a SIP server - I had it running under OpenBSD and it worked
just fine, clients could register and could be called, etc. 

But the guy wants a SIP client. Asterisk can do this, but needs some extra
modules for this
- audio output, dial etc. And the audio module is disabled in the OpenBSD port
  because it doesn't compile.

CL<
> 
> > > -http://www.openwengo.com/
> > Tried on OpenBSD, doesn't work.
> > > -http://www.gizmoproject.com/
> > Tried on OpenBSD, doesn't work.
> 
> No idea whether or not those work.
> 
>               Joachim

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