Hello,

Thank you for your reply.

I should indeed have been more specific :-)

For the moment, we plan to implement about 10 lines with 2 "head numbers" that 
will be used to rotate calls depending on the hours and such.

Your suggestion to implement our own system is a valid one but is not one we 
would like to pursue. I have no doubt there are very good open source solutions 
but given the reasonable price of the solutions that we have been seeing, it 
does not seem like it would make sense to set up our own system.

Regarding UPC Cablecom, I have not been successful at reaching them (maybe 
because our planned setup is so small ?) but I should probably give it another 
try.

Have a nice day,

On Aug 29, 2014, at 8:45 AM, Jeroen Massar <[email protected]> wrote:

> On 2014-08-29 03:23, Michael Horn wrote:
>> On Thu, 28 Aug 2014 19:45:43 +0200 (CEST)
>> Ralph Krämer <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>>> I suggest to run your own Asterisk (or Callmanager)
>> 
>> ...or freeswitch, if you like reliability and predictable behaviour.
>> 
>> I've managed quite a few freeswitch deployments until now and did some
>> migrations from Asterisk to freeswitch due to issues with reliability or
>> flexibility. As an office/corporate pbx I'd select freeswitch over
>> asterisk any time. If something more specialized is needed, yate is
>> worth a try.
> 
> +1 on FreeSWITCH, have been using that for years; and as they finally
> have debian packages that work in their own apt-repo, makes installing
> much easier too.
> 
> One thing to note though is that one does not have to keep their
> configfile layout, one can bend it anyway one likes.
> 
>>> through a redundant SIP-Trunk to an VoIP Provider.
>> 
>> Curious however about recommendations for VoIP providers in .ch
>> there aren't that many around unfortunately. would love to hear some
>> suggestions (backed by experiece).
> 
> I have good experience with netvoip.ch; though it really depends on
> why/how one uses it (in my case inbound only mostly and not for large
> volumes).
> 
> 
> Note also, that if one has a hardline and a Fritz!Box, one can use the
> latters internal SIP server to make that hardline available from
> anything you can connect to it. (SIPclients -> FS -> F!B in my case).
> 
> Greets,
> Jeroen
> 
> 
> 
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