Hi everyone,
While I've been in IT for a couple years, I've only recently been responsible for a PBX, and work for a company with that will eventually look to Asterisk to providefor something better then our current 50 handset Avaya IP Office 401. (At this time, we're looking at feasability, and won't be prepared to jump for several months/year)
I've been lurking here for quite a while, but I haven't seen many posts about Avaya or systems our size, and I was hoping to change that.
With all the FUD about open source, our experence with Avaya has been at best, mediocre. One previous consultant told us how the vendor before him left a defective T1 card in the system, and we've been rebooting the system when the lines get static. The reporting system is strewn between 2 WS2003 boxes and voicemail is installed on an XP Pro box, and I'm told we need to "invest" several thousand more so more then 8 people can leave messages at a time. I also want to develop dial plan applications that will query our CRM system, so asterisk is really attractive in that regard.
I've agree with WM's comments on how Asterisk will be the next killer app for SMBs, especially in this economy, but I'm hesitant to risk my career on Asterisk because there seems a lot fewer people who can support it.
After some googling, I've seen Citel's digital telephone adapter, and was wondering if anyone has figured out a cheap way of using IP Office digital phones with asterisk.
Is there any OSS call center reporting packages out there?
Are 50 handset companies with 2 T1 PRIs common in the Asterisk world? If the T1s are overloaded, is it easy to redirect the traffic to SIP?
Are our experiences with Avaya resellers the norm?
From what I've seen and read, Asterisk and PIAF sound like like they are mature and stable, and I sure as people who are familiar with OSS enter the workforce, managers will realize the value you offer over the more common PBXes. As a Windows person, I'm hoping the "Asterisk appliance" market offers support and polish business like ours will need.
Thanks,
crobusa
While I've been in IT for a couple years, I've only recently been responsible for a PBX, and work for a company with that will eventually look to Asterisk to providefor something better then our current 50 handset Avaya IP Office 401. (At this time, we're looking at feasability, and won't be prepared to jump for several months/year)
I've been lurking here for quite a while, but I haven't seen many posts about Avaya or systems our size, and I was hoping to change that.
With all the FUD about open source, our experence with Avaya has been at best, mediocre. One previous consultant told us how the vendor before him left a defective T1 card in the system, and we've been rebooting the system when the lines get static. The reporting system is strewn between 2 WS2003 boxes and voicemail is installed on an XP Pro box, and I'm told we need to "invest" several thousand more so more then 8 people can leave messages at a time. I also want to develop dial plan applications that will query our CRM system, so asterisk is really attractive in that regard.
I've agree with WM's comments on how Asterisk will be the next killer app for SMBs, especially in this economy, but I'm hesitant to risk my career on Asterisk because there seems a lot fewer people who can support it.
After some googling, I've seen Citel's digital telephone adapter, and was wondering if anyone has figured out a cheap way of using IP Office digital phones with asterisk.
Is there any OSS call center reporting packages out there?
Are 50 handset companies with 2 T1 PRIs common in the Asterisk world? If the T1s are overloaded, is it easy to redirect the traffic to SIP?
Are our experiences with Avaya resellers the norm?
From what I've seen and read, Asterisk and PIAF sound like like they are mature and stable, and I sure as people who are familiar with OSS enter the workforce, managers will realize the value you offer over the more common PBXes. As a Windows person, I'm hoping the "Asterisk appliance" market offers support and polish business like ours will need.
Thanks,
crobusa

