YoungOrtho
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- Sep 4, 2009
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I am about ready to jump hip-deep into the PBIAF pool, but I have some questions before committing to the time and hardware costs. I have an orthodontic office and am currently using a Panasonic phone system, which works well but is lacking in some features that I require and is overly complex to implement the features it does possess. But before I move over to PBIAF I have a few general questions as well as some specific questions on the functionality it provides:
1. DID’s - If the company I use for my DID’s goes out of business what happens to my phone number(s)? Would I lose them?
2. Analog failover – I currently have 4 POTS lines. In the interest of cost savings I would like to get rid of 3 of those lines, keep my main (published) line, and then add 3-4 more VOIP lines. My thinking on this is that if the internet goes down I would still be able to place/receive calls on that one POTS line. Is that correct? What is the recommended strategy to keep your phone system running if your internet connection dies?
3. Hunting - If the POTS line is busy, can you have Asterisk hunt to the VOIP lines?
4. DHCP - I’ve read that the Asterisk box must be running DHCP, but I’ve also read that is no longer the case. I am running in a windows server environment so I need my windows server to run DHCP. Does the Asterisk box have to be a DHCP server? If so, would that mean I am required to run it on a separate subnet?
5. Network – Is it recommended to have the phone system on a separate subnet so that VOIP traffic and phones are segmented from the main data subnet? If so, how? VLAN or DMZ? I currently have Untangle as my edge firewall.
6. Click to call - I see that it is possible (with some phones) to use click to call from the browser or Outlook. Is there a program that will allow click to call from *any* Windows program? We call and confirm all appointments and it would be a huge timesaver to be able to hover over a phone number in our practice management software and click the number to place the call.
Thanks!
Dave
1. DID’s - If the company I use for my DID’s goes out of business what happens to my phone number(s)? Would I lose them?
2. Analog failover – I currently have 4 POTS lines. In the interest of cost savings I would like to get rid of 3 of those lines, keep my main (published) line, and then add 3-4 more VOIP lines. My thinking on this is that if the internet goes down I would still be able to place/receive calls on that one POTS line. Is that correct? What is the recommended strategy to keep your phone system running if your internet connection dies?
3. Hunting - If the POTS line is busy, can you have Asterisk hunt to the VOIP lines?
4. DHCP - I’ve read that the Asterisk box must be running DHCP, but I’ve also read that is no longer the case. I am running in a windows server environment so I need my windows server to run DHCP. Does the Asterisk box have to be a DHCP server? If so, would that mean I am required to run it on a separate subnet?
5. Network – Is it recommended to have the phone system on a separate subnet so that VOIP traffic and phones are segmented from the main data subnet? If so, how? VLAN or DMZ? I currently have Untangle as my edge firewall.
6. Click to call - I see that it is possible (with some phones) to use click to call from the browser or Outlook. Is there a program that will allow click to call from *any* Windows program? We call and confirm all appointments and it would be a huge timesaver to be able to hover over a phone number in our practice management software and click the number to place the call.
Thanks!
Dave
. On the surface, seems like it would satisfy HIPPA but I'd have to read up on it first to be sure.