--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "sipxcom-users" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to sipxcom-user...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to sipxco...@googlegroups.com.
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/sipxcom-users.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/sipxcom-users/4ef02815-41af-43b5-88e4-31c28e549dbb%40googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
I'm pretty confused...
BLF is listed among sipxcom features in the official wiki, with no declared limitations.
There is no pbx where is no BLF!
How could our secretary manage calls with our offices without BLF?
So the one compatible BLF is with polycom?
In other words you are telling to me that sipxcom is a project that lives for selling polycom hardware.
That should be clearer and explicit!!!
You cannot hide that behind the "open source" concept. Not honest!
Otherwise people like me, trying to migrate his Cisco hardware business environment to sipxcom, waste his time for nothing and get angry...
Asterisk BLF works well with both Cisco and Polycom. On freepbx it works out of box, everywhere.
Nothing will keep out of my mind that the cisco blf incompatibility is a developer team will.
I cannot change the phones, they are on every desk at our offices, it would have a big $$$ impact.
So I can't see sipxcom nor Polycom in our future. I'm sorry for that, because the rest of sipxcom is better than many other pbxes!
It just follows a different BLF standard than the Cisco phones support. We (eZuce) tried building a special SBC to mangle SIP and try to make the Cisco phones work. We got to about 80% functionality. The SIP on those things is just a mess.
Sell them to a recycler like Voip Supply and trade up to some better phones that work on more platforms.
Ripping sipXcom because it follows a different standard is bad form.
If you'd like to develop and contribute BLF functionality that works with those phone it would be welcomed. But that's not the only problem with them. Cisco doesn't handle refer properly, they don't work with SRV records so no HA, etc... Like I said, they are a mess.
Mike
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "sipxcom-users" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to sipxcom-user...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to sipxco...@googlegroups.com.
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/sipxcom-users.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/sipxcom-users/cca310d7-061d-4e13-861d-133f13fdb400%40googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
300 Brickstone Square
Suite 104
Andover, MA. 01810
It just follows a different BLF standard than the Cisco phones support.
We (eZuce) tried building a special SBC to mangle SIP and try to make the Cisco phones work. We got to about 80% functionality. The SIP on those things is just a mess.
Sell them to a recycler like Voip Supply and trade up to some better phones that work on more platforms.
Ripping sipXcom because it follows a different standard is bad form.
If you'd like to develop and contribute BLF functionality that works with those phone it would be welcomed.
But that's not the only problem with them. Cisco doesn't handle refer properly, they don't work with SRV records so no HA, etc... Like I said, they are a mess.
300 Brickstone Square
Suite 104
Andover, MA. 01810
Il giorno giovedì 28 gennaio 2016 01:04:54 UTC+1, Michael Picher ha scritto:It just follows a different BLF standard than the Cisco phones support.
Ok, but all the cisco phones use that way, so it is a "cisco standard", and the pbx enterprise world, you know, is cisco (or avaya, but avaya is not sip). If you want to give a future to sipxcom, you can't ignore that!We (eZuce) tried building a special SBC to mangle SIP and try to make the Cisco phones work. We got to about 80% functionality. The SIP on those things is just a mess.
Are you saying it is too difficult to do, or it are you saying it is not so important to do?
Sell them to a recycler like Voip Supply and trade up to some better phones that work on more platforms.
I appreciate you proposal, but the real world is a litte bit more complicated...Well,I buy 200 Polycom @ $200 --> $4000I buy a little server @ $1000I sell 200 Cisco @ $25 to the recycler --> $500Operation costs $4500.No warranty. Do you know what I mean for no warranty?Nobody ensure to me that that Polycom model will work with the sipXcom, and continue working with further upgrades. In other words if I'll have some problems, the responsability will be mine.Ok, I'll have no problems. CEO will ask to me "why do you want to invest $4500 for changing all the phones? What do we'll have more?"I can "try" to explain that we will have an open source PBX and just in case we'll need some new features, we "probably" don't pay for them.But NOW we don't need any new feature, so in fact I would change all the phones for continue having BLF.That's have no sense in the real world.You easy understand that it would have sense if I could leave all the phones in place, and migrate the PBX only.That way, sipxcom would gain an installation in the business world, killing a proprietary PBX and demonstrating its power.Ripping sipXcom because it follows a different standard is bad form.
Telling this, you say half story. The half where sipxcom is perfect... Perfection don't exists.
If you'd like to develop and contribute BLF functionality that works with those phone it would be welcomed.
This is the same story I hear since centuries when I say to a community that its software could be improved."Just write down some code, and improve it, you're welcome!" they say. So I'd have to understand the code written by other (if the wiki is incomplete, I can't imagine code comments), skilling me on a programming language I don't use daily, and finally put my mess on your perfect code. That's the best way for obtaining a perfect spaghetti code! Nobody understands that a little feature is easy to implement for who look at that code every day, and do it is pure love for the project.
But that's not the only problem with them. Cisco doesn't handle refer properly, they don't work with SRV records so no HA, etc... Like I said, they are a mess.
Not true. Almost every cisco phone has the possibility to configure up to 3 backup SIP proxy. That's HA.(just take a look at the cisco provisioning XML tags generated by sipxcom and you will find that!)So cisco makes HA in a different way, but this can cohabit with your elegant HA concept (apropos, congratulations, it is made really well!).So cisco has a different BLF communication way, but this can cohabit with the other (at the end they are telegrams passed on the network!).
I don't pretend Cisco BLF compatibility, I understood that that's at the moment not exists. I would prefer that this would be clear on the documentation, so everyone should not waste his time for trying.
I recommend the Cisco BLF compatibility, for the future of the project. a project that I think deserves to move forward... Sure, if it was not born to sell polycom hardware, but if it is a real open source project and will remain open source (not like freepbx).
Take care,Enrico.
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "sipxcom-users" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to sipxcom-user...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to sipxco...@googlegroups.com.
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/sipxcom-users.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/sipxcom-users/539a5f49-d18c-4be3-863b-de55b388d153%40googlegroups.com.
Both. It's not commercially important to us (as eZuce). We put a couple man month's worth of effort and couldn't get to where it was a viable product / component. With 80% functionality it just wasn't worth it. You'd still have people complaining about 'why doesn't this or that work'.
Where did I state something was perfection? Polycom is however our 'gold standard' for our commercial product, it's what's in our QA labs. It's what we prove all of our features against.
300 Brickstone Square
Suite 104
Andover, MA. 01810
P.S.: somebody forget to tell me why BLF don't works between 2 Linphones clients. But don't matter, I don't need Linphone, it was for test only.
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "sipxcom-users" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to sipxcom-user...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to sipxco...@googlegroups.com.
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/sipxcom-users.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/sipxcom-users/17454c81-1f87-48e5-bfbd-99f2c25c7403%40googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/sipxcom-users/CAAHujP4OwpB8ErPKsDcikshQL1yQjK07B%3DWFZMODwNiDyJp0Jw%40mail.gmail.com.
I buy 200 Polycom @ $200 --> $40000
I buy a little server @ $1000
I sell 200 Cisco @ $25 to the recycler --> $500
$40500 cost of the project for having the same features... Crazy.
It costs like many many Cisco proprietary licenses and a lot of years of assistance...
BR,
E.
- SCCP for Call Manager (proprietary)
- SIP for SIP servers (universal)
The SIP firmware works perfectly with asterisk, don't worry!
(BLF too)
200 to the recycler x $25 is $5000 not $500.
Polycom VVX 300 sets only cost around $99 and VVX 400 sets cost around $150. Not saying it's going to be cheap but it's still about half of the $40000 you came up with.
You don't realize the years that have gone into this project by guys like Mike and the staff. Your sheer lack of respect for that is infuriating.
I've used SipXecs, now SipXcom, since the days when it was run by Pingtel and then Nortel/Avaya and finally eZuce. It's It's a quality software that is rock solid. I have one customer who is still using their 100 or so LG-Nortel 6812 sets with BLF.
If you like Cisco so much, than have fun with FreePBX. The rest of us will hang out here.