Help with Obi project - updated

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ProfTech:
After 3 or 4 weeks of learning, trial & error and experimentation I was able to install Asterisk on a PC I had here and get everything up and running. The addition of Asterisk to the picture gives a whole range of new possibilities! I thought I would try this before buying the Raspberry. Now it should be a simple matter of transferring two configuration files to the Raspberry and I should be up and running. Thanks to you guys for giving me the impetus to do it.

Ostracus:
Pogoplug is a good choice as well.

vtsnaab:
A fascinating collection of info & replies here, thanks for posting it:
Quote from: Ostracus on June 14, 2014, 09:18:09 am

Pogoplug is a good choice as well.

Worthy of note as well is that the last reply to that thread was posted 2012-Dec-11 so whatever devices & sources it suggests are more than a little out of date.

Here's my 2 cents on this subject from my own experiences:
Running a PBX on a Pogoplug (if one could get a unit new for under $20...) is still a very cool & attractive idea and one which I may wish to tinker with at home at some later date myself.

My biggest 'hangup' (LOL) with wired/home/small office VOIP has always been the interfacing & phone choices because there are a great many available - it is hard to know what is decent quality - and the interfacing can also be quite expensive.

My work place needed a phone system upgrade very badly as its ancient one had proprietary phones that were dying out - and I was going to do it with VOIP -until- I examined the interfacing & phone choices offered back then.

The adapters to bring in the POTS lines back then were a real problem - and the 1000 or so phone choices (with reviews & opinions suggesting & damning most of them at once) was enough to give a man a HUGE headache.

So instead of VOIP the office has been using a highly reliable pre-VOIP system that cost very little, has tons of features and for less than just a few phones would have cost new I was able to source the entire system + phones + an add-on VM system + a full set of spares.

Since that time many VOIP parts have come way down in price and the field itself has made significant leaps in maturity as well - so if I had to replace that now I'd likely really lean towards a small, low-cost thing with the needed external parts to interface it - as long as it was not hideously complicated to set up...

Best Wishes to All !!

TodWulff:
Quote from: ProfTech on June 10, 2014, 05:42:43 pm

After 3 or 4 weeks of learning, trial & error and experimentation I was able to install Asterisk on a PC I had here and get everything up and running. The addition of Asterisk to the picture gives a whole range of new possibilities! I thought I would try this before buying the Raspberry. Now it should be a simple matter of transferring two configuration files to the Raspberry and I should be up and running. Thanks to you guys for giving me the impetus to do it.

I am going down this path currently of getting an Asterisk implementation setup.  I actually chose a bit of a different route with hosting Asterisk however, and have elected installed it on my router.  I'm working through the sip.conf and extensions.conf configs now.  I elected to go the way of the router vs. a Pi or PC as, due to the fact that my router is my edge device and is powered by a UPS, it was the most logical choice for me.  Not having yet another physical device to mess with is a good thing, not to mention not having to shell out any more monies.  And I am learning more about embedded linux that I had thought I would need to... :)

'tis fun times, for sure.

-t

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