Open source VOIP/telephony
Oliver Rist, InfoWorld

11/08/2005 09:51:52

One of the first open source VoIP projects -- and one of the earliest VoIP PBXes, period -- is Digium-sponsored Asterisk. A highly mature platform licensed under the GPL, Asterisk supports almost everything that even larger enterprises would desire of a VoIP gateway solution, including voice mail, call forwarding, conferencing, and even IVR (Interactive Voice Response). It also has call-detail records -- the golden goose of VoIP -- as well as advanced features suitable for use in virtual classroom or virtual conference room applications. Its large developer community contributes still more add-ons for the platform, both commercial and open source.

But while Asterisk may have been a pioneer, it's certainly no longer alone. A number of new, competitive open source VoIP platforms based on the SIP protocol have emerged. Pingtel has released the code to its commercial SIPxchange PBX, which is currently managed by a nonprofit organization called SIPFoundry under the name sipX. Although not as mature as Asterisk, sipX adheres much more closely to the open SIP standard, giving it greater hardware and software compatibility -- at least for the moment. The InfoWorld Test Center reviewed both Digium Asterisk and Pingtel SIPxchange in January.

SER (SIP Express Router) is a close adherent to the SIP standard. Written in C and issued under the GPL (General Public License), it has been ported to Linux and Solaris. In addition to acting as an SIP server, it features gateways for SMS (short messaging service) and IM, RADIUS accounting and authorization, and Web-based user provisioning. Commercial products based on SER are available from iptelorg. A bootable LiveCD version of the software is also available, which has extended SER to include a much easier Web-based administration tool and support for general VoIP hardware from vendors such as Cisco Systems and Mitel.

Yate (Yet Another Telephony Engine) is published under the GPL and is a surprisingly flexible platform. Fully mature, it includes support for SIP, H.323, and other protocols, and it runs on either Linux or Windows. It has all the usual PBX enhancements -- voice mail, call forwarding, and so on -- but also functions as an IVR server.

Those interested in more robust IVR applications, however, would do well to seek out Bayonne, the script-driven telephony server of the GNU Project. Bayonne has a long history and is designed for a wide range of carrier-grade telephony applications. Commercial support is available from a number of sources. Bayonne has recently been brought under a larger GNU Telephony umbrella, which encompasses a number of other free software projects. There can be little doubt that open source efforts in this area will continue to progress as interest in VoIP and digital telephony continues to grow.

 

 
T-Online expands Internet telephony
Heise-Online, 02.08.2005

Deutsche Telekom subsidiary T-Online is getting into the Voice over IP business. "Starting tomorrow, we will be offering complete Voice-over-IP packages with new DSL rates," T-Online CEO Rainer Beaujean announced in today's issue of the German economics magazine Handelsblatt.

T-Online is thus responding to the pressure from competitors such as Freenet.de and AOL, who have long been offering such services, as the magazine writes. Up to now, the Internet provider based in Darmstadt has been reluctant to launch its own Voice-over-IP service because inexpensive VoIP calls are endangering the revenue of the Telekom's fixed-line division, T-Com, a sister company of T-Online. This helps explain why T-Online has been offering certain VoIP services but not with nearly all of the features that the competition has been offering.

When the new rates become available, 3.5 million T-Online DSL customers will be able to choose between 120 and 400 free minutes on the German landline network, Handelsblatt is reporting. T-Online will be charging 2.9 cents for each additional minute on the German landline network, while VoIP calls to other T-Online DSL customers will be free. T-Online will also soon be offering video calls via the Internet.

Beaujean told the paper that T-Online would be addressing the market "more aggressively" and that price wars are anything but a thing of the past. These price wars have already led T-Online to lower its DSL rates, forcing the company to reduce its targets for revenue and earnings in 2005. (Craig Morris) / (jk/c't)

 
Zultys Launches WiFi VoIP Phone
Monday 1st August 2005, IT-Analysis.com

Written By: Tony Lock

Copyright © 2005 Bloor Research

There are few areas of IT that are currently generating as much interest as Voice over IP (VoIP). Indeed, the level of attention on VoIP stretches from individuals through to enterprises of all sizes - from the smallest to the positively gigantic. VoIP is clearly an area where almost any announcement will find an audience ready and willing to be fascinated. More importantly, it is a space where interest is being converted to purchases. Last week, Zultys Technologies, a well-established supplier of VoIP solutions, warmed the pot even further when it added the element of WiFi to the mix.

Zultys Technologies announced the launch of the WIP 2 wireless IP phone. The new handset supplies very similar functionality of its established desktop IP phone range, including the ZIP 2, but in a mobile design that utilizes the connectivity established by the ever-growing numbers of wireless networks - commonly called WiFi. It is expected that the WIP 2 handsets will hit the street in full distribution by November this year.

The company has addressed the key question of battery life for the portable handset, which it is claimed can give up to four hours of talk time and twelve hours of standby time between charges. The handset is consequently a little larger than a cell phone in order to handle the battery capacity, but it is in line with standard DECT devices.

 

 
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