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DIGITAL PBX
Digital Call Recording
| Asterisk |
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Asterisk is a complete PBX in software. It runs on Linux, BSD
and MacOSX and provides all of the features you would expect from
a PBX and more. Asterisk does voice over IP in many protocols,
and can interoperate with almost all standards-based telephony
equipment using relatively inexpensive hardware. |
Overview |
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Protocol Support |
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Asterisk
supports a wide range of TDM protocols for the handling and transmission
of voice over traditional telephony interfaces. Asterisk supports
US and European standard signalling types used in standard business
phone systems, allowing it to bridge between next generation voice-data
integrated networks and existing infrastructure. Asterisk not
only supports traditional phone equipment, it enhances them with
additional capabilities. Using the Inter-Asterisk eXchange (IAX™)
Voice over IP protocol, Asterisk merges voice and data traffic
seamlessly across disparate networks. While using Packet Voice,
it is possible to send data such as URL information and images
in-line with voice traffic, allowing advanced integration of information.
Asterisk provides a central switching core, with four APIs for
modular loading of telephony applications, hardware interfaces,
file format handling, and codecs. It allows for transparent switching
between all supported interfaces, allowing it to tie together
a diverse mixture of telephony systems into a single switching
network. |
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Platform Support |
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Asterisk
is primarily developed on GNU/Linux for x/86. It is known to compile
and run on GNU/Linux for PPC along with OpenBSD, FreeBSD, and
Mac OS X Jaguar. Other platforms and standards-based UNIX-like
operating systems should be reasonably easy to port for anyone
with the time and requisite skill to do so. Asterisk is available
in Debian Stable (in version 1.0.7), and the current maintainership
is done by a team, the Debian VoIP Team. |
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Who created Asterisk? |
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Asterisk
was originally written by Mark Spencer of Digium, Inc. Code has
been contributed from open source coders around the world, and
testing and bug-patches from the community have provided invaluable
aid to the development of this software. |
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Where is Asterisk going? |
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Asterisk
is growing fast with new features added frequently to the CVS
tree. Mark Spencer and numerous contributors from around the world
contribute new code and patches on a daily basis. To stay up-to-date
on the growing feature list of Asterisk, please visit Digium's
website for more information on subscribing to the Asterisk mailing
lists. |
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