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Fonality Acquires Trixbox
Posted by
ScuttleMonkey
on Wed Oct 04, 2006 05:14 PM
from the i-love-lamp dept.
from the i-love-lamp dept.
An anonymous reader writes "MySQL's Brian Aker has a good commentary on the big news in acquisitions today that Fonality has acquired Trixbox, the Linux Telephony distribution." From the article: "So why is this big news? Trixbox is the distribution for telephony on Linux today. They have put together a vertical Linux distribution dedicated to telephony. It combines Asterisk with a web based interface backed by MySQL, integrated into the SugarCRM solution. As Redhat today is the LAMP of the IT Enterprise and Web Framework, (Linux, Apache, MySQL, Perl/PHP), Trixbox is the LAMP stack of the Telephony market, Linux , Asterisk, MySQL, Perl/PHP."
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Your Rights Online: Linux-Based Phone System Phones Home 164 comments
An anonymous reader writes to let us know that users of Trixbox, a PBX based on Asterisk, recently discovered that the software has been phoning home with statistics about their installations. It's easy enough to disable, and not particularly steathy (beyond encrypting the data sent back), but customers in the forum are annoyed at not having been informed of the reporting. Trixbox is owned by Fonality, which makes customized PBXs (again based on Asterisk) for paying customers.
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WTF? (W == "Who") (Score:3, Insightful)
Usually, company acquisitions worthy of a
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As in, "who the f*** are these companies??"
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Well, if his head was indeed up his ass, I'd say it's looser than the average rectum...
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LAMP buzzword (Score:3, Informative)
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FYI, Last I checked the "PBX vendors like Avaya, NEC and Cisco" do use/require a Microsoft Server, and license to provide a VOIP solution. 4 years ago I got quotes from Cisco, and Avaya, don't recall NEC, but both required a microsoft server. I do believe they had a seperate box connected to the server, but the server was required. I ended up with Asterisk custom install, which I followed to the Asterisk@Home at 1.0.
I just moved to Trixbox image this week, so far th
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Let me check on this, your argument is that since Avaya, NEC, and Cisco use NT as their server platform rather than something that makes more sense, that Microsoft has VoIP technology?
Well let me tell ya buddy, you're on fucking crack. The VoIP solutions from all of these vendors do their heavy lifting in hardware. Windows is there to run the configuration tool, st
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Using trixbox for a PBX is another location where the microsoft tax is being displaced by linux.
guess you didn't read my whole post, stopped at that line?
thanks for the meaningless post, I simply said the MS server was required in all those solutions, and you never disputed that, or added any new content that I could find.
vertical distribution? (Score:1, Insightful)
They have put together a vertical Linux distribution dedicated to telephony.
As opposed to a horizontal linux distribution dedicated to telephony? As opposed to a diagonal distribution? A vertical distribution that is dedicated to something other than telephony?
The sentence up there is composed as if it conveyed some kind of information, but that may be misleading...
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Unlike Ubuntu... (Score:1)
This is a good thing (Score:4, Informative)
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nothing special to speak of...
As a matter of fact I chose Asterisk@Home over them for a number of reasons...
the way they base their support...the COST of that support(simply for software updates)...lack of support(financially) for those doing the actual footwork/installations onsite(bill your own hours, but once you've set it up...we'll take all of the support money thanks)
Their software that they have developed is nice...but will they let you just buy the software, NO..you
fonality (Score:2)
FreePBX (Score:5, Informative)
However, FreePBX _is still free_ - It hasn't been bought, it's still pure Open Source, and it's not forking to a non-free addition, so don't panic. Trixbox is just a wrapper for asterisk and freepbx (and, obviously, a couple of other things), and Fonality have bought the wrapper, not the package.
I'll leave to to your previously scheduled conspiracy theories now.
--Rob
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I'm hoping they'll put some funds and people towards working out the bugs rather than adding more features.
I really like asterisk and AMP/FreePBX make it easy to manage. If I could fix a few issues such as low volume on bridged zaptel calls, timeouts that don't work for custom extensions (such as to my cell phone) that cause unanswered calls to go to my cell phone's voicemail instead of asterisk's, and an annoying dtmf issue where extensions that
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All this great software but... (Score:1)
Sure I can get Asterisk and whatnot for free, but you still need the hardware to run it on, and I have been unable to find info anywhere on how to build a cheap PBX. I look at the hardware that you can plug into a PCI slot (sold by the vendor that makes Asterisk), and the prices are so high that when all is said and done, I might as well just buy an actual commercial phone switch.
How does one going about making a cheap PBX that has a few external POTS lines, and a half dozen or so inter
Asterisk Hardware (Score:2)
Might want to see this article:
A $10 Linux Answering Machine [linuxtoys.org]
N
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Do you have a company of your own or do you work for a company that offers support for FreePBX.
If we could get one feature added it would work great for what we need.
The feature is one that is on our current phone system so I bet other would find it useful. It is an option for "remote delivery" of voice mail.
The way it works is when a voice mail goes to a certain box the system then calls out to a preset phone number. When you answer that phone you are at a voice mail menu. Y
This got the front page? (Score:3, Informative)
I guess it is important, though, because trixbox is an open source project, and the trixbox developers are now going to be paid to develop it. Fonality will reap the rewards when they install it for their clients. It's a good example of how an open source business can work.
Agree with the WTF (Score:1)
Fan boy here... (Score:1)
Silly Wabbit (Score:1, Redundant)
(Sorry couldn't resist).
When will they ditch the monolithic system? (Score:2)
Nerd Vittles has a great TrixBox distro. (Score:3, Informative)
Take a look a bit deeper. (Score:3, Interesting)
Not to mention the sheer geekiness of Trixbox. It makes a killer home hack. You can control X10 from your phone. Tie your doorbell in as an extension and answer the door with your phone using hardware from home base. On and on.
On my home business, if I don't answer, the user gets the option of trying my cell phone or go to voice mail. If I don't answer the cell then Trixbox takes over and goes to internal voicemail which is then emailed to me. Makes the cell phone usable without giving anyone my cell number.
Thing is that we all use phones and there is a major shift underway with regards to what with and how we use voice communications. Very exiting on a lot of levels.
Robert
IAAVD (Score:2)
Tee Hee (Score:1)
Hey wassup Brain Ache!
I bet he heard that in the playground...
They say sarchasm is the lowest for of wit, I think we need to recount the vote because 'making fun of names' should be elected #1.