Replacing Orange's Wildfire with Asterisk?
Loconut1389 asks: "In 1994, Wildfire Communications released a telephone based voice recognition agent that kept track of contacts, and given a schedule or a list of numbers where to reach you, would try and contact you at places you might be when someone calls in. Wildfire was in service through a number of companies, until 2005 when Orange pulled the plug. I had the pleasure of being frustrated with misunderstandings, but thoroughly enjoyed the concept, and it was a worthwhile product. Just before they closed up the Wildfire shop, they had a version that didn't require training. In any case, I was wondering if Asterisk, with some extension modules, had come far enough to replace the functionality of the Wildfire service? Has anyone had experience with the original Wildfire product that could recommend a modern equivalent, even if it was commercial?"
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Since you mentioned Asterisk I assume you're open to a PBX solution. If not, you can leave now.
We use Altigen as our PBX and it does what you ask. I can give it a list of numbers to try me at when someone calls, and the caller will have the option to do so, or to leave me a message. It can be set to this "One Number Access" according to a schedule. It can email your voice messages, call you with voice messages or serve your voice messages through its client software or a web interface.
Plus all the usual PBX stuff. It ain't cheap, but it's not as expensive as a traditional system. I would imagine that Asterisk can do most of this, but I have no experience with it.
Using bluetooth proximity detection, automatically forward calls to the *right* place rather than just guessing. When you're at your desk, your computer detects your bluetooth phone and routes calls to your desk. When you leave, your computer detects the lack of your phone and forwards calls to your cell. When you get home, your computer there picks up your cell and routes calls to your home phone. Yes, with asterisk.
http://nerdvittles.com/index.php?p=78
-ben
My company switched to asterisk about 9 months ago. It covers our IVR & PBX needs, but it's got a glitch somewhere that refuses to drop channels. Depending on call volume/luck, we can only go from 4 hours to a week between having to restart because it's claiming all the channels are in use.
Other than that, we haven't had any problems not related to in house stupidity.
don't depend on AI if you don't have to. My dad forwards his business line at our house (self employed) to his cell phone every time he leaves. It's easy and free. Dunno who our provider is though but it's not even digital. This way calls get to where you are no matter what your schedule is or if it changes.
Is it just me or is it not going to upgrade to Vista in here?
Actually I think I'm maintaining all of the non ATT owned wildfire servers remaining in the US. I get mixed responses from people on the voice recognition, it works great for me unless there is tons of background noise. All you have to do is train it once for each one of your phone locations. There are a few things it could do, but the version we're running isn't that new. Outlook integration, fax receive, email notifications, and some various find me follow me refinements would be nice to have.
I also run a handful of Asterisk servers and one of these days I'll clone WF's feature set on asterisk. I've been told the final version of Wildfire that got shelved had all of the features I want then some I can't recall who bought them and their IP at the moment. Asterisk is the key to developing the replacement. Supposedly someone has setup a cmu:sphinx server with asterisk that works on a limited dictionary, so thats a step in the right direction. In the meantime we're still selling WildFire service and people are still using it.
I've done some work with asterisk and sphinx. It's a damn cool idea. However, voice recognition over the phone is extremely tricky. It really depends how big of a vocabulary you want. A small list of distinct words and it's ok. However, saying numbers and letters, and trying to have a huge vocabulary is asking for disaster.
If an officer ever threatens to taze you, say you have a pacemaker.
If you are in the U.S., you can keep using Wildfire through CR Technologies, Inc.; don't know anything about them other than I have been following the Wildfire saga, and know that CR advertises continued Wildfire services. For everyone suggesting ways to set up a "follow me/find me" feature, please check out the demos on CR Technologies' web site, because you are kind of missing the point of the original poster's desire to re-establish Wildfire in his life.
When Wildfire launched five years ago, it was an innovative service offering Orange customers the opportunity to access voice messages. However, over the last eighteen months user numbers have declined rapidly and during a recent review of the service it became clear that Wildfire does not offer some key features that many Orange customers have come to expect from their answer phone service. As a result, it has now become financially and technically impractical to run the service.
That is total and complete bullshit. For starters, Orange were actively refusing customers who requested Wildfire be added to their account for at least three years before they pulled the plug. I'd lost count of the people I demonstrated Wildfire to who immediately called Orange to have it added to their account only be be told they were not taking any more customers.
Secondly, just WHAT features did it not have that 'many Orange customers have come to expect from their answer phone service' - WHAT? The only 'feature' that you could do with the regular crappy Orange answerphone that you couldn't do with Wildfire was forward a message to someone. Does ANYONE EVER do this..?? If it was a feature you couldn't live without, then nobody was forcing you to keep wildfire. Since Hutchison sold Orange it went down the pan. It's obviously run by cretins - don't even get me started on their fucking stupid data plans. Sure - have a new 3G phone at £4 PER MEGABYTE. What? You can take a data plan that's only £4 for 4 Mb? Great! Except... what's that? No you can't have off peak data as well as that silly! Fucking. Morons.
Have a look at CommuniGate Pro, it is commercial, but there is a free five user version (not crippled) and there is a free trial version that allows lot's of accounts for testing.