At this moment I have an Asterisk PBX running at home. I am using an AVM Fritz ISDN adapter with capi drivers in order to dial out to a landline.
The biggest challange with VOIP is getting your current telephones connected. Using Softphones or VOIP hardphones is an solution but costs money.
For me the challange was obtaining an ISDN card with a HFC type chipset. These are some the few chipsets known to enable an ISDN card into NT mode which is required for connecting TA's (telephones). These type of cards are still cheaply available and I recently bought one at ebay for 2 euro's.
I am/was busy studying for RHCE, I started out with RHL8, at that point only RHL7 books were available. In due time, RH9 was released and I found myself running 2 versions behind plus Red Hat is very proud of the fact that they switch their exams quickly after a new product release. This was one of the books that I was looking at to use as a study guide as it came highly recommended. Pity about the switch Red Hat has made.At this point in time there are no study books available for RHEL and you might as well forget about RH9.
At this moment I have an Asterisk PBX running at home. I am using an AVM Fritz ISDN adapter with capi drivers in order to dial out to a landline.
The biggest challange with VOIP is getting your current telephones connected. Using Softphones or VOIP hardphones is an solution but costs money.
For me the challange was obtaining an ISDN card with a HFC type chipset. These are some the few chipsets known to enable an ISDN card into NT mode which is required for connecting TA's (telephones). These type of cards are still cheaply available and I recently bought one at ebay for 2 euro's.
It used to fit on one cd, now it's 3 or more.
So putting a link of your personal website on Slashdot, is like committing suicide?
I am/was busy studying for RHCE, I started out with RHL8, at that point only RHL7 books were available. In due time, RH9 was released and I found myself running 2 versions behind plus Red Hat is very proud of the fact that they switch their exams quickly after a new product release. This was one of the books that I was looking at to use as a study guide as it came highly recommended. Pity about the switch Red Hat has made.At this point in time there are no study books available for RHEL and you might as well forget about RH9.
Problem is that you will need bigger fans to compensate for limiting the airflow.
It also explains the shape of a wigwam, how els do the Indians send smoke signals when it rains?
Add few drops to cable, watch bunny flip... No more cable chewing bunny.
So that's the killer app they have been working on.