VitalPBX and Microsoft 365
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@Dashrender said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@JasGot said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@coliver Click a phone number in Outlook Contacts and have it dial the phone.
The phone on your desk, or a softphone?
Shouldn't matter in this case, but the way I read this was Outlook on your computer (softphone).
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@DustinB3403 said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@Dashrender said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@JasGot said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@coliver Click a phone number in Outlook Contacts and have it dial the phone.
The phone on your desk, or a softphone?
Shouldn't matter in this case, but the way I read this was Outlook on your computer (softphone).
and I read it completely differently... then again, when I saw this used 20 years ago, it was to make my deskphone dial, not the softphone... so I figured I'd ask.
As Scott said - pretty much any softphone you install will likely integrate directly into the API and clicking those numbers will cause the softphone to become active.
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@Dashrender said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@JasGot said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@coliver Click a phone number in Outlook Contacts and have it dial the phone.
The phone on your desk, or a softphone?
Either.
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@DustinB3403 said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@Dashrender said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@JasGot said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@coliver Click a phone number in Outlook Contacts and have it dial the phone.
The phone on your desk, or a softphone?
Shouldn't matter in this case, but the way I read this was Outlook on your computer (softphone).
Outlook is on the computer, but the phone is disconnected. Using a softphone like interface to dial your desk phone is standard.
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@Dashrender said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
and I read it completely differently... then again, when I saw this used 20 years ago, it was to make my deskphone dial, not the softphone... so I figured I'd ask.
That's the assumption, yes, that it is your physical desk phone hardware.
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@scottalanmiller said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@Dashrender said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
and I read it completely differently... then again, when I saw this used 20 years ago, it was to make my deskphone dial, not the softphone... so I figured I'd ask.
That's the assumption, yes, that it is your physical desk phone hardware.
but it doesn't matter. because softphone or deskphone.. it is still your extension that it should be dialing.
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@JaredBusch said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@scottalanmiller said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@Dashrender said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
and I read it completely differently... then again, when I saw this used 20 years ago, it was to make my deskphone dial, not the softphone... so I figured I'd ask.
That's the assumption, yes, that it is your physical desk phone hardware.
but it doesn't matter. because softphone or deskphone.. it is still your extension that it should be dialing.
Not call TO you, to initiate a call FROM you.
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@scottalanmiller said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@JaredBusch said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@scottalanmiller said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@Dashrender said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
and I read it completely differently... then again, when I saw this used 20 years ago, it was to make my deskphone dial, not the softphone... so I figured I'd ask.
That's the assumption, yes, that it is your physical desk phone hardware.
but it doesn't matter. because softphone or deskphone.. it is still your extension that it should be dialing.
Not call TO you, to initiate a call FROM you.
Exactly - it's about outbound calling.
Hell, as far as the user's concerned, they don't know what a softphone even is - all they know is they click on the phone number in Outlook, and suddenly their deskphone is on speakerphone and it's ringing the clicked number.
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@scottalanmiller said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@JaredBusch said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@scottalanmiller said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@Dashrender said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
and I read it completely differently... then again, when I saw this used 20 years ago, it was to make my deskphone dial, not the softphone... so I figured I'd ask.
That's the assumption, yes, that it is your physical desk phone hardware.
but it doesn't matter. because softphone or deskphone.. it is still your extension that it should be dialing.
Not call TO you, to initiate a call FROM you.
Right. The PBX initiates a call to your extension, and once you pickup initiates a call to whoever you are calling and then bridges the two channels.
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@Dashrender said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@JasGot said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@coliver Click a phone number in Outlook Contacts and have it dial the phone.
The phone on your desk, or a softphone?
Deskphone.
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@JasGot said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@Dashrender said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@JasGot said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@coliver Click a phone number in Outlook Contacts and have it dial the phone.
The phone on your desk, or a softphone?
Deskphone.
Interesting - Scott's above link leads you to software that should do this for you. I'll be trying it tomorrow... I have a few users that might like this.
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@Dashrender said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@JasGot said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@Dashrender said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@JasGot said in VitalPBX and Microsoft 365:
@coliver Click a phone number in Outlook Contacts and have it dial the phone.
The phone on your desk, or a softphone?
Deskphone.
Interesting - Scott's above link leads you to software that should do this for you. I'll be trying it tomorrow... I have a few users that might like this.
This is standard click to call plug-in and not a new thing