Has anyone used FluidServers.net?
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After the install almost all configuration can be done via the webinterface. The install is a little odd though. You have to mount the install iso as a repo if you are installing it to an existing centos box.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
After the install almost all configuration can be done via the webinterface. The install is a little odd though. You have to mount the install iso as a repo if you are installing it to an existing centos box.
That is not their designed install path. At least they make it possible.
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@Aaron-Studer said:
How hard is Elastix to setup, assuming you know basic Linux?
Like two commands. One to add the repo and one to install the package.
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i literally can't get elastix installed on my C@C server. i'm a linux idiot.
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This should get you Elastix 4.0 beta (with freepbx) on CentOS 7
yum update -y
yum install epel-release -y
wget http://sourceforge.net/projects/elastix/files/Elastix Test_Beta Packages/4.0.0-beta1/Elastix-4.0.48-BETA1-x86_64-bin-12mar2014.iso
mkdir /mnt/iso
mount -o loop Elastix-4.0.48-BETA1-x86_64-bin-12mar2014.iso /mnt/iso
vi /etc/yum.repos.d/elastix-cd.repo[elastix-cd] name=Elastix RPM Repo CD baseurl=file:///mnt/iso/ gpgcheck=0 enabled=1
yum -y install elastix
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@thecreativeone91 isn't 4.0 the multi tennant?
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@Hubtech said:
@thecreativeone91 isn't 4.0 the multi tennant?
nope, dumb again. you right. lemme play w/ dat
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Make sure you replace that wget link with a Direct download link. I forgot too.
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@scottalanmiller said:
No, haven't used them. Small players scale me for hosting. Rackspace and Digital Ocean are bigger and cheaper than this.
Rackspace offers Elastix for 25 concurrent lines for $15/month? Even if this doesn't include the cost of the SIP trunks - why is anyone running their own phone system?
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@Dashrender said:
Rackspace offers Elastix for 25 concurrent lines for $15/month? Even if this doesn't include the cost of the SIP trunks - why is anyone running their own phone system?
Far bigger than that. DO for even less. $10 on DO I think.
Because people wear tin foil hats to work every day.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Rackspace offers Elastix for 25 concurrent lines for $15/month? Even if this doesn't include the cost of the SIP trunks - why is anyone running their own phone system?
Far bigger than that. DO for even less. $10 on DO I think.
Because people wear tin foil hats to work every day.
Is that a jab
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@Dashrender lol, wasn't mean to be.
People fear hosting in general, even though it is often more secure and stable. It's just a curse of IT.
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Considering these options - am I just crazy to consider hosting our PBX in the cloud?
I'm completely unwilling to pay $10-20/ext/month like some providers want, but I'd definitely be willing to look at other solutions closer to $1-3/ext/month providing my own endpoint equipment (including SIP trunks) for my 66 extensions (16 in one building, 50 in another)?
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If you have the redundancy and reliability on site there is no reason to pay for some one else to host it when you could just spin up a new vm.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender lol, wasn't mean to be.
People fear hosting in general, even though it is often more secure and stable. It's just a curse of IT.
The stability is what I fear. The cost of going to a better protected internet connection, or trying to manage multiple ISPs is costly and at times difficult.
i.e. we currently pay $875/month for 10 Mb fiber connection with a 99.999 SLA - of course the SLA is only giving us some cash back if they drop below the SLA, and that doesn't really do me any good when I have 40 patients in the waiting room and I have to cancel because my internet connection went down so I can no longer access my EHR which is entirely online only.
So I can look to bringing in another ISP and different firewall/router equipment to fail over to in case one provider has an issue I can keep working from the other.
In writing this all things considered I can probably save myself a bundle, get two lower class ISPs (cable and DSL) from different providers.
Thoughts? - nevermind.. don't answer in this thread - I've started a new one.
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2015-04-07 14:21:56 (951 KB/s) - ‘download’ saved [1342113792/1342113792]
[root@localhost ~]# mkdir /mnt/iso
[root@localhost ~]# mount -o loop Elastix-4.0.48-BETA1-x86_64-bin-12mar2014.iso /mnt/iso
mount: Elastix-4.0.48-BETA1-x86_64-bin-12mar2014.iso: failed to setup loop device: No such file or directory -
@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender lol, wasn't mean to be.
People fear hosting in general, even though it is often more secure and stable. It's just a curse of IT.
The stability is what I fear. The cost of going to a better protected internet connection, or trying to manage multiple ISPs is costly and at times difficult.
i.e. we currently pay $875/month for 10 Mb fiber connection with a 99.999 SLA - of course the SLA is only giving us some cash back if they drop below the SLA, and that doesn't really do me any good when I have 40 patients in the waiting room and I have to cancel because my internet connection went down so I can no longer access my EHR which is entirely online only.
So I can look to bringing in another ISP and different firewall/router equipment to fail over to in case one provider has an issue I can keep working from the other.
In writing this all things considered I can probably save myself a bundle, get two lower class ISPs (cable and DSL) from different providers.
Thoughts?
Business Grade connections are much better. I wouldn't consider a low end connection. It's not worth it. You get what you pay for in terms of connections. Fiber connections are generally far more reliable and have less latency than a Cable or DSL connection. It also it's a shared trunk in most cases with DSL/Cable.
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@Hubtech File was named download and not the actual ISO name...
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@thecreativeone91 said:
Business Grade connections are much better. I wouldn't consider a low end connection. It's not worth it. You get what you pay for in terms of connections. Fiber connections are generally far more reliable and have less latency than a Cable or DSL connection. It also it's a shared trunk in most cases with DSL/Cable.
I've seen the opposite. Business grade often has the bigger outages. The "you get what you pay for" thing isn't true in the real world. Business grade connections are mostly smoke and mirrors. They get businesses to overbuy because it sounds good. But the consumer fiber is cheaper for more. Same or lower latency, better uptime. I've never seen any business get a fiber line as good as consumer cable in the northeast even at $1,000 a month.
Do anything to avoid business connections. If it comes with an SLA, you are being screwed.
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What I've seen the most from business grade connections are days or even weeks (and in a rare care over six months) of downtime. Business grade means, normally, that you are a lone customer with little value to the ISP. When you go down, they don't care. And having that business empathy explains just about everything. You have no leverage . You just don't matter.
Consumer lines when a line goes down, lots of people are down and pissed and talking about it. It's a real outage that impacts reputation and potentially legal liability. Business class lines are promoted because they, by and large, protect the ISPs from the big responsibilities.