who had used webphone in freePBX
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@Dashrender said:
This kinda sounds like the Skype links we used to see in websites (and maybe some people still do)
Not likely, was Skype actually embedded into the site? This isn't a link but an entire phone that loads in a web page.
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Does the web phone have it's won extension built in? Or does it load a generic SIP client and let the user input an extension and password?
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@scottalanmiller said:
@IT-ADMIN said:
sorry the image cannot be uploaded, i don't know why ???
You have to wait for a while once it hits 100%. If you "submit" while it is still on 100%, it hasn't completed yet. It is created a link, so you have to wait until a link is visible.
yes you are right, now it was uploaded
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@Reid-Cooper said:
Does the web phone have it's won extension built in? Or does it load a generic SIP client and let the user input an extension and password?
There would be no need for an extension because the whole thing runs in a browser.
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Okay, so it is a competing PBX to FreePBX. You don't need FreePBX to do this for you, you can just put SIP code into a web page and it is the same as any other SIP client.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
This kinda sounds like the Skype links we used to see in websites (and maybe some people still do)
Not likely, was Skype actually embedded into the site? This isn't a link but an entire phone that loads in a web page.
Yeah, you're right. For Skype links to work, you have to have Skype installed.
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@Dashrender said:
@Reid-Cooper said:
Does the web phone have it's won extension built in? Or does it load a generic SIP client and let the user input an extension and password?
There would be no need for an extension because the whole thing runs in a browser.
Yes, still need an extension. Not sure what you mean by running in a browser meaning that it does not need an extension. A softphone loaded in a browser or loaded as a .NET app or running in Java is all the same, just a SIP client.
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@Dashrender said:
Yeah, you're right. For Skype links to work, you have to have Skype installed.
That will work with any softphone and link detection. But since people don't use standard SIP phones, it makes it difficult.
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@Reid-Cooper said:
Does the web phone have it's won extension built in? Or does it load a generic SIP client and let the user input an extension and password?
it has it own extension and username and password, it is like a softphone with the difference that webphone is not a software but rather it is a piece of code, it is a very useful way to make your costumers call you freely and internationally
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@IT-ADMIN said:
webphone is not a software but rather it is a piece of code
That's all software is, a piece of code
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
@Reid-Cooper said:
Does the web phone have it's won extension built in? Or does it load a generic SIP client and let the user input an extension and password?
There would be no need for an extension because the whole thing runs in a browser.
Yes, still need an extension. Not sure what you mean by running in a browser meaning that it does not need an extension. A softphone loaded in a browser or loaded as a .NET app or running in Java is all the same, just a SIP client.
oh...lol - by extension I thought he meant .exe or .txt - I see now that he meant PBX extension.. yeah you're right, the user will need one.
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@IT-ADMIN said:
@Reid-Cooper said:
Does the web phone have it's won extension built in? Or does it load a generic SIP client and let the user input an extension and password?
it has it own extension and username and password, it is like a softphone with the difference that webphone is not a software but rather it is a piece of code, it is a very useful way to make your costumers call you freely and internationally
Sure, but how many users can use it at one time?
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@Dashrender said:
Sure, but how many users can use it at one time?
Presumably each one gets it's own extension. So effectively unlimited.
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@scottalanmiller said:
That's all software is, a piece of code
i mean by not a software the fact that it is not a seperate applicaion that you run on your computer but rather a piece of code running on the webpage
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@IT-ADMIN said:
i mean by not a software the fact that it is not a seperate applicaion that you run on your computer but rather a piece of code running on the webpage
I knew what you were trying to say.
Although it is still important to remember conceptually, as it often confuses people, that all that is happening in the web page is that a full software application is being downloaded automatically and run on the desktop. It's still full software, just does not persist to the disk.
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@Dashrender said:
Sure, but how many users can use it at one time?
the webphone is considered an outside line like a PSTN line or a PRI trunk or a VOIP trunk....it is not an internal extension
to understand the concept take a look on this article
http://www.ozekiphone.com/voip-how-to-add-a-webphone-to-your-website-with-ozeki-xe-pbx-724.html -
@scottalanmiller said:
Although it is still important to remember conceptually, as it often confuses people, that all that is happening in the web page is that a full software application is being downloaded automatically and run on the desktop. It's still full software, just does not persist to the disk.
i understand what you mean,
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@IT-ADMIN said:
Hi everybody...
did anyone try webphone in freePBX ?? because i used this option in the ozeki XE IP PBX, it is sort of html code that you insert in your webpage so that your costumers can call you freely from your website like this image :
please if anyone had set up this before in freePBX , help me do that
I wouldn't use it. this will tie directly into your PBX. That also makes logging calls harder to know where they came from they will basically seem internal and could have some legal implications.
I'd just use the standard TEL: links to their sip client, sykpe or smart phone will allow them to call from their own number.
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@IT-ADMIN said:
the webphone is considered an outside line like a PSTN line or a PRI trunk or a VOIP trunk....it is not an internal extension
Not really. It's a directly connected extension just like an internal phone. Sure they may be rules on it but that doesn't change the fact that it's on your PBX.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
@IT-ADMIN said:
the webphone is considered an outside line like a PSTN line or a PRI trunk or a VOIP trunk....it is not an internal extension
Not really. It's a directly connected extension just like an internal phone. Sure they may be rules on it but that doesn't change the fact that it's on your PBX.
In Asterisk, and with some other PBXs, you can designate extensions as being external. It's a weird thing but because the VoIP trunks are external (but are just SIP lines like any phone) the idea that there is an internal side and an external side is purely one of logic in the PBX. He's right, the web phone clients can be turned into fully external and connect no differently than any non-internal SIP call.