Sip Trunk Provider
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@Dashrender said:
huh - When I don't get a DID I just think a company is either cheap or they don't want their employees getting phones directly to their desk.
What "real" business lets you call everyone directly outside a few executives?
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@johnhooks said:
We also had Comcast give us a quote for their hosted pbx (just to see). For 8 lines, with only 4 having voicemail it was going to be something like $376 (including internet).
Yeah AND you'd be locked in just like a legacy phone system from the 1960s. Even if that was cheap, which it is not, that's crazy. I can tell you that NTG's hosted phone system is cheaper than that for 80 lines
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@scottalanmiller said:
@johnhooks said:
We also had Comcast give us a quote for their hosted pbx (just to see). For 8 lines, with only 4 having voicemail it was going to be something like $376 (including internet).
Yeah AND you'd be locked in just like a legacy phone system from the 1960s. Even if that was cheap, which it is not, that's crazy. I can tell you that NTG's hosted phone system is cheaper than that for 80 lines
Oh it was insane. The "Sales Engineer" was telling me how he's talked with IT Directors at large companies and they really liked the system. Ya, ok.
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They wanted $10 a month for essentially a loudspeaker ringer for on the shop floor.
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@johnhooks said:
Oh it was insane. The "Sales Engineer" was telling me how he's talked with IT Directors at large companies and they really liked the system. Ya, ok.
Where "IT Director" = "Guy getting paid to arrange other people to do IT on his behalf."
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@johnhooks said:
We also had Comcast give us a quote for their hosted pbx (just to see). For 8 lines, with only 4 having voicemail it was going to be something like $376 (including internet).
did that include phones too?
Cox wanted $20/month/extension - but that includes them installing a whole new wireplant, switches, phones, etc. They manage the entire thing. At that price it's not a bad offering. They do offer less expensive options that allow you to use your preexisting networking, etc, but I don't have that pricing.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
huh - When I don't get a DID I just think a company is either cheap or they don't want their employees getting phones directly to their desk.
What "real" business lets you call everyone directly outside a few executives?
West Teleservices has DID's to a rather large percentage of their staff, if not everyone.
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@Dashrender said:
@johnhooks said:
We also had Comcast give us a quote for their hosted pbx (just to see). For 8 lines, with only 4 having voicemail it was going to be something like $376 (including internet).
did that include phones too?
Cox wanted $20/month/extension - but that includes them installing a whole new wireplant, switches, phones, etc. They manage the entire thing. At that price it's not a bad offering. They do offer less expensive options that allow you to use your preexisting networking, etc, but I don't have that pricing.
Ya it was for their low end phones. They put an edgemark behind our router, but don't do any installation of wiring.
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You can buy very nice, brand new phones for about $120. You can get cheap new ones for around $80.
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@Dashrender said:
Cox wanted $20/month/extension - but that includes them installing a whole new wireplant, switches, phones, etc. They manage the entire thing. At that price it's not a bad offering. They do offer less expensive options that allow you to use your preexisting networking, etc, but I don't have that pricing.
If that is over, say, 18 phones it is not a very good deal. That is quite a lot of money.
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@scottalanmiller said:
You can buy very nice, brand new phones for about $120. You can get cheap new ones for around $80.
Have you used any of the Ubiquiti UVPs?
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@Dashrender said:
West Teleservices has DID's to a rather large percentage of their staff, if not everyone.
Yes, we've established that that one, smaller enterprise in the midwest does not follow the norms of the Fortune 500 in the rest of the world very often
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@johnhooks said:
Have you used any of the Ubiquiti UVPs?
No, they are very new.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Cox wanted $20/month/extension - but that includes them installing a whole new wireplant, switches, phones, etc. They manage the entire thing. At that price it's not a bad offering. They do offer less expensive options that allow you to use your preexisting networking, etc, but I don't have that pricing.
If that is over, say, 18 phones it is not a very good deal. That is quite a lot of money.
Oh it's way to damned expensive - but it's a fully managed/hosted/etc solution.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@johnhooks said:
Have you used any of the Ubiquiti UVPs?
No, they are very new.
I tried to find a some videos on them, but the only ones I found were unboxing videos. One guy had a video setting it up, but didn't have a pbx to connect it to for the video.
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@Dashrender said:
Oh it's way to damned expensive - but it's a fully managed/hosted/etc solution.
No "but", it's expensive. As someone who does that all for less.....
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Do you still have the same opinion of Elastix as I've read before @scottalanmiller?
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@johnhooks said:
Do you still have the same opinion of Elastix as I've read before @scottalanmiller?
I've started and or stated in more than one thread here and on SW that Elastix is basically dead.
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@johnhooks said:
Do you still have the same opinion of Elastix as I've read before @scottalanmiller?
Depends when you read it. Elastix was a great product and I think @JaredBusch would agree with me. But as things stand today, it looks like Elastix went under and the lights are still on (website hasn't been taken down yet) but the company itself appears to be gone (a la ShopTech from another thread.)
FreePBX is the key player here now having stepped into Elastix' shoes.
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Elastix doesn't seem to be doing anything anymore. It has been months since the last time that they had an update. They tried making their own interface and moving away from the FreePBX interface and it did not work out well for them at all. They ended up having to fall back to their old system and kind of died off in the process.