The non-geographic to geographic number lookup should work for all numbers that conform to the e164 standard. The "Geographic number" field must contain a number, which is usually your fixed line number (including country code). Here is a short tutorial I wrote to hopefully explain it:
https://www.voxalot.com/action/stati...lay&itemOID=43 |
Im sorry but i do not understand the geographic number deal.
If i want to call Sky Digital from voipbuster i pay 0,10 eurocent pr minute, and the sky digital phone number is (+44) 0870 600 2888. As i understand with voxalot i only pay 9.9 cents untimed meanining no minute charge, only for connection fee ? And how can i use it ? Can someone give me an example with the phone number for sky customer service. |
It works great, now I can save even more, gotta love the VOIP stuff lol
Thanks VoXaLot |
Thanks Martin. Great work.
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A silly question, if the lookup failed to find the geographic number, is it possible to configure the dial plan for falling back to the PSTN line?
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ataboy |
Is this supposed to work on the voxalot.com.au server?
I still cannot get my 1300 number to work using the non-geo lookup via voxalot.... doing a non-geo lookup at e164.org gives the right result. |
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1 _61[2378]XXXXXXXX 0${EXTEN:2} Worlddialpoint Yes [Edit] [Delete] The 1300 number is translated into a _61 number, so unless you have a dial plan in place that deals with the international number and replaces it with a format your VSP can accept, it won't work. |
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If I test 61387050300, it routes to my voxalot account as expected via an ENUM lookup. However if I test 1300853804, then it always passes to the VSP entered with the _1300. dial plan entry. |
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