Make sure you are using *010 and *031 (both will do the same thing) and *not* *10 or *31
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Mea culpa.
I am so sorry that I make that mistake. Every thing works fine now. |
ATA rings phone only when X-Lite is active.
Is it needed that you have X-Lite active to let your ATA ring the phone.
When I exit that program I received a message that the number is not available when I call it. If you can received a call with out that program I have to look further. |
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You might need to look into STUN or do some searching on NAT setup for your ATA. . |
Solved, but I don't no how. Sorry.
This problem is also solved only this time I have no clue what did the trick.
What it was not, that was the firewall. For that purpose I had ticked every checkbox on to log every error or blocking. After trying a lot off things I cleared the log file for the x-st time and after some refreshes there was suddenly the notice that SIP1, yes voxalot account, was trying to connect. First there was a 401 error but the second attempt was good. From that moment I can call true the Netherlands SIP Broker PSTN access number my ATA. It is not must to help others but I am very pleased. :D . |
How can i dial my beither's PSTN phone using ENUM
My brother's PSTN phone is registered with ENUM database e.164.org
Now how can i call the number for free. here is what i have- my ENUM registered regular PSTN phone -ATA box registered with my voxalot id and password. I have configured the box and got a dial tone perfectly. The main question is this, what device or phone i need to use to call the PSTN phone, and why do i have to gt another VSP, so voxalot is not a VSP? If i ned to have a VSP then how can i set it up because i already added voxalot to the box and have a dial tone. Please advise me on how to proceed. |
You need VoIP equipment at both ends, each needs to be registered to a SIP service [excepting pure IP to IP setups]. The SIP service could be Voxalot at both ends with different accounts. Each end will be the termination point for it's Voxalot account. You set up ENUM to point to the appropriate termination point. Then with the correct dial plans that use ENUM lookups, you will use ENUM to route the call to the other end.
Without ENUM, you can call directly between the Voxalot accounts using *010{voxalotid}. ENUM adds ability to bypass the PSTN when VoIP can be used at both end points. |
How can i dial my brother's PSTN phone using ENUM
Well thanks for your information, but my understanding from the way i read about ENUM is that,
A- You can call a PSTN line even if the callee is not on the internet as long as the line is registered with enum e.164.org database and active B- To do so you or me the caller must have an active enum acount number. Once registered, any call from voxalot My questions are: 1. How can I link my PSTN number to my voxalot account so that anyone using ENUM can call me for free? and vice versa. |
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So if you add your number to the e164.org registry and link it to SIP URI, that's all you do. Now when someone calls your PSTN number, if they are using a VSP that supports ENum lookups (these VSPs will check the ENum lists for any number you dial, if they find a listing, instead of calling the number they'll call 123456@voxalot.com from the example above). Now the call is completely routed over the internet so there is no cost. One downside is that anyone that uses ENum lookups will now only ring you on the VoIP line, the actual PSTN line will no longer ring when an ENum call comes in (there is ways to address this issue if your VSP provider supports it, eg. setting your VoIP line as DND will cause ENum to tell your VSP that although there is an ENum listing, the line is not available, so it should try the regular PSTN line) Now for you to call ENum numbers for free, all you need is VoXalot account and a dial plan within that account that has ENum lookup set to Yes. To call ENum numbers from your regular PSTN number, call one of the SipBroker Access Numbers (assuming there is a SipBroker Access Number local to you, and you are not charged for local calls), then enter the number you want to call if full International format CountryCode-Number, or *013-Country Code-Number In summary: ENum can provide free calls between VoIP users. Where PSTN comes into play is that instead of giving out 123456@voxalot.com or 12345@fwd.pulver.com, you give out your regular telephone number which people are more familiar with. If these VoIP users call the number (and their provider is doing ENum lookups) they'll reach you on your VoIP line. Since the call remains completely within the internet it is free. Hope that clarifies ENum a little bit. So ENum's usefulness is dependent on people registering their numbers and having a VoIP presence online to which to receive ENum calls. Hope that clarifies things a bit.... |
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