Hiya! > I hear you. I've started a brief introduction on > http://www.voip-info.org/tiki-index.php?page=Asterisk+introduction > Do you think I'm totally off the road or on the way to what you're looking for?
Wow - Olle (and others here), I have been around for a week or so on this list, and I am still amazed of the speed of things here! > A better and more detailed introduction can be found in the Asterisk > handbook by That one I know (the draft), but that misses a bit on what I have in mind. Your intro is more in the direction of what I have in mind but I'd suggest a couple of changes: - a bit less details and more global picture "what can I do with this?" So do also mention music-on-hold (incl. streaming), web frontend for voicemail, Festival (text-to-speech), fax (in the works as we all know) next to what you have already in that section. Also the codecs should appear somewhere (as list, similar to the protocols and right below them). A slightly better "human understandable" oveview of what agents are good for would also be great (a practical real-world example). - the context part is a bit too long; it might be good to mention a term like "access rights" in there as well because "context" as such doesn't suggest this functionality - the NAT issue and the "solution" IAX can use a short but big mention as well. That's one of the strongest points * can offer - question: what is * lacking compared to commercial PBX, what is it that * cannot do and is not good at? That would help to draw the borders and limit the map of where * can be and should be used. - in the very first paragraph: Very shortly explain PSTN and PBX, at least for non-english nationals all those abbreviations are a big hurdle at the start (took me a while to learn what "you people" meant with PRI and BRI as in Germany we have *slightly* different names for that ;->) - astman and gastman also need a mention: What are they to be used for? Note: I played a bit with both, but since I currently only test with X- Lite due to the lack of IP phones (trying to get my hands on two Swissvoice, still no success) I see no use in those tools, they don't seem to work with SIP channels at all. - "Development" for me means working on the Asterisk code base, so I'd reword that to something like "scripting Asterisk" (I guess you get the idea). I think there is quite a difference between contributing core code (few people do that and feel capable) and playing with AGI scripts in PHP, PERL etc. If you could include those buzzwords (PHP, PERL, Pyhton as well I think) it would round up the picture. - Also: Might be nice to explain that there aren't really Asterisk "releases" available (like in other projects). Although I read "you must use CVS" I thought "hey, maybe later when I am an * nerd, but no need to do that now". > I haven't looked into agents and queues myself and no one else have added > info on it to the wiki. The Wiki is a community effort, so you're more than > welcome to dig into the world of agents and queues and explain it. Still learning, and I am sure I'll get to that as well... :.-) Cheers, Philipp _______________________________________________ Asterisk-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users
