On-Premises soft PBX
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@Pete-S said in On-Premises soft PBX:
We had a look at what was available for our own small office about two years ago. We are not resellers of voip so could care less about that.
I can't think of any time I don't care about the ethics of my vendors. Not sure how being a reseller would change that. It's not being a reseller that affects us the most.
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@scottalanmiller said in On-Premises soft PBX:
@Pete-S said in On-Premises soft PBX:
We installed and ran a couple of options to see what would work best for us and for our needs 3CX was the clear winner.
We are running the debian version of 3CX on xenserver. It has worked very well.
What did you test against? Was FreePBX one of the options?
There are loads of things worse than 3CX, like Mitel or Cisco that we've found. No question there.
Of course we tried freepbx.
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@Pete-S said in On-Premises soft PBX:
@scottalanmiller said in On-Premises soft PBX:
@Pete-S said in On-Premises soft PBX:
We installed and ran a couple of options to see what would work best for us and for our needs 3CX was the clear winner.
We are running the debian version of 3CX on xenserver. It has worked very well.
What did you test against? Was FreePBX one of the options?
There are loads of things worse than 3CX, like Mitel or Cisco that we've found. No question there.
Of course we tried freepbx.
You'd be surprised how many places won't. Won't even consider it. It's not always the right choice, but it's nearly always a viable consideration.
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3CX' interface has come a long way in the last couple of years, probably coinciding with their move to support Linux. Their interface looked like something from the 1990s quite recently. But is pretty modern now.
If you run it on Linux rather than Windows (it requires a Windows Server license because it is a server product) and compare to using FreePBX with commercial modules, the pricing is pretty flat between the two.
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@scottalanmiller said in On-Premises soft PBX:
3CX' interface has come a long way in the last couple of years, probably coinciding with their move to support Linux. Their interface looked like something from the 1990s quite recently. But is pretty modern now.
Again @scottalanmiller the info ^^^ is 100% incorrect!
If you run it on Linux rather than Windows (it requires a Windows Server license because it is a server product) and compare to using FreePBX with commercial modules, the pricing is pretty flat between the two.
Again @scottalanmiller this info ^^^ is also 100% incorrect!
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@FATeknollogee said in On-Premises soft PBX:
@scottalanmiller said in On-Premises soft PBX:
3CX' interface has come a long way in the last couple of years, probably coinciding with their move to support Linux. Their interface looked like something from the 1990s quite recently. But is pretty modern now.
Again @scottalanmiller the info ^^^ is 100% incorrect!
If you run it on Linux rather than Windows (it requires a Windows Server license because it is a server product) and compare to using FreePBX with commercial modules, the pricing is pretty flat between the two.
Again @scottalanmiller this info ^^^ is also 100% incorrect!
Which info is not correct? That the interface has improved? That it isn't all that expensive? You say things are incorrect, but you aren't saying what IS correct.
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I hope you aren't going to make the claim that 3CX can run without a server license because they told you you can. That's a blatant violation of the MS licensing and would really drive home why 3CX isn't someone you can trust. But I doubt that they would be so brazen as to encourage theft like that.
Will it technically run there? Sure, and that's fine for testing. But can you use it in production on Windows 10? Of course not. Using Windows like this requires a server license. Nothing coming from the application company changes that.
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@scottalanmiller said in On-Premises soft PBX:
3CX' interface has come a long way in the last couple of years, probably coinciding with their move to support Linux. Their interface looked like something from the 1990s quite recently. But is pretty modern now.
If you run it on Linux rather than Windows (it requires a Windows Server license because it is a server product) and compare to using FreePBX with commercial modules, the pricing is pretty flat between the two.
Yes, the web interface looks very professional and full featured. I've never had to do anything in the OS with it. They also have voip software for windows, android etc that works well and integrates with the deskphones (CTI).
We also needed more than English and 3CX had the most professional IVR recordings.
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@Pete-S said in On-Premises soft PBX:
@scottalanmiller said in On-Premises soft PBX:
3CX' interface has come a long way in the last couple of years, probably coinciding with their move to support Linux. Their interface looked like something from the 1990s quite recently. But is pretty modern now.
If you run it on Linux rather than Windows (it requires a Windows Server license because it is a server product) and compare to using FreePBX with commercial modules, the pricing is pretty flat between the two.
Yes, the web interface looks very professional and full featured. I've never had to do anything in the OS with it. They also have voip software for windows, android etc that works well and integrates with the deskphones (CTI).
We also needed more than English and 3CX had the most professional IVR recordings.
Their soft phone was always solid. What got us was we needed to not use it and they used to have some big limitations around using non-3CX soft phones that made us essentially unable to consider them at the time. Apparently that stuff was fixed, but was, at the time a massive stumbling block when all their main competitors worked the same and didn't have the LAN limitation that they used to have.
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@Pete-S said in On-Premises soft PBX:
@scottalanmiller said in On-Premises soft PBX:
@Pete-S said in On-Premises soft PBX:
We installed and ran a couple of options to see what would work best for us and for our needs 3CX was the clear winner.
We are running the debian version of 3CX on xenserver. It has worked very well.
What did you test against? Was FreePBX one of the options?
There are loads of things worse than 3CX, like Mitel or Cisco that we've found. No question there.
Of course we tried freepbx.
Okay, so we can look at 3CX or FreePBX as two options.
What else do we need to make this work?
I jumped on FreePBX's site for a boo and there's something there about a SIP Trunk?
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@PhlipElder said in On-Premises soft PBX:
@Pete-S said in On-Premises soft PBX:
@scottalanmiller said in On-Premises soft PBX:
@Pete-S said in On-Premises soft PBX:
We installed and ran a couple of options to see what would work best for us and for our needs 3CX was the clear winner.
We are running the debian version of 3CX on xenserver. It has worked very well.
What did you test against? Was FreePBX one of the options?
There are loads of things worse than 3CX, like Mitel or Cisco that we've found. No question there.
Of course we tried freepbx.
Okay, so we can look at 3CX or FreePBX as two options.
What else do we need to make this work?
I jumped on FreePBX's site for a boo and there's something there about a SIP Trunk?
They make their money trying to sell you things. FreePBX is totally free and can use any SIP trunk you want. But you are welcome to buy SIP trunks from them directly, if you so desire.
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FreePBX or 3CX are the PBX, the "phone server" if you will. If you want to make calls on the PSTN (the public switched telephone network) then you need a connection to it. That's what a purchased SIP trunk is for. Vendors like Skyetel (@Skyetel ), VoicePulse, voip.ms, Twilio, Sangoma (on the FreePBX site) all offer these. Only Skyetel is active in the community here.
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Your SIP trunk to the PSTN is like your ISP providing Internet. The PBX itself handles your "LAN", your private network. But the SIP trunk provider allows you to connect to other people outside of your organization. So technically, nothing is needed beyond the PBX, but you can only call people that you give extensions to. That can be useful, but isn't what most people expect when building a phone system.
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@scottalanmiller said in On-Premises soft PBX:
Only Skyetel is active in the community here.
They are no more active than the FreePBX dev that pops in occasionally.
Just more recently active.
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@scottalanmiller said in On-Premises soft PBX:
@PhlipElder said in On-Premises soft PBX:
@Pete-S said in On-Premises soft PBX:
@scottalanmiller said in On-Premises soft PBX:
@Pete-S said in On-Premises soft PBX:
We installed and ran a couple of options to see what would work best for us and for our needs 3CX was the clear winner.
We are running the debian version of 3CX on xenserver. It has worked very well.
What did you test against? Was FreePBX one of the options?
There are loads of things worse than 3CX, like Mitel or Cisco that we've found. No question there.
Of course we tried freepbx.
Okay, so we can look at 3CX or FreePBX as two options.
What else do we need to make this work?
I jumped on FreePBX's site for a boo and there's something there about a SIP Trunk?
They make their money trying to sell you things. FreePBX is totally free and can use any SIP trunk you want. But you are welcome to buy SIP trunks from them directly, if you so desire.
That's the catch. I'm not sure what is needed and from where given our location in Canada.
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@PhlipElder said in On-Premises soft PBX:
@scottalanmiller said in On-Premises soft PBX:
@PhlipElder said in On-Premises soft PBX:
@Pete-S said in On-Premises soft PBX:
@scottalanmiller said in On-Premises soft PBX:
@Pete-S said in On-Premises soft PBX:
We installed and ran a couple of options to see what would work best for us and for our needs 3CX was the clear winner.
We are running the debian version of 3CX on xenserver. It has worked very well.
What did you test against? Was FreePBX one of the options?
There are loads of things worse than 3CX, like Mitel or Cisco that we've found. No question there.
Of course we tried freepbx.
Okay, so we can look at 3CX or FreePBX as two options.
What else do we need to make this work?
I jumped on FreePBX's site for a boo and there's something there about a SIP Trunk?
They make their money trying to sell you things. FreePBX is totally free and can use any SIP trunk you want. But you are welcome to buy SIP trunks from them directly, if you so desire.
That's the catch. I'm not sure what is needed and from where given our location in Canada.
Do you have Internet access?
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Twilio does SIP trunking in Canada as does voip.ms.
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@coliver said in On-Premises soft PBX:
Twilio does SIP trunking in Canada as does voip.ms.
VoIP.ms is a Canadian based company in fact.
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@PhlipElder said in On-Premises soft PBX:
@scottalanmiller said in On-Premises soft PBX:
@PhlipElder said in On-Premises soft PBX:
@Pete-S said in On-Premises soft PBX:
@scottalanmiller said in On-Premises soft PBX:
@Pete-S said in On-Premises soft PBX:
We installed and ran a couple of options to see what would work best for us and for our needs 3CX was the clear winner.
We are running the debian version of 3CX on xenserver. It has worked very well.
What did you test against? Was FreePBX one of the options?
There are loads of things worse than 3CX, like Mitel or Cisco that we've found. No question there.
Of course we tried freepbx.
Okay, so we can look at 3CX or FreePBX as two options.
What else do we need to make this work?
I jumped on FreePBX's site for a boo and there's something there about a SIP Trunk?
They make their money trying to sell you things. FreePBX is totally free and can use any SIP trunk you want. But you are welcome to buy SIP trunks from them directly, if you so desire.
That's the catch. I'm not sure what is needed and from where given our location in Canada.
What you need with any PBX is a connection to the PSTN (public switched telephone network). This connection is called a trunk.
Old school, your trunk was a POTS line or 3. Or it was a voice T1 (PRI).
Today it is SIP.
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What you can do is pick a solution to test.
Spin it up.
Connect 2 desk phones (or soft phones or apps).
Make calls to each other.
Then buy a DID (phone number) from a SIP provider for $1.
Setup a trunk in the PBX with the SIP provider.
Setup inbound routing rules.
Test calling in.
Setup outbound routing rules.
Test calling out.