AMO is basically just a shell, but heavily restricted to keep you from messing up the underlying OS very much. From my perception, AMO exists because they wanted their field techs to have manual control over telephony configuration but didn't want them accidentally messing up the underlying OS...
Paul, yes. When you dial into the system remotely, assuming you are using a system account which has AMO access then you just issue the keystrokes to go into AMO. I don't recall the exact sequence off-hand, but it's all menu-driven so if you have access, you can find it easily enough. It's no...
Paul, it can be done.
I wrote a custom app in Linux that logs into our HiCom systems and essentially screen scapes configuration information and analyze the up/down status of things. Technically, what it is doing is issuing some display commands, storing the results, and then using TCL along...
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