Recently we deployed Cisco in a building on another site less than a mile away. We are connecting to Cisco using Q-Sig trunking.
Users in the Avaya PBX may transfer to the other site and are allowed to take their extension with. Users in the Avaya can then still 4 digit dial to their coworkers in the other building.
The problem I am having is that if a Cisco user is offline (many of them use Cisco Jabber on their laptops instead of a phone), instead of calls being routed to their vmail the calls are encountering a fast busy. I am told this is because the Cisco is expecting 10 digits instead of the 4 digits I am currently sending.
I have been told that the Cisco cannot easily be changed to accomodate these because the Cisco platform services several other sites, some in 3 different area codes and states.
My goal then is to see if there is a way I can use UDP to insert the digits automatically. There are three different exchanges on the Avaya due to the size of the site. So I expect to need to make these adaptations for each separate user that migrates, and that is not a problem. Any given week there could be one or two Avaya users that migrate to Cisco, but there still remains hundreds of other users that stay on Avaya.
Anyone know if this can be done, and if so how?
Users in the Avaya PBX may transfer to the other site and are allowed to take their extension with. Users in the Avaya can then still 4 digit dial to their coworkers in the other building.
The problem I am having is that if a Cisco user is offline (many of them use Cisco Jabber on their laptops instead of a phone), instead of calls being routed to their vmail the calls are encountering a fast busy. I am told this is because the Cisco is expecting 10 digits instead of the 4 digits I am currently sending.
I have been told that the Cisco cannot easily be changed to accomodate these because the Cisco platform services several other sites, some in 3 different area codes and states.
My goal then is to see if there is a way I can use UDP to insert the digits automatically. There are three different exchanges on the Avaya due to the size of the site. So I expect to need to make these adaptations for each separate user that migrates, and that is not a problem. Any given week there could be one or two Avaya users that migrate to Cisco, but there still remains hundreds of other users that stay on Avaya.
Anyone know if this can be done, and if so how?