So we are running ShoreTel in the company that i'm working in at the moment and I've got to do a telephony review next year to see if ShoreTel still fits in the business.
To date the ShoreTel system has proven mostly reliable, with a few niggles that have needed whole-scale updates as ShoreTel don't patch.. and it needs a license for just about everything..
Now I've been playing with asterisk/freepbx as a hobby and it looks like it'll work really well.
I have 4 sites currently with a central site and 3 remotes that can operate independently if the links to HQ are lost, I also have contact centre with around 180 agents.
Would Emetrotel fit this kind of setup? how would I achieve the remote site resilience? and could I use the ShoreTel phones? I believe that the 230 and 230g are running mgcp and the 480's are some flavor of sip. It'll be the phones that dictate realistically where we go.
Any thoughts? is there anyway to get hold of a small dev system to poke under people's noses?
It's not getting any smarter out there. You have to come to terms with stupidity, and make it work for you.
To date the ShoreTel system has proven mostly reliable, with a few niggles that have needed whole-scale updates as ShoreTel don't patch.. and it needs a license for just about everything..
Now I've been playing with asterisk/freepbx as a hobby and it looks like it'll work really well.
I have 4 sites currently with a central site and 3 remotes that can operate independently if the links to HQ are lost, I also have contact centre with around 180 agents.
Would Emetrotel fit this kind of setup? how would I achieve the remote site resilience? and could I use the ShoreTel phones? I believe that the 230 and 230g are running mgcp and the 480's are some flavor of sip. It'll be the phones that dictate realistically where we go.
Any thoughts? is there anyway to get hold of a small dev system to poke under people's noses?
It's not getting any smarter out there. You have to come to terms with stupidity, and make it work for you.