On Wed, May 25, 2005 at 12:55:18PM -0400, M P Smoak wrote:
On Wednesday 25 May 2005 04:14, Mario Lang wrote:
M P Smoak <smoak(a)mis.net> writes:
[...]
In my work I use telephone in similar ways. In
both cases,
phone calls are data. In both cases, the calls are usually
"team interactions" and often the team wants to keep minutes
of the meeting.
Right now we have need to replace the tape recorder with a
linux recorder. So I've hooked-up the old RadioShack adapter
to mic in for the SBlive and have experimented with reZound
(ver 0.11.1beta), one channel using qamix. And it works; a
10 minute .rez file is about 100 meg, a shows an large
difference in loudness between the local and remote callers,
as expected.
I'D suggest asterisk. IF you can manage to route your
conference call through asterisk, you can nicely record calls
with gsm compression. The resulting files are small, and the
sound quality is good, and you get the same loudness for both
ends...
Am I confused or are you? Isn't asterick for internet telephone
servers? We are not setting up a server or interested in internet
telephone. We want to use record from conventional phones on
desktop computers, not servers. I just don't see where asterick
could apply.
asterisk is a complete open source PBX (private branch exchange)
solution. With the approriate hardware it can handle connections both to
the plain old/public switched telephone network as well as voice over the
internet.
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