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by ndimension » Thu May 12, 2011 4:31 am
As in subject.
My understanding till now is:
1. Server at my place is connected by E1/T1 to my providers network.
2. I buy for example 1 gazillion mins of traffic from my E1 provider.
3. I sell 1 gazillion mins (using my server) to people who want to buy it.
4. The traffic goes "random customer">his internet provider>my E1 provider>my server>again E1 provider>random customer destination number.
That makes sens althou I think i'm missing some important point here.
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ndimension
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by williamconley » Thu May 12, 2011 8:57 pm
The traffic goes:
Customer -> VICIDIAL -> E1 -> Carrier
Carrier -> E1 -> VICIDIAL -> Customer
Vicidial Installation and Repair, plus Hosting and Colocation
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by vccsdotca » Wed Jun 08, 2011 10:43 am
For small and inexpensive startups I would look at a VoIP provider that offers a reseller platform. This way you can avoid having a SIP proxy all together. If not and you do want your own SIP proxy, avoid E1 if possible and connect straight to a per minute provider. You prepay them , customers prepay you. Very low overhead.
Matt Martin
VoIP Guru
nurango
https://www.nurango.ca----------------
Open-Source Hosting & Support | SIP Trunking | DIDs
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vccsdotca
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by SSCooper » Thu Oct 06, 2011 8:48 am
vccsdotca wrote:For small and inexpensive startups I would look at a VoIP provider or
virtual PBX providers that offer a reseller platform for
residential VoIP. This way you can avoid having a SIP proxy all together. If not and you do want your own SIP proxy, avoid E1 if possible and connect straight to a per minute provider. You prepay them , customers prepay you. Very low overhead.
Yes, and especially if you don't have the expertise and staff to provide technical support. For a first venture as a voip provider, I would recommend starting as a reseller.
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by Charlieluc1968 » Thu Nov 03, 2011 7:11 pm
vccsdotca wrote:For small and inexpensive startups I would look at a VoIP provider that offers a reseller platform. This way you can avoid having a SIP proxy all together. If not and you do want your own SIP proxy, avoid E1 if possible and connect straight to a per minute provider. You prepay them , customers prepay you. Very low overhead.
Thank you for the info. Do you know how much the rates are for most providers?
Thanks,
Charlie
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Charlieluc1968
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by Charlieluc1968 » Thu Nov 03, 2011 7:13 pm
ndimension wrote:As in subject.
My understanding till now is:
1. Server at my place is connected by E1/T1 to my providers network.
2. I buy for example 1 gazillion mins of traffic from my E1 provider.
3. I sell 1 gazillion mins (using my server) to people who want to buy it.
4. The traffic goes "random customer">his internet provider>my E1 provider>my server>again E1 provider>random customer destination number.
That makes sens althou I think i'm missing some important point here.
I do not have T1 and am connected to cable internet. Does having T1 make a difference, and if so, is the difference worth the cost?
Thanks,
Charlie
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Charlieluc1968
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by williamconley » Fri Nov 04, 2011 12:25 am
becoming a provider in any meaningful fashion will require the ability to connect a large number of channels simultaneously. (which will affect the number of minutes per month you can generate, but simultaneous channels is where it all begins ...)
how much bandwidth do you have? (UP and DOWN are both required for the answer, as they are both important, stating just the big number your cable provider gives you is not helpful, must have BOTH
)
Vicidial Installation and Repair, plus Hosting and Colocation
Newest Product: Vicidial Agent Only Beep - Beta
http://www.PoundTeam.com # 352-269-0000 # +44(203) 769-2294
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by boybawang » Tue Nov 08, 2011 7:53 am
To become a provider:
1. lease a remote server that has a fast connection there are alot of servers now at around 200$/month
2. install a2billing or kamailio or openser or opensips software and cdrtool for billing
3. get at least 2 voice providers that will allow you unlimited channels
4. get a good consultant to put it all together
5. it is not cheap and easy to setup one
* I recommend opensips or kamailio with cdrtool as billing software since it can handle a numerous amount of calls even with a virtualized server
heres how it will go:
your client ---------> sip server w/billing ---------> voice provider 1
---------> voice provider 2
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by shanjay86 » Sat Nov 12, 2011 6:48 pm
was looking for this info
thanks
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by Charlieluc1968 » Wed May 06, 2015 7:53 pm
An earlier post in this thread by SSCooper includes some embedded spam links to our sites. Can these please be removed? They are in his "Quoted" area
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