[Serusers] fee-for-service SER server - clarified

Greger V. Teigre greger at onsip.org
Mon Oct 31 07:27:58 CET 2005


Hi Michael,
You got more reponse now, but maybe not what you expected :-)
Free World Dialup and iptel.org have both free services that should bit your 
bill, both do NAT traversal. Just request your students to register and they 
have an account beyond the tutoring.
g-)

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Michael Kendall" <michael at starmega.com>
To: <serusers at lists.iptel.org>; <michael at starmega.com>
Sent: Saturday, October 29, 2005 12:12 AM
Subject: [Serusers] fee-for-service SER server - clarified


>
> Greger,
>
> Thanks so much for your reply to my question,
> and thanks also to Olivier, Bravo, Iqbal, and Phil,
> who each sent me some great SER server recommendations
> or requested clarification to my confusing question.
>
> You are right that I did not provide enough info
> in my question.  I do not need any of the example
> services that you mentioned in a, b, c, d.
> I don't want to control or customize any SER server,
> I only want to be a normal customer of an existing SER server.
> I do not need any access to regular telephones.
>
> What I want to do is have a call center with 10 tutors,
> with each tutor connected to a different remote student,
> The 10 teachers and 10 students would each be using
> the Windows (SIP) Messenger softphone
> and would find and call each other using the SER server.  The SER server 
> would need to allow media-proxy service
> so that we can traverse NATs and firewalls.
>
> I have selected Windows (SIP) Messenger as my softphone because
> it is cost-free (quite important if I have 300 students)
> and because it has a whiteboard (required for the tutoring).
> If someone can suggest a better softphone which has a whiteboard
> I would be very happy, especially if the softphone supports STUN.
>
> If the suggested softphone is free, that would be perfect.  I can't really 
> afford to use a softphone
> which charges me a fee for each named user,
> but if I need to pay a reasonanable price
> for each SIMULTANEOUS user, that would be ok.
>
> Most of the SER server websites that I have visited
> seem to recommend the Xten softphone, but since it has no
> whiteboard, I cannot use it.
> Windows (SIP) Messenger does not appear to support STUN,
> so media-proxy is the only way I know to traverse NATs.
> (Please correct me if I am wrong
> about Messenger not supporting STUN.)
>
> I know that the newest versions of Windows (SIP) Messenger
> do not allow connecting to 3rd party servers,
> so I plan to use the older versions that do allow it.
>
> Some of the SER server websites ( like fonosip ) claim
> (after a search) that they support Windows (SIP) Messenger,
> but they do not offer any configuration instructions.
> The fonosip site also does not say whether they will offer
> media-proxy services, which I need for NAT traversal.   It is strange that 
> these SER service provider websites
> provide very little info about whether they
> support media-proxy or how to configure a softphone for STUN.
>
> I know that media-proxy places a heavy load on the
> SER server, and that some SER servers are therefore
> reluctant to consume their expensive bandwidth
> by offering media-proxy services.  But since there must be many other 
> customers
> who are willing to pay for media-proxy service,
> there should be a group of SER servers who are offering
> this service for a fee.  I just need to find one.
>
> Can someone please suggest a SER server which
> might satisfy the Messenger and media-proxy requirements?
>
> And can someone recommend a better softphone with whiteboard?
>
> thanks,
>
> Michael
>
>
>
> Greger wrote:
>
> Dear Michael,
> I know that many on this list operate own services they sell in the 
> market.
> Others sell software packages and services,
> both to corporations (ex. Asterisk + ser in a combo setup)
> and to service providers (some sort of white-label service).  There are 
> also hosted services for enterprises that are not based on SER.
>
> I would suspect that lack of answer may have something to do with lack of 
> information.
> You are not saying what you need. Here are some examples:
>  a. A hosted SER server where you can log in and do changes to ser.cfg 
> (for fun or commercial)
>  b. A hosted corporate PBX-type solution
>  c. A hosted SIP service ? la university setups with ENUM lookup and 
> authentication against your own user database
>  d. A white-label service that you will brand as your own and resell in a 
> given market
>
> And BTW, you are not saying anything about your requirements
> (just a vanilla SER server?!)
> nor the size of the subscriber base you want to support etc etc.
>
> If you are looking for b, you are probably better off
> looking in your local market for a telephony provider who can give you IP 
> access.
> g-)
>
>
>
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