Book Image

Building Enterprise Ready Telephony Systems with sipXecs 4.0

Book Image

Building Enterprise Ready Telephony Systems with sipXecs 4.0

Overview of this book

Open source telephony systems are making big waves in the communications industry. Moving your organization from a lab environment to production system can seem like a daunting and inherently risky proposition. Building Enterprise Ready Telephony Systems with sipXecs delivers proven techniques for deploying reliable and robust communications systems. Building Enterprise Ready Telephony Systems with sipXecs provides a guiding hand in planning, building and migrating a corporate communications system to the open source sipXecs SIP PBX platform. Following this step-by-step guide makes normally complex tasks, such as migrating your existing communication system to VOIP and deploying phones, easy. Imagine how good you'll feel when you have a complete, enterprise ready telephony system at work in your business. Planning a communications system for any size of network can seem an overwhelmingly complicated task. Deploying a robust and reliable communications system may seem even harder. This book will start by helping you understand the nuts and bolts of a Voice over IP Telephony system. The base knowledge gained is then built upon with system design and product selection. Soon you will be able to implement, utilize and maintain a communications system with sipXecs. Many screen-shots and diagrams help to illustrate and make simple what can otherwise be a complex undertaking. It's easy to build an enterprise ready telephony system when you follow this helpful, straightforward guide.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Building Enterprise-Ready Telephony Systems with sipXecs 4.0
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
Preface
Glossary

About the Reviewer

Anthony Graziano has spent the last 25 years working in Information Technology and telecommunications. Recruited by a national carrier from his position at a multistate financial services firm concentrating on IBM mainframes and communications, he worked as a data specialist for one of the largest US facilities-based carriers. After deciding to focus on microcomputing technology, he worked for a Virginia-based consulting and services firm, which he helped to grow before it was purchased by a national firm.

Today he operates a CLEC in Virginia (Cavalier Broadband) with a dedicated focus on data services. His growing consulting practice, myITdepartment, helps commercial clients to identify emerging technologies such as VoIP and SaaS, so they can more easily adapt to changing business trends.

He lives in Charlottesville, Virginia, with his wife Lisa and their three daughters. He enjoys saltwater fishing, especially on the Northern Neck of the Cheaspeake Bay, with friends and family as often as he can.