[Discuss] Discuss Digest, Vol 99, Issue 2

Mayuresh Rajwadkar m.m.rajwadkar at ieee.org
Fri Aug 9 10:10:42 EDT 2019


hi

I guess folks may know of this online service called calendly
https://calendly.com/

Is there a FOSS/GPL own hosted software which can do the same job?

I have a LAMP server @home which I can use to host. The benefit is that
it connects to multiple Google Calendars and find the empty slots for
booking meetings.
Calendly only offers one meeting duration free additional meeting durations
are $$.
I also have multiple google calendars with multiple email accounts so its
all complex for me.

Mayuresh

On Sat, Aug 3, 2019 at 12:00 PM <discuss-request at blu.org> wrote:

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> Today's Topics:
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>    1. couple of cheap (free?) Asterisk telephony cards (Bill Bogstad)
>    2. Re: couple of cheap (free?) Asterisk telephony cards (Dan Ritter)
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> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Fri, 2 Aug 2019 17:57:25 -0400
> From: Bill Bogstad <bogstad at pobox.com>
> To: Boston Linux and Unix <discuss at blu.org>, hardwarehacking
>         <hardwarehacking at blu.org>
> Subject: [Discuss] couple of cheap (free?) Asterisk telephony cards
> Message-ID:
>         <CAJFsZ=
> p9xvuL+BikdGswt0_5Pm2sCwH26BhyHnZsQd7eSxUkZA at mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
>
> So a local call center near me closed down and was giving away all of
> their office furniture for free.  By the time that I got there, they
> seemed to have gotten rid of any interesting tech.  There were a
> couple of add in cards lying around that they said that I could have.
>  I think they are some form of Quad-span T1 cards.  Marking are:
>
> Front side of board:
>
> Compuamt 2011/4/EC
>
> Back side of board:
> Compuamt
> 2011/4/EC
> Asterisk 2-4 Port E1/T1/J1 PRI PCIE Card
> www.asterisk.com
>
> The boards appear to be identical and unlike most of the boards that I
> can find online they have
> 4 dip switches labeled JPO on the front.
>
> I know some people on this list work with Linux based PBX systems, so
> maybe someone familiar with the product line can clarify what they
> are.  I have no use for them and would be happy to pass them on to a
> good home.  I only picked them up because I thought that they might be
> useful and they were going to end up in the trash if I didn't take
> them.  I have no idea if they work so buyer/taker beware.
>
> Bill Bogstad
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 2
> Date: Sat, 3 Aug 2019 08:54:34 -0400
> From: Dan Ritter <dsr at randomstring.org>
> To: Bill Bogstad <bogstad at pobox.com>
> Cc: hardwarehacking <hardwarehacking at blu.org>, Boston Linux and Unix
>         <discuss at blu.org>
> Subject: Re: [Discuss] couple of cheap (free?) Asterisk telephony
>         cards
> Message-ID: <20190803125434.eqrmkvcsffoalejj at randomstring.org>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
>
> Bill Bogstad wrote:
> > So a local call center near me closed down and was giving away all of
> > their office furniture for free.  By the time that I got there, they
> > seemed to have gotten rid of any interesting tech.  There were a
> > couple of add in cards lying around that they said that I could have.
> >  I think they are some form of Quad-span T1 cards.  Marking are:
> >
> > Front side of board:
> >
> > Compuamt 2011/4/EC
> >
> > Back side of board:
> > Compuamt
> > 2011/4/EC
> > Asterisk 2-4 Port E1/T1/J1 PRI PCIE Card
> > www.asterisk.com
> >
> > The boards appear to be identical and unlike most of the boards that I
> > can find online they have
> > 4 dip switches labeled JPO on the front.
> >
> > I know some people on this list work with Linux based PBX systems, so
> > maybe someone familiar with the product line can clarify what they
> > are.  I have no use for them and would be happy to pass them on to a
> > good home.  I only picked them up because I thought that they might be
> > useful and they were going to end up in the trash if I didn't take
> > them.  I have no idea if they work so buyer/taker beware.
>
> These are telco-PC interfaces, taking a full T1 (24 voice
> circuits) or ISDN PRI (23B+D circuits) and converting that for
> internal VOIP use.
>
> There was a time when these were very much in demand; telcos
> didn't have VOIP available, so you would order a bunch of lines
> and feed them into your Asterisk PC, turn them into VOIP, and
> handle voice mail, phone menu trees, rerouting.
>
> Now a really good desk VOIP phone goes for under $100, there are
> a thousand VOIP telcos that will offer you service, and if you
> never have to convert from analog to digital, you can run your
> server in a virtual machine or have someone else do it for you.
>
> Which is all to say, ten years ago I would have found these very
> useful, and now I don't want them at all...
>
> -dsr-
>
>
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>
> End of Discuss Digest, Vol 99, Issue 2
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