Have you seen THIS? Most of it seems right up our alley in scripting to outdo...

Philip Dorr tagno25 at gmail.com
Mon Nov 12 20:49:36 CST 2007


If some one (else) wants to try it I can send you an invite

> Date: Fri, 9 Nov 2007 19:28:13 -0600
> From: "Monty J. Harder" <mjharder at gmail.com>
> Subject: Re: Have you seen THIS? Most of it seems right up our alley
>        in      scripting to outdo...
> To: "Oren Beck" <orenbeck at gmail.com>
> Cc: kclug <kclug at kclug.org>
> Message-ID:
>        <97ef72660711091728x11ec8000s76549728f517091e at mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
>
> This thing looks like it works the way Avaya does for me.  A person calls my
> company's main number, then my extension, and the Avaya IP Agent lets me
> know a call is coming in.  I click a button to accept the call, pick up a
> phone in my home office, and I'm connected to that customer, who has no idea
> I'm not in our corporate HQ in Tampa unless I tell them I'm actually in KC.
> If I had this setup on a company laptop, I could go anywhere, put in the
> phone number I'm at, and be able to take calls on this "Virtual PBX".
>
> (I also use it to make outgoing calls, but that may not be a feature of this
> service.)
>
> I would expect ISPs like Time-Warner Cable that are offering local phone
> service to package some of the features of this service (like forwardable
> voice mail, call screening, forwarding etc.) to gain marketshare from the
> RBOCs.
>
> On Nov 9, 2007 5:55 PM, Oren Beck <orenbeck at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > http://grandcentral.com/howitworks/webcall_button
> >
> > I dunno if it's patented nor even patentable.
> >
> > But if we do it and it is it's certain that the lawyers will swiftly let
> > us know.


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