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PIKA WARP Appliance Adds BRI Support
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PIKA Technologies announced today the release of a BRI expansion module for the PIKA WARP Appliance. The PIKA WARP Appliance is a very flexible hardware telecom appliance that can run various flavors of Asterisk, including native Asterisk, Schmooze, trixbox CE, and others. They even support FreePBX, the popular front-end GUI for Asterisk. They support FreeSwitch as well.
PIKA’s BRI module supports two ports and four channels, allowing the WARP Appliance to reach a total port density of four ports and eight channels when two BRI modules are installed. BRI is very popular in Europe and is very commonly used in the SMB space, making the WARP Appliance a suitable option.
Check out my PIKA WARP Appliance for Asterisk review for more details on this flexible piece of hardware.
Tags: asterisk, BRI, freepbx, PIKA, PIKA WARP Appliance, schmooze, voip
- Related Entries
- PIKA WARP Appliance Adds FreePBX Support - Nov 18, 2008

- Asterisk-based VPN in a Flash Mobile Telephony Appliance - Dec 08, 2008

- Bandwidth.com invests in FreePBX - Nov 14, 2008

- AsteriskNOW 1.5 beta released - Oct 15, 2008

- ITEXPO West 2008 a Resounding Success - Sep 18, 2008

- PIKA WARP Appliance adopted by Schmooze - Sep 16, 2008

- PIKA WARP Appliance for Asterisk Review - Sep 12, 2008

- Sangoma Acquires Paraxip Technologies - Jul 07, 2008

- PIKA T1/E1 and analog boards now compatible with FreeSWITCH - Apr 15, 2008
- Sangoma Technologies Offers Lifetime Warranty - Mar 18, 2008
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Asterisk-based VPN in a Flash Mobile Telephony Appliance

Nerd Vittles (Ward Mundy) is the man! He just combined the popular Acer Aspire One NetBook featuring the powerful Intel Atom N270(1.60GHz) processor along with Fedora 10 and his Asterisk-based distro.
Nerd just may have cooked up the perfect low-cost, powerful, GUI-rich (low overhead KDE), and portable Asterisk-based appliance! Now you can take your phone system on the road while driving, on the plane, etc. Imagine sticking a 3G/EVDO card in the system while driving and your Asterisk-based PBX is still able to make/receive VoIP over EVDO calls and route them accordingly.
He writes about the challenges of building a portable Asterisk-based platform:
Continue reading Asterisk-based VPN in a Flash Mobile Telephony Appliance…
Tags: Acer, aspire one, asterisk, FreePBX, Intel Atom, netbook, PBX in a Flash 1.3, voip, VPN in a Flash
- Related Entries
- PIKA WARP Appliance Adds FreePBX Support -
Nov 18, 2008 - Bandwidth.com invests in FreePBX -
Nov 14, 2008 - Voiceroute Druid Open Source Edition Launches offering New Open Source Asterisk GUI Front End -
Mar 12, 2008 - Asterisk Wake-Up calls and Web Scheduling -
Feb 25, 2008 - Asterisk-based FreePBX clones Microsoft Response Point’s Easy Button -
Jan 31, 2008 - Sangoma Launches B600 Series of Analog Voice Cards -
Dec 04, 2008 - New Blackfin BF51x Processor Launches -
Oct 27, 2008 - TMC & Digium Announce Registrations open for Digium|Asterisk World -
Oct 20, 2008 - AsteriskNOW 1.5 beta released -
Oct 15, 2008 - TMC & Digium Partner for Digium|Asterisk World at ITEXPO -
Oct 06, 2008
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PIKA WARP Appliance Adds FreePBX Support
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When I met with PIKA Technologies at ITEXPO they told me support for FreePBX was coming. Well today, PIKA Technologies announced that PIKA WARP the Appliance is now compatible with the Asterisk-based FreePBX GUI (Graphical User Interface) application. I reviewed the PIKA Appliance recently and was pretty impressed with it. Having FreePBX support is a huge milestone for the PIKA Appliance. FreePBX is a popular user-friendly web application that makes it easy to setup and configure Asterisk.

According to PIKA, “While customers often develop their own GUIs, many have told PIKA that if WARP were compatible with industry-standard GUIs like FreePBX, they would be much more inclined to adopt the portfolio. With today’s announcement, PIKA has once again demonstrated its responsiveness to the needs of its user base.”
“We are very pleased to have supported the effort to adopt the FreePBX application to run in the PIKA Warp environment,” said Terry Atwood, vice president of sales, marketing and customer care at PIKA Technologies. “Used in many Asterisk implementations around the world, including Trixbox, FreePBX has proven its value, time and again. When the FreePBX team expressed their willingness to work with us to port to the Warp Appliance, we jumped on the opportunity.”
“FreePBX has become the de facto standard for enterprise grade PBX functionality delivered to the SMB business and includes a very rich set of functionality and customization potential,” said Philippe Lindheimer, open source community director of Bandwidth.com and leader of the FreePBX project. “But no GUI is complete without a wide range of hardware options to complete the package. We are delighted that PIKA can now include FreePBX in the PIKA WARP and bring our two eco-systems together.”
Today’s announcement from PIKA follows news of a new partnership between FreePBX and Bandwidth.com, a complete business communications provider offering advanced VoIP, Internet services and managed network services to small and medium businesses. Bandwidth.com will devote significant resources to expand the scope of FreePBX while protecting its charter to remain open source and free.
“The partnership with Bandwidth.com is great news as it gives FreePBX the support it needs to grow while ensuring it remains a free GUI for the entire open source eco-system,” said David Clarke, business development manager at PIKA and director of the PIKA Warp Community. “I know the choice of Bandwidth.com was a decision that Philippe made only after months of consideration and sound input from the key developers and contributors to the FreePBX project.”
Out of the box, FreePBX provides a long list of features including many typically found only in an enterprise-grade PBX, some examples are:
• Unlimited number of voicemail boxes
• “Follow me” functionality
• Ring groups and call queues
• Unlimited number of conference bridges
• Paging and intercom functionality
• and much more
The PIKA WARP Appliance product portfolio is ideal for deploying small- to medium-sized IP-PBX systems, IVR self-service systems, predictive dialling systems, fax servers and many other features typical of a traditional, purpose-built business telephone system that are often lacking in a computerized system. Compatible with a variety of open-source development platforms, including Asterisk and Linux, the Appliance offers a cost-effective alternative to traditional off-the-shelf computers and plug-in-card network connectivity in a smaller footprint.
Tags: Asterisk, Bandwidth.com, David Clarke, FreePBX, Philippe Lindheimer, PIKA WARP Appliance, Terry Atwood, voip
- Related Entries
- Bandwidth.com invests in FreePBX -
Nov 14, 2008 - PIKA WARP Appliance adopted by Schmooze -
Sep 16, 2008 - PIKA WARP Appliance for Asterisk Review -
Sep 12, 2008 - Voiceroute Druid Open Source Edition Launches offering New Open Source Asterisk GUI Front End -
Mar 12, 2008 - Asterisk Wake-Up calls and Web Scheduling -
Feb 25, 2008 - Asterisk-based FreePBX clones Microsoft Response Point’s Easy Button -
Jan 31, 2008 - TMC & Digium Partner for Digium|Asterisk World at ITEXPO -
Oct 06, 2008 - Windows Live Messenger Back in the VoIP game! -
Oct 03, 2008 - Skype for Asterisk Launches -
Sep 25, 2008 - ITEXPO West 2008 a Resounding Success -
Sep 18, 2008
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Bandwidth.com invests in FreePBX

Bandwidth.com has just made an investment in FreePBX, the popular front-end interface to Asterisk-based distros. I discussed this news with Philippe Lindheimer just a couple hours ago. One of the questions I asked was if Bandwidth.com would get “preferred treatment” within the FreePBX interface, since Bandwidth.com offers SIP trunking. Obviously, if FreePBX gives Bandwidth.com a prominent position in the GUI or they make it “easier” to configure FreePBX (i.e. plug-n-play) that could be a huge boon to Bandwidth.com Philippe said that that isn’t part of the investment announcement being made today, however, that is something they are looking at.
As for the purpose of the investment, Philippe said it was mostly due to Bandwidth.com’s desire to grow the market and help build the FreePBX community. The idea is that the more IP-PBXs out there, the more SIP trunks, and hence more revenue for Bandwidth.com. I have some further thoughts on this, but I’m pretty busy today and wanted to share the news.
Philippe Lindheimer said, “Part of assuring the success of FreePBX is to make sure that we continue to have strong leadership, community participation and a thriving eco-system of users and partners. I would like to announce a new partnership that will help the project tremendously. I have joined forces with Bandwidth.com as their Open Source Community Director, where we will be devoting significant resources and effort to expand the scope of FreePBX while protecting its charter to make sure it remains open and strong.”
One significant piece of news is that Bandwidth.com helped protect the FreePBX’s project several months ago when the FreePBX trademark (which FreePBX.org nor Phillipe never owned) was “being shopped around to parties that did not have this project’s best interest in mind” according to Phillipe. Thus, Bandwidth.com preemptively purchased the trademark with Phillipe’s blessing in order to assure FreePBX was not jeopardized.
You can read Phillipe’s blog post about this here which has more details.
Tags: asterisk, Bandwidth, com, FreePBX, Philippe Lindheimer, voip
- Related Entries
- Voiceroute Druid Open Source Edition Launches offering New Open Source Asterisk GUI Front End -
Mar 12, 2008 - Asterisk Wake-Up calls and Web Scheduling -
Feb 25, 2008 - Asterisk-based FreePBX clones Microsoft Response Point’s Easy Button -
Jan 31, 2008 - New Blackfin BF51x Processor Launches -
Oct 27, 2008 - TMC & Digium Announce Registrations open for Digium|Asterisk World -
Oct 20, 2008 - AsteriskNOW 1.5 beta released -
Oct 15, 2008 - TMC & Digium Partner for Digium|Asterisk World at ITEXPO -
Oct 06, 2008 - Adtran IP 706 Review -
Oct 01, 2008 - Skype for Asterisk Launches -
Sep 25, 2008 - ITEXPO West 2008 a Resounding Success -
Sep 18, 2008
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AsteriskNOW 1.5 beta released
In August, I visited Digium’s headquarters and excitedly wrote, “the next release of AsteriskNOW (1.5) will bundle the very popular FreePBX front-end GUI. This is big news! FreePBX has become the defacto standard for web-based GUI administration of Asterisk, so now Asterisk fans can download AsteriskNOW, boot of the self-install CD and not only getting a working copy of AsteriskNOW, but FreePBX as well!” I also explained that the forthcoming AsteriskNOW which previously ran on rPath will now be using the very popular CentOS (5.2) distribution
Well my Asterisk friends, that day has come! AsteriskNOW just came out in beta. Now go grab yourself a copy!
Tags: asterisk, asterisknow, CenOS, freepbx, voip
- Related Entries
- Digium AsteriskNOW News and more… -
Aug 25, 2008 - Sangoma Acquires Paraxip Technologies -
Jul 07, 2008 - Voiceroute Druid Open Source Edition Launches offering New Open Source Asterisk GUI Front End -
Mar 12, 2008 - Asterisk Wake-Up calls and Web Scheduling -
Feb 25, 2008 - Schmooze the Yiddish Asterisk -
Feb 01, 2008 - Asterisk-based FreePBX clones Microsoft Response Point’s Easy Button -
Jan 31, 2008 - Top 10 Reasons Why I love Asterisk -
Aug 03, 2007 - AsteriskNow Now Has 1-Click Features -
Jan 24, 2007 - Digium releases AsteriskNOW -
Jan 03, 2007 - Signate, an Asterisk provider, bites the dust? -
Dec 08, 2006
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Comments on this Entry:
(cosmicwombat.myopenid.com on
Oct 15, 2008 7:16 PM)
Tom, I did an interview with Philippe Lindheimer, the FreePBX Lead Developer. Hear it here.
I have a few systems running the new beta and it also includes the Zaptel replacement called DAHDI.
(db on
Oct 17, 2008 12:16 AM)
haha that’s one big screw you Fonality if you ask me.
It will be interesting to see how this plays out and how much market share will flow to AsteriskNOW.
Digium AsteriskNOW News and more…
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As I hinted last week, I would have some “interesting” news to tell after my visit to Digium’s brand new headquarters along with colleagues Greg Galitzine and Dave Rodriguez. Before I get into the MAJOR news being made by Digium, let me cover what else I learned on my trip. It had been 3 years since I last visited Digium down in Huntville, Alabama.
After getting a grand tour of the new Digium building we sat down in a state-of-art boardroom complete with a high-end Polycom IP conferencing unit, theater lighting, and a projector with motorized retractable screen. The boardroom was named the Mark C. Smith Boardroom to honor Mark Smith, who was the founder and chief executive officer of ADTRAN and Mark Spencer’s mentor. A picture honoring Mark Smith sits on a table in the room. We all admire how Mark Spencer was able to transform open source telephony - myself included - but no doubt Mark Smith and his company ADTRAN played a major role in making Asterisk the phenomenon it is today.
During our full-day meeting, Digium wanted to fill us in on the latest happenings going on and the future directions Digium was planning to take. One of the first takeaways I took was that their 1.5 year term CEO, Danny Windham believes strongly that Asterisk should be classified as an “engine”. It’s the “core guts” on which other software from third-parties can be added. For instance, Asterisk is not simply an IP-PBX, as of 1.6 it has an SS7 stack enabling Asterisk to be used in carrier and service provider applications. Another example they gave was how Asterisk can run just about any protocol, and were quick to point out that sipXecs, an open source alternative recently acquired by Nortel, can’t even natively run Nortel’s own digital phones while Asterisk works just fine with Nortel phones.
Another important takeaway was that Digium said flat out that claims Asterisk could not scale were false or at the very least were misleading since they were based on older versions of Asterisk. In fact, it seemed Digium took great personal umbrage that some of their competitors were making these claims. As evidence of scalability, they mentioned a particular service provider running thousands of ports and are currently writing a write paper case study on this customer. When they publish it, I’ll be sure to include excerpts in my blog.
One last takeaway that is important to mention is that Digium considers themselves to be the “Benevolent Asterisk Project Sponsor and Maintainer”. This is a key mantra that they want to reinforce. They have no plans to ever fork Asterisk into say an open source version and a premium closed source version. They know there are many companies that do add proprietary code on top of the Asterisk engine and don’t give back to the community, but Digium has no plans on monetizing Asterisk that way. I should point out that corporations that purchase Asterisk Business Edition (ABE) do have the right under the dual licensing to add their own code without giving it back to the community, however, there are companies that have taken the Asterisk engine, didn’t pay for ABE, added their own code, and didn’t give the code to the community.
Some interesting statistics about Digium that they told me during the meeting that I thought I’d share. First, Digium currently has 150 employees and has had 26 consecutive growth quarters. The headquarters are now running on Switchvox, which Digium acquired in September of last year. This is the first year that Digium has been named to Gartner’s renowned visionaries quadrant. One stat that I’ve always wonder about is what percentage of Asterisk code is developed by the open source community and what percentage by Digium. Well, the answer is 50% each, which was a little surprising. I would have expected the open source community to be higher, but this goes to show you how important Digium is to the future of Asterisk. They are obviously paying for developers and making an investment in improving Asterisk.
Some other interesting stats:
- Over 1,000,000 downloads in 2007
- Project 2008 downloads at over 1.54M
- Over 4 million servers deployed with Asterisk
- Over 56,000 active on forums
- Over 17,700 on active Asterisk mailing lists
- Over 7,248 on our Bug Tracker
- Over 400 active contributors
- Over 200 service providers worldwide using Asterisk
Further, the number of commits to Asterisk Trunk was 3,498 (mainly Asterisk 1.6 related) and the number of commits to Asterisk 1.4 was 1,401 (bug fixes). A staggering 132GB of bandwidth was consumed in 2008 YTD.
Here’s an interesting photo I took from the 2nd or 3rd floor aimed at the Asterisk logo which I believe is the center of the 3 buildings. From what I’m told if you fly over Digium’s building, the three buildings form the Asterisk logo. For some reason looking down at this circular area reminded me of the Star Trek Enterprise’s warp core. Forget “Powered by Intel”, this building is “Powered by Asterisk”. 
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Digium recently hired Stephen Burcham, the Director of Quality who came from a company that designed controllers for anti-lock braking systems, which demand the most stringent quality control and reliability standards. Stephen has brought that same high standards mentality to Digium. Surprisingly, Digium’s hardware production is done by two American companies, so it’s Made in the U.S.A. Considering many electronics can be done more cheaply in China, I was happy to hear Digium was using American companies to manufacture their goods. In fact, Digium is using two local Alabama companies and they told me that they actually made in an investment in at least one of them to purchase a higher-end process manufacturing machine to meet Digium’s stringent quality requirements.
One of the biggest challenges facing Digium has less to do with technology and more to do with market perception. Digium told us that they have to battle Cisco and their claims that Asterisk is not a business class solution. I found it fascinating that Cisco is still able to leverage their own name brand recognition to get (scare?) customer wins, but if anything that’s great news for Digium and Asterisk. It isn’t technical comparisons or feature-sets that Asterisk is losing customers to Cisco, it’s name brand recognition. That’ll improve with time and my guess is very quickly since Asterisk has a full head of steam.
Now for the interesting news. AsteriskNOW which previously ran on rPath will now be using the very popular CentOS (5.2) distribution. Now that it runs on CentOS it will support easy operating system updates (via .rpm files). Also new in AsteriskNOW will be a yum repository for easy updates of Asterisk itself. Just ‘yum’ the lastest version of Asterisk and it will upgrade your version of Asterisk without screwing up your customizations.
Also new is that the next release of AsteriskNOW (1.5) will bundle the very popular FreePBX front-end GUI. This is big news! FreePBX has become the defacto standard for web-based GUI administration of Asterisk, so now Asterisk fans can download AsteriskNOW, boot of the self-install CD and not only getting a working copy of AsteriskNOW, but FreePBX as well! This isn’t to say Digium will stop developing their own GUI. In fact, when I asked that question, they said categorically they will continue to develop and improve their Asterisk GUI 2.0, which is currently installed on Asterisk Business Edition (ABE) and the Digium Asterisk Appliance 50 (AA50), as part of the 1.2 release I recently blogged about. Digium told me they expect the next release of AsteriskNOW to be available by Astricon.
Some other interesting news to talk about soon and I want to blog my grand tour of Digium’s state-of-the-art facility, but I’ll break that out into a separate blog post. Stay tuned…
Tags: adtran, AsteriskNOW, Cisco, Digium, Digium Asterisk Appliance 50, FreePBX, Mark C. Smith, Mark Spencer, nortel, VoIP
- Related Entries
- The IP-PBX Energy Wars… -
Aug 04, 2008 - Leslie Conway Joins Digium -
Jul 11, 2008 - Avaya #1 VoIP PBX Vendor? -
Aug 21, 2007 - Top 10 Reasons Why I love Asterisk -
Aug 03, 2007 - Digium podcast of Mark Spencer’s new role -
Jan 30, 2007 - Digium AA50 1.2 Software Released -
Aug 19, 2008 - Cisco Manager Meets Jurassic Park -
Jul 10, 2008 - Awesome Adtran & Digium article -
Jul 08, 2008 - PhoneFromHere.com & Digium Ink 5 Year Deal -
Apr 09, 2008 - Digium Wins InfoWorld ”Best of Open Source Software” Award -
Sep 18, 2007
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Sangoma Acquires Paraxip Technologies
Sangoma has acquired Paraxip Technologies giving Sangama a broader communications play than just offering telephony boards for Asterisk-based solutions. Sangoma is positioning the news as a new foothold in the Windows Unified Communications and IP Contact Center markets.
This kind of reminds me of Aastra which first started offering IP-phones used in Asterisk, trixbox, FreePBX, etc. but then launched the Aastra Aastralink Pro 160 Appliance, making Aastra a ‘competitor’ to IP-PBX platforms such as Digium’s Asterisk, trixbox, etc. Similarly, by Sangoma acquiring Paraxip Technologies, they get their entire NetBorder product line, which enables IP telephony applications such as IP-PBXs, IVRs, call center routing, outbound dialers, and more. Obviously, the IP-PBX and call center functionality is a direct shot across the bow of some of their IP-PBX partners that use Sangoma hardware. Very interesting…
They have a conference call later today that I’m going to try and join and ask this very question. For now, check out the news release after the jump…
Continue reading Sangoma Acquires Paraxip Technologies…
Tags: Aastra, AastraLink Pro 160, asterisk, freepbx, ip-pbx, paraxip technologies, sangoma, voip
- Related Entries
- More on the Aastra AastraLink Pro 160 appliance -
Mar 18, 2008 - Aastra AastraLink Pro 160 -
Mar 18, 2008 - SIP-based VoIP Wake Up Call Service -
May 16, 2008 - Shoretel Rumors -
May 01, 2008 - Sangoma Technologies Offers Lifetime Warranty -
Mar 18, 2008 - Intuitive Voice Technology Calls Out other Asterisk Competitors - Asterisk Clone Wars Have Begun… -
Mar 13, 2008 - Voiceroute Druid Open Source Edition Launches offering New Open Source Asterisk GUI Front End -
Mar 12, 2008 - Asterisk 1.6.0 beta5 -
Mar 06, 2008 - PIKA Fax Adds Faxing to Asterisk -
Feb 26, 2008 - Asterisk Wake-Up calls and Web Scheduling -
Feb 25, 2008
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News, opinions and announcements about fast changing communication tools and technologies, from various blogs and ezine.
