The 3CX IP PBX tutorial [[electronic resource] ] : develop a fully functional, low cost, professional PBX phone system using 3CX / / Matthew M. Landis, Robert A. Lloyd |
Autore | Landis Matthew M |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Birmingham [England], : Packt Pub., 2010 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (228 p.) |
Disciplina | 004.695 |
Altri autori (Persone) | LloydRobert A |
Collana | From technologies to solutions |
Soggetto topico | Telephone - Private branch exchanges |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN |
1-282-77720-3
9786612777202 1-84719-897-X |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Copyright; Credits; About the Authors; About the Reviewer; Table of Contents; Preface; Chapter 1: Getting Started with the 3CX Phone System; About the company-3CX; What the 3CX Phone System is; Hardware versus software phone systems; Linux Asterisk versus Windows 3CX; 3CX Free versus 3CX Commercial edition; Major components of the 3CX Phone System; 3CX Phone System; The navigation pane; Drop-down menus; Quick launch toolbar; 3CX Phone; 3CX Assistant; 3CX VoIP Client; 3CX Call Reporter; 3CX Gateway for Skype; 3CX Hotel module; Some characteristics and features of 3CX; Easy to use
Open and vendor independentWindows-based; What the 3CX Phone System is not; 3CX is not expensive; 3CX is not a Cisco level of maturity product; 3CX is not a turnkey hardware phone system; 3CX is not done; 3CX does not have ""key system"" replacement features; 3CX integration with Microsoft Office Communications Server is not supported; 3CX currently does not have the ability to do multi-tenant; 3CX does not do multiple languages simultaneously; Summary; Chapter 2: Downloading and Installing 3CX; What you will need; Your 3CX server hardware requirements; Choosing a Windows operating system Starting with a clean operating system installGetting the Microsoft stack in place; Downloading 3CX and getting a key; Free key versus a two-user test key; Starting the install; The requirements screen; The recommendations screen; The EUL Agreement; The install folder screen; Selecting IIS or Cassini web server; The 3CX User Settings Wizard; Creating user extensions; Operator extension; Registration; Logging in to 3CX for the first time; Checking the status of 3CX; Summary; Chapter 3: Working with Extensions; Devices that can connect to 3CX as extensions; Softphones; X-Lite by CounterPath Zoiper CommunicatorSIP phones; Analog phones; Other SIP hardware and software devices; Verifying basic network connectivity to our 3CX server from another computer; Basic extension setup in the administrator console; First and last name; ID, password, and pin; E-mail address; Voicemail configuration; Forwarding rules; Installing and connecting the 3CX VoIP Phone; Testing the extension we just connected; Checking that system console indicates the extension as registered; Testing that we can call another extension; Connecting a Snom 360 phone; Connecting other phones Checking out the MyPhone UserPortal pageVoicemail; Extension groups; Editing multiple extensions at a time; Summary; Chapter 4: Call Control: Ring Groups, Auto-attendants, and Call Queues; Ring groups; Adding ring group members; Destination if no answer; Digital Receptionist setup; Recording a menu prompt; Creating the Digital Receptionist; Call by name setup; Call queues; Summary; Chapter 5: Trunks-Connecting to the Outside World; PSTN trunks; SIP trunks; The PBX; The enterprise border element; The ITSP; Choosing a VoIP carrier-more than just price; Disaster recovery; Mixing VoIP and PSTN Connecting 3CX to your trunk |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910455706603321 |
Landis Matthew M
![]() |
||
Birmingham [England], : Packt Pub., 2010 | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
The 3CX IP PBX tutorial [[electronic resource] ] : develop a fully functional, low cost, professional PBX phone system using 3CX / / Matthew M. Landis, Robert A. Lloyd |
Autore | Landis Matthew M |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Birmingham [England], : Packt Pub., 2010 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (228 p.) |
Disciplina | 004.695 |
Altri autori (Persone) | LloydRobert A |
Collana | From technologies to solutions |
Soggetto topico | Telephone - Private branch exchanges |
ISBN |
1-282-77720-3
9786612777202 1-84719-897-X |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Copyright; Credits; About the Authors; About the Reviewer; Table of Contents; Preface; Chapter 1: Getting Started with the 3CX Phone System; About the company-3CX; What the 3CX Phone System is; Hardware versus software phone systems; Linux Asterisk versus Windows 3CX; 3CX Free versus 3CX Commercial edition; Major components of the 3CX Phone System; 3CX Phone System; The navigation pane; Drop-down menus; Quick launch toolbar; 3CX Phone; 3CX Assistant; 3CX VoIP Client; 3CX Call Reporter; 3CX Gateway for Skype; 3CX Hotel module; Some characteristics and features of 3CX; Easy to use
Open and vendor independentWindows-based; What the 3CX Phone System is not; 3CX is not expensive; 3CX is not a Cisco level of maturity product; 3CX is not a turnkey hardware phone system; 3CX is not done; 3CX does not have ""key system"" replacement features; 3CX integration with Microsoft Office Communications Server is not supported; 3CX currently does not have the ability to do multi-tenant; 3CX does not do multiple languages simultaneously; Summary; Chapter 2: Downloading and Installing 3CX; What you will need; Your 3CX server hardware requirements; Choosing a Windows operating system Starting with a clean operating system installGetting the Microsoft stack in place; Downloading 3CX and getting a key; Free key versus a two-user test key; Starting the install; The requirements screen; The recommendations screen; The EUL Agreement; The install folder screen; Selecting IIS or Cassini web server; The 3CX User Settings Wizard; Creating user extensions; Operator extension; Registration; Logging in to 3CX for the first time; Checking the status of 3CX; Summary; Chapter 3: Working with Extensions; Devices that can connect to 3CX as extensions; Softphones; X-Lite by CounterPath Zoiper CommunicatorSIP phones; Analog phones; Other SIP hardware and software devices; Verifying basic network connectivity to our 3CX server from another computer; Basic extension setup in the administrator console; First and last name; ID, password, and pin; E-mail address; Voicemail configuration; Forwarding rules; Installing and connecting the 3CX VoIP Phone; Testing the extension we just connected; Checking that system console indicates the extension as registered; Testing that we can call another extension; Connecting a Snom 360 phone; Connecting other phones Checking out the MyPhone UserPortal pageVoicemail; Extension groups; Editing multiple extensions at a time; Summary; Chapter 4: Call Control: Ring Groups, Auto-attendants, and Call Queues; Ring groups; Adding ring group members; Destination if no answer; Digital Receptionist setup; Recording a menu prompt; Creating the Digital Receptionist; Call by name setup; Call queues; Summary; Chapter 5: Trunks-Connecting to the Outside World; PSTN trunks; SIP trunks; The PBX; The enterprise border element; The ITSP; Choosing a VoIP carrier-more than just price; Disaster recovery; Mixing VoIP and PSTN Connecting 3CX to your trunk |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910780788303321 |
Landis Matthew M
![]() |
||
Birmingham [England], : Packt Pub., 2010 | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
The 3CX IP PBX tutorial : develop a fully functional, low cost, professional PBX phone system using 3CX / / Matthew M. Landis, Robert A. Lloyd |
Autore | Landis Matthew M |
Edizione | [1st ed.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Birmingham [England], : Packt Pub., 2010 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (228 p.) |
Disciplina | 004.695 |
Altri autori (Persone) | LloydRobert A |
Collana | From technologies to solutions |
Soggetto topico | Telephone - Private branch exchanges |
ISBN |
1-282-77720-3
9786612777202 1-84719-897-X |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Copyright; Credits; About the Authors; About the Reviewer; Table of Contents; Preface; Chapter 1: Getting Started with the 3CX Phone System; About the company-3CX; What the 3CX Phone System is; Hardware versus software phone systems; Linux Asterisk versus Windows 3CX; 3CX Free versus 3CX Commercial edition; Major components of the 3CX Phone System; 3CX Phone System; The navigation pane; Drop-down menus; Quick launch toolbar; 3CX Phone; 3CX Assistant; 3CX VoIP Client; 3CX Call Reporter; 3CX Gateway for Skype; 3CX Hotel module; Some characteristics and features of 3CX; Easy to use
Open and vendor independentWindows-based; What the 3CX Phone System is not; 3CX is not expensive; 3CX is not a Cisco level of maturity product; 3CX is not a turnkey hardware phone system; 3CX is not done; 3CX does not have ""key system"" replacement features; 3CX integration with Microsoft Office Communications Server is not supported; 3CX currently does not have the ability to do multi-tenant; 3CX does not do multiple languages simultaneously; Summary; Chapter 2: Downloading and Installing 3CX; What you will need; Your 3CX server hardware requirements; Choosing a Windows operating system Starting with a clean operating system installGetting the Microsoft stack in place; Downloading 3CX and getting a key; Free key versus a two-user test key; Starting the install; The requirements screen; The recommendations screen; The EUL Agreement; The install folder screen; Selecting IIS or Cassini web server; The 3CX User Settings Wizard; Creating user extensions; Operator extension; Registration; Logging in to 3CX for the first time; Checking the status of 3CX; Summary; Chapter 3: Working with Extensions; Devices that can connect to 3CX as extensions; Softphones; X-Lite by CounterPath Zoiper CommunicatorSIP phones; Analog phones; Other SIP hardware and software devices; Verifying basic network connectivity to our 3CX server from another computer; Basic extension setup in the administrator console; First and last name; ID, password, and pin; E-mail address; Voicemail configuration; Forwarding rules; Installing and connecting the 3CX VoIP Phone; Testing the extension we just connected; Checking that system console indicates the extension as registered; Testing that we can call another extension; Connecting a Snom 360 phone; Connecting other phones Checking out the MyPhone UserPortal pageVoicemail; Extension groups; Editing multiple extensions at a time; Summary; Chapter 4: Call Control: Ring Groups, Auto-attendants, and Call Queues; Ring groups; Adding ring group members; Destination if no answer; Digital Receptionist setup; Recording a menu prompt; Creating the Digital Receptionist; Call by name setup; Call queues; Summary; Chapter 5: Trunks-Connecting to the Outside World; PSTN trunks; SIP trunks; The PBX; The enterprise border element; The ITSP; Choosing a VoIP carrier-more than just price; Disaster recovery; Mixing VoIP and PSTN Connecting 3CX to your trunk |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910828209603321 |
Landis Matthew M
![]() |
||
Birmingham [England], : Packt Pub., 2010 | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|