grichardomi Posted November 9, 2007 Report Share Posted November 9, 2007 I welcome suggestions or input on remore hosting with 13 extenstions on two domains. Any licensing issues? Below is the dedicated server option: Pentium 4 2.4GHz + 512MB RAM + 1x 80GB Drive + Windows Server 2003R2 Standard Edition + 5 IP Addresses + 750GB Monthly Transfer + 10mbps Uplink Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Vodia PBX Posted November 9, 2007 Report Share Posted November 9, 2007 For 13 extensions that should be sufficient. Be careful with the IP addresses - one is enough, make sure the other four are not giving you unneccessary problems. For good user experience on audio, see http://www.pbxnsip.com/download/qos.ppt. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
grichardomi Posted November 9, 2007 Author Report Share Posted November 9, 2007 For 13 extensions that should be sufficient. Be careful with the IP addresses - one is enough, make sure the other four are not giving you unneccessary problems. For good user experience on audio, see http://www.pbxnsip.com/download/qos.ppt. thanks for the reply. I posted this question to our service provider on chat session please review this log and let me know if ok - Customer: i have one question: does your router to this server ensures qos , possible a SBC? Thomas S: No it does not do QOS Customer: what do you have that does? Thomas S: I don't think any dedicated server company in the world has a standard server for the cheapest price with QOS to a specific provider. QOS is very expensive hardware to provide. Thomas S: But we don't have any server with QOS Thomas S: But in a rack we can provide QOS hardware Customer: ok thanks Thomas S: But without QOS our routers are very fast Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Vodia PBX Posted November 9, 2007 Report Share Posted November 9, 2007 Well, well... QoS could be reasonable with layer 3 tags. But he is right, practically nobody is doing that today. That's what the PPT speaks about having a 2nd DSL line and use that one only for VoIP - QoS by having physically seperated lines. Seems the router industry still has a long way to go. Until then, pragmatic solutions will make it happen! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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