3CX Linux Beta
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FWIW, we like 3CX a lot. We worked really closely with them to get certified as one of their preferred providers (which took months), and got to see a lot behind the curtain. Their support engineers really know their stuff and our customers find them to be pretty accessible. They're really good about not over committing their development teams too - so when they roll stuff out, it's generally pretty solid. Just figured I'd throw our opinion in here
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@Pete-S said in 3CX Linux Beta:
So when you push a button and have all your phones upgraded to the latest 3CX/Yealink firmware you pretty much know that everything is going to work afterwards.
Now that is a pretty solid value that could make up for quite a bit of cost.
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Overall I am quite impressed. Installation was simple. Adding a SIP truck was super simple. They provide a bunch of "free" services to such as DNS, and tunneling.
First downside I have found to the free version is that you need a paid license to use your own FQDN. They provide their own FQDN for free, so that's cool.
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Mobile phone setup is super simply, just download the app, and scan the QR code
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@scottalanmiller said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@Pete-S said in 3CX Linux Beta:
So when you push a button and have all your phones upgraded to the latest 3CX/Yealink firmware you pretty much know that everything is going to work afterwards.
Now that is a pretty solid value that could make up for quite a bit of cost.
I was wondering how much value this provided. I've done some firmware updates via FreePBX - been a while though - and I didn't find it very easy, though not end of the world hard either.
A push button solution though would definitely be nice. Anyone know if the endpoint module for FreePBX is there yet?
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@Dashrender said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@scottalanmiller said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@Pete-S said in 3CX Linux Beta:
So when you push a button and have all your phones upgraded to the latest 3CX/Yealink firmware you pretty much know that everything is going to work afterwards.
Now that is a pretty solid value that could make up for quite a bit of cost.
I was wondering how much value this provided. I've done some firmware updates via FreePBX - been a while though - and I didn't find it very easy, though not end of the world hard either.
A push button solution though would definitely be nice. Anyone know if the endpoint module for FreePBX is there yet?
Then you were doing it wrong. Assuming you have the paid EPM, it is all just built in. Always has been.
If you were going without the paid EPM, then it is still easy if you have setup auto provisioning manually during initial setup.
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@JaredBusch said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@Dashrender said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@scottalanmiller said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@Pete-S said in 3CX Linux Beta:
So when you push a button and have all your phones upgraded to the latest 3CX/Yealink firmware you pretty much know that everything is going to work afterwards.
Now that is a pretty solid value that could make up for quite a bit of cost.
I was wondering how much value this provided. I've done some firmware updates via FreePBX - been a while though - and I didn't find it very easy, though not end of the world hard either.
A push button solution though would definitely be nice. Anyone know if the endpoint module for FreePBX is there yet?
Then you were doing it wrong. Assuming you have the paid EPM, it is all just built in. Always has been.
If you were going without the paid EPM, then it is still easy if you have setup auto provisioning manually during initial setup.
I've never used EPM.
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@Dashrender said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@JaredBusch said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@Dashrender said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@scottalanmiller said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@Pete-S said in 3CX Linux Beta:
So when you push a button and have all your phones upgraded to the latest 3CX/Yealink firmware you pretty much know that everything is going to work afterwards.
Now that is a pretty solid value that could make up for quite a bit of cost.
I was wondering how much value this provided. I've done some firmware updates via FreePBX - been a while though - and I didn't find it very easy, though not end of the world hard either.
A push button solution though would definitely be nice. Anyone know if the endpoint module for FreePBX is there yet?
Then you were doing it wrong. Assuming you have the paid EPM, it is all just built in. Always has been.
If you were going without the paid EPM, then it is still easy if you have setup auto provisioning manually during initial setup.
I've never used EPM.
That's the part of FreePBX that does that stuff.
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@scottalanmiller said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@Dashrender said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@JaredBusch said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@Dashrender said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@scottalanmiller said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@Pete-S said in 3CX Linux Beta:
So when you push a button and have all your phones upgraded to the latest 3CX/Yealink firmware you pretty much know that everything is going to work afterwards.
Now that is a pretty solid value that could make up for quite a bit of cost.
I was wondering how much value this provided. I've done some firmware updates via FreePBX - been a while though - and I didn't find it very easy, though not end of the world hard either.
A push button solution though would definitely be nice. Anyone know if the endpoint module for FreePBX is there yet?
Then you were doing it wrong. Assuming you have the paid EPM, it is all just built in. Always has been.
If you were going without the paid EPM, then it is still easy if you have setup auto provisioning manually during initial setup.
I've never used EPM.
That's the part of FreePBX that does that stuff.
Yes I know... JB has always suggested against it's value in the past.
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@Dashrender said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@scottalanmiller said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@Dashrender said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@JaredBusch said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@Dashrender said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@scottalanmiller said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@Pete-S said in 3CX Linux Beta:
So when you push a button and have all your phones upgraded to the latest 3CX/Yealink firmware you pretty much know that everything is going to work afterwards.
Now that is a pretty solid value that could make up for quite a bit of cost.
I was wondering how much value this provided. I've done some firmware updates via FreePBX - been a while though - and I didn't find it very easy, though not end of the world hard either.
A push button solution though would definitely be nice. Anyone know if the endpoint module for FreePBX is there yet?
Then you were doing it wrong. Assuming you have the paid EPM, it is all just built in. Always has been.
If you were going without the paid EPM, then it is still easy if you have setup auto provisioning manually during initial setup.
I've never used EPM.
That's the part of FreePBX that does that stuff.
Yes I know... JB has always suggested against it's value in the past.
No, it's the ONLY module that does that. Either the paid or the free version. If you didn't use it, that's why it was hard.
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@Dashrender said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@scottalanmiller said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@Dashrender said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@JaredBusch said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@Dashrender said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@scottalanmiller said in 3CX Linux Beta:
@Pete-S said in 3CX Linux Beta:
So when you push a button and have all your phones upgraded to the latest 3CX/Yealink firmware you pretty much know that everything is going to work afterwards.
Now that is a pretty solid value that could make up for quite a bit of cost.
I was wondering how much value this provided. I've done some firmware updates via FreePBX - been a while though - and I didn't find it very easy, though not end of the world hard either.
A push button solution though would definitely be nice. Anyone know if the endpoint module for FreePBX is there yet?
Then you were doing it wrong. Assuming you have the paid EPM, it is all just built in. Always has been.
If you were going without the paid EPM, then it is still easy if you have setup auto provisioning manually during initial setup.
I've never used EPM.
That's the part of FreePBX that does that stuff.
Yes I know... JB has always suggested against it's value in the past.
Because setting up manually once does take some skill, but after that, it is simple file replication.