Land line calls from cellular phones

Land line calls from cellular phones

Many cellular phones today are equipped with Wi-Fi transceivers and SIP phone clients. Cellular phones such as the Nokia N80 and N91, dual mode cellular phones, are gaining popularity, despite the easy-to-understand cold shoulder that this feature gets from the cellular providers.

Registration to an Internet Telephony Service Provider (ITSP) can allow the dual-mode cell phone owner to originate SIP calls from his home, office and many public Wi-Fi hot-spots. Although getting a SIP phone call is technically feasible, it is not quite practical as those calls cannot terminate successfully when the dual mode cell phone is out of the Wi-Fi Internet range.

Adding a Xorcom Asterisk® IP-PBX enhances the ways one can use his dual mode cellular phone substantially. For an organization equipped with Xorcom IP-PBX, the dual mode cellular phone will forward the employee’s extension to his cell phone; it will allow call initiation and reception as if the employee was sitting at his desk.

Without registration to any ITSP, the employee’s office telephony extension will follow him anywhere on the globe, providing the services and flexibility he is used to while maintaining low office extension local telephony costs

Changing the way people use the cellular phone in the corporate and SMBs

When using dual mode cellular phones, people use their comfortable cellular phone to initiate and accept telephone calls at the office. The Xorcom IP-PBX can be configured to forward the incoming call to the cellular phone when the cellular phone is out of the Wi-Fi IP network area.

Now people can be reached by using a single phone number. The phone will ring at the office and to the cellular phone (when registered to the Internet), otherwise it will forward the call to the cell phone through the cellular network.

In addition, if the employee has a laptop – he can install a soft phone on the laptop and get the calls to his computer.

Using the cellular phone everywhere and all the time is very comfortable, but there are three problems doing it:

  1. The user receives excessive radiation due to more calls that are done over his cell phone. In addition, the typical radiation level is high when the cell phone is used inside buildings, as the transmission passes through walls and ceilings and the cell phone adjusts itself to high transmission power. On the other hand, Wi-Fi transmission power is very low, and does not create health hazards to the user.
  2. In most places cellular calls are much more expensive than land lines calls. Even where cell phone calls are inexpensive, the described architecture will allow free “cellular” calls to the office even from places that charge excessive roaming charges (such as another country) as long as there is a Wi-Fi network in the neighborhood.
  3. When using the cellular phone, the user does not have an access to the corporate PBX, therefore, he cannot get PBX services, not even make a phone call to an internal extension.

The dual mode cell phone with the Xorcom IP-PBX provides the best solution for the corporate and the SMB market.

Xorcom XR1000 Asterisk Appliance and XR2000 Asterisk server

Xorcom offers two different Asterisk IP-PBX product lines which provide the advantages of the Asterisk IP-PBX ready-to-go server with high-quality telephony interfaces (FXS, FXO, BRI and E1/T1 PRI).

The XR1000 is an embedded full Asterisk-based solution with up to 32 telephone ports designed for the SMB market. The unit comes in a small 10” chassis or in a standard 1U 19” rack / wall mountable chassis. It is recommended to support up to 50 users and up to 32 concurrent calls.

More information about the XR1000

The XR2000 is a medium-power Asterisk-based solution that supports up to 120 concurrent PSTN / Telephones calls as well as SIP phones. The 2U 19” rack mountable unit comes with PSTN / telephone interfaces and is recommended for up to 300 users and 120 concurrent calls.

More information about the XR2000

Using the XR1000 to support dual mode cellular phones:

Fig.1 describes an organization with ADSL Internet access and a Wi-Fi router. The XR1000 is connected to the LAN. Cellular phones in the organization register to the XR1000.

Fig 2 shows Joe Smith and his office. Joe gets all his incoming calls on his cell phone as well. When his extension (a) rings, so does his soft-phone (b) and his cellular phone (SIP/IAX client)(c).

Fig 3 shows Joe at a hotel that has a wired LAN connection. His extension is now forwarded to his laptop.

Fig 4 Joe at the cafe. He gets a phone call via Wi-Fi to his cell phone (the call was forwarded by the secretary to his office extension), makes free calls to his office and land-line calls to other phone numbers from his office.

Fig 5 – now Joe is out at the street. A call that was dialed to his office extension is routed by the Xorcom IP-PBX, which figures out that Joe’s cell phone is not in not registered as a SIP phone, to his cellular phone using the cellular network.

Fig 6 describes a bigger organization using the XR2000. Joe will have the same cell phone benefits with this architecture as well.

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