Re: potpourri (Re: Clearwire May Block VoIP Competitors )

From: (no name) (no email)
Date: Fri Apr 01 2005 - 06:34:13 EST

  • Next message: (no name): "The Cidr Report"

    > most american PBX's don't have 911 as a dialplan. you have to dial
    9-911.
    > this isn't a violation of the law as long as there's a warning
    labelabout it.
    > but go ahead and visit a few large companies and tell me how many such
    warning
    > labels you see. as an added boon, note that campuses with blocks of1000
    DIDs
    > end up using the corporate headquarters or the address of the PBX as the
    911
    > locator for all 1000 (or 10000 or whatever) extensions, making the fire
    dept
    > have to select from among 20 different buildings by looking for smoke
    plumes.

    Why can't we have VoIP phones with built-in GPS receivers and a built-in
    911 dialplan that makes the phone transmit your coordinates along with the
    emergency call? That solves the campus problem. And since VoIP phones are
    nearly as portable as cellphones, this makes good sense. If you take your
    VoIP phone to grandma's house at Thanksgiving, plug into her broadband
    router
    and need to call for assistance, it would just work.

    Of course there is the little matter of a national E-911 center to accept
    the calls, decode the GPS info, and dispatch the call correctly...

    --Michael Dillon


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