Fax and Answering Machine for your SIP/H.323/ISDN CAPI 2.0 line. Support for Multiple SIP Registrations. Call Routing. Voice Fax Modem for your Fax & Voice software. Color faxes over VOIP and ISDN. Incoming Fax Routing: Route through e-mail, Store in a folder, Print.
I'm going to be the detractor in all this.But again, I work in legal and we still have to do (as in, required) a lot of stuff via fax with the various courts and tribunals.Do NOT switch to FOIP. It is not reliable enough. Trying to put fax through. We have relatively new physical Xerox fax machines that cannot talk to badly configured client / adversarial FOIP setups.
![Voip Voip](/uploads/1/2/5/4/125415113/709900755.jpg)
If we switch to our RightFax server, it works sometimes. Let's not even through 'Least Cost Routing' into the mix which affects both.We open tickets with the end users or adversaries and 'you're the first to mention it' (yeah right). Then all of a sudden, several days later, we get an update that something was reconfigured on their system and all of a sudden faxes start working correctly.
The next time it happens and we have some lawyer trying to tear a strip off of us, we just resend them the previous tickets where the other persons system was dead, and tell them we're back to square one. Wait a few days. It is much better when that angry lawyer and you send them their own helpdesk admissions of guilt, or assistant is the OTHER side and not internal.So, what I mean by this, is there are certain industries that require faxes to work%100 of the time.If your industry falls into that bracket, then do not go to any form of FOIP.I know of one firm in my area which has switched back to traditional POTS based faxes for this very reason. I am sure there are others, but I know of one.
![Voip Voip](/uploads/1/2/5/4/125415113/565670928.png)
Alan,There's a few ways to skin this cat. If you're looking for minimal disruption of the way the customer currently faxes, you could simply connect the telephone line from the (fax)modem to an analog telephone adapter parentheses (ATA), and connect that ATA to a VoIP service provider who specializes in T.38 Fax Over IP (FoIP). Cisco's SPA112 works the best, find.
They're pretty cheap, as is a single SIP trunk.Alternatively, migrate away from actually faxing, and subscribe instead to a fax service that will allow you to email to fax, fax to email etc.-Cam.