[cisco-voip] Auto Mute when Dialed
Ryan Ratliff
rratliff at cisco.com
Thu Sep 29 12:10:05 EDT 2011
It depends on whether the goal is to send audio to security or just kick off the notification. If you are going to send audio then a button will be lit (headset or speaker). This will be true whether an xml service tells the phone to stream audio or there is an active call.
If you just want to kick off a notification then a CTI app or web service can be used as others have mentioned.
-Ryan
On Sep 28, 2011, at 6:49 PM, Pavan wrote:
Why would intercom not work here ?
Its a one way audio streaming feature.
On Sep 28, 2011, at 16:32, Jeffrey Ollie <jeff at ocjtech.us> wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 28, 2011 at 10:48 AM, Scott Voll <svoll.voip at gmail.com> wrote:
>> On Wed, Sep 28, 2011 at 7:46 AM, Haas, Neal <nhaas at co.fresno.ca.us> wrote:
>>>
>>> I need to have a phone in an interview room that “in case of emergency” a
>>> button is pushed an auto dial goes out and security is notified to go to
>>> “booth 1” BUT they don’t want the person at the Booth to hear that a call
>>> was placed.
>>>
>>> Is there a way to create a Speed Dial and turn the Speaker off?
>>
>> Not sure if you have anything like Singlewire Informacast..... but if you
>> do, create a service URL that pushes txt and audio to a phone (eg. Security)
>> and they will no nothing at the phone the service url button is pushed.
>> if you don't hve informacast..... I'm sure you could still home grow
>> something like it.
>
> I set up an Asterisk system to do this for me.... We add a speed dial
> to phones that need this. When the speed dial button is pressed the
> Asterisk system takes the call, takes note of the phone that called
> it, and then hangs up (which happens in a fraction of a second, you'd
> have to be looking directly at the phone to see it). Then the calling
> phone number is looked up in a database for location information, a
> sound file is generated using a TTS program, and then the security
> guard's cell phone is called and the sound file is played back to
> them.
>
> I'm sure something similar could be done with JTAPI or something but I
> knew how to get this done using Asterisk - I'm not much of a Java
> developer. So you'd need to be comfortable using Asterisk to follow
> my approach exactly.
>
> Something like this has the advantage that it can be used from any
> phone (e.g. an analog phone used as a courtesy phone) by setting up a
> call pattern like "1111" and then putting a sticker on the courtesy
> phone.
>
> --
> Jeff Ollie
>
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