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A broadcast line group would cover that just as well without the shared
line processing dependencies & race conditions.<br>
<br>
/Wes<br>
<br>
Robert Singleton wrote:
<blockquote cite="mid:1188934545.5024.46.camel@robert.morsco.com"
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<pre wrap="">On Tue, 2007-09-04 at 09:27 -0400, Wes Sisk wrote:
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<pre wrap="">testing goes beyond that, but is it really a good idea? try to avoid
having a single line shared in that many places if possible. testing
does not include cluster over wan, device reset recovery, etc.
/Wes
On Aug 31, 2007, at 11:22 AM, <a class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated" href="mailto:CarlosOrtiz@bayviewfinancial.com">CarlosOrtiz@bayviewfinancial.com</a> wrote:
Is their a limit on how many phones can share a line? I have seen it
set as high as 30 but had a request for about 60.
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<pre wrap=""><!---->
I have a situation here with 60 appearances of a shared line. We have a
call box at the front door. The DN it is programmed to dial is on 60 out
of 78 devices. It gets fairly heavy use between 5:30 and 6:30 each
morning as people who don't have a key arrive early for work. It's also
handy for after hours courier pickup or food delivery, which are amongst
my favorite uses for it. :)
Robert
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