Onsip login username6/7/2023 The change in policy doesn’t effect us at all since we elected to pay the $20/mo that they charge to add a private conference bridge to our OnSIP service. We have only two options available to us – block calls to those numbers or charge the true market rate. Junction Networks cannot afford to subsidize these services and maintain our competitive pricing. Starting Friday November 13, 2009, calls to seemingly free conference services and other reverse billing services will be charged at $0.50 per minute.Īs of today, the affected rate centers are:Ĭalls to these rate centers are 20 times more expensive than a ‘normal’ call. Policy Changes Re: Free Conference ServicesĪ few days back I received an email from Junction Networks outlining a new policy toward free calling conference services. I wonder how they will deal with significant transitions between software versions?ģ. It could simplify my life, which is always a noble goal. I’ve yet to try this myself as I already have an FTP server setup to handle provisioning all the phones that I oversee. It must build that dynamically based upon the users in the OnSIP PBX. The menu provided support for various Polycom models, a series of speed-dials, common company directory, NAT keep-alive, variable time zones and multiple call appearances per line key. This shows up as a new tool “phone” tool under the “resources” menu of the admin portal.ĭiving into the menu further it’s yields a fairly straightforward tool for assigning phone parameters based upon the phones MAC address, typical of the Polycom provisioning scheme. I was pleasantly surprised to find that OnSIP has also added a basic ability to provision Polycom phones. You’re probably not going to remember that password, so keep the email reminder handy until they work out how to let your browser remember the logon. OnSIP is very rigorous about issuing complex passwords to ensure a secure system. This is a problem common with Flash GUI implementations. The logon page does not remember your SIP registration name and password. That does explain the one annoyance I have about the logon process. The very fact that the portal is implemented in Flash is kinda curious. I was involved in their beta program last year. It includes a hosted design environment as well as hosting for the completed Flash files. Sprout Builder is a hosted development environment for Flash based applications. With a little poking around I was able to determine that Junction Networks is using Sprout Builder as the underlying tool set for creating this new user portal. It’d be great to have all these speed dials available via the web GUI. We have a large number of extensions programmed to our OnSIP account, where each is actually a DID occurring on our PBX at HQ. I’d like to see the status display extended to support actions involving extensions that are resources external to our OnSIP account. I can initiate a call, or even transfer an ongoing call to another extension from the web interface. At a glance I can tell if any of our staff are on the phone. It’s essentially a busy-lamp-field for a distributed company. The portal offers some nice capabilities. That’s about 16 users mostly in the US, but a few in the UK, France & the Middle East. ![]() Now that the portal is broadly launched I’m introducing it to any of our staff who have OnSIP connected phones. A long time OnSIP user I was in the beta program, but since I could not roll-out the portal to my co-workers while it was in beta I didn’t have much opportunity to evaluate it in depth during the beta program. These changes bear closer examination.Ī few weeks back Junction Networks launched the long awaited user portal for their OnSIP hosted IP-PBX service. However, they have been making a few changes in their service. ![]() ![]() Since they are my primary ITSP this very fact is probably “a good thing.” It means that we haven’t had any issues. It’s been a while since I paid any attention to OnSIP.
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