System information
The chances of anyone ever making a proprietary digital phone directly compatible
with Asterisk are slim, but companies such as Citel (http://www.citel.com)
§
have created
gateways that convert the proprietary signals to Session Initiation Protocol (SIP).
‖
ISDN telephones
Prior to VoIP, the closest thing to a standards-based digital telephone was an ISDN-
BRI terminal. Developed in the early 1980s, ISDN was expected to revolutionize the
telecommunications industry in exactly the same way that VoIP promises to finally
achieve today.
There are two types of ISDN: Primary Rate Interface (PRI) and Basic
Rate Interface (BRI). PRI is commonly used to provide trunking facilities
between PBXs and the PSTN, and is widely deployed all over the world.
BRI is not at all popular in North America, but is common in Europe.
While ISDN was widely deployed by the telephone companies, many consider the
standard to have been a flop, as it generally failed to live up to its promises. The high
costs of implementation, recurring charges, and lack of cooperation among the major
industry players contributed to an environment that caused more problems than it
solved.
BRI was intended to service terminal devices and smaller sites (a BRI loop provides two
digital circuits). A wealth of BRI devices have been developed, but BRI has largely been
deprecated in favor of faster, less expensive technologies such as ADSL, cable modems,
and VoIP.
BRI is still very popular for use in videoconferencing equipment, as it provides a fixed-
bandwidth link. Also, BRI does not have the type of quality of service issues a VoIP
connection might, as it is circuit-switched.
BRI is still sometimes used in place of analog circuits to provide trunking to a PBX.
Whether or not this is a good idea depends mostly on how your local phone company
prices the service, and what features it is willing to provide.
#
§ Citel has produced a fantastic product, but it is limited by the fact that it is too expensive. If you have old
proprietary PBX telephones, and you want to use them with your Asterisk system, Citel’s technology can do
the job, but make sure you understand how the per-port cost of these units stacks up against replacing the
old sets with pure VoIP telephones.
‖ SIP is currently the most well-known and popular protocol for VoIP. We discuss it further in Appendix B.
#If you are in North America, give up on this idea, unless you have a lot of patience and money and are a bit
of a masochist.
Types of Phones | 659