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This is a discussion on Calling to BT Broadband Voice number within the uk.telecom.voip forums, part of the Newsgroup Forums category; A relative has subscribed to BT Broadand Voice and has a new 11 digit phone number with this service commencing ...
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A relative has subscribed to BT Broadand Voice and has a new 11 digit phone
number with this service commencing 05. Is it possible to dial sraight into this number for free from another PC based VOIP Network, like DrayTEL or similar? If so are any pre-fixes etc.. needed? |
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On 2006-11-08, Traveller <nospam@thanks.com> wrote:[color=blue]
> A relative has subscribed to BT Broadand Voice and has a new 11 digit phone > number with this service commencing 05.[/color] Commencing 056 I think you mean. [color=blue] > Is it possible to dial sraight into this number for free from another PC > based VOIP Network, like DrayTEL or similar? If so are any pre-fixes etc.. > needed?[/color] 056 numbers are PSTN numbers. In general you will pay to connect to them just as you do when contacting 01/02 numbers. Brian. |
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"Brian" <bandj@o2.co.uk> wrote in message news:eiu15l$bem$1$8300dec7@news.demon.co.uk...[color=blue] > On 2006-11-08, Traveller <nospam@thanks.com> wrote:[color=green] >> A relative has subscribed to BT Broadand Voice and has a new 11 digit >> phone >> number with this service commencing 05.[/color] > > Commencing 056 I think you mean. >[color=green] >> Is it possible to dial sraight into this number for free from another PC >> based VOIP Network, like DrayTEL or similar? If so are any pre-fixes >> etc.. >> needed?[/color] > > 056 numbers are PSTN numbers. In general you will pay to connect to them > just as you do when contacting 01/02 numbers. > > Brian.[/color] Yes, you're right. 056 number. Thanks for the info. |
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On Thu, 9 Nov 2006 08:04:26 -0000, "Traveller" <nospam@thanks.com>
wrote: [color=blue] > >"Brian" <bandj@o2.co.uk> wrote in message >news:eiu15l$bem$1$8300dec7@news.demon.co.uk...[color=green] >> On 2006-11-08, Traveller <nospam@thanks.com> wrote:[color=darkred] >>> A relative has subscribed to BT Broadand Voice and has a new 11 digit >>> phone >>> number with this service commencing 05.[/color] >> >> Commencing 056 I think you mean. >>[color=darkred] >>> Is it possible to dial sraight into this number for free from another PC >>> based VOIP Network, like DrayTEL or similar? If so are any pre-fixes >>> etc.. >>> needed?[/color] >> >> 056 numbers are PSTN numbers. In general you will pay to connect to them >> just as you do when contacting 01/02 numbers. >> >> Brian.[/color] > >Yes, you're right. 056 number. > >Thanks for the info. >[/color] You may be able to dial into this number directly via SIP. How? Well it MAY be listed as an E number. I don't know how the Draytel works but if you are able to set your dial plan such that it includes <:@sipbroker.com> - no username or password required, then IF it is an Enum then it will route via sipbroker. If it is not it will route normally. If this is a specific 056 number that you wish to call the recipient could make it an Enum and then, normally, it would be accessible via SIP - unless BT have some sort of block on it. To understand how all this works checkout [url]http://www.sipbroker.com[/url] SEPARATE from all this, there isn't a sipbroker access number for BT voice . Obviously BT want their customers to be restricted in their SIP calls - one good reason NOT to go with BT There is one, however, for bt.net whatever that service is. The web site simply states "BT Global Services: IP Services" . It has a sip server address of sip.btsip.bt.net Remove 'no_spam_' from email address. |
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Traveller wrote:[color=blue]
> A relative has subscribed to BT Broadand Voice and has a new 11 digit phone > number with this service commencing 05. > > Is it possible to dial sraight into this number for free from another PC > based VOIP Network, like DrayTEL or similar? If so are any pre-fixes etc.. > needed? > >[/color] You may not want to..... call charges IIRC are around 5ppm. Apart from that you should have no probs. Cheers |
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On 2006-11-09, Brian A <no_spam_bca1000@hotmail.com> wrote:
[color=blue] > On Thu, 9 Nov 2006 08:04:26 -0000, "Traveller" <nospam@thanks.com> > wrote:[color=green] >>Yes, you're right. 056 number. >> >>Thanks for the info. >>[/color] > You may be able to dial into this number directly via SIP. How? Well > it MAY be listed as an E number. I don't know how the Draytel works > but if you are able to set your dial plan such that it includes > <:@sipbroker.com> - no username or password required, then IF it is an > Enum then it will route via sipbroker. If it is not it will route > normally. If this is a specific 056 number that you wish to call the > recipient could make it an Enum and then, normally, it would be > accessible via SIP - unless BT have some sort of block on it. To > understand how all this works checkout [url]http://www.sipbroker.com[/url][/color] If Traveller wants those free calls to his friend your idea is one he should definitely investigate but I wonder how feasible it is to get it working with a BT Broadband Voice number. My recollection of using [url]www.e164.org[/url] is that the number points to a SIP URI. According to [url]http://bbs.adslguide.org.uk/showthreaded.php?Cat=&Board=voip&Number=2660761[/url] the URI could be something like 44560*******@btsip.bt.com. Which looks OK except whois has no knowledge of btsip.bt.com. [color=blue] > SEPARATE from all this, there isn't a sipbroker access number for BT > voice . Obviously BT want their customers to be restricted in their > SIP calls - one good reason NOT to go with BT[/color] You may be interested in this: [url]http://hubbub.labs.bt.com/?pagename=viewpost&id=1143[/url] Brian. |
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Brian wrote:
[color=blue] > According to > >[/color] [url]http://bbs.adslguide.org.uk/showthreaded.php?Cat=&Board=voip&Number=2660761[/url][color=blue] > > the URI could be something like 44560*******@btsip.bt.com. Which looks > OK except whois has no knowledge of btsip.bt.com.[/color] You snipped this: [color=blue][color=green] >> It has a sip server address of sip.btsip.bt.net[/color][/color] so: $ host sip.btsip.bt.net sip.btsip.bt.net has address 81.144.106.8 sip.btsip.bt.net has address 81.144.106.36 sip.btsip.bt.net has address 81.144.106.40 sip.btsip.bt.net has address 81.144.106.228 :-) -- <http://ale.cx/> (AIM:troffasky) (UnSoEsNpEaTm@ale.cx) 21:17:06 up 16 days, 5:03, 2 users, load average: 3.42, 3.45, 3.43 This is my BOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOMSTICK |
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On 2006-11-09, alexd <look@my.sig> wrote:
[color=blue] > Brian wrote: >[color=green] >> According to >> >>[/color] > [url]http://bbs.adslguide.org.uk/showthreaded.php?Cat=&Board=voip&Number=2660761[/url][color=green] >> >> the URI could be something like 44560*******@btsip.bt.com. Which looks >> OK except whois has no knowledge of btsip.bt.com.[/color] > > You snipped this: >[color=green][color=darkred] >>> It has a sip server address of sip.btsip.bt.net[/color][/color][/color] I cannot find that sentence on that page. I expect you will help me out. sip.btsip.bt.net is there as an outbound proxy. [color=blue] > so: > > $ host sip.btsip.bt.net > sip.btsip.bt.net has address 81.144.106.8 > sip.btsip.bt.net has address 81.144.106.36 > sip.btsip.bt.net has address 81.144.106.40 > sip.btsip.bt.net has address 81.144.106.228 > >:-)[/color] Does that make 44560*******@sip.btsip.bt.com a more likely URI? Brian. |
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On 2006-11-09, Duncan MacCallum <dmacca@blueyonder.co.uk> wrote:
[color=blue] > Traveller wrote:[color=green] >> A relative has subscribed to BT Broadand Voice and has a new 11 digit phone >> number with this service commencing 05. >> >> Is it possible to dial sraight into this number for free from another PC >> based VOIP Network, like DrayTEL or similar? If so are any pre-fixes etc.. >> needed? >> >>[/color] > You may not want to..... call charges IIRC are around 5ppm. > Apart from that you should have no probs.[/color] The per minute charge is dependent on the provider and can be cheaper than 5p. At least one of the Betamax products has it at less than 1p. The non-voip 18866 charges 0p. TalkTalk is, I think, about 2p. Brian. |
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Brian wrote:
[color=blue] > On 2006-11-09, alexd <look@my.sig> wrote:[/color] [color=blue][color=green] >> You snipped this:[/color][/color] [color=blue][color=green][color=darkred] >>>> It has a sip server address of sip.btsip.bt.net[/color][/color] > > I cannot find that sentence on that page. I expect you will help me out.[/color] Message-ID: <q116l2930jk0llgv9e23di4l45femdojda@4ax.com>, third from last line. [color=blue] > sip.btsip.bt.net is there as an outbound proxy.[/color] Ah OK - so definitely no use as an inbound one then? Has anyone tried from outside of BT's network? [color=blue][color=green] >> so: >> >> $ host sip.btsip.bt.net >> sip.btsip.bt.net has address 81.144.106.8[/color][/color] [color=blue] > Does that make 44560*******@sip.btsip.bt.com a more likely URI?[/color] Not 100% certain about the guidelines for a SIP URI, but I would have thought that the bit after the @ would have to resolve in order for it to be valid, so .net is more likely than .com. Sometimes SIP URIs make use of DNS SRV records, so that one can call [email]foo@bar.com[/email] when it's really [email]foo@sip.bar.com[/email] [at least I think that's how it works]. -- <http://ale.cx/> (AIM:troffasky) (UnSoEsNpEaTm@ale.cx) 19:05:09 up 17 days, 2:51, 3 users, load average: 3.32, 3.13, 3.10 This is my BOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOMSTICK |
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