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Asterisk: The Future of Telephony Second Edition

3.9 out of 5 stars 20 ratings

This bestselling book is now the standard guide to building phone systems with Asterisk, the open source IP PBX that has traditional telephony providers running scared! Revised for the 1.4 release of the software, the new edition of Asterisk: The Future of Telephony reveals how you can save money on equipment and support, and finally be in control of your telephone system.

If you've worked with telephony in the past, you're familiar with the problem: expensive and inflexible systems that are tuned to the vendor's needs, not yours. Asterisk isn't just a candle in the darkness, it's a whole fireworks show. Because Asterisk is so powerful, configuring it can seem tricky and difficult. This book steps you through the process of installing, configuring, and integrating Asterisk with your existing phone system.

You'll learn how to write dialplans, set up applications including speech synthesis and voice recognition, how to script Asterisk, and much more -- everything you need to design a simple but complete system with little or no Asterisk experience, and no more than rudimentary telecommunications knowledge. The book includes:

  • A new chapter on managing/administering your Asterisk system
  • A new chapter on using Asterisk with databases
  • Coverage of features in Asterisk 1.4
  • A new appendix on dialplan functions
  • A simplified installation chapter
  • New simplified SIP configuration, including examples for several popular SIP clients (soft phones and IP telephones)
  • Revised chapters and appendicies reviewed and updated for the latest in features, applications, trends and best-practices
Asterisk is revolutionizing the telecom industry, due in large part to the way it gets along with other network applications. While other PBXs are fighting their inevitable absorption into the network, Asterisk embraces it. If you need to take control of your telephony systems, move to Asterisk and see what the future of telecommunications looks like.

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Editorial Reviews

Book Description

Join the Open Source PBX Revolution

About the Author

Jim Van Meggelen is President and CTO of Core Telecom Innovations, a Canadian-based provider of open-source telephony solutions. He has over fifteen years of enterprise telecom experience, for such companies as Nortel, Williams and Telus, and has has extensive knowledge of both legacy and VoIP equipment from manufacturers such as Nortel, Cisco and Avaya.

Jim was the architect of two of the world's largest managed enterprise voice networks; each solution serving roughly twenty-thousand users in more than one-thousand communities across Canada, providing telecommunications in five different languages, through six time zones, administered completely from a central location. These networks pioneered the use of extensive automation and database control in a branch voice network - functionalities not generally available in proprietary telecommunications systems. Jim has now moved on from the world of proprietary telecom, and is commited to open-source telephony.

Jim is one of the principal contributors to the Asterisk Documentation Project, and is co-author of the bestselling O'Reilly book, Asterisk: The Future of Telephony. He enjoys teaching, public speaking, improvisational acting, and writing.

Jared Smith is a long time member of the Asterisk community, and a co-founder of the Asterisk Documentation Project. Jared has over a decade of systems administration and programming experience, along with several years of professional telephony and voice-over-IP experience. As the architect of one of the world's largest Asterisk installations, he has a wealth of hands-on Asterisk knowledge.Jim Van Meggelen is President and CTO of Core Telecom Innovations, a Canadian-based provider of open-source telephony solutions. He has over fifteen years of enterprise telecom experience, for such companies as Nortel, Williams and Telus, and has extensive knowledge of both legacy and VoIP equipment from manufacturers such as Nortel, Cisco and Avaya. Jim is one of the principal contributors to the Asterisk Documentation Project.Leif Madsen first took an interest in Asterisk while attempting to find a voice conferencing solution for him and his friends. After someone suggested trying Asterisk, the obsession began. Wanting to contribute and be involved with the community, and noticing the lack of Asterisk documentation, he co-founded the Asterisk Documentation Project.

Leif Madsen first took an interest in Asterisk while attempting to find a voice conferencing solution for him and his friends. After someone suggested trying Asterisk, the obsession began. Wanting to contribute and be involved with the community, and noticing the lack of Asterisk documentation, he co-founded the Asterisk Documentation Project. Leif is currently working as a consultant, specializing in Asterisk clustering and call-centre integration. You can get more information at http://www.leifmadsen.com

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ O'Reilly Media; Second edition (September 7, 2007)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 608 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0596510489
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0596510480
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.05 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 7 x 1.46 x 9.19 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    3.9 out of 5 stars 20 ratings

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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on February 1, 2009
    Just a note, this book can be downloaded for free from OReilly online. Mr. OReilly also has an interesting blog about the future of distributing books this way using download statistics from this book. I am a bit old fashioned when it comes to reading, so I opted for the printed version. But it is also nice to be able to search the appendix on channels and applications in the PDF version.

    As the authors openly admit, the hardest part about this book is to decide what 'not' to include in the book. Asterisk's flexibility and almost unlimited potential are intimidating even for the most motivated. After hearing about Asterisk a few years ago, I was surprised to find so few books on the topic and many scattered around information. Coming from a Cisco background, I was getting spoiled with shining books and a vendor-driven learning paths.

    At the time, after read up on user groups, blogs, man pages, and various sources, I was able to get the phones to register and ring. This was very cool for the first 5 minutes, but the system lacked all the standard features that would make it useful. I then spend the next few days trying to get voicemail, conference bridge, auto attendant, and Free World Dialing to work. Long story short, the system stayed as a science project for me while I move on to Cisco, Sipura, SipX, and other products in the next few years. I remain enthusiastic about Asterisk and its potential so I continued to watch for any new publications. Unfortunately, Voip-info.org still remained to be the place with the most Asterisk information, but I often find myself being frustrated by the lack of organization and works-for-me-but-use-it-at-your-own-risk code examples.

    If I remember correctly, the publication date of this book was pushed back for almost a year, it remained on my watch list on Amazon mostly because it is from the trusted OReilly. I was disappointed by the lack of detail examples in the first edition so my expectation was low, it sat on the shelf for months before I start to read it a few weeks ago. Boy was this an improvement from the first edition! It starts to fill in gaps for me right away and by the end of chapter 5, I feel it is already worth the money paid for the book because it has enough information for a basic working system. The concepts are clearly explained and the codes are simple and to the point. It does not attempt to cover all the information because it cant, but it lays down a nice foundation for you to build on. I honestly wish I had this book a few years ago.

    Like anything that is worth learning, you need to spend time and energy if you want to be good at Asterisk. What this book did was to lessen the slope of the learning curve. I highly recommend this book, if nothing else, download the PDF version so you can leverage the nice appendix on channels and applications at the end.
    10 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on December 5, 2009
    This book gave me the motivation to play with asterisk. It's a great toy, but capable of being much more in skilled hands. Had I reason to build a serious PBX this book gave me the background to do this.

    The information is presented in a clear and logical format with a focus on the necessary concepts and then building your first configuration using the text configuration file. Also covered are options for hardware connectivity to the variety of physical interfaces that are avaialble and issues such as software vs hardware echo cancelling.

    Security is covered as well as protocols used in internet telephony. With this background interconnection one asterisk box to another or to a service that supports the SIP protocol like skype or vonage is covered.

    For the less geeky there is coverage of various turnkey asterisk packages with gui interfaces to get one up with a basic system quickly and without messing with text configuration files.

    This book made playing with asterisk fun for me and it can be an essential resource for someone looking to roll their own pbx with ip or more traditional telephony.
  • Reviewed in the United States on September 17, 2017
    Typical of any O'Reilly book, it's extremely well written and a wealth of information.
    Except, it's absolutely obsolete.
    If you're running a current version, like FreePBX 13.0.192.16, this book will only confuse you.
    It covers NOTHING of the new web interface.
  • Reviewed in the United States on July 19, 2024
    Installed Asterisk, and needed contest. This book succeeds in providing it. A must have if you are running Asterisk or FreePBX (which sits on top of Asterisk)
  • Reviewed in the United States on July 16, 2010
    This book is not as good as advertised. Particularly when it describes the installation of asterisk and its accessories where there is a mess. I did not understand anything.
    Maybe because there are not many books this book has a leadership but this does not make it the best...
  • Reviewed in the United States on December 7, 2007
    I'm enjoying the book and learning a lot from it, but this newest edition has some editing problems, such as typos:

    Page 99: "providers may insteadSession Initiation Protocol" - and I don't know enough about the subject yet to figure out what they meant to say

    and logical errors:

    Page 71: "if you want to build an IP-only configuration, you can skip to the section on configuring SIP." - but if you do, expect to be coming back to this page because you'll have skipped over some important stuff and will have no idea what's going on

    But these are comparatively minor problems with an otherwise great book.
    4 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on May 11, 2009
    I bought the first iteration of this book a few years back. Asterisk has certainly changed quite a bit in that time. This book serves as a great reference for the past and sheds some light on what is coming next. I would highly recommend this book for anyone interested in trying out Asterisk or simply wants a good desk reference on-hand for syntax.
  • Reviewed in the United States on November 29, 2009
    This book enumerates the functions and features of Asterisk, but does little to facilitate deep understanding. I can make the same positive comment about this book that I can about every other O'Reilly book that I own: it's cheap. If you want a good book, plan to pay $50-75 or more. Good, clear technical writing is very time consuming and sales volume is low. Therefore, good technical books are expensive.

    Also, no need to study up on Asterisk. The easiest-to-use implementation out there for free is Trixbox CE. If you want an Asterisk switch you can live with, go Trixbox and buy a book on that particular build.
    2 people found this helpful
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