Aspiring Elastix engineers have one more opportunity this year for Elastix Certified Training in Miami, Florida.
After announcing that New York City’s session in November was to be the last Elastix training in the US this year, it turns out that we were mistaken.
Courses are now available in not one, but two languages to teach engineers everything they need to know about installing, using, and configuring the Elastix platform:
Elastix is the easiest to use Unified Communication platform on the market today. Elastix is Asterisk-based and is one of the most popular open sourced IP PBX’s in the world. It is free to operate and update, allows for unlimited users, and requires no recurring licensing fees.
Registrants of the ECE course can expect 40 hours of training on 27 theoretical chapters and 21 practices of Unified Communications.
Attendees will walk away as confident telephony engineers capable of handily running advanced communication operations through Elastix.
Each attendee also receives a student kit that includes:
Register now through VoIP Supply for the Elastix Certified Engineer training in Miami.
“Simple and trusted comes in one package with the Elastix communication platform,” said Garrett Smith, Chief Marketing Officer at VoIP Supply. “The ECE training course is a great opportunity to become an Elastix expert and learn firsthand why this fully unified, open source platform is fast becoming the VoIP phone system of choice.”
In our gadget-loving, planet-hugging era, businesses are on the hunt for solutions that boost productivity…
https://youtu.be/d167qfC_qCk?si=DVchHuXW_UT5dD8l Your October VoIP News Update is here! Tune in to get all the latest…
Paging Dr. Smith, Clean Up Aisle 2, Johnny Report to the Office, Lost Car Key…
https://youtu.be/G8fuKPL8fSs?si=MIOeKuJM8S09K8px The time has come to make a switch from NEC, but we understand that…
S33 DECT Handset: Offers exceptional voice clarity and reliable connectivity for uninterrupted conversations. With durable…
I don’t know about you but when I heard the word encryption, I would think…