IPCS Word(s) of the Day: Vandal Resistant
Vandal Resistant = Cameras and other devices that are “vandal resistant” or “vandal-proof” have been manufactured in such a fashion as to make them difficult or nearly impossible to disable or disassemble.
Vandal Resistant = Cameras and other devices that are “vandal resistant” or “vandal-proof” have been manufactured in such a fashion as to make them difficult or nearly impossible to disable or disassemble.
VoIP Supply takes a lot of pride in its prime customer service staff. We’d like for you to get to know them better, because they are always happy to meet and take on new customers.
Our customer service department has many functions within VoIP Supply. The most important is providing care to customers that email or call in with questions regarding their order, invoicing, tracking, account status, product returns, etc…
The customer service department also provides support to all other departments within the company, providing requested assistance, assisting sales associates so that they can spend more time selling, contacting customers for accounting, purchasing, or shipping to gather additional information so that VoIP Supply can be the best!
And now introducing, the Customer Service Department!
William Herrmann – Customer Service Manager
Bill is responsible for the overall management of the department. He is required to direct the staff and provide the necessary roadmap for the department. Bill is also responsible to drive continuous improvement with the department and the company as a whole. Bill works with all staff and management to push customer identified opportunities for quick improvement.
Erin Moran – Customer Service Team Lead
Erin is known as the jack of all trades within VoIP Supply. Erin acts as an assistant to the Customer Service Manager, often providing training and leadership to the staff. She can be counted on to perform any task within the department and many within the company. Erin also serves as a backup receptionist for the company.
Linda Boney and Dawn Martin- Customer Service Representatives
Linda and Dawn are responsible for handling inbound customer service calls, replying to incoming customer service emails, providing proactive customer service information, and handling various customer service queues. They also supports our sales staff and any other associates with any pressing issues.
Jeffrey Hanover – Customer Service Representative (RMA Specialist)
Jeff is responsible to handle all incoming RMA requests, providing customers with all required communications pertaining to returns, declining any RMA’s that do not fit within our returns program, processing all returns that do, and providing customers technical support options when applicable. Jeff is tasked with reducing the percentage of returns that VoIP Supply processes. Jeff also assists the other customer service representatives by helping with inbound customer service calls.
Mary Beth Hyzy – Customer Service Representative
Mary Beth is responsible for an outbound call customer service campaign. In this role she calls customers and informs them that their order has been shipped, informs them about the email they received with a PDF of the invoice, provides them with tracking information and thanks them for shopping with VoIP Supply.
Christopher Heinrich – Sales Engineer
As Sales Engineer; Chris provides pre & post sales support to our customers and our sales staff. Chris is responsible for the technical product trainings that are continuously created and modified to improve the selling skills and knowledge within the sales department.
Kyle Brocious – Technical Support Representative
Kyle is responsible for providing pre & post sales support to our customers, provisioning orders, and testing returns and new products. Kyle also is involved in processing online orders and is currently training new sales staff to take over this project.
Kevin McCarthy – Technical Support Representative
Kevin is responsible for providing pre & post sales support to our customers, provisioning orders, and testing returns and new products.
Griffin Green – Customer Service Intern
Griffin is a temporary associate that is used as a utility employee. He can be counted on to assist wherever needed.
And if you need help with any of your VoIP Supply orders, have installation questions, or just want to say hi, please contact us at 1-800-398-8647 or at https://www.voipsupply.com/getsupport.
Having recently endured the painful process of updating my 1st generation iPhone to Apple’s 2.0 firmware revision, I was excited to test out a native VoIP client.
I downloaded TruPhone’s free client from the appstore, and installed it. Setup was as simple as filling our a short form on the phone. Note: Don’t misstype your mobile number in the setup form….TruPhone does not give you the opportunity to modify it if you enter it incorrectly. In this case, I fat fingered one of the digits, but there was no way for me to go back and correct it. I had to uninstall the TruPhone client and then resync/reinstall it.
The final step in activating the TruPhone service on your iPhone is to authenticate your account by receiving an inbound verification call from TruPhone, and entering a 4-digit PIN number that you chose during the original client setup.
This is where I hit a brick wall. For some reason, I am unable to receive the verification call from TruPhone. When I attempt to initiate the verification call from TruPhone, after about a minute, I get a message that reads “Sorry, we could not detect your security PIN. Did your voicemail answer the call?”
My voicemail did indeed answer the call, as for some reason the TruPhone verification calls will not ring through on my iPhone. They go directly into my voicemail. I have no issues receiving inbound calls from any other originating numbers, and they ring through fine.
I filled out a support request ticket and am waiting to hear back from TruPhone.
Anyone having a positive experience using TruPhone’s mobile VoIP client on their iPhone?
TFTP = Abbreviation of Trivial File Transfer Protocol, a simple form of the File Transfer Protocol (FTP). TFTP uses the User Datagram Protocol (UDP) and provides no security features.
John Paczowski over at AllThingsD reports on the FCC’s pending action against Comcast for violation of net neutrality pricinciples in blocking P2P filesharing traffic.
The problem with “principles” is that they pre-suppose integrity, which is not an integral component of capitalism. Comcast will almost certainly mount a legal appeal to any action taken by the FCC, since there is no body of legislation laying out a framework and accountability for net neutrality.
From WSJ:
“You can’t enforce this because there aren’t any rules,” said Comcast spokeswoman Sena Fitzmaurice. “It violates all sorts of due processes in the way you are supposed to create rules.”
I have chosen Asterisk for many reasons. First was the lower cost, but once I had it running and tested I found it to have many more features than I could imagine. When I first started with Asterisk it was my first introduction to any telephony system at all, everything was learned for this one project, also known as my family’s business, Art Knapp Plantland.
I have had Asterisk running for well over two years, learning more every time I look at it. Once I had all the basics setup and functioning, I had some ideas to tryout and see what I could make work. One of those ideas was an automated timer system for our ride-on train.
Here at work, we have a ride-on train that goes through our nursery. The announcement system for this has gone through many revisions, starting with our cashiers making manual announcements following a timer, and then I made some recordings that were manually started following the timer. Both those attempts worked to a degree, but if it was busy the times would be off. Then I modified it so the cashiers could start the timer on a phone, and the three calls for boarding times (10 minutes, 5 minutes and 1 minute) would all go on their own.
If the driver asks how many minutes are remaining, they don’t usually know, so I made a script that checks the time and reads back the number of minutes before the train should leave.
Technically, the system works like this. Our phones are all connected to our overhead paging system. When the cashiers sell tickets, they dial an extension that launches an AGI script. That script first checks if a call is in progress or not. If there is not call it will copy three call files to the /tmp directory, touch them in the future based on the time they should be announced, move them to the /var/spool/asterisk/outgoing directory, then announce it was successful. Asterisk will then play them in sequence when the time is right. The time-checking script first gets the system time, and compares it against the time the one-minute call is scheduled to go, calculates the minutes, and reads it back. Quite simple really.
Telephoto = In order to make distant objects appear larger, cameras require a telephoto lens.
VoIP Supply announced today that it has selected Bandwidth.com to provide voice and data services for its end-to-end phone system solutions for small and medium-sized businesses. In selecting Bandwidth.com, VoIP Supply will now be able to offer businesses complete nationwide advanced Internet, VoIP, network and wireless services in addition to its current phone system and VoIP hardware offerings. The partnership, VoIP Supply’s first with a voice and data service provider, represents a strategic investment in the delivery of complete telephony solutions to the small medium business marketplace; allowing the company to further solidify itself as a market leader “with everything you need for VoIP.”
“After weighting a couple of options, we found the right partner in Bandwidth.com. Its business culture, offerings and customer-centric approach aligned perfectly with ours,” stated Benjamin P. Sayers, CEO at VoIP Supply. “As more businesses consider the switch to IP-based phone systems, Bandwidth.com’s flexible and affordable offerings will allow VoIP Supply to be uniquely positioned within the marketplace to help small businesses realize greater cost savings, increased productivity, and painless user management with their VoIP deployments.”
“We are very excited about our partnership with VoIP Supply,” said Henry Kaestner Co-founder and Chairman of Bandwidth.com. “VoIP Supply is a true leader in the business telecom industry with a commitment to excellence that is readily apparent in all aspects of their business from corporate culture to the way they treat their customers. We believe that this new one-stop shop approach to all things VoIP, from hardware to service, is exactly what businesses are looking for. We look forward to exceeding customer expectations in as give them better telecom functionality and quality, all while saving them money.”
Ok, admit it, you like the Domino’s new online “Pizza Tracker.” If you haven’t heard of it, It is a Flash application that tracks the status of your pizza order as it flows through the steps from the initial order, preparation, baking in the oven, being boxed, and out for delivery. See: https://www.dominos.com/en/
While waiting for an order the other day I thought, what could top that? The system should call us when the pizza is out for delivery! No longer do you need to stare at the progress meter on your computer while waiting when you could be in the pool, watching a game with friends, or beating your kids in a game on the Wii. I figured I only had roughly 30 minutes to get this working, so let’s get cracking.
Watching the flash application make web requests in Firebug pointed me to the source of the status. All it does is pass your phone number on to a web page and it returns an XML structure with the data needed. The data includes timestamps of each step in the process, durations in the current step, the person who took your order, how long you were on the phone with them, the store manager’s name, etc. Plenty of data to provide some metrics to their corporate office, plus the information we need to send out the alerts.
How does the pizza tracker notification work you ask? Well it is made up of two components. The first component, a Perl script, runs every minute or so from Cron checking the online order status for the numbers we are tracking and generating calls for those out for delivery. The second component, the Asterisk dial plan, allows you to call an extension and set up the pizza tracker for a number and check the order progress.
It is by no means a complete application but it was fun to write, and seems functional enough to use. I’m sure there are tons of uses for something similar to this. One such use could be an airline notification system that notifies limousine drivers’ cell phones when their clients’ planes land. What is your next cool Asterisk project?