[VoIP] The Museum of Communications, Seattle
John Novack
jnovack at stromberg-carlson.org
Wed Apr 18 08:27:22 CDT 2007
Welcome to the list
Hope you can get the Museum into CNET, and make sure some of the older
folks understand that surplus items should be preserved and not go to scrap.
There are quite a few "switchers" in the US who have working switches in
one form or another from a few lines in a homebuilt rack to several
office codes in a large building.
I am somewhere in the middle with just under 400 lines of Western SXS,
Stromberg-Carlson XY and ITEC electronic SXS.
That doesn't include my PBX stuff.
Now if I only had enough time left in my life to get it all working, and
stay that way!
So many wires, so little time
John Novack
Duncan Smith wrote:
> On Sun, Apr 08, 2007 at 10:51:25PM -0700, David Josephson wrote:
>
>> I have been talking with another friend who lives in Seattle and is
>> a regular volunteer with the Seattle museum, Dave Dintenfass. He's
>> talked to Don about it, ordered Asterisk books and should be part of
>> the project too. Sounds like there is a lot of support in various
>> directions for this project. The Asterisk box could also help them
>> tie their various switches together.
>>
>> --
>> David Josephson
>>
>
> Hi! I'm new on the list.
>
> I guess you could say that I'm the resident 19-year old at the Seattle
> museum. I came across the CNET project back in December, mentally
> bookmarked it as "neato", and went on to things such as passing math
> class. (*sadface*)
>
> Although my school schedule doesn't often allow museum trips, one of
> my criteria for summer employment this year is that I get many
> non-working Tuesdays.
>
> Anyway, I've used Linux and other Unix for several years, though I
> have no specific Asterisk experience.
>
> (What's the list etiquette rule for PGP signed messages? I usually
> include the signature as a MIME attachment; is that bad?)
>
>
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