November 17, 2014- SIPob is outgoing SIP-based student that can be used to schedule calls over Internet protocol and implementation of specific scenarios if the answers were intelocutor, such as reading texts or play audio files.
Create queues advocacy and monitoring sessions
Depending on the Session Initiation Protocol (or in short, SIP) and RFC 3261, SIPob enables you to create a queue and the calls can be online networks.It protocol create multiple profiles to work with, call queues for each department. , All configurations are displayed inside the main window along with the scheduled call, the phone numbers assigned corresponding scenarios.
It supports NAT traversal protocols, UDP, TCP and TLS and enable you to follow up communication sessions run in real time, and data loggin and allow report generation. Summary of, cancel, fail, active calls busy and successful is also available.
Design scenarios to be executed when they are answering
Begins by configuring service settings, and determine whether SIPob been installed behind NAT gateway or not, and if so, enter the NAT's external IP address of the cross-sectional parameters and UPnP. You can also tinker TTS voice for use, the number of redial attempts and the time between successive attempts.
"SIP destination" tab is where you can configure the paths to the end of the probe. By default, SIPob defines the SIP-UA as a kind of end point.
Using "scenario editor" you can add WAV files to play when the call is answered (Note that the file must be in 16 bits per sample, with one channel and frequency 8000 Hz). SIPob enables you to modify your scenario step by step, from the sound play to end the call.
Multi-profile student-based SIP
SIPob works with multiple features and allows monitoring realt time of the call sessions. Can be instructed to implement the knowledge scenarios by the user based on the answer, which includes play audio files or reading texts aloud using text-to-speech engine automatically. Thanks to easy-to-use interface, configuration is a breeze once you know what each function was designed for.