OpenSER, VoIP and my opinions… I am not that old guy, but the time spent in VoIP and Open Source SIP projects could result is some writing useful for others. My full name is Daniel-Constantin Mierla (along the time, using nicknames as miconda or dcm). During 2001-2002 I got involved in Open Source and research of VoIP and SIP at FhG Fokus, Berlin, Germany. Up to 2005 I was core developer of SIP Express Router (SER), when I started, together with some colleagues from SER, a new project named OpenSER that was based on new government and development rules. We are today, with OpenSER, in a stage of accelerate innovation, preserving robustness, performances and flexibility that made OpenSER a famous Open Source VoIP project.
The blog won’t focus primarily on OpenSER, as the project has a dedicated blog at http://openser.blogspot.com, but on my view to some aspects of life, IP communications, VoIP and, of course, OpenSER.
Hi Daniel, I run across your blog. I’m trying waters with blogging. I write in Russian.
I work on voip project, it’s may be another voip, but I think you should try to build platform so you can implement the services upon it.
So we get our hands dirty with asterisk, but heard much about SER.
Can we get some kind a advice from you on project implementation?
Sincerely
Kazbek
ksadykov@teleport.kz
Comment by apprentice — July 30, 2007 @ 5:26 pm
I do not know if I can help, as long as I do not know what you want to implement.
In the last time there was a big focus in allowing easy service creation in OpenSER. The implementors do not have to get dirty with low level of SIP/VoIP. Check the Perl module in OpenSER as well as the WeSIP Java SIP Servlet application server.
Also, interaction with OpenSER itself can be done via XMLRPC or UDP, thus integration with third-party API and services should be easier.
Comment by miconda — August 3, 2007 @ 9:44 am