Honestly, I just want Microsoft to end support or or even announce end of support altogether instead of the incredibly slow death of the technology.
Then we will have justification to push email or VOIP as a fallback and in absolutely critical installations, an autodialler or SMS appliance.
As it stands, because we can get it to work (with slightly increased effort after every Windows feature update) we'd have to pry the analog voice notifications away from Operators' cold, dead heads.
Twilio is also fairly trivial and low maintenance, but securing an internet-facing application is not. SIP device support would be nice to avoid this.
Honestly, I just want Microsoft to end support or or even announce end of support altogether instead of the incredibly slow death of the technology.
Then we will have justification to push email or VOIP as a fallback and in absolutely critical installations, an autodialler or SMS appliance.
As it stands, because we *can* get it to work (with slightly increased effort after every Windows feature update) we'd have to pry the analog voice notifications away from Operators' cold, dead heads.
Twilio is also fairly trivial and low maintenance, but securing an internet-facing application is not. SIP device support would be nice to avoid this.
edited Sep 6 '19 at 8:22 pm