About the project
The VoIP Domain project was created by detecting the need for a tool for administration of VoIP PBX’s that are less complex, using minimal technical terms and allowing an administrator with little knowledge to have the full capacity of telephony management.
For this reason the result was a robust system, which requires an initial configuration with a little more technical, but once installed, all administration can be done by computer laymen with the need of little instruction.
The regionalization of resources (dial tone, dial plan, language, among others) are transparent in the system, so that the user does not need to manually configure already homologated devices, nor the creation of routes, dialing rules, among other common tasks of other VoIP administration systems less focused on the corporate world.
Every system was created with a structure in mind based on the consumption of an extensive and complete API, allowing the interconnection with other systems, and a modular structure where it can be easily expanded by developers without the need to change the original source code. This plug-in support allows changes to be easily ported between versions, enabling a simple and secure upgrade of the entire system, making it easy to upgrade to use new features and bug fixes.
Who are us?
The project was created and is maintained by Ernani José Camargo Azevedo, a VoIP specialist with more than 10 years of experience in the field, with more than 35 years of programming experience, more than 25 years of Unix/Linux knowledge and specialist in the area of computational forensics.
Has already developed several commercial projects using Asterisk, and with the acquired experience created the VoIP Domain, making it public so that the use of technology became more transparent for small and medium enterprises that have a more limited technical staff, often making the use of very technical tools.
Collaboration with the project is welcome and the developer community are still being created. Translators for other languages are warmly welcomed, as well as a review of regionalized resources.