Digium TE121
Digium TE121 Summary
Digium TE121
The Digium TE121 is a high-performance, cost effective digital
telephony interface card with the power to create a seamless network,
interconnecting traditional telephony systems with emerging Voice over
IP technologies.
Used in conjunction with Asterisk®, the TE121 can be used to deliver
a wide range of PBX and IVR services to the network or handset
including Voicemail, Call Conferencing, Three-way Calling, and VoIP
Gateways.
The TE121 is a single span, selectable T1
(24-channel), E1 (32-channel), or J1 (24-channel) card. The card
utilizes Digium's VoiceBus™ technology. VoiceBus technology allows the
TE121 to use an industry standard bus-mastering PCI Express interface,
as found in millions of PCs worldwide, to maximize system compatibility
and eliminate system conflicts. Improving upon the prior TE120P which
does not offer expansion capabilities, the TE121 may be combined with
Digium's VPMADT032 echo cancellation module to deliver 128ms of echo
cancellation across 30 channels in E1 mode or 24 channels in T1 mode.
Bundled with the VPMADT032, the product SKU is TE121B.
The
TE121 supports both voice and data modes on its single span. For
example, the card can support 12 channels dedicated to voice, routed
directly to the Asterisk Open Source PBX, and 12 to data, handled by
the underlying Linux operating system, thus eliminating the need for an
external router. The TE121 works in any PCI Express compliant slot.
By
utilizing our TDMoE (TDM over Ethernet) technology, an exclusive Digium
process, you can easily connect multiple PCs equipped with the TE121
and achieve voice quality on par with single PBX implementations.
Scalability for this product is derived from adding multiple TE121
cards to each individual PC. Add additional cards as you need them for
your expanding applications.
The TE121 supports industry
standard telephony and data protocols, including both RBS and Primary
Rate ISDN (PRI) protocol families for voice and PPP, Cisco HDLC, and
Frame Relay data modes. The board drives both line-side and trunk-side
interfaces, including call features.