Well, you could probably use one of the many SIP SDK's to write a
bluetooth->SIP gateway, and then make it talk to a Cisco ATA-186 device
(which run about $150) over the network.  The box will generate a dialtone
and ring your phones when a call comes in.

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Carl Wilhelm Soderstrom [mailto:chrome at real-time.com] 
> Sent: Tuesday, July 09, 2002 3:45 PM
> To: tclug-list at mn-linux.org
> Subject: Re: [TCLUG] OT: ATT GSM
> 
> 
> > I wonder if the bluetooth stuff works under linux.
> 
> don't see why it shouldn't.
> 
> Nate tells me that the wireless bluetooth headsets are 
> actually another 'telephone device' the the cellphone 
> acutally *forwards* calls to. 
> what I'd really like to do with something like that, is have 
> a linux box at home, with a bluetooth card/dongle on it, that 
> is plugged into my wired phones at home. so the cellphone 
> just forwards calls to the linux box, which makes the analog 
> phones ring. I get the advantages of wired phones (cheap, can 
> put many throughout the house), with the advantage of the 
> cellphone (cheaper service in some cases). 
> 
> something like that Internet PhoneJack thing should be able 
> to generate dialtone, right? I just need to build some sort 
> of linux PBX to handle the bluetooth/cellphone <-> wired 
> phone connection.
> 
> at least that's what I'm guessing so far... I admit that I 
> don't know diddly squat about telephones, and I know that 
> things are a *lot* more complicated than I lay out above. 
> (getting voltage to ring the phones, etc).
> 
> anyone ever built a linux PBX? with analog phones?
> 
> Carl Soderstrom.
> -- 
> Network Engineer
> Real-Time Enterprises
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