In this video I take you through exactly how Dynamic Emergency Calling works with complete demos on moving MS Teams clients around the enterprise and movement outside the enterprise in a work from home scenario.
Пікірлер: 8
@Lyle-In-NO8 ай бұрын
Awesome video! I wish it also included mobile Teams clients (Android, etc) & if/when/how the mobile phone's GPS can be used to send a user's coordinates as the user's location.
@dogslove96747 ай бұрын
Amazing work Anson, with pictures and everything. I understood everything in under 40 minutes. Just one thing, i am working on a direct routing project, and will i be emergency call routing policy in instead of calling policy ? You never showed where did you configure what number to dial for emergency calling, which in your case was 933.
@jackmitchell94832 жыл бұрын
I think the reason you didn't get an address when you were outside the enterprise may be due to needing to enable Location services to be accessed by the Teams app. Your default global emergency calling policy has external lookup mode enabled. But the Teams app couldn't get the location from the computer. In windows, you enable that in the "Location Privacy Settings". We had to restart the Teams client after enabling it. After that, the laptop was able to auto detect the location.
@adeshjadhav5235 Жыл бұрын
Great information
@deepkumar71682 жыл бұрын
Awesome
@ericartist Жыл бұрын
Is there any kind of pop-up or alert to the user to let them know they are at an unknown/unregistered location or are we depending on people to think to change their 911 address whenever they leave their home office and work from somewhere else?
@tomoreau152 жыл бұрын
can you make the Teams client outpulse a certain CLID for 911 based on what office the user is in?
@TheAskAnsonChannel Жыл бұрын
I don't think so. However, you can send an ELIN in PIDFLO and then make your SBC do whatever it wants with that before it sends to the ERS. You can also not have it pass on PIDFLO and move the ELIN to CallID and then pass it to ERS or SIP Trunk Provider.