Asterisk is a core component in many commercial products and open-source projects. Some of the commercial products are hardware and software bundles, for which the manufacturer supports and releases the software with an open-source distribution model. •
AskoziaPBX, a fork of the
m0n0wall project, uses Asterisk PBX software to realize all telephony functions. • AstLinux is a "Network Appliance for Communications" open-source
software distribution. •
FreePBX, an open-source
graphical user interface, bundles Asterisk as the core of its
FreePBX Distro •
LinuxMCE bundles Asterisk to provide telephony; there is also an embedded version of Asterisk for OpenWrt routers. • PBX in a Flash/Incredible PBX and
trixbox are software PBXes based on Asterisk. •
Elastix previously used Asterisk,
HylaFAX,
Openfire and
Postfix to offer PBX, fax,
instant messaging and email functions, respectively, before switching to
3CX. •
Issabel is an open-source
Unified Communications software which uses Asterisk for telephony functions. It was forked from the open-source versions of Elastix when 3CX acquired it. • *astTECS uses Asterisk in its VoIP and mobile gateways. •
Grandstream's UCM series of IP-PBX appliances uses Asterisk with a custom web interface. •
E-MetroTel UCX is a system developed by former
Nortel engineers, running on Asterisk, designed to work with Nortel's digital and IP phones, as well as to integrate with other Nortel equipment. It also works with other products from other vendors, including
NEC,
Mitel,
Avaya, and
Cisco. Various add-on products, often commercial, are available that extend Asterisk features and capabilities. The standard voice prompts included with the system are free. A business can purchase matching voice announcements of its company name, IVR menu options and employee or department names (as a library of live recordings of common names or a set of fully customised prompts recorded by the same professional voice talent) at additional cost for seamless integration into the system. Other add-ons provide fax support, text-to-speech, additional
codecs and new features. Some third-party add-ons are free; a few even support embedded platforms such as the
Raspberry Pi. ==See also==