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This is amazing, and at first glance it is going to solve many of my problems. I see offers to start a free trial but nothing about pricing. The sign up page doesn't work well with my password manager, I imagine you need to add auto fill hints to the textboxes, looks like your using flutter, so add these to each textbox you want to autofill: https://api.flutter.dev/flutter/material/TextField/autofillH..., it should also work with mobile

When I sign up, I get an error when confirming my email: This site can’t be reached The webpage at https://api.onlyrecipeapp.com/?code=XXX

Good work, looks very promising.


Oh shoot!

That's a reverse proxy configuration error. I just fixed it.

Please try registering again.


This just seems like another VOIP service wrapped in nostalgia. There are MANY cheaper and better options. I say this because I recently added a VOIP line for exactly this reason to give my kids a way to call their friends without a smart phone.

Here are many good options https://www.ooma.com/blog/home-phone/best-voip-service-for-h...


How easy is it to manage the calling allowlist for those providers? That seems to be the key value proposition here; the parent app that controls the allowlist.


[flagged]


> It's not. bja is yet another who rushes to the comments to ACKSHUALLY provide an "alternative" that is no such thing.

And again. Please avoid this kind of fulmination and sneering. https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html


Keep in mind, the main use case is allowing kids to call their friends and family and no one else.

VoIP nerds out there, is there any simple PFSense equivalent for VoIP that would allow you to DIY this? Basically restrict inbound and outbound calls to a whitelist?


You might like FreePBX[0] for a PFSense-style "PBX appliance" with easy WebUI. Just grab the ISO (or shell script to install on Debian). It's built on Asterisk, and more than adequate for the task. Whilst FreeSWITCH is awesome it's way more complex and overkill for this use case.

[0]: https://freepbx.org


Awesome, thanks! I'll check it out.


Yes, get a trunk from someone like BulkVS, SignalWire and run your own freeswitch or asterix. You can set up arbitrary “allowed” lists. Hell you can even get fancy with lookups and decide on the fly to allow a call or not.

There are other comments about providers, but my way is way cheaper and you can run you EPBAX on a pi or even get a pre made VM from Azure, Amazon, etc.

Damn I hate paying rent.


Whoa, love this. Do you have any recommended resources if I wanted to try this out? Any comments about FreeSWITCH vs Asterisk, or BulkVS vs Signalwire for a simple setup like this?


Freeswitch is more complicated and has a steeper learning curve, but you can pair it with FusionPBX and it will make things a lot more palatable. Asterix is the grand daddy of this stuff. The community is stronger for Asterix. Freeswitch is pretty much infinitely customizable.

SignalWire is the primary sponsor of Freeswitch but is mainly geared towards HUGE installations. BulkVS is cheaper and better in my opinion. You can also look at AnveoDirect, which is more raw than BulkVS, but you can become really really fancy with it. Like, call center fancy.


I did a writeup of my own experiences using Asterisk for this exact use case: https://github.com/mnutt/rotary


This is exactly what I was looking for—thanks! So cool that you did this with a rotary phone.


Asterisk has better voice lines, like if-rotary-phone.wav, tt-somethingwrong.wav, shiny-brass-lamp.wav, you-sound-cute.wav, and tt-monkeysintro.wav.


Some of the providers on that link have “allowlist” as a feature, but I am curious how easy it is to manage. The parent app seems like the real value proposition here.


Why is preventing them from calling other people an important feature? The market for people who care about that sounds extremely tiny.


And that’s fine. It’s cute. It’s fun. Looks like they are optimizing for UX, design, and marketing.


Location: Utah, US Remote: Yes Willing to relocate: No Technologies: Excellent with: C#, .NET (Core, MVC, ASP), back-end and front-end. SQL Server, Powershell, Angular/Typescript Good with: node.js, Docker, Python, Snowflake

    Forgetting: ASP web forms, Elastic Search, Redis
CV/Resume: https://benjaminjanderson.com/images/content/Ben%20Anderson%... Site: https://benjaminjanderson.com/ Email: See CV/Resume 15+ years of experience building world-class software. Roles range from supervisor, architect, engineer, and support for web applications and data pipelines with stringent quality performance.


Wrong thread I think


We've moved it now. Thanks for watching out for a fellow user!


Location: Utah, US

Remote: Yes

Willing to relocate: No

Technologies:

    Excellent with:  C#, .NET (Core, MVC, ASP), back-end and 
front-end. SQL Server, Powershell, Angular/Typescript

    Good with: node.js, Docker, Python, Snowflake

    Forgetting: ASP web forms, Elastic Search, Redis
CV/Resume: https://benjaminjanderson.com/images/content/Ben%20Anderson%...

Site: https://benjaminjanderson.com/

Email: See CV/Resume

15+ years of experience building world-class software. Roles range from supervisor, architect, engineer, and support for web applications and data pipelines with stringent quality performance.


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