<div dir="ltr"><font color="#663366"><font face="trebuchet ms,sans-serif">Hello All,</font></font><div><font color="#663366"><font face="trebuchet ms,sans-serif"><br></font></font></div><div><font color="#663366"><font face="trebuchet ms,sans-serif">just throwing this out there. What are people generally using these days when designing their services, esp. those that require a user to call a DID to access their system, similar to calling card services. There was a time when this used to be 50 to 1 for DIDs, and about 10 to 1 for number of channels bought in SMB with IP-PBX. </font></font></div>
<div><font color="#663366"><font face="trebuchet ms,sans-serif"><br></font></font></div><div><font color="#663366"><font face="trebuchet ms,sans-serif">I believe this would have changed today and assuming a service is pretty popular, the ALOCs are longer due to cheaper rates and convenience of calling. Does anyone have any real world numbers they can share? Is 10 to 1 a good ratio to ensure a user practically never gets a "circuits are busy"?</font></font></div>
<div><font color="#663366"><font face="trebuchet ms,sans-serif"><br></font></font></div><div><font color="#663366"><font face="trebuchet ms,sans-serif">Thanks in advance</font></font></div></div>