Phones
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Grandstream and Yealink are both great. Polycoms are good also, but are way over priced in today's market. I only use PolyCom for Conference phones.
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@fuznutz04 said in Phones:
Grandstream and Yealink are both great. Polycoms are good also, but are way over priced in today's market. I only use PolyCom for Conference phones.
Have you seen the new Yealink CP960 phones. Those things are pretty niffty. . . and very well priced when compared to polycom's comparable models.
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@dustinb3403 said in Phones:
@fuznutz04 said in Phones:
Grandstream and Yealink are both great. Polycoms are good also, but are way over priced in today's market. I only use PolyCom for Conference phones.
Have you seen the new Yealink CP960 phones. Those things are pretty niffty. . . and very well priced when compared to polycom's comparable models.
Yes, I saw those. I'd like to get one to try it out. Those run Android. The last Android based desktop phone I tried (a Ubiquiti phone) was totally useless. It was purely eye candy. However, I'm not blaming that on Android.
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@fuznutz04 said in Phones:
@dustinb3403 said in Phones:
@fuznutz04 said in Phones:
Grandstream and Yealink are both great. Polycoms are good also, but are way over priced in today's market. I only use PolyCom for Conference phones.
Have you seen the new Yealink CP960 phones. Those things are pretty niffty. . . and very well priced when compared to polycom's comparable models.
Yes, I saw those. I'd like to get one to try it out. Those run Android. The last Android based desktop phone I tried (a Ubiquiti phone) was totally useless. It was purely eye candy. However, I'm not blaming that on Android.
Don't the Polycom Trio line also use an Android OS?
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Ok thanks for the info everyone. Seems Yealink is the consensus here. Ill see what meets the budget. Also learned a bit from the other discussions lol. Interesting how that works
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Ok thanks for the info everyone. Seems Yealink is the consensus here. Ill see what meets the budget. Also learned a bit from the other discussions lol. Interesting how that works
Yealink has a wide range of devices, so make sure you're considering what is required in terms of functionality. Before you start asking for a budget.
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@dustinb3403 Understood and thanks. I was planning on that I just didn't type it.
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@jaredbusch said in Phones:
My personal order of preference is
- Yealink
- Sangoma
- Grandstream
I'm about the same, but Snom rather than Grandstream. Used GS a while ago and they were fine, but not great. I wouldn't avoid them, certainly, but they don't make my top three.
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@scottalanmiller said in Phones:
..Used GS a while ago and they were fine, but not great. I wouldn't avoid them, certainly, but they don't make my top three.
Just curious, how long ago was that?
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@fateknollogee said in Phones:
@scottalanmiller said in Phones:
..Used GS a while ago and they were fine, but not great. I wouldn't avoid them, certainly, but they don't make my top three.
Just curious, how long ago was that?
Oh it has been quite a while. Many years.
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GS has come a long way since even a year ago.
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@scottalanmiller said in Phones:
@fuznutz04 said in Phones:
GS has come a long way since even a year ago.
New models this year?
They are always upgrading their models it seems. But I was referring to their firmware. The firmware improves with each release, and adds stuff that should have been there in the first place, as well as bug fixes as usual.