Deploying Polycom Phones Properly
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Those are SoundStation 335 models. Two of them. Not worth plugging in, not worth one penny. Total garbage in every sense. No reason to store them. Only good disposition, straight in the trash.
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@WrCombs said in Deploying Polycom Phones Properly:
is this the same with Cisco?
Just curious.Cisco is pretty bad, but I find Cisco to be "overpriced, low quality", but these Polycom are "absolutely worthless."
If you already had a Cisco that was free, for example, it would just be a normal low to mid end phone. You wouldn't be excited, but you'd be happy it was free. But these Polycom, even for free, aren't worth plugging in.
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what's the take on Toshiba Ip Series phones?
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I think that is the exact same phone we have at the front desk. Given to us by AT&T, has not been any trouble so far... but everything else here is an antique Cisco (SPA504G), of which I managed to brick about 10 trying to provision them with AT&T's broken instructions.
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@scottalanmiller SoundPoint 560 works just fine over
tftp
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But I generally agree with you. They are such a pain in the ass to work with.
Someone over on the FreePBX community finally figured out that you had to accept an upload form the phones if you wanted them to provision over
HTTP/HTTPS
. It was this logic I co-opted for the Yealink local contact backup.https://community.freepbx.org/t/polycom-phones-via-http-and-https/56767
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@RojoLoco said in Deploying Polycom Phones Properly:
I think that is the exact same phone we have at the front desk. Given to us by AT&T, has not been any trouble so far... but everything else here is an antique Cisco (SPA504G), of which I managed to brick about 10 trying to provision them with AT&T's broken instructions.
I think that is the SPA model we used to replace these Polycoms temporarily till we order more Yealinks.
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@WrCombs said in Deploying Polycom Phones Properly:
what's the take on Toshiba Ip Series phones?
not even on the radar, Toshiba makes phone systems, do they sell phones?
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@scottalanmiller said in Deploying Polycom Phones Properly:
@WrCombs said in Deploying Polycom Phones Properly:
what's the take on Toshiba Ip Series phones?
not even on the radar, Toshiba makes phone systems, do they sell phones?
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@WrCombs that's Mitel now. So... not good. High cost, meh quality.
No old school maker like Toshiba, NEC, etc. is known to be any good.
Basically the big players are people like Yealink and Snom. Second tier has Sangoma and Ubiquiti. Getting into many other names sends you down a rabbit hole of problems and cost.
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@scottalanmiller said in Deploying Polycom Phones Properly:
@WrCombs that's Mitel now. So... not good. High cost, meh quality.
No old school maker like Toshiba, NEC, etc. is known to be any good.
Basically the big players are people like Yealink and Snom. Second tier has Sangoma and Ubiquiti. Getting into many other names sends you down a rabbit hole of problems and cost.
gotcha, thanks for explaining that
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@scottalanmiller said in Deploying Polycom Phones Properly:
@WrCombs said in Deploying Polycom Phones Properly:
what's the take on Toshiba Ip Series phones?
not even on the radar, Toshiba makes phone systems, do they sell phones?
Toshiba, technically Toshiba Unified Communications, no longer exists.
Mitel bought them in 2017.
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@scottalanmiller said in Deploying Polycom Phones Properly:
@WrCombs that's Mitel now. So... not good. High cost, meh quality.
No old school maker like Toshiba, NEC, etc. is known to be any good.
Basically the big players are people like Yealink and Snom. Second tier has Sangoma and Ubiquiti. Getting into many other names sends you down a rabbit hole of problems and cost.
Current Grandstream models are supposed to be much improved. I have not yet gotten to test them myself though.
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@JaredBusch said in Deploying Polycom Phones Properly:
@scottalanmiller said in Deploying Polycom Phones Properly:
@WrCombs that's Mitel now. So... not good. High cost, meh quality.
No old school maker like Toshiba, NEC, etc. is known to be any good.
Basically the big players are people like Yealink and Snom. Second tier has Sangoma and Ubiquiti. Getting into many other names sends you down a rabbit hole of problems and cost.
Current Grandstream models are supposed to be much improved. I have not yet gotten to test them myself though.
And they weren't that bad before, just really cheap. But even in their cheap years were good value for cheap phones.
I forgot to list them. Worth considering.
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Not that my opinion matters much considering the scale of what @scottalanmiller and @JaredBusch deploy, but we've had good luck with the GXP-2170 Grandstream phones and FreePBX.
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So I should just get rid of the TOTE of 20 or so IP650 Polycom phones someone left on my desk?
(for those not in the know, my desk often becomes the Junk/Recycle pile collection site for some reason) -
@jt1001001 said in Deploying Polycom Phones Properly:
(for those not in the know, my desk often becomes the Junk/Recycle pile collection site for some reason)
Funny, mine does this as well, must be some kind of magnet. . .
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@DustinB3403 said in Deploying Polycom Phones Properly:
@jt1001001 said in Deploying Polycom Phones Properly:
(for those not in the know, my desk often becomes the Junk/Recycle pile collection site for some reason)
Funny, mine does this as well, must be some kind of magnet. . .
It's the same attitude that IT = takes care of all things that plug into a wall. It plugs in and I'm throwing it out, I bet the IT guy would like it.
Now let me introduce them to Mr Reality, the IT guy is just going to throw it away and be annoyed that he has to.
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@travisdh1 said in Deploying Polycom Phones Properly:
@DustinB3403 said in Deploying Polycom Phones Properly:
@jt1001001 said in Deploying Polycom Phones Properly:
(for those not in the know, my desk often becomes the Junk/Recycle pile collection site for some reason)
Funny, mine does this as well, must be some kind of magnet. . .
It's the same attitude that IT = takes care of all things that plug into a wall. It plugs in and I'm throwing it out, I bet the IT guy would like it.
Now let me introduce them to Mr Reality, the IT guy is just going to throw it away and be annoyed that he has to.
No, a real IT staffer will ensure it is properly recycled.
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@jt1001001 said in Deploying Polycom Phones Properly:
So I should just get rid of the TOTE of 20 or so IP650 Polycom phones someone left on my desk?
(for those not in the know, my desk often becomes the Junk/Recycle pile collection site for some reason)I would. Or get them to eBay.