We use Yealink and Fanvil.

The customers use what we support, or they're not customers. Now, we may expand 
the scope of what we support, but there needs to be a very good reason to 
expand that scope.




--
Mike Hammett

----- Original Message -----
From: "Nate Burke" <n...@blastcomm.com>
To: "AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group" <af@af.afmug.com>
Sent: Tuesday, April 1, 2025 12:41:14 PM
Subject: [AFMUG] Desk VoIP Phones

We've been using grandstream phones for quite a while, cheap and easy to 
provision.  One of my new business customers is making a stink because 
'he's never heard of Grandstream, these phones just don't work with my 
bluetooth headset, I NEED a Cisco phone because that's a real phone'  
I'm thinking that it's mainly about ego, that his friends probably have 
Cisco phones on their desks, and he doesn't, so he's making up issues.

I haven't used Cisco phones in many years, Linksys SPA504G's were my 
last dabble into non-grandstream phones.

It looks like a Cisco phone with Bluetooth (A requirement) is about $550 
for an 8851.  How do you provision those?  Is there any sort of cloud 
provisioning?  Still done with TFTP?   Put some sort of call manager on 
site?  I really like that I can provision the Grandstream phones while 
they are behind the customers firewall without having to do any port 
forwarding etc.  Cisco always used to like Licensing, is that still the 
case to use them with normal SIP, or are they all SIP now.

Just wondering if it's worth trying to investigate Cisco phones for this 
one customer, or if Cisco phones really want a Cisco Callmanager on the 
backend.


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