Stay away from Grandstream and AddPac. These are some of the companies with undereducated software developers that have problems with understanding written english, mainly the SIP RFC documents. I learned this the hard way, wasting half a year with helping them fix problems which shouldn't be there if they have had read/implemented the RFC correctly.

Basically, they sell beta quality hardware and then you co-share their final firmware development costs by providing free testing/QA. I blame their sales management for pushing developers to release without proper testing.

GXP2000 is much more buggy echo-can wise than the earlier models.

For now, I'm back to more expensive equipment. We're not that rich to pay twice.

HTH,
Vahan


Avi Miller wrote:
Brian Capouch wrote:

They don't perform as well as the expensive Ciscos and Polycoms, but many of us are using them in a variety of circumstances quite happily.


I have 4 of them in a small office (GXP2000) running 1.0.12 and they're just fine for our purposes. As Brian said, YMMV. For our 60-person office in Sydney, I'm probably going to use a mix of Polycom/Grandstream and softphones.

cYa,
Avi

_______________________________________________
--Bandwidth and Colocation provided by Easynews.com --

Asterisk-Users mailing list
To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
  http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users

Reply via email to