My only experience is with their Budgetone 102. You basically get you pay for. I have since purchased a pair of Aastra 480i. Much much better. I am going to put the Budgetone on ebay, no point dealing with all the hassle. The main issue for me was actually not sofware but rather the design of the handset.


Vahan Yerkanian wrote:
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

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