I have been a long time user of Skype and love it. I call locally in the US, and internationally to Europe, Asia and Africa. It’s convenient to call someone up while working on the computer. Since Skype introduced the flat plan for local US calling, I have invested in a multitude of dedicated Skype Phones and my experience has been mixed.
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Pros: Wireless so call from anywhere in the house Skype Contacts list to easily dial from Charge lasts a few days Incoming calls, voicemail etc are all available on this phone
Cons: Wireless is intermittent. This impacts the call quality Wireless needs WEP. I don’t like to keep my network so vulnerable
I gave up on this phone because the call quality was just so horrible. Even locally in the US, people were having trouble hearing me. |
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Pros: Cheap. Works by plugging in a home phone into the VOIP socket
Cons: Usability is horrible. You have some weird number sequence you have to press to make a call. And even then, it doesn’t work until you try it for about 20 minutes Call quality is poor No Skype list to call from Tethered to a desktop. Which means you have to have the machine on all the time
I gave up on this phone too. If making a call requires 20 minutes and an always on computer, might as well just use a headset on the computer. |
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Pros: Slim design Skype contacts list Connects to your router Incoming calls, voicemail etc are all available on this phone
Cons: No wireless which means you are tethered to its location Call quality is semi-decent
I settled on this phone because it seems to just work. I find that after a few days of usage, you have to turn the power off completely for about 30 seconds and then call quality is acceptable again. After searching the internet on ways to hack this, I came across Wiretrip Hardhack which was very revealing. The phone is actually a server which means you can see a UI that will let you update its firmware. BTW, there was NO mention of this in the documentation that came with the phone. Believe it or not, I setup QOS and also tried putting this phone in a DMZ in order to improve call quality before I found the power cycle fix.
From a security perspective, running a server is bad especially if the username is admin and the password is blank. Anyone can get in and if they have a hack for the firmware, upload a malicious firmware which will let them snoop on calls and get access to the rest of your network. If you have this device behind a router with a good firewall (I use DD-WRT) then you should be ok. |