Ooma Telo VoIP Gratis Internet Doheem Telefon Service mat 3 HD3 Handyen. Bezuelbar Festnetz Ersatz. Onlimitéiert Nationwide Calling. Repondeur. Optioun fir Roboter ze blockéieren.

Brand:ooma

3.2/5

172.91

Dee schlausten Heemtelefon ass deen deen Iech genee gëtt wat Dir wëllt mat de gréisste Spueren Dat ass Ooma Telo Connect Ooma Telo op Ären Héichgeschwindeg Internet a regelméissegen Heemtelefon a kritt glaskloer national gratis Uruff Dir bezuelt nëmme monatlech applicabel Steieren an Fraisen Ëmfaasst super Stëmmqualitéit an Zouverlässegkeet mat Ooma Pure Voice HD Technologie Voicemail Caller-ID Call-waiting an 911 Halt Är aktuell Nummer fir eng eemoleg Frais oder wielt eng nei Nummer an all verfügbare Beräich Code gratis Optional fortgeschratt Funktiounen sinn verfügbar mat Ooma Premier Service abegraff onparalleléiert Blacklisting Features fir Telemarketer an aner ongewollt Uruffer gratis Uruff a Kanada a Mexiko ze blockéieren eng Instant Second Line Voicemail-zu-E-Mail Forwarding a méi Ooma Telo integréiert och mat Echo a villen anere Smart Produkter fir Iech Komfort a Fridden ze ginn vergiessen ni virdrun méiglech an engem Heem Telefon Bundle enthält dräi Ooma HD3 Handyen mat Bild Caller-ID

Keng Unitéiten verfügbar
Ëmfaasst onlimitéiert landwäit Vocatioun Voicemail Uruff-ID Call-waiting an 911 Uruff mat Text Alarmer. PureVoice HD liwwert eng super Stëmmqualitéit fir eng konsequent super Urufferfahrung. # 1 bewäerten Heemtelefonservice fir allgemeng Zefriddenheet a Wäert vun enger féierender Konsumentefuerschungspublikatioun. Ëmfaasst dräi Ooma HD3 Handyen mat Faarfbildschierm a Bild Caller-ID. Kristallkloer landwäit rufft gratis an niddreg international Tariffer Bezuelt nëmme monatlech applicabel Steieren a Fraisen.
Answering System Type Digital
Brand ooma
Caller Identification No
Color Black
Conference Call Capability 2 way
Country of Origin China
Customer Reviews 4.1 4.1 out of 5 stars 717 ratings 4.1 out of 5 stars
Dialer Type Single Keypad
Item model number TELO3HD3
Item Weight 4.19 pounds
Manufacturer Ooma
Package Dimensions 11 x 8.5 x 6.1 inches
Power Source Corded Electric
Recording Capacity 22 minutes

3.2

8 Review
5 Star
60
4 Star
17
3 Star
7
2 Star
6
1 Star
10

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Scritto da: MinorAgentofChaos
Easy to set up & use; hardest part was entering billing info
Important details: we use an older (2018) Intel Macs on AtlanticBB/Breezeline. We've used an ATT landline for years & have never had a cell phone or Internet phone; we're probably the last GenXers in the US to even have a landline, & since we barely use the phone anyway, never felt the need to switch. However, ATT's worsening service, horrible customer care, and persistent issues with our line finally drove us to look for other options. Ooma was recommended to us by folks on the Reddit sub for our city (r/Columbus). I was a bit concerned over the bad reviews here, I admit, especially since health issues require us to have a reliable 911 ability. After going thru the entire setup process, I'm now puzzled; the biggest problem we had was entering our credit card info. So, this is the basic Telo unit with three wireless/wifi handsets. Telo plugs into your modem/router, handsets' bases need to be plugged into a power source & the bases connect over wifi to the Telo unit. We've currently got two of the handsets in use; third is being saved as a backup. The setup directions (booklet & app) were clear and easy to follow: set up the account, plugged the Telo unit into the ethernet port of our modem/router unit & waited for all the updates to finish. That part took over an hour, mostly because our ISP had sent us new equipment the day before and THAT was having fits. Two reboots, one reset & a call to Breezeline support later, our Internet finally stabilized & Ooma's Telo finished its updates. Plugged in the wifi handsets, waited for the handsets to download their updates, got the "welcome" call from Ooma, and much cheering commenced. Our ATT line has been filled with static for the last couple months, ruining several important calls & making it hard for callers to hear us, too. As our first test, we had my elderly mother-in-law call us on the new temp number, and we talked to her on a perfectly clear connection on those wireless handsets while we walked around the apartment to make sure the connection held. It's a small apartment, roughly 600 sq ft, and the connection was clear & strong all thru it. We're surrounded by tons of other Wifi points/home networks, but there's no interference. We're still getting used to all the options & menus on the handsets (old phone is just a simple handset attached to an answering machine), but the documentation & shortcut card have been easy to understand & follow so far, and our phone needs are pretty basic anyway. the only major issue was getting the billing information entered in. For some reason, Ooma's app, website, & automated phone customer-service refused to accept any credit card info from us. Bank showed no issue with the account, but didn't show any declines or auth attempts from Ooma, either. Took two calls to Ooma Customer Service to resolve -- first rep referred us to the automated phone line (no go); second call rep had to transfer us to an actual supervisor to manually enter the billing into our account. Our old phone number finished its porting yesterday -- took only a week & works great. I'm dreading the ATT cancellation call, but that's ATT's issue. I'll add to this review after a month or so, after we've settled into and used Ooma a while. But so far? Impressed.
Scritto da: Albert
My 2nd Ooma
My first Ooma just died. I had it for over 10 years though so I'm pretty ok with that. I'm a little disappointed because I thought this was the Telo Air - which is totally wireless. And it's not. It has to be plugged in to the router/modem. So, you're pretty limited on where this can be. Why aren't they ALL wireless at this point? Other than that though. I've been using Ooma for years and really like it. I think it's a little expensive at $100+ a year and then you also have to pay taxes - which in my case are like $13 a month. 911 isn't great. Someone was breaking into my home years ago. I called 911. They didn't get there for 4 hours because Ooma had sent them somewhere else. Part of that is a bad 911 operator who didn't listen when I gave my address. He just looked at what the phone system was telling him - and ooma was telling them I was in another city. So, I had a smashed window, cuts on my arm and the guy got away. Thanks ooma. I noticed that when I bought this new ooma there was a big note as soon as you open the box specifically saying, and I'm paraphrasing "Listen, 911 is awful on our service. You need to do this this and this to make sure it's even kind of accurate and even then please be specific to the operator and tell them you have an internet phone and they may be seeing false information." Other than those complaints - and they may be big ones for some of you - I do like ooma. I really like the call blocking and black list service. I like these new hand sets too. Since they're made for the ooma telo devices they work much better than any other average phone (which will also work) My old set had an answering machine. So, I had an answering machine and ooma's voicemail. I never knew where my messages were going. Some would go to machine, others to voice mail. And that kind of stunk. Now that I've replaced my very old beat up phones, I just have the voice mail. The phones have nice color screens. Are easy to use. Can be used as intercoms. And each phone can be programmed to ring with a different phone number. So, if you call me/the house these 2 phones will ring - my daughter has her own line so if you call her JUST her phone will ring. It's very convenient. Ooma isn't perfect and it has its problems but the good outweighs the bad. In my opinion.
Scritto da: HatManDo
Crazy Pricing, Great Phone
I have been using an Ooma Telo with the HD2 handset for years, but the HD2 handset was failing to charge the battery (I had replaced the rechargeable batteries and they still would not charge when the phone was on the cradle.) So, I planned to just order a new HD3 handset. However, the new HD3 handset was $50 alone and this set offered three handsets plus a new Ooma Telo base for $100, so I now have a lot of spares. My existing base is pretty old, so I thought having a replacement ready might be a good idea. I considered just going ahead and changing the base, but I found out you actually have to call Ooma to change the base out (unlike everything else with them which you do solely online.) The new HD3 handset is an improvement on the old HD2, it is slimmer and easier to hold, the cradle is smaller, but they did change from AA rechargeable batteries to AAA rechargeable batteries, yet it seems the battery life is about the same. Using Ooma for my business phone has saved me $1000's over the past seven years and the initial setup of the hardware is still the best setup experience I have had.
Scritto da: Andy G
Can not use the phones in UK
Bad choice made
Scritto da: LRod
Better value than the 1- and 2-phone kits!
I bought the Ooma box but found my old phone (which has its own answering machine) didn't work well with it. I initially wanted to just grab an Ooma handset so as not to have any compatibility issues. But when I checked online, the 3-phone was the best value! I did have to wait for Ooma to switch to the new box before proceeding -- you have to call in to do this and can't be done online. After I received confirmation of the transfer, setup was simple enough. Make sure you allow your Ooma box to update first. Once it's up and running, you can pair the phones. They too need to update, but after a few minutes they're good to go! Not sure why this 3-phone Ooma kit costs less than the one with 2 phones, or even the one with a single handset. I thought it may be used or refurbished, but it was pristine upon opening. I only really needed a single phone, so now I have 2 in reserve! Happy shopping!
Scritto da: William D. Bailey
Poor support in case of a defective product
I purchased the Ooma Telo and two HD3 handsets. The Telo and one handset were easy to set up and get operational HOWEVER the other handset didn't work properly. After a bit of a run-around thru Online Chat, then Tech Support by telephone, the Tech Support insisted I buy new batteries AT MY OWN EXPENSE, which I did. When the problem persisted, I called Tech Support again and after much messing about, they admitted that the handset must be defective. They insisted I would have to BUY ANOTHER HANDSET AT MY OWN EXPENSE. They assured me that once I had the new, replacement handset, they would refund me the cost of that handset. I have ordered the new handset from Ooma.ca; once I have it I'll set what happens. Ooma's service and service policies seem sorely wanting.
Scritto da: Lloyd
Not the vendors fault
Upgrading was extremely annoying and frustrating. You need to contact them to do an upgrade to a new device, which requires calling a 1-800 that takes forever to get through. When you finally speak to someone they need to escalate the request and advised I'd be emailed when it was ready to be plugged in. A week later, I contacted them back, and they said it had been ready for days. Upgrading a phone modem should not be this hard.
Scritto da: El Jefito
Economical consumer-grade VoIP with budget handsets and off-shore customer support
After 6 months of service, Ooma's service exceeds expectations for voice quality and reliability. The basic plan continues to be the cheapest turn-key consumer grade VoIP I have seen. I never write reviews, but this service and hardware combination deserves a simple honest review with no BS. The setup experience might be a bit daunting if you are not technically inclined, but after the setup it truly does have the look and feel of a conventional land line: place/carry the charging stations/phones anywhere in RF range of the base station and use them like conventional phones; as well, when you miss a call the base station has a conventional voice recording system you can review/replay physically in person. I wouldn't buy this expecting an older pre-internet generation to unbox it and set it all up, but I would trust that once set up anyone could use it reliably. At least as of May 2022, all meaningful account changes require calling support, which routes you to a clearly outsourced call center where agents are trained to read sterile prompts as you navigate through changing service. For example, if you downgrade from the free premium trial, you have to decline keeping the premium service after listening to someone read a list of features. English is a second language at the call center, so some aspects of support are choppy. I guess this is to be expected of a $5/month service. Coupled with a service like Starlink, Ooma is a delight for cutting any need for external wires to your property while keeping creature comforts like the ability to call 911 without cell service. Ooma's app lets you use your VoIP account from your phone to place or receive calls and to manage voicemails. Ooma's online account website also lets you set up basic rules for failing back to call forwarding if the base station goes offline and for e-mailing you audio files for new voicemails. Nothing is overly complicated. Their website, perhaps fittingly, looks like it's nearly from the era of a living room length of spiral phone cord affixed to an old phone mounted to a wall in the kitchen. You can almost hear Vince selling Slap Chops or the home shopping network in the background as you navigate their website. The base station is decent. However, the "HD3" handsets that come with this kit feel like they were designed to minimize cost to manufacture without forgiveness... I wouldn't want to see how one fairs if knocked on to the floor. Every component feels cheap. The speakers used to service the earpiece as well as the speaker phone mode are both absolutely atrocious. Sound quality is not great in the earpiece, and is laughably bad on speaker phone. But it's all certainly "good enough". To clarify: I suspect the sound quality for the service itself is great; the limiting factor feels like it's the speaker of the cheap "HD3" handset. The viable range for the phones from the base station is not as impressive as I hoped. We have been able to walk around the house without worry and walk outside maybe 10-15 ft. The phones do not make it obvious if you walk slightly out of range while on a call, but you can roughly get a feel for your space and I still consider it to be "good enough" for how cheap everything is. The phone features/LCD/etc. vary between surprising and underwhelming. Keeping a few contacts is not too difficult: you can sync them from the Ooma app (I wouldn't, as it would probably be hard to search through tons of contacts) or enter the critical ones piecemeal online (the route I took). The phones sync contacts online--a surprising convenience. Calling a contact requires browsing a menu which would be hard to coach for less technical people. But, you can press the first letter of the name of a contact as if you're dialing a number and it will present a list of contacts and that seems to work well for less technical people. On the underwhelming side: many features are buried in menus that have a bit of noticeable latency. On the surprising side: I didn't expect features like intercom between phones which proves useful if they are placed in different nearby buildings like a garage or shop. I imagine if you coupled this base station with a nicer Panasonic or VTech phone you'd have a truly great system across the board (cheap VoIP plus good hardware), but given how little we use a land line, it was hard enough to justify the $90 or whatever this was on sale. We'll keep the service for the foreseeable future to have a landline for emergencies or simple local calls.

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