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I found hard wiring a two-handset phone works best, it allows you to place one handset wherever you want
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Be careful not to stress the wires at the ethernet jack by puling on the ethernet cable.
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At one point (in an apartment for 1 year), I was completely hard wired and never had any issues with packet loss.
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I found hard wiring a two-handset phone works best, it allows you to place one handset wherever you want
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One has a loose Ethernet wire
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I intend to go under my home and run a phone wire to my computer office to "hard wire" via the existing lines, just because some of our phones are not the cordless.
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Almost as clear as a hard wire land line
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I upgraded to their better service that offers several good features and it costs me a few dollars more per month; still, much less than what I was paying to the hard-wired folks
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The only difference I can tell between Ooma Telo and a hard wired land line is the bill at the end of the month.
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Almost as clear as a hard wire land line
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And in top of that I am saving over $50 a month over AT&T hard wire phone service
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Just plugging Ooma directly into 1 of 4 hard wired ports cleared up our issues
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Call quality is very good, almost as good as a wired phone (when it was not buzzing due to poor connections in the boxes along the road).I could not be happier.
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Then, connect the Telo to any jack in the house, and if your inside wiring is good, all the phones in your house will act -just- as they did before--with maybe better quality sound.
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We have it hard wired to our router and it serves a Panasonic wireless set of five handsets throughout the house.
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The Ooma unit is hard wired to the router.
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Since purchasing Ooma, I upgraded my computer which no longer has the old hard-wire technology
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Voice quality is excellent; other end doesn't even suspect I
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well i really like the 5$ phone bill ease of use ? took 7 days to port the number at a cost of 47$ all these added costs are not to my liking