VoIP Supply’s Telemedicine Kit Featured in Medical Economics
Click here to view our HIPAA approved Telemedicine Kit for video conferencing.
Click here to view our HIPAA approved Telemedicine Kit for video conferencing.
The upcoming July issue of INTERNET TELEPHONY magazine will be featuring several cool topics, but possibly the coolest is the winner of the TMC Labs Innovation Award Winner for 2013. Â This award is granted to âproducts that have demonstrated innovation, unique features, and noteworthy developments toward improving communications technologies.â It is not based on best sellers or name brands, but on actual, innovative improvement. Â And we know who won it.
This year the Grandstream GXV3672 Series of infrared IP cameras has taken the prize.
TMCâs CEO Rich Tehrani announced, âWeâre pleased to bestow Grandstream with a Unified Communications TMC Labs Innovation Award. Â The GXV3672 IP Video Camera has show true innovation and is deserving of recognition.â
âBusinesses are investing in IP video surveillance as a way to affordably add applications for physical security monitoring as well as assessing human behavior and market research purposes,â said Grandstream Networks CEO David Li in a press release on the topic. While IP Surveillance might not strike everyone as a communications technology, Grandstream has made their IP Surveillance equipment unique in that the video phones will connect with all of their cameras. Â Not only can you view your security video footage from any web browser, but with a push of a button you can check it on your desk phone! Â Cool, right?
Grandstream offers two cameras from the GXV3672 Series.  Both models offer IR LED lights and IP66 weather-proof casing, providing excellent outdoor surveillance in even low or no light. Theyâre also ready to install with included mounting brackets with the PoE cabling already strung through.  The GXV3672_HD offers a 1.2 Megapixel CMOS sensor for 720p HD surveillance and the GXV3672_FHD comes with a 3.1 Megapixel CMOS sensor for 1080p Full HD.  Both stream in real-time, compress video in H.264 and MJPEG formats, offer pre/post event recording buffer, and support video motion detection and SIP/VoIP support.
Grandstreamâs line up is a great choice for any business looking to have high technology for a low budget. Â Be it IP Voice Telephony, Video Telephony, or Video Surveillance, Grandstream is committed to offering a complete set up for any business while being affordable. Â Theyâve also considered those who are making the gradual transition to the IP world from analog by providing ATAâs and Analog Gateways for phones, video encoders/decoders for surveillance, and several means of support.
TMC is a global integrated media company that strives to support clientâs goals by building communities through all means of media, including several magazines they publish and the industry trade events they sponsor or produce.
âGrandstream has displayed its commitment to quality and innovation in the development of the unified communications industry,â said Tom Keating, CTO and TMC Labs Executive Editorial Director at TMC, in the same press release, âI look forward to more innovation from Grandstream and continued effort toward improving the future of the UC industry.â
VoIP Supply’s Guide to IP Paging Systems is now available to download.
This educational guide will walk you through:
Read, enjoy, learn – Download the IP Paging Guide today.
Thank you to Cisco for sponsoring the VoIP Supply team running in the 2013 J.P. Morgan Corporate Challenge in Buffalo on Thursday, June 5th.
Don MacKinnon from Cisco will also be joining our team to compete for our Top 3 Runner prizes. Thanks to his sponsorship we’ll not only have food and drink, but these wonderfully vibrant t-shirts too:
Please feel free to join us at our tent in the Green section (map) – Just follow an orange shirt and introduce yourself.
Good luck to all the runners, may the wind be at your back.
Grandstream has been producing VoIP phones with lots of features at affordable prices since 2002.
Their first ever Android VoIP phone comes in the form of the Grandstream GXP2200 for less than $250.00.
If you’ve used an Android smartphone before, then you already know more about what the Grandstream GXP2200 is than you thought you did.
Grandstream’s official product description for the GXP2200 is “Enterprise Multimedia Phone for Android.”
In simpler terms, that mean that the GXP2200 is a standard desktop VoIP phone that runs on the Android 2.3 operating system and it uses a color touchscreen for simple navigation.
The great thing about the GXP2200 is that it’s assimilating with the other technology consumers are using. Its user experience is similar to that of a smartphone or tablet.
You can customize the home screen with your favorite apps and the touchscreen allows you to drag, swipe, pinch, and zoom.
The Grandstream GXP2200 will feel very familiar right out of the box.
Customize your GXP 2200 home screen
The Grandstream GXP2200 looks, feels, and sounds great with its HD Voice handset. If that’s good enough for you, skip this section.
Otherwise, here are the key bang-for-your-buck VoIP features:
Add conference callers simply, visually
Android features on the GXP2200 include:
GS Market
Grandstream GXP2200 Video Features
As Tom Keating writes on the VoIP & Gadgets Blog, the GXP2200 can stream video but since it doesn’t have a built-in camera, it doesn’t transmit video.
However, Keating was able to get the Logitech BCC950 ConferenceCam to work with the GXP2200. Click here to read the details.
If you need Skype video calling from your desktop phone, look to the Grandstream GXV3140 which is a Skype certified video phone.
Or, the Grandstream GXV3175 has a built-in camera, a 7 inch color screen, and is great for desktop video conferencing or video surveillance with Grandstream IP cameras.
Streaming video in browser from Niagara Falls webcam
This phone is for someone who needs an extra screen on their desk to mult-task and/or someone who uses custom business apps.
I use two monitors at work and didn’t think I’d need a 3rd screen. The GXP2200 is handy though. Instead of clicking and searching for the weather in yet another browser tab (I have 23 open right now), all I have to do is hit one button on the phone to wake it up and there it is – my local weather.
Simple example but, the same can be said for using the GXP2200 as a dedicated screen for your company’s Twitter feed, customer service email account, Facebook page, stock ticker, or whatever you want quick access to.
Custom Business Apps
The GXP2200 runs an open version of Android OS so you can use Google’s API to customize uses for your business. VoIP Supply uses a custom dashboard on our phones to display key numbers throughout the day. Â Other examples include:
There are many possibilities depending on your application.
For interested app developers, click here to download the Grandstream GXP2200 SDK Framework Service Package.
A Second Computer on Your Desk
The GXP2200 is the only Grandstream phone that supports Bluetooth connectivity. Â Here’s the list of compatible Bluetooth headsets that have been tested and verified by Grandstream:
The Grandstream GXP2200 is available now.
Click here to read Grandstream GXP2200 customer reviews.
Did you know that donating a good meal to someone in need is a simple way to start a domino effect of positive change?
Since Thanksgiving of last year, VoIP Supply has been giving $1.98 for every order placed online and customers are encouraged to match this donation when they checkout.
We’d like to say Thank You to the anonymous party who recently donated 2,000 meals and took us up on our matching offer which helped provide 4,000 meals in a single day.
VoIP Supply has now donated over 8,000 meals in the company’s Feed the Homeless campaign.
“We have worked hard to do well, serve our customers, pay our bills, employ our people, grow and improve,” said Ben Sayers, CEO of VoIP Supply. We have worked hard so that we may help others and not just ourselves.”
“When I was a kid I was taught by my parents, as they lead by example, to wait for those behind you and hold the door so they may pass with a little less effort,” said Sayers.
“It isn’t just the physical door that needs to be held open, sometimes the “door” is an opportunity given, a pair of shoes or something as simple as a meal.”
Help the Buffalo City Mission directly with their Summer Matching Gift Challenge. From now until May 31, 2013, every $1.98 donated is doubled to provide two meals.
Click here for more information or, to make a donation.
The Buffalo City Mission, founded in 1917, is a not-for-profit organization that provides preventative, emergency and long-term recovery services to thousands of people who are homeless or impoverished. The Mission includes: Women and Children’s Shelter (Cornerstone Manor); the Men’s Community Center; the Mission Automotive Vehicle Donation Program; and our Dick Road thrift store location to better serve our community.
Higher Megapixels are all the rage in IP cameras. Who can blame it? In a world of HDTV, higher resolution is a seductive quality. Details that have been missed for decades are now clearly defined, for better or for worse. When converting this over to surveillance, that paradigm is exactly what someone is looking for in their security system.
Several manufacturers have been quick to respond with higher resolution cameras, but strangely, the larger name brands such as Axis, SONY, Panasonic, and MOBOTIX were slow to respond. When speaking with the engineers at these companies, one comes to discover that higher resolution is not a simple cut-and-dry process.
The technology behind pixels is actually quite interesting. In simplest terms, think of pixels as units of light. A black pixel on the screen is an empty pixel, it contains no light. A white pixel is considered full of light. All the colors in between are varying temperatures of light, much like how a rainbow works. This is all based on the cameraâs image sensor, which contains many photosites which correspond to a pixel. The image sensor can either be CCD, which has excellent light sensitivity but is more expensive to produce and somewhat of a lower technology chip, or the image sensor can be CMOS, which is comparatively a smarter chip and is less expensive.
Axis, SONY, Panasonic, and MOBOTIX are industry leaders, and as such they are incredibly picky about their lens (here, lens referring to the entire unit rather than just the glass). SONY manufactures their own with the Exmor CMOS sensor, but even for the IP cameras designed without it, SONY ships every camera with their own lens to ensure the camera will at least deliver quality 1 Megapixel resolution. Panasonic and Axis have in recent years switched to HDTV resolution also, often keeping to either 720p or 1080p HD, and MOBOTIX firmly kept to 3 Megapixel resolution for a long time as well. The reasoning behind this? Other brands donât spend a lot of time on the technology behind Megapixel lens. In order to meet public demand, they quickly ship out the next highest 5MP lens on their camera.
When speaking with SONY, one of their engineers stated that a problem they kept seeing in higher Megapixel cameras was light overexposure. The higher pixel lens were absorbing so much light and their processors werenât able to convert the output into a quality image. That was when they created their Exmor CMOS sensor, which has high speed readout and been utilized in their WDR technology, View-DR, and Visibility Enhancer feature.
Axis managers gave similar responses when speaking with them about high Megapixels. For the longest time, it all boiled down to not finding a lens that produced an image that held to Axisâ standards. It seems that that time has passed. Now Axis has a wide variety of HDTV cameras with Megapixel lens with their P33 series and P13 series, both of which have 3MP and 5MP options.
Panasonic was also careful with their Megapixel IP cameras, offering additional lenses aside from their own, from an exclusive OEM partnership with Fujinon.
Happily, MOBOTIX has also announced that a 5MP lens has met their expectations and will be launched in their new S15, D15 and V15 IP cameras. Even the directors were shocked at the clarity their test cameras were proving. The example of the flying dove was displayed proudly at this yearâs conferences.
It seems now it is safe to claim that, yes, bigger is better. ACTi has released entire new lines of cameras replacing their old ACM, TCM, and KCM series, ranging from 1 MP up to the anticipated 10 MP coming later this year. With all these new Megapixel IP cameras steadily trickling out of these top line manufacturers, it seems like the age of quality HDTV surveillance systems has dawned.
To learn more about Megapixel IP cameras and to see if they make sense for your surveillance needs, call our IP Surveillance Specialist Tom Uhteg at 866.885.4853.
Have you had any experiences with early HDTV surveillance cameras? How did you like it? What are you looking forward to in the coming years?
The proliferation of hosted-private branch exchange (PBX) solutions has led to a surplus of information about these virtual telephony systems. But small business owners should consider the pros and cons of both hosted PBX and on-premise PBX systems when evaluating a new system for their offices.
Business phone systems reviewer Software Advice has recently put together an article discussing the five important considerations for small business owners deciding between Cloud-based and on-premise PBX systems. The team at Software Advice suggests that buyers consider the following:
If you’re running a small business and you haven’t heard of Seth Godin by now, maybe you should.
Seth Godin is an entrepreneur, best selling author, and marketing wizard who excels at explaining business ideas in everyday ways you can understand.
Recently, Vocus hosted the webinar titled No Secrets, No Shortcuts where Godin “showed us how the era of mass media â where marketers could simply advertise, reap the rewards and repeat â is done.”
Attending a conference isn’t complete without getting some free stuff.
VoIP Supply was happy to donate a Digium D40 VoIP phone, the 2-line, HD Voice, PoE enabled phone designed for Asterisk; to the 7th annual Atlanta Asterisk Users Group (AAUG) VoIP Conference.
The conference was held on May 11th on the Georgia Tech campus and provides an opportunity for Asterisk VoIP users of all skill levels, from beginners to experts, to meet and share their knowledge, experiences, and design needs.
The annual AAUG conference “brings together leading Asterisk and VoIP users, developers, enthusiasts, service providers and manufacturers who share their accomplishments and goals for the future.”
The Atlanta Asterisk Users Group is a non-profit organization of focused on developing, promoting, fostering, strengthening, and improving VoIP applications.
Via PR Web