What Soft Phones Are You Using?
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@scottalanmiller said:
I have used several softphones over the years but recently have discovered Linphone and am really thrilled with it. So far I have found it to be rock solid and I really like that it is available on nearly every platform. I am currently using in on Windows 8.1 and iOS 7 but it is open source and I know that it is available on Linux, Mac OSX, Android and Blackberry. Very versatile.
I tried this on my MacBook Pro and did not like it at all. Trying it on my Windows dekstop now.
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@JaredBusch said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I have used several softphones over the years but recently have discovered Linphone and am really thrilled with it. So far I have found it to be rock solid and I really like that it is available on nearly every platform. I am currently using in on Windows 8.1 and iOS 7 but it is open source and I know that it is available on Linux, Mac OSX, Android and Blackberry. Very versatile.
I tried this on my MacBook Pro and did not like it at all. Trying it on my Windows dekstop now.
I really like the iphone app. the windows client is not that great.
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The iPhone client really works well.
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I like Jitsi, and Zoiper for Android.
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Cool, Jitsi is open source too: https://jitsi.org/
Available for Windows, OSX, RPM (RHEL / SUSE), Ubuntu and Arch. That's pretty cool.
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We have started using MicroSIP a bit on Windows. It is in Chocolatey which is handy.
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@scottalanmiller said in What Soft Phones Are You Using?:
We have started using MicroSIP a bit on Windows. It is in Chocolatey which is handy.
Pretty basic.
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Zulu works well on Windows. Not so much on Fedora yet.
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@JaredBusch said in What Soft Phones Are You Using?:
@scottalanmiller said in What Soft Phones Are You Using?:
We have started using MicroSIP a bit on Windows. It is in Chocolatey which is handy.
Pretty basic.
Very, but seems to work reliably and Chocolatey management is a big deal.