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  2. Mobile VoIP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mobile_VoIP

    The mainstreaming of VoIP in the small business market led to the introduction of more devices extending VoIP to business cordless users. Panasonic introduced the KX-TGP base station supporting up to 6 cordless handsets , essentially a VoIP complement to its popular KX-TGA analogue phones which likewise support up to 4 cordless handsets ...

  3. Cordless telephone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cordless_telephone

    Two cordless telephones 3 VTech cordless landline phones A Panasonic KX-TG2226B 2.4GHz cordless phone with answering machine. A cordless telephone or portable telephone has a portable telephone handset that connects by radio to a base station connected to the public telephone network. The operational range is limited, usually to the same ...

  4. Business telephone system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Business_telephone_system

    DECT – a standard for connecting cordless phones. Internet Protocol – For example, H.323 and SIP. POTS (plain old telephone service) – the common two-wire interface used in most homes. This is cheap and effective and allows almost any standard phone to be used as an extension. proprietary – the manufacturer has defined a protocol.

  5. Wi-Fi calling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wi-fi_calling

    While dual-mode DECT/GSM phones have appeared, these have generally been functionally cordless phones with a GSM handset built-in (or vice versa, depending on your point of view), rather than phones implementing DECT/GIP, due to the lack of suitable infrastructure to hook DECT base-stations supporting GIP to GSM networks on an ad-hoc basis. [31]

  6. DECT - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DECT

    However, its most popular application is single-cell cordless phones connected to traditional analog telephone, primarily in home and small-office systems, though gateways with multi-cell DECT and/or DECT repeaters are also available in many private branch exchange (PBX) systems for medium and large businesses, produced by Panasonic, Mitel ...

  7. Customer-premises equipment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Customer-premises_equipment

    The two phrases, "customer-premises equipment" and "customer-provided equipment", reflect the history of this equipment.Under the Bell System monopoly in the United States (post Communications Act of 1934), the Bell System owned the telephones, and one could not attach privately owned or supplied devices to the network, or to the station apparatus.