<div>Curiously, Tadiran Telecom, who are a specialist in hospitality telecom solutions, actually sells rebandged Yealink.</div>
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<div>http://www.tadirantele.com/en/products/phones/tadiran-t49g/<br /><br />
<div>Michael Graves<br /> mgraves@mstvp.com</div>
<div>http://www.mgraves.org</div>
<div>o(713) 861-4005<br /> c(713) 201-1262<br /> sip:mgraves@mjg.onsip.com<br /> skype mjgraves</div>
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<blockquote class="threadBlockQuote" style="border-left: 2px solid #C2C2C2; padding-left: 3px; margin-left: 4px;">--------- Original Message ---------
<div>Subject: Re: [VoiceOps] Hotel IP phones<br />From: "Nicholas Sten" <nicksten@gmail.com><br />Date: 1/5/17 6:57 am<br />To: mgraves@mstvp.com<br />Cc: "Glenn Geller (VDOPh)" <ggeller@vdo-ph.com>, "Ernesto Miro Cons" <emc@transtelco.net>, voiceops@voiceops.org<br /><br />"It was often critical that there be a phone in each room so that housekeeping could use it to log as each room is refreshed."<br /> <br /> Is this seriously still a core requirement for in-room telephones in a "modern" hotel installation?<br /> <br /> <br /> > On Jan 5, 2017, at 7:52 AM, mgraves@mstvp.com wrote:<br /> > <br /> > It was often critical that there be a phone in each room so that housekeeping could use it to log as each room is refreshed.</div>
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