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I would get rid of AT&T and go with these phones in a heartbeat. You will save a tremendous amount of money. The quality is based on your internet. If you have decent internet service there won't be any problems. I live so rural that the only internet we have is Hughes net. Hughes net has a terrible reputation and is known to be the end of the line. If the wind blows, our internet waffles. I think it is a half step up from dial up. Even with that being said, our phone quality is fair. We have no cell service and this gave us the option without paying for a landline. Because our internet is so poor sometimes we have a slight lag when talking on the phone. Again, if you have decent internet, you won't have any problems. This gave us the opportunity to be able to talk when we can't use our phones. I would buy this again without a second thought. Set up is very easy. You can add other handsets if necessary. I only use the one so I have a spare. It took 5 or 10 minutes at the most. Just follow the directions.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I got an OOMA last month to drop my AT&T home phone. I have not had any problems with call quality. I purchased only the OOMA Telo. I was able to connect it to my Panasonic home phone. You setup the OOMA with a new phone number. Then you port your AT&T number over to OOMA which takes about a month. Continue paying for your AT&T service until the number is transported. Once the number is transported you change it to your primary number and the new number is secondary. You now have two phone lines for about $6 a month.
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