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Probably. I'm not familiar with OOMA, but most CONSUMER VOIP systems (like magicjack, or Lingo) are only VOIP on the backend, not the phones themselves. They make use of POTS (plain old telephone service) telephones. Commercial/business class VOIP systems (such as Cisco) on the other hand are VOIP end-to-end and require special VOIP telephones. These phones are POTS (traditional) phones. The easy way to distinguish between POTS telephones and business class VOIP telephones (other than the branding) is that POTS telephones use a small RJ-11 jack (4 wires) and most (if not all) VOIP phones use the RJ-45 (8 wire) jack. So if OOMA is a service that provides you with a special device, look at the device and determine whether the jack that goes to the telephone is an rj-11 or an RJ-45. My bet is that it's an RJ-11 and you can use any POTS telephone (including this one) with your service.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I have Spectrum phone, which I believe is considered VOIP. Works wonderfully. Since I don't have Ooma, I have no idea if it works on that service.
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