Easy management makes ShoreTel IP PBX a delight
Modular components, clear configuration impress
Follow @infoworldOne thought kept running through my mind while I tested the ShoreTel 6 phone system: “This is too easy.” Surely, I thought, there must be a point at which the ShoreTel PBX becomes a pain in the neck. I thought wrong.
ShoreTel 6 is a collection of IP PBX products that includes ShoreGear Voice Switches, ShoreWare Director V. 6, and other components. You can buy ShoreGear Voice Switches in three configurations, designated by the number of VoIP versus analog users they’ll support -- the ShoreGear 120/24 refers to 120 IP users or 24 analog users, not IP and analog users, as an analog port uses the same capability as five digital ports. There are also ShoreGear 60/12 and 40/8 switches. The system is highly modular, so you can deploy a combination of switches to match user density at various locations.
The ShoreGear Voice Switch is the physical platform for the PBX; ShoreWare Director provides the management component, running on a Windows platform and communicating with the voice switch through the network. The optional but recommended ShoreTel Call Manager software allows users to manage their own phones within parameters that the system administrator sets.
A Logical Set of Setup Steps
ShoreTel is very easy to manage and operate. There is still a vast number of steps to take and many options to be set and managed before the ShoreTel PBX is fully functional, but with the exception of making adds, moves, and changes, you only do these tasks at the beginning.
Initial setup progresses logically, and the configuration steps in the Director software are intuitive. For example, one fairly complex task with any phone system is setting up the Auto Attendant: You must decide who gets which calls, where calls should go if they’re not answered, and what to say at each prompt, generally without much help from the system itself. ShoreTel, however, leads you through the process step-by-step with clear choices, and the script for each prompt can be kept in case it needs to be recorded again in the future.
The only problem I had during setup was when the server ShoreTel provided for the test showed signs of one too many air freight experiences, and quietly croaked. Fortunately, any up-to-date Windows server will support the ShoreWare Director, so I installed it on an HP DL380. Because the server platform requires no special hardware or software beyond the Director software, the change took just minutes.
Beyond setting up Director, most of the implementation process consists of plugging phones into the network. If you have switches that support PoE (Power over Ethernet), the phones will boot and run when you plug them in. If you don’t, ShoreTel can provide external power supplies for phones that don’t have access to PoE. Phones can be set with fixed IP addresses, or they can use DHCP.
ShoreTel makes several types of MGCP (Media Gateway Control Protocol) phones, ranging from simple to complex, and they will work with most third-party MGCP phones. The ShoreTel phones are easy to use and are easily configured by the administrator. More important, I found the voice quality to be very high, and there was no detectable latency. You can also get an expansion unit (called a Button Box) to increase a phone’s capabilities by adding more programmable buttons that can be loaded with phone numbers or other functions.
| Test Center Scorecard | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 30% | 30% | 20% | 10% | 10% | ||
| ShoreTel 6 | 9 | 9 | 8 | 9 | 9 |
8.8
Very Good
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