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Customer Reviews
Xtreme Technologies Xlink BTTN Bluetooth Gateway (Black)

11 Reviews
5 star:
(2)
4 star:
(3)
3 star:
(1)
2 star:
(3)
1 star:
(2)

Average Customer Review
3.0 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)

7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Works perfect. I Love it!, July 3, 2009
By Steve McQueen (Boston, MA) - See all my reviews
I decided to get this to save myself some of the cellular radiation and related headaches while I'm using my phone at home.
It took me 5 days to decide between the different options (Panasonic, GE and this one). For some reason they all got bad reviews, and it made me think 100 times before I decided to try it out myself.

Once I received the item it was up and running in 3 minutes. Product is running better than expected. It works as a regular land-line (minus callerID, you can see the number though), and switching between cell lines is simple and convenient. This machine changed the way I use my phone at home. With an unlimited minute plan from my cell provider there is no need for a land line.

Cost: Initial cost is the equivalent of 4 months land line charges. After that its pure savings.

One warning: It looks like the people who got stuck did not know how to pair the phone with the link box. If you are not familiar with bluetooth or if you are not sure your phone supports the technology, check with your cell phone customer support.
-------------------------

4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Day 1 - Dig it!, August 8, 2009
By R. Swartwood "RVWood" (NJ!) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)
Got this sucker working in minutes and then spent an hour running it through the paces. It has performed flawlessly. I was almost discouraged to buy this (or similar devices) as it was hard to tell exactly how they would interface with the home system. I thought I would add some notes on the tests I successfully ran (See below). All this was with one paired cell phone and a dect 6.0 cordless phone plugged in the back of xlink.

Ultimately, I've made about 20 calls in and out and I find the technology on par with Apple's mission - easy to use, intuitive and will utlimately become ubiquitous to the user. I have to believe, like DVRs, about everyone will have this technology in their house someday. I'll report back if I downgrade this in the future due to any problems.

Notes:

Only phones plugged directly to xlink will interface with it. If you want to go whole house, use an expandable cordless system with base plugged into the xlink. We have an expandable for our downstairs and other random phones elsewhere. This works nicely, actually. If you are on a cell call using the expandable, then you can make a concurrent land line call from one of the other random phones (but not from any of the expandable handsets).

To call out, you use your phone as normal. It defaults to land line or you can push 1 and flash to call out via cell instead. Caller id number it transmits will be aligned with your choice. If you are on landline and a call comes in via landline, you use call waiting as normal. If you are on landline and a call comes in via cell, you will hear a different beep and can flash over to that call. (Makes me wonder what happens if you started land line, went over to cell to get a call and another land line call starts to come it - will you hear it? Also, I realize I didn't test if you are on cell and another call via cell comes in can you flash over to it - but I imagine that will work too.)

If you are on cell, someone can use landline via a different phone (as long as it's not part of an expandable system whose base plugged to xlink).

If you are on landline on a phone not connected to xlink and someone wants to make a call out via cell on xlink, the x-link connected phone automatically defaults to landline (so people talking will hear someone pick up), then you quickly hit 1 and flash and you switch over to cell. So a minor irritation for someone already talking on land line.

Our answering machine, which is a separate device, is plugged in ahead of xlink in the chain and will pick up for landline and has no confusion with cell - cell calls go to cell voice mail if not picked up.

When you are receiving a call, you can tell what line it's coming in on. My cordless system doesn't support separate ring tones (and the instructions warn many won't), but if the cell is in hearing distance you will hear it ring too. Also, the xlink passes through caller id to the handset and if it's coming in via cell it displays the incoming number plus "xlink". If via land line, just the incoming number.

If you are on cell via xlink and a landline call comes in, other phones in the house will ring that aren't connected to xlink. You could pick up via call waiting, allow the answering machine to get it or someone on a random phone not plugged to xlink could pick it up normally too.
 
Customer Reviews
Xtreme Technologies Xlink BTTN Bluetooth Gateway (Black)

11 Reviews
5 star:
(2)
4 star:
(3)
3 star:
(1)
2 star:
(3)
1 star:
(2)

Average Customer Review
3.0 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)

7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Works perfect. I Love it!, July 3, 2009
By Steve McQueen (Boston, MA) - See all my reviews
I decided to get this to save myself some of the cellular radiation and related headaches while I'm using my phone at home.
It took me 5 days to decide between the different options (Panasonic, GE and this one). For some reason they all got bad reviews, and it made me think 100 times before I decided to try it out myself.

Once I received the item it was up and running in 3 minutes. Product is running better than expected. It works as a regular land-line (minus callerID, you can see the number though), and switching between cell lines is simple and convenient. This machine changed the way I use my phone at home. With an unlimited minute plan from my cell provider there is no need for a land line.

Cost: Initial cost is the equivalent of 4 months land line charges. After that its pure savings.

One warning: It looks like the people who got stuck did not know how to pair the phone with the link box. If you are not familiar with bluetooth or if you are not sure your phone supports the technology, check with your cell phone customer support.
-------------------------

4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Day 1 - Dig it!, August 8, 2009
By R. Swartwood "RVWood" (NJ!) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)
Got this sucker working in minutes and then spent an hour running it through the paces. It has performed flawlessly. I was almost discouraged to buy this (or similar devices) as it was hard to tell exactly how they would interface with the home system. I thought I would add some notes on the tests I successfully ran (See below). All this was with one paired cell phone and a dect 6.0 cordless phone plugged in the back of xlink.

Ultimately, I've made about 20 calls in and out and I find the technology on par with Apple's mission - easy to use, intuitive and will utlimately become ubiquitous to the user. I have to believe, like DVRs, about everyone will have this technology in their house someday. I'll report back if I downgrade this in the future due to any problems.

Notes:

Only phones plugged directly to xlink will interface with it. If you want to go whole house, use an expandable cordless system with base plugged into the xlink. We have an expandable for our downstairs and other random phones elsewhere. This works nicely, actually. If you are on a cell call using the expandable, then you can make a concurrent land line call from one of the other random phones (but not from any of the expandable handsets).

To call out, you use your phone as normal. It defaults to land line or you can push 1 and flash to call out via cell instead. Caller id number it transmits will be aligned with your choice. If you are on landline and a call comes in via landline, you use call waiting as normal. If you are on landline and a call comes in via cell, you will hear a different beep and can flash over to that call. (Makes me wonder what happens if you started land line, went over to cell to get a call and another land line call starts to come it - will you hear it? Also, I realize I didn't test if you are on cell and another call via cell comes in can you flash over to it - but I imagine that will work too.)

If you are on cell, someone can use landline via a different phone (as long as it's not part of an expandable system whose base plugged to xlink).

If you are on landline on a phone not connected to xlink and someone wants to make a call out via cell on xlink, the x-link connected phone automatically defaults to landline (so people talking will hear someone pick up), then you quickly hit 1 and flash and you switch over to cell. So a minor irritation for someone already talking on land line.

Our answering machine, which is a separate device, is plugged in ahead of xlink in the chain and will pick up for landline and has no confusion with cell - cell calls go to cell voice mail if not picked up.

When you are receiving a call, you can tell what line it's coming in on. My cordless system doesn't support separate ring tones (and the instructions warn many won't), but if the cell is in hearing distance you will hear it ring too. Also, the xlink passes through caller id to the handset and if it's coming in via cell it displays the incoming number plus "xlink". If via land line, just the incoming number.

If you are on cell via xlink and a landline call comes in, other phones in the house will ring that aren't connected to xlink. You could pick up via call waiting, allow the answering machine to get it or someone on a random phone not plugged to xlink could pick it up normally too.
 
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