Graves On SOHO VoIP

End User Perspective On IP Telephony In The Home Office
  • rss
  • Home
  • About
    • Contact
    • Disclosure
  • Guides & How-To’s
  • Product Reviews
  • Raves
  • Personal Blog

Review: Plantronics .Audio 615m USB Headset

mjgraves | May 1, 2009

audio615m 53x96 Review: Plantronics .Audio 615m USB HeadsetSo after months of badgering people about G.722 based wideband capabilities in soft phones I’ve settled on using Counterpath’s Eyebeam v1.5 as my principle soft phone. I have it installed on my laptop and netbook, both systems that travel with me all the time.

Having finally found a soft phone that I lets me take advantage of the wideband capabilities of our hosted IP-PBX installation I was left to consider the audio I/O requirement in support of Eyebeam. To address this need I’ve recently been experimenting with both wired headsets and USB speakerphone devices. I started with the Plantronics .Audio 480 analog headset as detailed previously.

However, I thought it would be good to check out something in the way of a more traditional headset. I started by asking some question of people I knew, especially the VoIP Users Conference regulars. A few names kept coming up, most notably; Plantronics, Jabra/GN Telecom & Hello Direct.

I followed up these initial inquiries in a few Tweets. Quite unexpectedly the folks in PR with Plantronics responded, offering to provide me some hardware for evaluation. This Plantronics .Audio 615m is the first of two items that they have provided.

audio615m Review: Plantronics .Audio 615m USB Headset

That’s an awfully big picture, but as they say…worth a thousand words.

The .Audio 615m has just one earpiece. The microphone is boom mounted. The boom is adjustable in a couple of ways. It’s a two part boom, where the free end can slide within the end mounted to the earpiece, making it length adjustable. Then the free end is also flexible. It can be curved to adjust its position relative to your mouth. And of course, it pivots about the mount point at the earpiece. This combination makes it nicely adaptable to a variety of head sizes & shapes, usable on either the left or right side.

audio 6xx headsets Review: Plantronics .Audio 615m USB Headset

The Plantronics .Audio 6xx Series; (left-to-right)  630, 615, 610

A quick search on Amazon resulted into a little more insight into this range of devices from Plantronics. While the .Audio 615m has one earpiece there is also a .Audio 630 with dual earpieces. There is also a .Audio 610 with analog connections to the PC and a separate USB  audio adapter. On Amazon the .Audio 615m that I have is offered at around $42.00

The cord on the headset is nice and long, perfect for being tethered to a desktop PC. It’s long enough to allow me to stand up and pace a little on really long calls, as is my habit. About 12″ from the USB connector there’s a “line lump” containing the interface electronics. There’s a label on the cord that reads “Certified For Microsoft Office Communicator”, not that I care about such things.

Based upon it’s size and the length of the cord you can safely presume that this headset is not intended as a solution for the road warrior. It’s more appropriate for the desk or cubicle dweller. That said, there’s really no reason not to use it as traveling kit, but I suspect that it might suffer breakage if routinely packed in a suitcase. At least the way that I pack. There are certainly smaller, more portable solutions for the serious road warrior.

I used the .Audio 615m with  number of wideband capable soft phones on my laptop, netbook and desktop PC. I found that the headset was very comfortable to wear, even over the long term. For telephony purposes I prefer the single ear version so that I can keep it on and still converse with coworkers and my wife.

From an audio quality point of view the .Audio 615m is very good. The earpiece is easily capable high quality sound, even for listening to music. The microphone element is similarly high quality. In general the .Audio 615m is more than capable of supporting wideband telephony, which is all that I require.

The easiest way to make this point is simply to record some of my voice using the headset. So, here are a few audio clips:

  • Reference clip
  • G.722 encoded wideband clip
  • G.711 encoded narrowband quality clip

From the reference recording its clear to see (hear?) that the Plantronics .Audio 615m surpasses the audio quality requirements of the two telephony codecs. The G.722 format clips sound good, and the G.711 for clip is…well, as good as narrowband gets…which isn’t saying much. The point is really to illustrate in the reference clip that the .Audio 615m is more than a match for any IP telephony application, be that Skype, SIP, Google Voice or whatever your VoIP preference. 

I’ve been using the Plantronics .Audio 615m off and on for about eight weeks. I have a number of  headsets of various sorts available in my office, yet I find that the 615m has consistantly been my preference. When used in combination with a wideband capable soft phone it’s truly a pleasure to use, even for very long calls. Given that it’s also relatively inexpensive I simply can’t find any reason to not own one.

Categories
Audio, VoIP
Tags
G.722, headset, plantronics, USB, VoIP, wideband
Comments rss
Comments rss
Trackback
Trackback

« David Isen: Broadband without Internet ain’t worth squat PhonerLite: A Free G.722 Capable Windows Soft Phone »

6 Responses to “Review: Plantronics .Audio 615m USB Headset”

  1. 1
    Steve Perich says:
    May 2, 2009 at 12:35 am

    Thanks for the review. I just purchased a Plantronics m214c for my Gigaset S685IP and was worried about its wideband abilities. I’ll let you know if they’re much chop.

    Reply
  2. 2
    Boyd says:
    August 3, 2009 at 4:57 pm

    It may be worth noting that this .Audio 615m headset is not compatible with Windows XP. It will only work on Windows Vista and higher. Since our company uses Windows XP, this would have been nice to know before purchasing several of these headsets.

    Reply
    • 2.1
      mjgraves says:
      August 3, 2009 at 5:13 pm

      I’m not sure what kind of incompatibility you’re seeing? I use mine with three Windows XP systems & a Windows 7 system. There’s nothing special about the USB connection. It doesn’t require a driver. I don’t see how they could be incompatible.

      Reply
  3. 3
    Shawn says:
    January 25, 2010 at 8:00 pm

    Do you know if the 615m USB will work on a Macbook Pro (10.6)?

    Reply
    • 3.1
      mjgraves says:
      January 25, 2010 at 9:01 pm

      As a generic USB audio device I know of no reason why it would not work with a Macbook Pro.

      Reply
  4. 4
    Silas says:
    February 25, 2010 at 8:46 am

    Based on this review I bought a Audio 630M USB for use with Skype on my Mac. It didn’t work. I contacted Plantronics Help. They said the 630M is specifically designed (special Firmware) for MS Office and it won ‘t work on the Mac. The review doesn’t make this clear. They recommended the Audio 625 USB which I have now ordered.

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Click here to cancel reply.

Search Me?

My Tweets

  • Curious, while in Sault Ste Marie I'm close enough to the border that my BB9700 grabs AT&T service from the US side...no roaming!
  • The birthday party was truly a surprise, proving that my step-father doesn't follow my twitter feed...just facebook #fb
  • @wolrah Happy to be of assistance. I'm a new world man.
  • RT @DaveMichels: Google Voice Problems. Online help only indicates lots of folks have this problem and no support from Google.
  • At YYZ en route to YAM. No my folks don't follow my tweets so the surprise is safe.

Recent Posts

  • SIP Trunks don’t exist. There’s no such thing.
  • Video How-To: Calling the VUC Using PhonerLite on Windows
  • Making Use of Wideband Voice Right Now!: IdeaSIP
  • The Inventor Of The Cell Phone Interviewed On C-SPAN
  • OpenPeak Tablet At Mobile World Congress

Recent Comments

  • Ierlandfan on Review: The Gigaset A580IP SIP/DECT Cordless Phone System
  • Ierlandfan on Gigaset News: New Beta Firmware Release
  • Greg on Gigaset News: New Beta Firmware Release
  • qwe on Gigaset News: New Beta Firmware Release
  • Venturello on Review: The Gigaset A580IP SIP/DECT Cordless Phone System

Series: Making Use of HDVoice Right Now!

  • Series Introduction
  • HDVoice Using Skype
  • HDVoice Using Gizmo5
  • HDVoice Using SIPGate
  • HDVoice Using OnSIP
  • HDVoice Using IdeaSIP

Make a difference.


Change a life.

VoIP Users Conference

Think About It

RSS From My Personal Blog

  • Mossberg & Jobs On The iPad
  • The Who’s Baba O’Reilly Performed On Gear From ThinkGeek
  • What’s in a name or a title?
  • We Now Have Vacancy
  • Just A Thought

RSS Google Reader Shared Stories

  • Let the Spectrum Reallocation Games Begin
  • Niue #4: License?! We Don't Need No Stinkin' License!
  • AudioCodes Debuts OCS-SIP Phone Interoperability Product
  • Verizon Announces SMB VoIP Package
  • Covad Nationwide Ethernet Service Launches on Tax Day
  • Niue Episode 3: Linking the Site
  • Verizon responds to ARRA in a predictable way
  • Tesla switches gears, plans to keep Roadster till 2012
  • [PBX] Hosted PBX service
  • Niue Episode 2: Site Prep

Tags

Asterisk Astlinux astricon Audio blog Broadband cell cellular codec conference cordless DECT digium DSL FWD G.722 gateway Gigaset gsm HD hdvoice headset hp M3 music onsip phone polycom QoS router siemens sip skype SNOM soft phone Squeezebox technology uri USB Video VoIP VUC wideband wifi zipdx

Archives

  • March 2010
  • February 2010
  • January 2010
  • December 2009
  • November 2009
  • October 2009
  • September 2009
  • August 2009
  • July 2009
  • June 2009
  • May 2009
  • April 2009
  • March 2009
  • February 2009
  • January 2009
  • December 2008
  • November 2008
  • October 2008
  • September 2008
  • August 2008
  • July 2008
  • June 2008
  • May 2008
  • April 2008
  • March 2008
  • February 2008
  • January 2008
  • December 2007
  • November 2007
  • October 2007

Meta

  • Register
  • Log in
  • Entries RSS
  • Comments RSS
  • WordPress.org
rss Comments rss valid xhtml 1.1