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Zyxel V300Zyxel V300 V300-T1 IP Phone with 2 TEXT-LINE LCD
ZyXEL 2-Line VoIP IP Phone - V300 The V300 Series is a cost-effective broadband network IP phone that provides an easy-to-use solution for VoIP service deployments, as well as users who already have broadband access. It supports flexible configurations including fully functional Web-based setup. Moreover, it also has the Auto-Provisioning capability to automatically download configuration files and complete the setup process without cumbersome tweaking. Features 2 line LCD text display Supports ... Read more

Details
Brand: ZYXEL
Part Number: V300
UPC: 0760559116187, 760559116187
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Manual

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Zyxel V300

 

 

User reviews and opinions

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Comments to date: 3. Page 1 of 1. Average Rating:
SaLifHoq 12:02am on Monday, September 27th, 2010 
I have had this board for about 8 months and is has/had performed great until I tried to upgrade the CPU from an E6420 @ 2. Core 2 Duo e8600 4 GB Ram GeForce 8400 Soundblaster Audigy 2 Platinum ZS ATI TV Wonder 550 Will be upgrading TV Wonder and Soundblaster as well as ge...
raharold 5:21pm on Sunday, August 1st, 2010 
Excelente producto Muy buena atencion, rapido despacho, y el producto de muy buena calidad lo recomendo 100%
andreuws 11:13pm on Sunday, May 16th, 2010 
Worked and recognized my Core 2 Quad q9450 right out of the box. Would def recommend to other people. I am actually selling this to a friend to upgrade bc I got a good deal on a full ATX mobo, case, and parts.

Comments posted on www.ps2netdrivers.net are solely the views and opinions of the people posting them and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of us.

 

Documents

doc0

5.1 Overview

LCD Menus: Basic Settings
This chapter discusses how to set up your V300 using the internal configuration menus.
5.1.1 What You Can Do in This Chapter
The Menu system lets you configure your V300 (Section 5.2 on page 47). The Phonebook menu lets you view a list of your contacts (Section 5.3 on page 48). The Volume menu lets you set the loudness of the speakers (Section 5.4 on page 48). The Advanced Setting menu let you configure a range of more detailed phone options, such as your VoIP account and PPPoE settings (Section 5.6 on page 49). The Reset menu lets you restart the phone or restore its defaults (Section 5.7 on page 50).
5.2 Entering the Menu System
Press MENU to enter the menu system. The Menu Setting screen displays as shown below.
Figure 15 LCD Menu Setting
Menu Setting: 1. Phonebook
See the rest of this chapter for details on configuring each menu. For background information, see the relevant chapter in the web configurator section of this Users Guide.
When a menu has more than one option, only the first option can be seen on the LCD screen. Use the navigator to scroll down to the other options.
Chapter 5 LCD Menus: Basic Settings

5.3 The Phonebook Menu

Use the phonebook to view a list of your contacts. Select MENU > Phonebook. The following screen displays. This is the same fuction as pressing the actual PHONEBOOK button.
Figure 16 LCD Menu: Phonebook
If you want to add, edit or remove an entry in the phonebook, use the web configurator. See Chapter 7 on page 73 for more information. If you want to add a call record in the phonebook or call a phonebook contact, see Chapter 4 on page 45.
5.4 The Volume Setting Menu
Use these menus to set the loudness of the V300s audio equipment. Select MENU > Vol Setting. The following screen displays.
Figure 17 LCD Menu: Volume Setting
2. Vol Control 1. Speaker Volume
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 8 LCD Menu: Volume Setting
LABEL Speaker Volume Phone Volume Ring Volume Headset Volume DESCRIPTION Select this to set the internal speakerphone volume. This controls both the internal speaker and the internal microphone. Select this to set the handset volume. This controls both the handsets speaker and its microphone. Select this to set the volume of the V300s ringtone. This setting applies to all configured group rings. Select this to set the volume of an attached headset (or any device connected to the external speaker and/or microphone sockets). This controls both the handsets speaker (earpiece) and its microphone.

The default is 8080. Press to change this.
If you make a mistake, use the PHONEBOOK key to delete your entry one number at a time (you can use the asterix key [*] to enter periods). Press again to save the port number.

6.4.5 Expire Time

Select Adv > Auto Prov > Expire Time. The following screen displays.
Figure 52 LCD Menu: Expire Time

5. Expire Time 3600

The default is 3600 seconds, or 60 minutes. Press 259200 seconds, or 72 hours/3 days. to change this. The maximum allowed is
If you make a mistake, use the PHONEBOOK key to delete your entry one number at a time. Press again to save the expire time.

6.4.6 Retry Time

Select Adv > Auto Prov > Retry Time. The following screen displays.
Figure 53 LCD Menu: Retry Time

6. Retry Time 1800

The default and maximum is 1800 seconds, or 30 minutes. Press minimum allowed is 1 second. to change this. The
If you make a mistake, use the PHONEBOOK key to delete your entry one number at a time. Press again to save the retry time.

6.5 DHCP

Use DHCP to have the V300 get an IP address automatically from a DHCP server on the network. Select Adv Setting > DHCP. The following screen displays.

Figure 54 LCD Menu: DHCP

1. DHCP On
Check whether DHCP is enabled on the V300 or not. If DHCP is disabled (Off), press to enter the DHCP screen and press again to change the configuration (turn DHCP on). Alternatively press to return to the previous screen.
If static IP or PPPoE is enabled, DHCP will be disabled automatically.

6.6 The Static IP Menu

Use this menu to manually configure your V300s IP address, subnet mask and gateway settings. Enter the settings exactly as your ISP or network administrator gave them to you. Select Adv Setting > Static IP. The following screen displays.
Figure 55 LCD Menu: Static IP

1. Static IP Off

Press to toggle auto provisioning OFF and ON.
The following table describes the other labels in this section.

8.3 Packet Statistics

This screen displays read-only information here includes port status and packet specific statistics. Also provided are "system up time" and "poll interval(s)". The Poll Interval(s) field is configurable. To access it, open the Status screen (see Section 8.2 on page 80), and click (Details.) next to Packet Statistics.
Figure 79 Packet Statistics
The following table describes the fields in this screen.
Table 20 Packet Statistics
LABEL Packet Statistics Port Status TxPkts RxPkts Collisions Tx B/s Rx B/s Up Time This column displays each interface of the V300. This displays the port speed and duplex setting. This field displays the number of packets transmitted on this interface. This field displays the number of packets received on this interface. This field displays the number of collisions on this port. This field displays the number of bytes transmitted in the last second. This field displays the number of bytes received in the last second. This field displays the elapsed time this interface has been connected. DESCRIPTION
System up Time This is the elapsed time the system has been on. Poll Interval(s) Set Interval Stop Type the time interval (in seconds) for the browser to refresh system statistics. Click this button to apply the new poll interval you entered in the Poll Interval field. Click this button to halt the refreshing of the system statistics.

8.4 VoIP Statistics

This screen displays SIP registration information, status of calls and VoIP traffic statistics. To access it, open the Status screen (see Section 8.2 on page 80), and click (Details.) next to VoIP Statistics.
Figure 80 VoIP Statistics

Table 21 VoIP Statistics

LABEL SIP Status Account Registration This column displays each SIP account in the V300. This field displays the current registration status of the SIP account. You can change this in the Status screen. Registered - The SIP account is registered with a SIP server. Unregister - The SIP account has failed to register with a SIP server, or is not active. This field displays the last time you successfully registered the SIP account. It displays N/A if you never successfully registered this account. This field displays the account number and service domain of the SIP account. You can change these in VoIP > SIP > SIP Settings. This field displays the transport protocol the SIP account uses. SIP accounts always use UDP. This field indicates whether or not there are any messages waiting for the SIP account. This field displays the last number that called the SIP account. It displays N/A if no number has ever dialed the SIP account. DESCRIPTION
Last Registration URI Protocol Message Waiting Last Incoming Number
LABEL Last Outgoing Number Call Statistics Call Peer Number Status This field displays the V300s line number. This field displays the SIP number of the person on the other end of the line, when a call is in progress. This field indicates whether the line is active or not. Idle - The line is not active. Dial - the line is active and a connection to a SIP server has been made, but a call is not in progress. Dialing - the V300 is initiating a call on this line. Ringing - the V300 has initiated a call, and the phone at the other end is ringing. Connected - a call is in progress on this line. Disconnect - the line is active, but the connection with the SIP server has been terminated. Hold - a call on this line is on hold. Waiting - another line is active, and this line has an incoming call that has not been answered. Transfer - a call on this line is waiting to be transferred. Transferred - a call on this line has been transferred to another number, and is still ongoing. Incoming - an incoming call on this line is waiting to be answered. Busy - the V300 has tried to initiate a call, but the phone at the other end is engaged. This field displays what voice codec (coder/decoder) is being used for a current VoIP call. This field displays how long the current call has lasted. This field displays the number of packets the V300 has transmitted in the current call. This field displays the number of packets the V300 has received in the current call. This field displays how quickly the V300 has transmitted packets in the current call. The rate is the average number of bytes transmitted per second. This field displays how quickly the V300 has received packets in the current call. The rate is the average number of bytes transmitted per second. Enter how often you want the V300 to update this screen, and click Set Interval. Click this to make the V300 update the screen based on the amount of time you specified in the Poll Interval field. Click this to make the V300 stop updating the screen. DESCRIPTION This field displays the last number the SIP account called. It displays N/A if the SIP account has never dialed a number.

Chapter 12 The Phone Book

12.2 Call Forward Screen

Use this screen to configure call forwarding for incoming calls. When call forwarding is active, incoming calls are redirected to other phone numbers. You can set up rules for all incoming calls, or have the V300 forward calls from specific numbers only. Click VoIP > Phone Book > Call Forward. The following screen displays.
Figure 95 VoIP > Phone Book > Call Forward
Table 33 VoIP > Phone Book > Call Forward
LABEL Call Forward Setup Active Allow Anonymous Call Conditional Forward DESCRIPTION The V300 checks these rules, in the order in which they appear, after it checks the rules in the Advanced Setup section. Select this to turn call forwarding on. This setting applies to all call forwarding on the V300. Select this to allow incoming calls that do not carry caller ID. If this is not selected, the phone does not ring when someone tries to call you with caller ID deactivated. Select this to forward all incoming calls under certain circumstances (if the phone is in use, if you do not answer, or if you have the Do Not Disturb function turned on).
Table 33 VoIP > Phone Book > Call Forward (continued)
LABEL Busy Forward to Number DESCRIPTION Select this if you want the V300 to forward incoming calls to the specified phone number if the phone is busy (it does not matter which line is being used). Specify the phone number in the field on the right. If you have call waiting, the incoming call is forwarded to the specified phone number if you reject or ignore the second incoming call. Select this to forward all incoming calls if you do not answer the phone within the time you set in the No Answer Time field. Select this to forward all incoming calls if you have DND (Do Not Disturb) turned on. Select this if you want the V300 to forward all incoming calls to the specified phone number, regardless of other rules in the Forward to Number section. Specify the phone number in the Forward Number field. Enter the phone number to which you want to forward incoming calls. This field is used by the No Answer Forward to Number feature and No Answer conditions. Enter the number of seconds the V300 should wait for you to answer an incoming call before it considers the call is unanswered.
No Answer Forward to Number DND Forward Unconditional Forward to Number Forward Number No Answer Time
Specific Active Select this to turn on the specific call forwarding rules you set up in the Advanced Setup section of this screen. If you have Conditional Forwarding or Unconditional Forwarding turned on as well as specific call forwarding, the V300 applies the specific call forwarding rules first. If the incoming number does not match a specific call forwarding rule, the V300 applies the conditional or unconditional forwarding rule. List Table Group List Block List DND White List Advanced Setup # Select this to see the phonebook entries belonging to each group. Select this to see the phone numbers that are prevented from calling the V300. Select this to see which contacts (phonebook entries) are allowed to call the V300 even when DND (Do Not Disturb) is turned on. The V300 checks these rules before it checks the rules in the Call Forward Setup section. This field is a sequential value, and it is not associated with a specific rule. The sequence is important, however. The V300 checks each rule in order, and it only follows the first one that applies. Select this to have the V300 use the specific call forwarding rule. Deselect it to ignore the rule. Enter the incoming phone number to which you want this rule to apply. Enter the phone number to which you want to forward calls from this number Select this to always forward incoming calls from this number. Select this to forward incoming calls from this number if you do not answer the phone within the time you set in the No Answer Time field. Select this to forward incoming calls from this number if the V300 is in use. It does not matter which line is being used. Select this to forward incoming calls from this number if you have DND (Do Not Disturb) turned on.

Figure 106 Maintenance > Tools > Firmware Upload

Chapter 15 Tools

Table 44 Maintenance > Tools > Firmware Upload
LABEL Firmware Upgrade File Upload Browse. Upload Type in the location of the file you want to upload in this field or click Browse. to find it. Click Browse. to find the.bin file you want to upload. Remember that you must decompress compressed (.zip) files before you can upload them. Click Upload to begin the upload process. This process may take up to two minutes. DESCRIPTION
Do not turn off the V300 while firmware upload is in progress!
After you see the Firmware Upload In Process screen, wait two minutes before logging into the V300 again.
Figure 107 Upload Warning
The V300 automatically restarts during this interval, causing a temporary network disconnect. In some operating systems, you may see the following icon on your desktop.
Figure 108 Network Temporarily Disconnected
After two minutes, log in again and check your new firmware version in the Status screen. If the upload was not successful, the following screen will appear. Click Return to go back to the Firmware screen.
Figure 109 Upload Error Message
15.3 Configuration Screen
Click Maintenance > Tools > Configuration. Information related to factory defaults, backup configuration, and restoring configuration appears on this screen.
Figure 110 Maintenance > Tools > Configuration
15.3.1 Backup Configuration
Backup configuration allows you to back up (save) the V300s current configuration to a file on your computer. Once your V300 is configured and functioning properly, it is highly recommended that you back up your configuration file before making configuration changes. The backup configuration file will be useful in case you need to return to your previous settings. Click Backup to save the V300s current configuration to your computer.
15.3.2 Restore Configuration
Restore configuration allows you to upload a new or previously saved configuration file from your computer to your V300.
Table 45 Maintenance > Tools > Configuration > Restore
LABEL Restore Configuration File Path Browse. Upload Type in the location of the file you want to upload in this field or click Browse. to find it. Click Browse. to find the file you want to upload. Remember that you must decompress compressed (.ZIP) files before you can upload them. Click Upload to begin the upload process. DESCRIPTION
Do not turn off the V300 while configuration file upload is in progress
After you see a configuration upload successful screen, you must then wait one minute before logging into the V300 again.

Figure 111 Configuration Upload Successful
Figure 112 Temporarily Disconnected
If you uploaded a configuration file that sets the V300 to get an IP address automatically, use the System Info LCD menu to find out its new address. See Section 5.5 on page 49 for more information. If the upload was not successful, the following screen will appear. Click Return to go back to the Configuration screen.
Figure 113 Configuration Restore Error

15.3.3 Save Debug Log

Save Debug Log allows you save a copy of the V300s debug log to your computer. This is useful if you encounter any problems with the device and need to talk to customer support.
15.3.4 Back to Factory Defaults
Back to Factory Defaults let you clear all user-entered configuration information and returns the V300 to its factory defaults. You can also press the RESET button on the rear panel to reset the factory defaults of your V300. Refer to the chapter about introducing the web configurator for more information on the RESET button.

15.4 Restart Screen

System restart allows you to reboot the V300 without turning the power off. Click Maintenance > Tools > Restart. Click Restart to have the V300 reboot. This does not affect the V300's configuration.
Figure 114 Maintenance > Tools > Restart
15.5 Ring Maintenance Screen
This screen allows you to upload files to the V300 and use them as ringtones. These files must be MIDI (Musical Instrument Digital Interface) files with a.midi extension. You can also download files from the V300 to your computer.
The V300 has ten MIDI file slots. If you upload a MIDI file to a file slot on the V300, the MIDI file already in the slot is deleted. There is no way to retrieve the deleted file, unless it is a default ringtone (in which case you need to reset the V300).
Each MIDI file can be up to 10K in size.
Click Maintenance > Tools > Ring Maintenance. The following screen displays.
Figure 115 Maintenance > Tools > Ring Maintenance
Table 46 Maintenance > Tools > Ring Maintenance
LABEL Ring Maintenance Ring Midi File Select Browse Upload Delete Select the file you want to manage. The V300 has four MIDI file slots. Use this to select the file you want to upload to the V300. Click this once you have selected a file you want to upload. Click this to delete the file in the slot you selected in the Ring Midi File Select list. DESCRIPTION
LABEL Ring Download Download Click this to download the MIDI file you selected in the Ring Midi File Select list to your computer. The file is saved in.rar format. DESCRIPTION

Figure 131 Windows Vista: Internet Protocol Version 4 (TCP/IPv4) Properties
8 Select Obtain an IP address automatically if your network administrator or ISP assigns your IP address dynamically. Select Use the following IP Address and fill in the IP address, Subnet mask, and Default gateway fields if you have a static IP address that was assigned to you by your network administrator or ISP. You may also have to enter a Preferred DNS server and an Alternate DNS server, if that information was provided.Click Advanced. 9 Click OK to close the Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) Properties window. 10 Click OK to close the Local Area Connection Properties window.

Mac OS X: 10.3 and 10.4

The screens in this section are from Mac OS X 10.4 but can also apply to 10.3. 1 Click Apple > System Preferences.
Figure 132 Mac OS X 10.4: Apple Menu
2 In the System Preferences window, click the Network icon.
Figure 133 Mac OS X 10.4: System Preferences
3 When the Network preferences pane opens, select Built-in Ethernet from the network connection type list, and then click Configure.
Figure 134 Mac OS X 10.4: Network Preferences
4 For dynamically assigned settings, select Using DHCP from the Configure IPv4 list in the TCP/IP tab.
Figure 135 Mac OS X 10.4: Network Preferences > TCP/IP Tab.
5 For statically assigned settings, do the following: From the Configure IPv4 list, select Manually. In the IP Address field, type your IP address. In the Subnet Mask field, type your subnet mask. In the Router field, type the IP address of your device.
Figure 136 Mac OS X 10.4: Network Preferences > Ethernet
6 Click Apply Now and close the window.
Check your TCP/IP properties by clicking Applications > Utilities > Network Utilities, and then selecting the appropriate Network Interface from the Info tab.
Figure 137 Mac OS X 10.4: Network Utility

Mac OS X: 10.5

The screens in this section are from Mac OS X 10.5. 1 Click Apple > System Preferences.
Figure 138 Mac OS X 10.5: Apple Menu
2 In System Preferences, click the Network icon.
Figure 139 Mac OS X 10.5: Systems Preferences
3 When the Network preferences pane opens, select Ethernet from the list of available connection types.
Figure 140 Mac OS X 10.5: Network Preferences > Ethernet
4 From the Configure list, select Using DHCP for dynamically assigned settings. 5 For statically assigned settings, do the following: From the Configure list, select Manually. In the IP Address field, enter your IP address. In the Subnet Mask field, enter your subnet mask. In the Router field, enter the IP address of your NWD271N.

Figure 141 Mac OS X 10.5: Network Preferences > Ethernet
6 Click Apply and close the window.
Check your TCP/IP properties by clicking Applications > Utilities > Network Utilities, and then selecting the appropriate Network interface from the Info tab.
Figure 142 Mac OS X 10.5: Network Utility

Linux: Ubuntu 8 (GNOME)

This section shows you how to configure your computers TCP/IP settings in the GNU Object Model Environment (GNOME) using the Ubuntu 8 Linux distribution. The procedure, screens and file locations may vary depending on your specific distribution, release version, and individual configuration. The following screens use the default Ubuntu 8 installation.
Make sure you are logged in as the root administrator.
Follow the steps below to configure your computer IP address in GNOME: 1 Click System > Administration > Network.
Figure 143 Ubuntu 8: System > Administration Menu
2 When the Network Settings window opens, click Unlock to open the Authenticate window. (By default, the Unlock button is greyed out until clicked.) You cannot make changes to your configuration unless you first enter your admin password.
Figure 144 Ubuntu 8: Network Settings > Connections
3 In the Authenticate window, enter your admin account name and password then click the Authenticate button.
Figure 145 Ubuntu 8: Administrator Account Authentication
4 In the Network Settings window, select the connection that you want to configure, then click Properties.
Figure 146 Ubuntu 8: Network Settings > Connections
5 The Properties dialog box opens.
Figure 147 Ubuntu 8: Network Settings > Properties
In the Configuration list, select Automatic Configuration (DHCP) if you have a dynamic IP address. In the Configuration list, select Static IP address if you have a static IP address. Fill in the IP address, Subnet mask, and Gateway address fields. 6 Click OK to save the changes and close the Properties dialog box and return to the Network Settings screen. 7 If you know your DNS server IP address(es), click the DNS tab in the Network Settings window and then enter the DNS server information in the fields provided.
Figure 148 Ubuntu 8: Network Settings > DNS
8 Click the Close button to apply the changes.
Check your TCP/IP properties by clicking System > Administration > Network Tools, and then selecting the appropriate Network device from the Devices tab. The Interface Statistics column shows data if your connection is working properly.

Table 52 Subnet Masks

BINARY 1ST OCTET 8-bit mask 16-bit mask 24-bit mask 29-bit mask 2ND OCTET 3RD OCTET DECIMAL 4TH OCTET 255.0.0.0 255.255.0.0 255.255.255.0 255.255.255.248

Network Size

The size of the network number determines the maximum number of possible hosts you can have on your network. The larger the number of network number bits, the smaller the number of remaining host ID bits. An IP address with host IDs of all zeros is the IP address of the network (192.168.1.0 with a 24-bit subnet mask, for example). An IP address with host IDs of all ones is the broadcast address for that network (192.168.1.255 with a 24-bit subnet mask, for example). As these two IP addresses cannot be used for individual hosts, calculate the maximum number of possible hosts in a network as follows:
Table 53 Maximum Host Numbers
SUBNET MASK 8 bits 16 bits 24 bits 29 bits 255.0.0.0 255.255.0.0 255.255.255.0 255.255.255.248 HOST ID SIZE 24 bits 16 bits 8 bits 3 bits MAXIMUM NUMBER OF HOSTS 254 6

Notation

Since the mask is always a continuous number of ones beginning from the left, followed by a continuous number of zeros for the remainder of the 32 bit mask, you can simply specify the number of ones instead of writing the value of each octet. This is usually specified by writing a / followed by the number of bits in the mask after the address. For example, 192.1.1.0 /25 is equivalent to saying 192.1.1.0 with subnet mask 255.255.255.128. The following table shows some possible subnet masks using both notations.
Table 54 Alternative Subnet Mask Notation
SUBNET MASK 255.255.255.0 255.255.255.128 ALTERNATIVE NOTATION /24 /25 LAST OCTET (BINARY) LAST OCTET (DECIMAL) 0 128
Table 54 Alternative Subnet Mask Notation (continued)
SUBNET MASK 255.255.255.192 255.255.255.224 255.255.255.240 255.255.255.248 255.255.255.252 ALTERNATIVE NOTATION /26 /27 /28 /29 /30 LAST OCTET (BINARY) LAST OCTET (DECIMAL) 252

Subnetting

You can use subnetting to divide one network into multiple sub-networks. In the following example a network administrator creates two sub-networks to isolate a group of servers from the rest of the company network for security reasons. In this example, the company network address is 192.168.1.0. The first three octets of the address (192.168.1) are the network number, and the remaining octet is the host ID, allowing a maximum of or 254 possible hosts. The following figure shows the company network before subnetting.
Figure 167 Subnetting Example: Before Subnetting
You can borrow one of the host ID bits to divide the network 192.168.1.0 into two separate sub-networks. The subnet mask is now 25 bits (255.255.255.128 or /25). The borrowed host ID bit can have a value of either 0 or 1, allowing two subnets; 192.168.1.0 /25 and 192.168.1.128 /25. The following figure shows the company network after subnetting. There are now two subnetworks, A and B.

Appendix F Open Software Announcements Export Restrictions THIS LICENSE AGREEMENT IS EXPRESSLY MADE SUBJECT TO ANY APPLICABLE LAWS, REGULATIONS, ORDERS, OR OTHER RESTRICTIONS ON THE EXPORT OF THE SOFTWARE OR INFORMATION ABOUT SUCH SOFTWARE WHICH MAY BE IMPOSED FROM TIME TO TIME. YOU SHALL NOT EXPORT THE SOFTWARE, DOCUMENTATION OR INFORMATION ABOUT THE SOFTWARE AND DOCUMENTATION WITHOUT COMPLYING WITH SUCH LAWS, REGULATIONS, ORDERS, OR OTHER RESTRICTIONS. YOU AGREE TO INDEMNIFY ZyXEL AGAINST ALL CLAIMS, LOSSES, DAMAGES, LIABILITIES, COSTS AND EXPENSES, INCLUDING REASONABLE ATTORNEYS' FEES, TO THE EXTENT SUCH CLAIMS ARISE OUT OF ANY BREACH OF THIS SECTION 8. 9 Audit Rights ZyXEL SHALL HAVE THE RIGHT, AT ITS OWN EXPENSE, UPON REASONABLE PRIOR NOTICE, TO PERIODICALLY INSPECT AND AUDIT YOUR RECORDS TO ENSURE YOUR COMPLIANCE WITH THE TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF THIS LICENSE AGREEMENT. 10 Termination This License Agreement is effective until it is terminated. You may terminate this License Agreement at any time by destroying or returning to ZyXEL all copies of the Software and Documentation in your possession or under your control. ZyXEL may terminate this License Agreement for any reason, including, but not limited to, if ZyXEL finds that you have violated any of the terms of this License Agreement. Upon notification of termination, you agree to destroy or return to ZyXEL all copies of the Software and Documentation and to certify in writing that all known copies, including backup copies, have been destroyed. All provisions relating to confidentiality, proprietary rights, and non-disclosure shall survive the termination of this Software License Agreement. 11 General This License Agreement shall be construed, interpreted and governed by the laws of Republic of China without regard to conflicts of laws provisions thereof. The exclusive forum for any disputes arising out of or relating to this License Agreement shall be an appropriate court or Commercial Arbitration Association sitting in ROC, Taiwan. This License Agreement shall constitute the entire Agreement between the parties hereto. This License Agreement, the rights granted hereunder, the Software and Documentation shall not be assigned by you without the prior written consent of ZyXEL. Any waiver or modification of this License Agreement shall only be effective if it is in writing and signed by both parties hereto. If any part of this License Agreement is found invalid or unenforceable by a court of competent jurisdiction, the remainder of this License
Appendix F Open Software Announcements Agreement shall be interpreted so as to reasonably effect the intention of the parties.

Note: NOTE: Some components of this product incorporate source code covered under the open source code licenses. To obtain the source code covered under those Licenses, please check ZyXEL Technical Support (support@zyxel.com.tw) to get it. Table 62 Open Source Components

SOFTWARE

Linux busybox MSNTP

VERSION

2.4.17 0.61pre 1.6
http://www.linux.org/info/ gnu.html http://www.busybox.net/ license.html http:// www.freebsdsoftware.org/ net/msntp.html http://www.uclibc.org/ about.html http://freshmeat.net/ projects/udhcp/ http://sourceforge.net/ projects/utelnetd/ http://www.zlib.net/ zlib_license.html http:// bftpd.sourceforge.net/ downloads/COPYING/ http://c-ares.haxx.se/ license.html http://www.inatech.eu/ inadyn/ http://www.netfilter.org/ about.html#license http://www.gnu.org/ software/osip/ http://mmonit.com/monit/ http://www.openssl.org/ about/ http://www.stunnel.org/ http://freshmeat.net/ projects/tftp-hpa/ http:// upnp.sourceforge.net/ http://acme.com/software/ mini_httpd/ http://ppp.samba.org/ppp/ README.html
uClibc udhcp utelnetd zlib bftpd
0.9.19 0.9.7 0.1.4 1.2.3 1.4.1
c-ares inadyn iptables libosip2 monit openssl stunnel tftp libupnp mini_httpd pppd
1.3.1 1.96.2 1.3.8 3.1.0 5.0 0.9.7d 4.15 hpa0.42 1.3.1 1.19 1.68
Appendix F Open Software Announcements
Required Information Product model and serial number. Warranty Information. Date that you received your device. Brief description of the problem and the steps you took to solve it.

Customer Support

Please have the following information ready when you contact customer support.
+ is the (prefix) number you dial to make an international telephone call. Corporate Headquarters (Worldwide) Support E-mail: support@zyxel.com.tw Sales E-mail: sales@zyxel.com.tw Telephone: +886-3-578-3942 Fax: +886-3-578-2439 Web: www.zyxel.com, www.europe.zyxel.com FTP: ftp.zyxel.com, ftp.europe.zyxel.com Regular Mail: ZyXEL Communications Corp., 6 Innovation Road II, Science Park, Hsinchu 300, Taiwan
Costa Rica Support E-mail: soporte@zyxel.co.cr Sales E-mail: sales@zyxel.co.cr Telephone: +506-2017878 Fax: +506-2015098 Web: www.zyxel.co.cr FTP: ftp.zyxel.co.cr Regular Mail: ZyXEL Costa Rica, Plaza Roble Escaz, Etapa El Patio, Tercer Piso, San Jos, Costa Rica

Regular Mail: ZyXEL Communications Inc., 1130 N. Miller St., Anaheim, CA 928062001, U.S.A. Norway Support E-mail: support@zyxel.no Sales E-mail: sales@zyxel.no Telephone: +47-22-80-61-80 Fax: +47-22-80-61-81 Web: www.zyxel.no Regular Mail: ZyXEL Communications A/S, Nils Hansens vei 13, 0667 Oslo, Norway
Poland Russia Support: http://zyxel.ru/support Sales E-mail: sales@zyxel.ru Telephone: +7-095-542-89-29 Fax: +7-095-542-89-25 Web: www.zyxel.ru Regular Mail: ZyXEL Russia, Ostrovityanova 37a Str., Moscow 117279, Russia E-mail: info@pl.zyxel.com Telephone: +48-22-Fax: +48-22-Web: www.pl.zyxel.com Regular Mail: ZyXEL Communications, ul. Okrzei 1A, 03-715 Warszawa, Poland
Singapore Support E-mail: support@zyxel.com.sg Sales E-mail: sales@zyxel.com.sg Telephone: +65-6899-6678 Fax: +65-6899-8887 Web: http://www.zyxel.com.sg Regular Mail: ZyXEL Singapore Pte Ltd., No. 2 International Business Park, The Strategy #03-28, Singapore 609930
Spain Support E-mail: support@zyxel.es Sales E-mail: sales@zyxel.es Telephone: +34-902-195-420 Fax: +34-913-005-345 Web: www.zyxel.es Regular Mail: ZyXEL Communications, Arte, planta, 28033 Madrid, Spain
Sweden Support E-mail: support@zyxel.se Sales E-mail: sales@zyxel.se Telephone: +46-31-744-7700 Fax: +46-31-744-7701 Web: www.zyxel.se Regular Mail: ZyXEL Communications A/S, Sjporten 4, 41764 Gteborg, Sweden
Thailand Support E-mail: support@zyxel.co.th Sales E-mail: sales@zyxel.co.th Telephone: +662-831-5315 Fax: +662-831-5395 Web: http://www.zyxel.co.th Regular Mail: ZyXEL Thailand Co., Ltd., 1/1 Moo 2, Ratchaphruk Road, Bangrak-Noi, Muang, Nonthaburi 11000, Thailand.
Ukraine Support E-mail: support@ua.zyxel.com Sales E-mail: sales@ua.zyxel.com Telephone: +380-44-247-69-78 Fax: +380-44-494-49-32 Web: www.ua.zyxel.com Regular Mail: ZyXEL Ukraine, 13, Pimonenko Str., Kiev 04050, Ukraine
United Kingdom Support E-mail: support@zyxel.co.uk Sales E-mail: sales@zyxel.co.uk Telephone: +44-1344-303044, 08707-555779 (UK only) Fax: +44-1344-303034 Web: www.zyxel.co.uk FTP: ftp.zyxel.co.uk Regular Mail: ZyXEL Communications UK Ltd., 11 The Courtyard, Eastern Road, Bracknell, Berkshire RG12 2XB, United Kingdom (UK)
AbS 94 ACK message 90 action keys 32 address 85 address assignment 85 advanced settings 49, 51 alphanumeric keypad 33 alternative subnet mask notation 187 analysis-by-synthesis 94 CoS 95 custom keys 51 customer support 203

Daylight saving 127 decoder 93 DHCP 51, 62, 87 differentiated services 95 DiffServ 95 DiffServ Code Point (DSCP) 95 DiffServ marking rule 95 dimensions 149 disclaimer 193 DnD 33 DnD white list 118 DNS 64, 87, 128 Do not Disturb 33 Domain Name System 64 DS field 95 DSCPs 95 dynamic IP address 51, 62 dynamic jitter buffer 150
backup configuration 135 block list 117 BYE request 90
cable channels 35 call forwarding 112 calling a contact 46 certifications 193 notices 194 viewing 194 circuit-switched telephone networks 89 Class of Service (CoS) 95 client server SIP 90 client-server protocol 90 codec 93 coder/decoder 93 comfort noise generation 108, 150 configuration backup 135 reset the factory defaults 137 restore 136 contact information 203 contact list 45, 48, 114 copyright 193

echo cancellation 150

FCC interference statement 193 features 31 firmware 49 firmware upload 133 front panel 31 FTP 29 function keys 33
G.G.G.G.G.gateway 49, 62 group list 115

keypad 33

LCD screen 32, 35 LCD screen display settings 51 logs 131 loudspeaker 33
handset 32, 35 hang up 33 hardware 31 hardware connections 31, 73 headphone socket 33 headphones 33 headset 33 host ID 86 humidity 149 hybrid waveform codec 94
managing the device good habits 30 using FTP. See FTP. using SPTGEN. See SPTGEN. mask 86 Menu key 32, 46, 47 message waiting indication 94 mic socket 33 microphone 33 multimedia 89 mute 33 MWI 94
IANA 85, 192 IEEE 802.1Q VLAN 95 Internet access 87 Internet Assigned Numbers Authority See IANA 192 Internet Protocol Private Branch Exchange 28 Internet Telephony Service Provider 28, 89 IP address 49, 51, 73, 85, 86 IP to IP Calls 29 IP-PBX 28, 89 ITSP 28, 89
NAT 192 NAT (Network Address Translation) 92 NAT routers 93 navigation panel 76 Navigator key 32 network address translators 93 network connections 31 network number 86 number keys 33

jitter buffer 150

OK response 90 outbound proxy 93 SIP 93

outbound proxy server 93

password 73, 74 PBX services 89 PCM 94 peer-to-peer calls 29 per-hop behavior 95 PHB (per-hop behavior) 95 phone functions 31 phonebook 45, 48, 111 call contact 46 Phonebook key 32 physical features 31 PoE 34 Point 29 Point to Point Calls 29 Point-to-Point Protocol over Ethernet 86 power 34 Power over Ethernet 34 power specification 149 PPPoE 51, 65, 86, 87 dial-up connection private IP address 85 private networks 85 product registration 195 proxy server SIP 91 pulse code modulation 94
SIP 92 registration product 195 related documentation 3 required bandwidth 94 reset 35, 50 reset button 137 restart 50 restore configuration 136 RFC RFC RFC RFC RJ-RTP 92

doc1

Compact Design with Rich Call Features
HD Voice Wideband Codec Support Rich Call Feature with Hard Keys Multiple-Codec Indemnification Covered Crystal-Clear Voice Quality with TIA-810 Certification

Benefits

Easy Deployment
The V300 Series is a cost-effective broadband network IP phone that provides an easy-to-use solution for VoIP service deployments, as well as users who already have broadband access. It supports flexible configurations including fully functional Web-based setup. Moreover, it also has the AutoProvisioning capability to automatically download configuration files and complete the setup process without cumbersome tweaking.
Superior Audio and Speech Clarity
HD voice means excellent speech quality. It uses a wider voice spectrum between 50 and 7000 Hz, and the wider spectrum offers a more natural sound with fuller fidelity. The V300 Series IP Phone also provides various bit rates codec to meet different network environment needs.
High Voice Quality at Low Cost
The V300 Series IP Phone comes with tagging features that support QoS (Quality of Service) plans, such as ToS (Type of Service), from service providers. In addition, it also allows gateways or central-side equipments to identify and prioritize voice traffics.

Friendly Hard Keys

The V300 Series boasts hard keys with useful and popular features including Hold, Redial, Conference, Transfer, Send, Hang Up, Voice Mail, Mute, DND, Headset and Speaker, etc., to save communication time and efforts.

IP Phone

V300 SERIES

Specifications

System Specifications
Call Features CW (Call Waiting) Call Forward Call Transfer Call Hold/C Retrie C /Call ieve Inc ncoming Call Policy Ca Po Flash Hook Timer sh Tim i Music on Hold (l c (local/music play fro from PBX/IT P) /ITSP Early Media (music play from PBX/ITSP) Ear ia P VMWI (Visual Message Waiti Indicator al e ting (RFC 3842)) Hands-free/Speak aker Independent Volume Controls e Single Button Mute e Time & Date Settin (NTP) ting DND (Do Not Disturb) Di MCID Call Blo ock Redial (The last call by button) e Conferenc Call w/Media Server (PBX support) nce 3-way Conference Call w/Local mixer Co Call Log Dial Plan VoIP security SR SRTP* SMS News broad dcasting* SIP UA RFC 3261 SIP: Session Initiation Protocol RFC 2327 SDP RFC 3264 An Offer/Answer Model with SDP RFC 3550 RTP RFC 1890 RTCP RFC 3608 DNS SRV
* Firmware upgradeable for future enhancement
Qo QoS TOS Tagging Diffserv Tagging VLAN Tagging Network Features TCP/IP PPPoE Client DHCP Client Static IP WEB/FTP/TFTP Firmware Upgrade Configuration Backup/Restore TFTP, HTTP Auto-provisioning/Firmware Upgrade Outbound Proxy STUN (RFC3489) Manual Configured SIP and RTP (Fake Address) NAT Keep Alive Audio Codec/DSP G.711a/ G.722.2* G.723.1A G.726 (16/24/32/40) G.729a/b

Hardware Specifications

Two 10/100M Ethernet RJ-45 ports (For LAN & PC) Microphone Port and Earphone Port (3.5 mm) One 4-pin RJ-9 for phones handset connection Build-in full-duplex speaker/microphone Restore Factory Defaults/Reboot button LCD display: 2 lines x 16 characters Mono text Power over Ethernet (802.3af )(V301-T1 only) One RJ11 port for Lifeline (V301L-T1 only)

Physical Specifications

Dimensions: 165 (W) x 91.5 (D) x 208 (H) mm Weight: 465 g
Environmental Specifications
Operating Environment Operating temperature: 0C ~ 40C Operating humidity: 20% ~ 95% RH Storage Environment Storage temperature: -30C ~ 60C Storage humidity: 20% ~ 95% RH

Product Description

V300-T1 V301-T1 V301L-T1
Basic IP Phone IP Phone with PoE IP Phone with FXO port

Application Diagram

PSTN backup

PSTN Network

V301L IP Phone
ITSP (IP Telephony Service Provider)

PSTN Phone

Home/SOHO

PoE Switch

VoIP Call P Server Se Trunking Gateway
PSTN Network Mobile Network

IP Network

X6004 IP PBX

Enterprise

V300 IP Phone

Cellular Phone

For more produc t information, visit us on the web www.ZyXEL.com
Copyright 2007 ZyXEL Communications Corp. All rights reserved. ZyXEL, ZyXEL logo are registered trademarks of ZyXEL Communications Corp. All other brands, product names, or trademarks mentioned are the property of their respective owners. All specifications are subject to change without notice.

65-100-030001G

 

Technical specifications

Full description

ZyXEL 2-Line VoIP IP Phone - V300 The V300 Series is a cost-effective broadband network IP phone that provides an easy-to-use solution for VoIP service deployments, as well as users who already have broadband access. It supports flexible configurations including fully functional Web-based setup. Moreover, it also has the Auto-Provisioning capability to automatically download configuration files and complete the setup process without cumbersome tweaking. Features 2 line LCD text display Supports 3-way conferencing with crystal-clear voice quality ZyXEL auto-provisioning for ease of deployment Uses industry leading TI Voice DSP Optional PoE support

 

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