Jabra Speak 510 UC Wireless Bluetooth Speakerphone – Outstanding Sound Quality, Portable Conference Speaker for Holding Meetings Anywhere – Certified for Zoom & Google Meet
$91.76
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Specification: Jabra Speak 510 UC Wireless Bluetooth Speakerphone – Outstanding Sound Quality, Portable Conference Speaker for Holding Meetings Anywhere – Certified for Zoom & Google Meet
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10 reviews for Jabra Speak 510 UC Wireless Bluetooth Speakerphone – Outstanding Sound Quality, Portable Conference Speaker for Holding Meetings Anywhere – Certified for Zoom & Google Meet
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$91.76
J. Wong –
I had another USB speakerphone that this replaced. That one wasn’t bluetooth enabled, and that turned out to be a significant game changer for me.I’m a remote worker, and I spend a lot of time on the phone. The things that I love about this speaker is that it works with my PC (via USB) and my phone (via BT) simultaneously. It also functions as a basic mono speaker (I have no other speakers connected to my PC). The best thing about it is the smart button, which I’ve programmed to bring up Siri. Before, when I needed to make a call… pickup phone, unlock, open contacts, find contact (or punch in phone number). Now, tap smart button, tell Siri what I want. Yes, I can call up Siri on my phone directly, but it’s just not as simple or easy as tapping that button.Clarity on both ends is great. I’ve asked a few people on the other end, and nobody can tell I’m on a speaker. There’s plenty of volume if you need to fill a medium sized room, and overall sound quality is very good.The speaker claims to work with many conferencing apps, and it does work, but I wouldn’t say it’s integrated. For example, if I tap the mute button, the speaker mutes, but the conferencing app doesn’t. Not really a problem since I’m still muted, but there’s always that moment of, “am I muted?” if I look at the app. I just have to remember to look at the speaker which clearly shows you’re muted by lighting up all the red LEDs around the perimeter of the device. Speaking of the lights, they’re all very well thought out. Lights to let you know it’s on, that BT is on. Lights that come up in sequence to show the volume setting, and whether you’re on an active call, and lights to indicate the battery level. They’re all uniquely different and easy to intuitively understand.I also like that it’s easy to turn BT on/off with a tap of the BT button. Connection establishment happens fast, to the point that I can turn it on and answer a call after the phone has started ringing (if I’d forgotten to turn it on previously).I haven’t tested battery life since it stays plugged in at my desk. Though, even if it only got half of the 15-hour claimed talk time, that would be more than enough to get me through a typical days calls.The only thing I’d change about the device is the placement of the mute/power buttons. The four buttons I use the most are answer/end/mute and the smart button. I would’ve swapped the positions of the mute/power buttons so that mute was between answer/end. Then all four common use buttons would be right next to each other. As it is, the mute button is “far away” relative to the other buttons. Of course, this is a very minor nitpick, and doesn’t change my overall opinion of it, but there you go.
A.I. –
I got it today for use with Microsoft Teams in a small conference room at work. This thing is tiny, much smaller than I expected: it fits into the palm of my hand. It has a bluetooth connection capability (but it does not come with a special dongle, like my Jabra headset), and also USB connectivity (via the permanently connected to the unit USB cable). I plugged it into Dell docking station, and now we can connect our laptops to the speaker by just plugging in the USB-C cable from the docking station. This cable via docking station provides power to the laptop, feeds video to the TV via HDMI cable, and feeds audio to the Jabra Speak via USB. The sound is surprisingly good – the quality is great, and it is loud enough for the team. While it is nominally rated for 4 people, I found that mike is good enough to pick up sound from people around a larger table, which can sit up to 8 people. Connection to MS Teams as audio established automatically, one did not even need to switch the audio to Jabra Meet in the list. Sound quality on the other end was also better than expected. The only annoying thing is that every time you turn the unit on, it gives recorded instructions to connect to bluetooth – which is totally unnecessary as we do not play to use the bluetooth functionality, and this announcement is very annoying as it is repeated over and over again. I guess, the only way to deal with it is to keep it plugged into the docking station and never turn it off. Overall, a really nice gadget. Please be aware that when you buy on Amazon, the gadget can be sold by Amazon.com or any other business or individual doing merchant business through Amazon. At the time of this writing, there are 3 businesses who are not authorized dealers offering the same unit along with Amazon.com as a seller! You as a customer may pick from whom you want to buy. Jabra is very specific on their web site that warranty support will only be provided to original owners of units bought from authorized resellers. Amazon.com is one of them, but many third party vendors (with names you never heard) who are selling through Amazon are not. Jabra even maintains a list of non-authorized vendors, and they say they sell either grey market products or refurbished units, as they cannot get what they sell directly from Jabra! An option to buy a unit sold directly by Amazon can cost a few dollars more, but it is the only one that comes with warranty!
Dawn Meade –
I use an iPhone for my business. I don’t like holding a phone next to my ear, so I use the speaker or a headset. The downside is that my customers often hear interference from my headset, and the iPhone speaker is poor. I decided to get a speaker system to use with the iPhone. After researching, I chose this Jabra because it was not horrifically expensive, and I preferred a blutooth system to work with the iPhone. I have not been disappointed. I’ve been using the Jabra now for two months. It set up easily and works like a little charm. I set it near me on my desk and when I get a call, simply press the answer button and have a conversation on a clear line. My clients never hear interference, I hear them very well and the conversation is very clear on their end. I use it all day long: 8-10 hours per day. I’m on the phone a lot, more some days than others, but the charge lasts roughly two days. It will also work while plugged in and charging. The speaker volume is limited, but it’s about the size of a coffee cup saucer, so that’s a given. Despite its diminutive size, the volume is more than sufficient. The only downside I’ve experienced so far is that, when the battery is drawing down to empty, the red light starts to flash and, if you don’t get it plugged in immediately, it will shut down in probably less than 60 seconds. So, if you are on an important call, and you haven’t charged it in a day or so, plug it in before the call. I read reviews before I purchased and saw that a number of people were dissatisfied with range, quality, etc. I’ve experienced none of those issues and find this product to be an exceedingly useful little workhorse!
Mike –
I recently purchased the Microsoft Lync-compatible version of the Jabra Speak 410 (from Amazon), and have been using it daily for about 3 months. My experience has been excellent and I highly recommend it. This is a very well-designed product.Functionally, it integrates very smoothly with MS Lync and the audio settings of my laptop (the software downloaded via Jabra’s website is very easy to set up and use). It’s about the diameter of a CD, and about an inch thick – with the supplied soft case it tucks away nicely in my laptop bag for on-the-go use.The sound quality of the speaker is excellent – I’ve used it for both conference calls, VoIP phone calls via Lync, and listing to music and CDs from my laptop. In all cases, it sounded as good or better than any external computer speakers I have ever used (excluding outboard subwoofers, etc.). It gets plenty loud and can easily fill a small to medium size room with sound.People whom I am speaking with via the Jabra 410 have told me that my audio quality (i.e. the Jabra 410’s internal microphone) sounds excellent, however I have not been able to actually hear how I sound to others when using the Jabra 410 so I can not compare the Jabra 410’s mic sound quality to more traditional wired headsets or dedicated external mics. All my use of the Jabra has been from my own home office or small conference rooms, so I can not confirm how it performs in large conference rooms with many people speaking in a group (Jabra claims the microphone is multidirectional, and it does appear to be).It has a jack for an external headset, so you can listen to calls/music/audio privately if others are in the room with you, and when doing so it continues to use its own internal microphone in case you need to speak. I have not tried this, but I suspect the headphone jack would also allow you to connect the Jabra to an outboard audio system or the audio input of a computer monitor with speakers (and I suspect when doing so it would maintain full duplex audio).The onboard controls (volume, mute, etc.) are touch-sensitive and work very smoothly, and when pressing them the Jabra’s LEDs light up and you hear a soft “click” sound through the Jabra’s speaker to confirm (really slick, actually).A feature I particularly like is that when you press the “Mute” button, all 12 of the LEDs around the outer ring of the device light up red, and do NOT blink when you are on mute. The LEDs will stay red as long as the unit is muted, so at a quick glance you can verify that you are on mute, even from several feet away from the unit. I can’t stand mute lights that blink when on mute, especially when on long calls where I am not a key participant and am on mute for most of the call.My only complaint is that it is a wired device and isn’t wireless/battery powered. I’ll bet Jabra’s working on a wireless version though (if they aren’t they should be). Also, it would be nice to have a hinged base or “kickstand” so you could angle it toward you rather than having it point straight up all the time.If you’re looking for a true hands-free audio conferencing experience via MS Lync that is similar to that of traditional and far more expensive conferencing equipment (like Polycom, etc.), the Jabra Speak 410 will work nicely.
Christopher Moloney –
I love this speaker. It is so solid, I have purchase it for both the office and home (although you can easily move it.) Sounds quality for voice is a 10/10. Best I have heard. Even comparing to larger office professional speakers, this one picks up voice and sounds great and you can hear how good or bad everyone else’s computer mics are (Macs are great, some PCs are terrible, BTW.) I probably really want to give the product 4.4 stars–DUE TO THESE TECHNICAL ISSUES– (Not everyone will have these issues) But, the main complaint I have here is that the buttons light up differently depending on whether you are on Teams, Zoom, Google meet, etc. REALLY inconsistent. So inconsistent that I really don’t use the Bluetooth–I ONLY connect with a cable. It works great wirelessly with a phone, but when you switch from Zoom to Google meet or Teams–it often just does not connect. You have to manually reset things. BIG ISSUE #2 – the sleek design is such that buttons only light up when you need them. But sometimes the mute button does not light up and you cannot see it. I literally used a silver Sharpie to highlight the Mute and On button. They did not need to make these black with no label unless the light is on. When you switch between Teams and Zoom as I do 15 times a day, often the mute button on the device just does not work–mostly on teams. SO, the mute light on the Jabra is on — making you THINK you are muted — but you look on Teams and you are NOT muted. That is a risk and problem. It works better connected than wireless, just be careful about making sure you have got your video or audio tools fully set to the Jabra 710. Even when I am set up properly, odd things happen where I cannot hear or the mute is not working. But in the 90% of the time everything works right–JABRA 710 is great. I am happy to talk to the design team at Jabra as I can explain these issues more clearly–but they are real tech issues–not “user error.” AND for heaven’s sake, on the next one (Jabra 810, 910?) — PLEASE make the buttons visible at all times. The sleek design is a classic result of “form over function” and that’s bad. LAST COMPLAINT – I have a lot of bluetooth speakers for music, various Amazon, Bose, etc. The Jabra is very flat for music and not good. Even with two speakers, I still don’t recommend it. It’s for voices, not music. But again, it’s the best mainstream voice call/video speaker out there—so HIGHLY RECOMMENDED, despite my tech issues.
Gretchen Paine –
I tried a cheaper disc that started giving me static issues 3 months in. I have never had a complaint about the clarity of my voice in online meetings and have never had issues with the sound from this disc. Easy to use and works great.
CAM –
I was told a year or so ago that this Jabra was a good device… I had spent several weeks working remotely in Europe and after spending hours on the phone with ear buds… then with over-the-ear headphones that had an integrated microphone… and feeling like my ears were full of hot sweat and realizing that no matter how comfortable something feels at first… after hours even a soft pillow can start to hurt, I felt like there had to be something better. I quickly forgot about the Jabra devices until I was again at a meeting in a hotel without a speakerphone. We had to dial someone in and the connection was terrible. People had to lean over the phone and shout directly at the thing just to make themselves heard.Anyway… flash forward a few months and I happen to be a in room with our IT group. One of the guys was zipping this thing up into the little case and it reminded me that I should check it out. I decided to go ahead and order one.All I can say is WOW!! This thing connects to my iPhone 6s Plus with no problems whatsoever. I have also used it at work to connect directly with the USB cable for use with computer audio. One thing I have found is that the computer audio itself is usually the weak link. I have used some services in the past (Lync) and had little problems… others (GoTo something…) have had bigger problems. This has had nothing to do with the speaker.I am once again in Europe and have used this thing for approximately 40 hours of teleconferences back to the states. The call quality is pure and crisp and plenty loud for me working at my little home-away-from-home desk. The battery life is tremendous. I have only plugged it into charge a couple of time and neither time was the thing even half-way drained. I know that the answer/hang-up buttons only work with real phone calls. I have been using Skype to dial real numbers. I don’t think it is a limitation of the device so much as a limitation of Skype and bluetooth perhaps. I don’t even find it to be a nuisance because the ability to have a clear and crisp conference call with a speakerphone like this is really just fantastic. It is now going with me on every single work trip. I even bought one for my spouse.I can honestly say that if you are going to be working remotely (out of the country)… then your go-bag should have this device… a phone with international data for Skype (T-mobile has a great plan these days… unlimited data in 140 countries included with a regular plan)… and perhaps a Skype calling plan (unlimited calls back to the US for 3 months). If you toss in a small keyboard and perhaps a USB-powered monitor… you basically can have an office anywhere in the world that is fully functional and doesn’t give you head or ear aches.This thing is a winner for me… it has been exhaustively tested…I don’t write a lot of Amazon reviews, but this thing is really that good and worth my time writing up.Only real downside? The case that comes with it is a tiny bit snug. It works just fine… I had to search to find a gripe.Now I need to prep for 7 hours of calls coming up in 30 minutes!
N. Dured –
I purchased my second one because it’s so easy to use. One for work and one for home. This is truly plug-and-play with no software to download, no apps, no special instructions or difficult setup.Take it out of the box, stick the USB plug in, and it’s working. That simple.(I have used mine with both Dell and HP laptop computers)Outstanding microphone sensitivity – can pick up on all of the voices around a table in an average sized conference room (8 to 10 people).
Amazon Customer –
I love this speaker. It works great for my classes and it was a great price. Couldn’t be happier.
Jon Strong –
I have a reputation among friends, associates, family for doing a deep dive and researching the field when choosing new products. I like to understand the differences between products, state of the art, etc., and generally be an informed buyer. I’ve also been in “tech” for more than 35 years, with roles from hands on through CIO and CTO, so I’ve got a lot of experience researching and choosing products, whether for one person or thousands. In short: I tend to be a picky shopper. I researched the field here, and think I’ve found a winner.At this point in my career, I’m traveling weekly, and I’m meeting — either in person or remote — with numerous people each week. Conference calls are the norm, and may involve dozens of people, conference rooms with poor equipment, offices with dreadful 15 year old “speakerphones”, hotel rooms, working from my home office, etc. One of the most frustrating experiences is trying to participate in a mission critical conference call when 1) I can barely hear or understand the folks at the other end, and 2) they can’t hear and understand me unless I lean over a mic and raise my voice. Cell phone “speakerphones” may be acceptable in an emergency, but haven’t proven adequate for routine use.I had recently research Bluetooth speakers for use primarily as audio / music listening speakers (for use, e.g., with Google Play Music from my phone). I researched and auditioned many: Bose, Cambridge, JBL, Shark, Amazon, Phillips, Anker, Jambox, etc. I narrowed it down to those with speakerphone capability, thinking I’d satisfy that need along with the media speaker requirement. After a LOT of research and live auditions, I settled on Nyne Bass, and couldn’t be happier with it — as a media speaker – truly amazing in all respects: sound is stunningly good – even outdoors, and both battery life and bluetooth handling are excellent. Unfortunately, it’s only mediocre when turning a phone into a speakerphone, and often quite disappointing — and I’ve tried out colleague’s products like Jambox for the same purpose, and also found them disappointing. So — I went on the hunt for a “real” business quality Bluetooth speakerphone.After much research, I homed in on Jabra, and the 510+ looked most promising after reading a LOT of reviews. Buying via Amazon Prime, I knew I had no risk, so I place the order — and had the package on my desk about 36 hours later. Once again — kudos to Amazon Prime and the vendors that work with Amazon in this program.The product is perfectly packaged, and beautifully made. It appears to be about 4.5″ in diameter, and about 1.25″ high when sitting flat on a desk or table. It is a gorgeous, professional grade piece of tech with excellent fit and finish and features. It comes with a neoprene zipper case, the USB cord wraps around the body and tucks into a groove that also holds the cable end in place. Incredibly well thought out and executed.This model can be connected to a phone or laptop via bluetooth, and to a laptop via USB cable. It doesn’t come with its own charging brick, but the USB cable can charge from any standard 1A or higher brick. It takes a while for a full charge, but once charged, I can use it all day and into the night, and the charge is only partially depleted.Sound quality is absolutely spectacular for the purpose. I can place this on a table or desk in a room with a dozen people at distances from 3 ft to 15 ft or more, and they are all picked up and easily understand by people at the other end of the call. What comes out of the speaker is superb as well: I’m often on the receiving end of a conference call with two dozen people, all different sound environments and volume levels, and half a dozen international accents — and this speaker yields clear audio rivaling $400 or $500 Polycom and Cisco equipment (no exaggeration). This is so good, in fact, that I’ve taken to turning it on when sitting in my office at my current client’s site, and using it in favor of the brand new Cisco equipment installed there. It’s a better experience.The controls around the perimeter are all touch controls — no physical buttons to degrade, and they work perfectly. Power, answer / hang up, volume up/down, bluetooth (on/off/pair), mute, battery (to check battery charge level). There are a serious of LEDs around the perimeter of the speaker that are almost invisible when off, but light up as needed to indicate function, e.g., Bluetooth connected, power on, volume level and battery life (number of lights on out of ten around the perimeter), etc. Audio prompts walk you through pairing, connection status, etc — and these can be turned on and off via preferences.The firmware is easily upgradeable via the USB cable and downloadable PC application. I haven’t had need to use the app yet, but it provides deeper control over options and connection to services like Lync. This also provides support for soft phones: this “510+ MS edition” is optimized for Microsoft products like Lync — the other 510+ is, I believe, aimed more at other soft phone products like Cisco.All in all: a beautifully designed, engineered and implemented product. Every now and then you trip across a gem that defines state of the art in its category – and I believe this qualifies. As you might guess, I’m delighted with this product.