Thank you for the response. All I need is a wireless mic solution such as 
Revolabs table top wireless Mics. I understand the technology itself is not 
basic but having compatibility options for generally available universal third 
party wireless mic solutions in my mind is basic. When I can get wireless Mics 
for a several hundred dollar Cisco 8831 I would expect something to be 
available for an MX300 that costs thousands. Even if it is Cisco having a doc 
that tells me what to purchase and what the base settings need to be. I know 
there is a solution out there somewhere just surprised Cisco has not provided 
end users with supported configurations. Based on some forum searching, the 
problem people are seeing with this seems to be the non-industry standard mic 
plug they use so the proprietary mic can have a mute button on it.

Reason: I am tied of techs having to tape down the wires for the Mics so people 
don't trip on them. Also tired of not being able to reach Mics to some users. 
The wired Mics are fine for a stationary unit at the end of a conference table 
but when it is on wheels moving from room to room, wired is not so great.

As for the rest of the questions that would vary widely depending on room and 
setup. I am not trying to do anything fancy, I just need 2 wireless Mics I can 
set in front of presenters that will send audio to a base that will plug in to 
the codec and work whether it is an MX200G2 or MX300.

Been using a Revolabs 2 channel unit that mixes in to a single channel output 
to the codec. Some forum users have had luck and some have not. I have been 
able to get it to work but the audio quality is not consistent. Seems like a 
fine tuning setting between the Revolabs mixer and the codec.

Thanks again!



On Dec 18, 2014, at 12:29 AM, Josh Warcop 
<j...@warcop.com<mailto:j...@warcop.com>> wrote:

That is definitely more of an A/V conversation than a Cisco one. The A/V 
support is really up to you. There are thousands of room and acoustic 
configurations to account for. Wireless audio isn't a basic thing and to think 
a RadioShack 2.4Ghz mix solution is going to fit everyone's needs isn't 
realistic. The 750Mhz and 900Mhz wireless mics are still viable solutions.

So with all that side I've got a few questions -
What is the actual endpoint? Does it use speakertrack?
What are the room dimensions?
What are the table dimensions?
How many people are planned to be at the table?
Are you doing a presenter or whiteboard microphone?
Is there a giant reason wireless microphones are needed over corded?
How are you anticipating multiple audio channels or everyone is everything on 
the audio input?

Thanks!


Sent from my Windows Phone
________________________________
From: JASON BURWELL<mailto:jason.burw...@foundersfcu.com>
Sent: ?12/?17/?2014 10:26 PM
To: cisco-voip@puck.nether.net<mailto:cisco-voip@puck.nether.net>
Subject: [cisco-voip] Wireless Mics for MX Series

Has anyone had any luck integrating a 3rd party wireless mic solution with an 
MX series Telepresence endpoint? I am being told by TAC there is no recommended 
solution and cannot understand how on earth a product of this expense lacks 
such a basic feature or at the very least a supported solution with a Cisco 
partner. I tried a Revolabs mic with special cord recommended on the Cisco 
forums for a C series codec but I get all kinds of noise. I just believe there 
has to be something out there to address this need. Having to use the corded 
mics is a real pain in a mobile setting.

Thanks


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