Correction, it was a Lucent switch, not Avaya.
On Jul 7, 2009, at 8:54 AM, Ken Whitcomb wrote:
> True Jon, thanks for pointing it out. The only time I've had trouble
> with it was at my desk at a former employer, using an Avaya phone
> switch. I concluded that the switch was digital and didn't function
> properly with the Newton generated analog tone, but I was never really
> certain why it didn't work. I have a Panasonic phone switch at home
> and have never tested it, I guess I know what I'm going to do today!
> The calls app is one of my favorites. I presume it would be great for
> a person in sales as well.
>
> ken
>
> On Jul 7, 2009, at 1:16 AM, Jon Glass wrote:
>
>> On Tue, Jul 7, 2009 at 1:30 AM, Ken Whitcomb<ken@imageguild.com>
>> wrote:
>>> It would use a modem to dial the number
>>> associated with the person you're calling
>>
>> Just for the record, it doesn't need a modem to dial. Turn on speaker
>> dialing, and hold the mic part of the handset up to the speaker, and
>> it will dial through the speaker. You can even enter calling card
>> numbers, PBX codes, etc. Most phones I've used had no problems with
>> this, even hotel phones.
>
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Received on Tue Jul 7 09:06:19 2009
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