Chapter 2

( SRS -2100 Voice Features

Using a One Touch Button to Make a Call

Just press it. If no other call is active, the SRS-2100 selects an idle Directory Number, turns on the speaker and microphone, and dials the number. (If the MIC- OFF LED is red, the microphone has been turned off, so press MIC-OFF to turn it back on.)

If you already have a dial tone, then pressing the one-touch button plays back the stored number as if you were dialing.

Dialing Special Codes Using One-touch Buttons

The one-touch feature provides two ways of supplying special codes such as credit card numbers, passwords, personal ID numbers, and voice mail access codes. You can store a code on its own one-touch button or you can include special codes as part of a single one-touch number.

Storing a Code on a One- Touch Button

You can store a special code on its own one-touch button just as you do an ordinary telephone number. Once you establish an active call, you can press the one- touch button to send the special code. These numbers are sent using the standard DTMF tones that these systems normally require.

Including Codes in a One- Touch Number

You can code both telephone numbers and one or more special code numbers on a single one- touch button, with appropriate pauses between numbers to allow for system response. You can code up to 30 digits, with each pause character counting as one digit.

The following example illustrates the sequence for accessing voice mail. The SRS-2100 sends the numbers up to the first pause, represented by a comma, as an out-of-band, D-channel call request. When the call connects, the digital set waits one second and then begins sending the additional numbers as tones on the B-channel, with a two -second pause for each additional comma.

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Fujitsu SRS-2100 manual Using a One Touch Button to Make a Call, Dialing Special Codes Using One-touch Buttons