Sip 3102 Manual
Sip 3102 Manual
Sip 3102 Manual
Guide
1 GETTING STARTED
Setting Up Your Password and Voice Mail for the First Time 13
NBX NetSet Utility 15
Starting the NBX NetSet Utility 16
Navigation and Shortcut Icons in the NBX NetSet Utility 16
Quick Reference Guides 17
4 NBX MESSAGING
NBX Messaging Components 31
Important Considerations 32
Changing Your Password 32
Security Tips 33
Changing Your Name Announcement and Personal Greetings 33
5 STANDARD FEATURES
Answering a Call 47
Caller ID 48
Answering a Second Call 48
Using the 3Com Telephone Display Panel 48
Tips on Using the Lists 49
Dialing a Call 50
An Internal Call 50
An External Call 50
Redialing a Call 50
Using a Headset 76
With the 3Com Manager’s Telephone and 3Com 3102 Business
Telephone 76
General Headset Instructions 76
Returning to the Headset After a Long Delay 77
Using Hands Free Active on Intercom 78
Palm Integration 78
8 FEATURE CODES
NBX Tones 107
Feature Codes with 3Com Telephones 108
3Com Business Telephone 109
Using Feature Codes 109
INDEX
It includes information about using the NBX Voice Mail system and the
NBX NetSet™ administration utility for personal telephone settings.
■ Telephones
■ 3Com 3102 Business Telephone
■ 3Com 2102 Business Telephone
■ 3Com 2102-IR Business Telephone
■ 3Com 1102 Business Telephone
■ Attendant Consoles
■ 3Com 3105 Attendant Console
■ 3Com 1105 Attendant Console
■ NBX Complement Attendant Software
How to Use Table 1 shows where to look for specific information in this guide.
This Guide
Table 1 Where to Find Information
Conventions Table 2 defines some commonly used words and phrases in this guide.
Table 2 Common Terms
Term Definition
Auto Attendant The set of voice prompts that answers incoming calls and
describes actions that a caller or user can take to access
individual services.
Administrator The person who is responsible for maintaining your
3Com Networked Telephony Solution.
Receptionist The person who answers the majority of incoming
telephone calls. In some business environments, this
person may be a switchboard operator.
User A person who has a single 3Com Telephone or an
analog telephone connected to the NBX system through
an ATC card or the single-port ATA device.
Documentation The documentation set for 3Com NBX Networked Telephony Solutions is
designed to help NBX telephone users, installers, and administrators
maximize the full potential of the system.
The NBX Resource Pack CD contains many guides to the NBX products
and their related 3Com applications.
When you log in to the NBX NetSet utility as a user, you can view the PDF
versions of the NBX Telephone Guides and NBX Feature Codes Guide by
clicking the icons at the bottom of the screen. You can view the Quick
Reference Guide for your telephone by clicking the Telephone Quick
Reference button.
The NBX NetSet utility also includes a searchable Help system with Help
buttons on each screen.
An administrator who logs in can also see the NBX Installation Guide and
the NBX Administrator’s Guide.
Comments on the Your suggestions are important to us. They help us to make the NBX
Documentation documentation more useful to you.
Please send your e-mail comments about this guide or any of the
3Com NBX documentation and Help systems to:
[email protected]
As always, please address all questions regarding the NBX hardware and
software to your 3Com NBX Voice-Authorized Partner.
For how to access NBX® features from an analog telephone, set your
password as described next and then see the NBX Feature Codes Guide in
the NBX NetSet™ utility.
Setting Up Your The procedure by which you set up your password and voice mailbox for
Password and the first time depends on:
Voice Mail ■ The kind of telephone that you have
for the First Time
■ The kind of voice messaging system on your NBX system. Ask your
administrator what kind of voice messaging is active on your system.
For details on tones and feature codes, see Chapter 8. For details on
tones and feature codes on analog telephones, see the NBX Feature
Codes Guide in the NBX NetSet utility.
Table 4 Setting Your NBX NetSet Utility and NBX Messaging Password
After you have set your initial NBX password, continue to follow the voice
prompts to record your name announcement. Your name announcement
tells callers that they have reached your voice mailbox.
Then follow the voice prompts to record your personal greeting. Your
personal greeting lets callers know important information about you, for
instance, that you are on vacation, available at another number, or
unavailable for a specified amount of time.
At any time you can change these greetings or record more than one
personal greeting and choose which one is active. See “Changing Your
Name Announcement and Personal Greetings” in Chapter 4.
NBX NetSet Utility The NBX NetSet utility has two interfaces:
■ Administrator — Your administrator logs in with a special password
and uses the NBX NetSet utility to manage and configure system-wide
telephone settings and many of the settings for your telephone.
■ User — As a telephone user, you log in to the NBX NetSet utility with
your own system ID (your extension) and password to:
■ View and change your telephone’s personal settings, such as speed
dials, ringer tone, and specify where you want your calls to go
when you cannot answer them (your call coverage points).
■ Listen to and delete your voice messages from your computer as an
alternative to managing calls on your telephone.
■ View your call permissions, certain current feature settings, and the
internal user directory to call other users on your system.
■ Log in to and out of one or all ACD groups, hunt groups, and
calling groups of which your telephone is a member.
Starting the NBX To use the NBX NetSet utility, you need a computer that is connected to
NetSet Utility your local area network (LAN) and that has a web browser. (You do not
need Internet access.) To start the NBX NetSet utility:
1 Ask your administrator for the IP address (or DNS host name) for your
NBX system. In the web browser on your computer (Microsoft Internet
Explorer version 5.5 or later is optimal), enter the IP address (or DNS host
name) in the Address field, and then press Enter. The NBX NetSet utility
login screen appears.
You cannot log in to the NBX NetSet utility until you establish your
password through your telephone using NBX voice prompts or the
Feature Code sequence. See Table 4 earlier in this chapter.
2 Click User to log in as a user. The password dialog box appears.
3 Type your NBX NetSet utility user identification (always your 3-digit or
4-digit telephone extension) and your NBX NetSet utility password, and
then click OK.
Navigation and The icons at the lower right of any Personal Settings window allow you
Shortcut Icons or your administrator to navigate to the following features:
in the NBX NetSet
Utility Table 5 Navigation Icons
Off-Site Notification
Telephone Guides
(including this guide)
Quick Reference To open and print a copy of the Quick Reference Guides for the most
Guides frequently used features on your telephone:
1 Log in to the NBX NetSet utility. See “Starting the NBX NetSet Utility”
earlier in this chapter.
2 Click Telephone Quick Reference. The quick reference guide that
pertains to your telephone appears. Adobe Acrobat Reader 5.0 or higher
is required to view the file. Adobe Acrobat Reader is available free from
the Adobe Web site:
www.adobe.com
This chapter describes the buttons, controls, and features on the 3Com®
3102 Business Telephone. It covers these topics:
■ Telephone Buttons and Controls
■ Programmable Access Buttons
■ Status Lights for System Appearance Buttons
Telephone Buttons Figure 1 shows the buttons and controls on the 3Com 3102 Business
and Controls Telephone. The features are discussed after the picture.
1 Soft buttons — Allow you to select items that are displayed in the
telephone display panel. See “Using the 3Com Telephone Display Panel”
in Chapter 5. The buttons, from left to right, are:
■ Slct (Select)
■ Back (returns you to the next higher level in the menu)
■ Exit (leaves the display panel menus)
2 Message Waiting Indicator (MWI) — When lit, indicates that you have
one or more new voice mail messages in your voice mailbox. Also, this
indicator flashes when your telephone rings.
3 Display panel — Displays telephone status messages, Caller ID
information (if enabled), and the number of messages that you have in
your voice mail mailbox. You can also use it to view these items:
■ Logs of your recent missed, answered, and dialed calls
■ A directory of people’s names in your organization
■ Personal speed dial numbers
Programmable Figure 2 shows the 18 programmable Access buttons on the 3Com 3102
Access Buttons Business Telephone. To view or change the current features on your
telephone’s buttons (button mappings), click the Shortcut to
One-Touch Speed Dials icon on any NBX NetSet utility screen. Click the
Help button for instructions.
Access buttons have these default settings, which your administrator can
change:
1 In most circumstances, your administrator designates these three system
appearance buttons as lines for incoming and outgoing calls.
2 Personal Speed Dial 1. See “Speed Dials” in Chapter 6.
3 Personal Speed Dial 2
4 Personal Speed Dial 3
5 Call Park button — Allows you to place a call in a “holding pattern” so
that it can be retrieved from any other telephone on the system. See
“Call Park” in Chapter 7.
6 Transfer to Voice Mail button — Sends a call directly to another user’s
voice mailbox. See “Direct Mail Transfer” in Chapter 7.
7 Feature button — Allows you to access features that are not directly
assigned to an Access button on your telephone. See Chapter 8 for a list
of features and codes and how to use them.
8 Release button — Disconnects calls. Useful when you use a telephone
headset. See “Using a Headset” in Chapter 6.
9 Personal Speed Dial 4. See “Speed Dials” in Chapter 6.
10 Personal Speed Dial 5
11 Personal Speed Dial 6
12 Personal Speed Dial 7
13 Personal Speed Dial 8
Status Lights for An Access button that is set up for incoming and outgoing calls is called a
System Appearance System Appearance button. The light beside each System Appearance
Buttons button indicates the status:
Telephone Buttons Figure 3 shows the buttons and controls on the 3Com 1102, 2102 and
and Controls 2102-IR Business Telephones.
2 Soft buttons — Allow you to select items that are displayed in the
telephone display panel. See “Using the 3Com Telephone Display Panel”
in Chapter 5.
The soft buttons, from left to right, are:
■ Slct (Select)
■ Back (returns you to the next higher level in the menu)
■ Exit (leaves the display panel menus)
3 Scroll buttons (Up, Down) — Allow you to scroll through the items in
the telephone display panel. See “Using the 3Com Telephone
Display Panel” in Chapter 5.
4 Program button — Reserved for future use.
5 Programmable Access buttons and label area — Allow you and your
administrator to assign features to specific buttons. See “Programmable
Access Buttons” and “Status Lights for System Appearance Buttons”
later in this chapter.
6 Programmable Access and label area — Allow you and your
administrator to assign features to specific buttons. See “Programmable
Access Buttons” later in this chapter.
7 Hold button — Places a caller on hold. See “Putting a Call on Hold” in
Chapter 5.
8 Transfer button — Sends the currently active call to another telephone.
See “Transferring a Call” in Chapter 5.
9 Conference button — Establishes a single call with up to three
additional internal parties, external parties, or both. See “Establishing a
Conference Call” in Chapter 5.
10 Redial button — Redials the last telephone number or extension that
you called. See “Redialing a Call” in Chapter 5.
11 Speaker button — Enables you to use the speaker phone feature. Press
the Speaker button before you dial the call, when your telephone is
ringing, or while a call is in progress. To turn the speaker phone off and
resume the conversation, pick up the handset.
12 Volume up and down buttons — Raises and lowers the volume of the
ringer, the speaker, the handset, or the headset. See “Setting the
Volume” in Chapter 5.
13 Mute button — Enables you to prevent callers from hearing what you
are saying during a telephone call. Press the Mute button to turn off the
telephone’s microphone when you are using the handset or when your
telephone is in speaker phone mode. To turn off the Mute feature, press
the Mute button again.
14 Infrared Port (2102-IR only) — Receives infrared signals from a
hand-held device running the Palm Operating System. See “Palm
Integration” in Chapter 6.
15 Hands Free button — Allows you to answer internal (intercom) calls
without picking up the handset. To activate this feature, press the
Hands Free button before calls come in to your telephone. When this
feature is enabled, the indicator is lit. When you receive an internal call,
your telephone sounds a tone and activates the speaker phone.
An external call (a call from outside your NBX system) rings to your
telephone as usual.
16 Telephone key pad
17 MSG (Message) button — Accesses your voice mail messages through
the NBX Messaging system. See “Listening to NBX Messages” in
Chapter 4. The status light beside this button acts as a message waiting
indicator (you have one or more messages in your voice mailbox).
18 FWD MAIL (Forward to Voice Mail) button — Directs all incoming
calls to your voice mail (or to wherever you have specified in NetSet >
User Information > Call Forward Default) after one ring. See “Other
Ways to Manage Your Voice Mail Messages” in Chapter 4.
19 Handset
1 7
2
3
4
5
6
8
Access buttons have these default settings, which your administrator can
change:
1 Feature button — Allows you to access features that are not directly
assigned to an Access button on your telephone. See Chapter 8 for a list
of features and codes and how to use them.
2 Direct Mail Transfer button — Sends a call directly to another user’s
voice mailbox. See “Direct Mail Transfer” in Chapter 7.
3 Call Park button — Allows you to place a call in a “holding pattern” so
that it can be retrieved from any other telephone on the system. See
“Call Park” in Chapter 7.
4 Flash button (analog line only) — Toggles the current call to another
call if the line has the Call Waiting service from your local telephone
company, or enables call transfer if the line has the Call Transfer service.
5 Unassigned — This button has no default assigned function.
6 Release button — Disconnects calls. Useful when you use a telephone
headset. See “Using a Headset” in Chapter 6.
7 Typically, you can use these nine buttons for personal speed dial settings,
although the administrator can map them to other features. See “Speed
Dials” in Chapter 6.
8 In most circumstances, your administrator designates these three system
appearance buttons as lines for incoming and outgoing calls.
Status Lights for An Access button that is set up for incoming and outgoing calls is called a
System Appearance System Appearance button. The light beside each System Appearance
Buttons button indicates the status:
NBX Messaging A key component of the NBX Networked Telephony Solutions is the
Components NBX Messaging system, which includes voice mail, off-site notification,
and several administrative features. Voice mail allows callers to leave voice
messages in your voice mailbox when you are not able to answer your
telephone. You can listen to, save, and forward those messages from any
touch-tone telephone.
Important ■ The steps are the same for initially setting up the name
Considerations announcement, personal greetings, and passwords for personal,
greeting-only, and phantom mailboxes. See “Setting Up Your
Password and Voice Mail for the First Time” in Chapter 1 for details.
(Your administrator creates group mailboxes and their passwords.)
■ For changes to passwords and greetings, see “Changing Your
Password” and “Changing Your Name Announcement and Personal
Greetings” later in this chapter.
■ The default setting for the maximum length of each voice mail
message on the system is 5 minutes. Your administrator can configure
your organization’s NBX Messaging system to receive and store voice
mail messages that are up to 10 minutes long.
■ Use the Off-Site Notification feature if you want the NBX system to
notify you when callers leave voice mail messages in your voice
mailbox. See “Off-Site Notification” in Chapter 6.
■ With a touch-tone telephone, you are able to bypass system messages
using option buttons if you are configuring passwords and greetings.
However, you cannot bypass voice mail messages in this manner.
Changing Your You use the same 4-digit to 10-digit password to log in to the NBX
Password NetSet™ utility and to access your NBX voice mail. You can change this
password with your telephone (using the NBX voice prompts or a feature
code) or through the NBX NetSet utility.
To set up your password for the first time, see Table 4 and “NBX NetSet
Utility” in Chapter 1. Table 4 also describes how to change your
password.
If your NBX system uses a messaging system other than NBX Messaging:
■ Use the feature code method described in Table 4 in Chapter 1 to set
and change the NBX NetSet utility password.
■ 3Com recommends that you use the same password for your voice
messaging system and for the NBX NetSet utility.
Changing Your You set name announcement and personal greeting when you first set
Name your voice mail. See “Setting Up Your Password and Voice Mail
Announcement and for the First Time” in Chapter 1. Change your personal greeting often, to
Personal Greetings ensure that callers hear up-to-date information.
You can record up to five personal greetings and choose which to use
from the telephone. You can also review, delete, or choose which to
make active with the NetSet utility.
If appropriate, you may also want to change the greeting for an extension
that is a “greeting-only mailbox,” so that callers do not attempt to leave
messages. See “Greeting-Only Mailbox” later in this chapter.
Using the NetSet utility, you can review or delete a personal greeting or
choose which of your recorded greetings to make active.
3 Select a greeting.
a Click Select to choose the greeting as the active greeting.
b Click Listen to hear the greeting.
c Click Delete to delete the greeting. You cannot delete greeting
number 1; you can re-record it through the phone.
Listening to NBX You can listen to your NBX voice mail messages from your 3Com®
Messages Telephone, from any touch-tone telephone, or by logging in to the NBX
NetSet utility. After you listen to messages, you can save or delete them
to clear them from the New Messages queue. For how to set up your
NBX NetSet utility password the first time, see Table 4 and “NBX NetSet
Utility” in Chapter 1.
Message Indicators Here is how you can tell if you have messages in your mailbox:
■ On a 3Com 3102 Business Telephone — The indicator bar above
the display panel is lit, and the display panel shows the number of
messages. Example: 3 Msgs 2 New.
■ On a 3Com 1102, 2102, or 2102-IR Business Telephone — The
indicator next to the MSG button is lit, and the display panel shows
the number of messages. Example: 3 Msgs 2 New.
■ On an analog telephone — Pick up the handset. If you hear the
New Messages Tone (rapid stutter tone), you have new messages or
messages that you have listened to but have not yet saved or deleted.
For information on accessing NBX features from an analog telephone,
see the NBX Feature Codes Guide in the NBX NetSet utility.
■ In the NBX NetSet utility — Log in as a user. The list of your
messages appears in the Voice Mail Messages area on the NBX
NetSet > User Information screen. A new message has a * next to
it. A forwarded messages has -->Fw: next to it.
Listening from Your To listen to your messages from your computer, you must have a way of
Computer playing audio files:
■ A USB audio device such as a USB headset and an operating system
that supports USB
OR
■ A sound card, an application such as Windows Media Player, and
either headphones or speakers
1 Log in to the NBX NetSet utility with your extension and password.
2 Select a message in User Information > Voice Mail Messages.
3 Click Listen.
4 The third-party application downloads the voice message and plays it.
5 To delete the message, select the message and then click Delete.
Listening from Your To listen to your messages from your own 3Com Telephone:
3Com Telephone
1 Pick up the handset and press the Message button to access the
mailbox.
2 At the prompt, dial your password and press #.
3 See Table 6 for the buttons that you use to manage your messages.
Listening from Any To listen to your messages from any 3Com Telephone other than your
Internal 3Com own within your NBX system:
Telephone
1 Pick up the handset and press the Message button.
2 Press * and dial your extension. You hear your name announcement.
3 Dial your password and press #.
4 See Table 6 for the buttons that you use to manage your messages.
Information About To listen to date, time, and sender information about a message in your
Your Messages mailbox, press 6 during or after the message, and then press one of these
buttons:
Sender information.
Replying to a You can send a reply to a voice mail message, provided that the NBX
Message system has received the necessary caller ID information.
If you receive a message that is marked Private, you can reply to the
originator, but you cannot forward the message to others.
To forward a message:
1 Log in to your voice mailbox at your telephone or remotely.
2 Listen to a message that you want to forward, and press 5.
3 After the tone, record an introductory message and then press # OR if
you choose not to record a comment, press # when you hear the tone.
4 Optionally, press one of these buttons, OR proceed to step 5.
Creating and To create and send a message directly without actually making a call,
Sending a Message follow these steps:
1 Log in to your mailbox at your telephone or remotely.
2 Dial 2 to select Create and Send a Message.
3 At the tone, record a message that is at least 2 seconds long, and press #
to end the recording.
4 Optionally, press one of these buttons, OR proceed to step 5.
Using Voice Mail A Voice Mail Group, also called a mail group or mail list, is a collection of
Group Lists extensions with a special “group number.” Use it to send a message to
everyone on the list at the same time.
A Voice Mail Group is not the same as an ACD Group, Hunt Group, or
Calling Group. See “Automatic Call Distribution Groups, Hunt Groups,
and Calling Groups” in Chapter 7.
Viewing System System Voice Mail Groups can be set up by your administrator. You can
Groups send a message to everyone in a System Voice Mail Group by using * plus
the two-digit group number.
You can see a list of System Voice Mail Groups and the membership of
each group through the NBX NetSet utility.
1 Log in to Netset > NBX Messaging > System Group List. A list of
System Group IDs and Names displays.
2 To view the membership of any group, select the group and click
Membership.
Creating Personal You can create your own Personal Voice Mail Group either through the
Groups telephone or through the NBX NetSet Utility.
To create a Personal Voice Mail List through the NBX NetSet Utility:
1 Log in Netset > NBX Messaging > Personal Group List. You see a list
of your current personal voice mail groups with Group IDs and Group
Names.
2 Click Add.
3 Enter a Group ID, a number from 01–99 that is not used for a current
group.
4 Enter a Name for the new group.
5 Enter any VPIM extensions in the VPIMs box.
6 Select members from the Non-Members list and move them to the
Members list by clicking the left arrow.
7 Click Apply and OK to complete the list.
Modifying or You can review your Personal Voice Mail Groups, add members, or delete
Deleting Personal a group from the telephone or from the NBX NetSet utility.
Groups
To review or modify a Personal Voice Mail Group from the telephone:
1 Log in to your mailbox at your telephone or remotely.
2 Dial 9 for Mailbox Options.
Create a group.
Delete a group.
To review or modify a Personal Voice Mail Group from the NBX NetSet
utility:
1 Log in Netset > NBX Messaging > Personal Group List. You see a list
of your current personal voice mail groups.
2 Select the group to review or modify.
3 Click Modify.
4 You can change the Name for the group.
5 You can enter any VPIM extensions in the VPIMs box.
6 You can select members from the Non-Members list and move them to
the Members list by clicking the left arrow. OR select members from the
Members list and move them to the Non-Members list by clicking the
right arrow.
7 Click Apply and OK to complete your changes.
To delete a Personal Voice Mail Group from the NBX NetSet utility:
1 Log in Netset > NBX Messaging > Personal Group List. You see a list
of your current personal voice mail groups.
2 Select the group to delete.
3 Click Remove.
4 Click Yes to confirm.
Marking a Message When you compose a voice message, you can select Private or Urgent
as Private or Urgent from the delivery options. If you do not select a delivery option, your
message is sent as a Normal message.
■ Private Messages — The recipient cannot forward the message to
others.
■ Urgent Messages — Places the message at the beginning of the
recipient’s message queue. Urgent messages are heard first.
1 Follow the steps in “Replying to a Message”, “Forwarding a Message”,
or “Creating and Sending a Message” earlier in this chapter.
2 In step 4 of those instructions, press 9.
Other Ways to You can listen to and, in some configurations, delete your voice messages
Manage Your Voice from within an e-mail application or a messaging application using your
Mail Messages Internet browser. For details, see “Listening to Your Messages in Your
E-mail” in Chapter 7.
Other Kinds of The NBX system allows you (for the greeting-only mailbox) or the
Mailboxes administrator (for phantom or group mailboxes) to set up mailboxes for
special situations, as described in this section.
Greeting-Only When you designate your mailbox as a greeting-only mailbox, callers hear
Mailbox your personal greeting but they cannot leave a voice mail message.
Examples:
■ When you take an extended leave of absence, you can create a
personal greeting with your scheduled date of return and whom to
call during your absence. Callers can be transferred but are unable to
leave voice messages for you. When you return, clear the Greeting
Only Mailbox check box so that callers can leave messages again.
■ If you are a teacher, you can create a new personal greeting on the
school’s NBX system every day to explain homework assignments.
Students call in to the greeting-only mailbox to get the homework
information but cannot leave a message for you on this mailbox.
■ If you are the administrator, you can create a greeting-only mailbox
and use the personal greeting to post information for employees, such
as a notice that the offices are closed because of bad weather.
When you create the personal greeting, remember to tell callers that they
cannot leave messages in this voice mailbox. For instructions on changing
the personal greeting, see “Changing Your Name Announcement and
Personal Greetings” earlier in this chapter.
Phantom Mailbox A phantom mailbox does not have an actual telephone associated with it.
The administrator sets up a phantom mailbox.
Examples:
■ If you are a sales representative who travels constantly for your
organization and never comes into the office, you still need a way to
receive telephone messages. Using your phantom mailbox, you can
retrieve, forward, and save messages in the same way that any other
employee can but without a physical telephone connected to your
NBX system.
■ If you are an employee who lives a long distance from your office and
works from home, customers and others can leave messages in the
your phantom mailbox and you can call in to the NBX system to
retrieve them, or you can listen to them from the NBX NetSet utility.
You retrieve messages from a phantom mailbox in the same way that you
retrieve messages from a personal mailbox. See “Listening to NBX
Messages” earlier in this chapter.
Group Mailbox A group mailbox is a voice mailbox from which a group of users can
retrieve messages. Your administrator creates group mailboxes and can
explain how to retrieve messages that are left in the group mailbox.
Example:
■ During nonbusiness hours, the system can send incoming telephone
calls for your sales department to a group mailbox. Your administrator
assigns to the appropriate sales people the ability to listen to, forward,
or otherwise handle all messages that are directed to the group
mailbox.
Your administrator can assign (map) a Message Waiting Indicator for the
group mailbox to an Access button on the 3Com Business Telephone of
each group member. The light next to the mapped button indicates when
the group mailbox has messages in it. Any group member can press the
button to retrieve messages from the group mailbox.
For help on accessing NBX features from an analog telephone, see the
NBX Feature Codes Guide in the NBX NetSet™ utility.
Answering a Call To answer an incoming call, pick up the handset. If you are using a
3Com® Business Telephone, you can press the Speaker button. If you
have enabled Handsfree Active on Intercom, you can simply speak to
answer internal calls.
forwarded or to specify where you want the call to go, see “Forwarding
Incoming Calls” later in this chapter.
Caller ID The display panel on your 3Com Telephone shows the name and
extension of an internal caller. For an external caller, if your organization
purchases Caller ID service from your telephone company and if the
external caller allows Caller ID information to be broadcast, the display
panel shows the external caller’s name and telephone number.
Answering a On 3Com Business Telephones, when a new call arrives while you are on
Second Call a call:
1 Press Hold to put the current call on hold.
2 Press the Access button for the line on which the new call is arriving.
3 To return to the earlier call, hang up the new call, or put it on hold, or
transfer it, and then press the Access button for the original call.
Using the 3Com Use the telephone display panel of your 3Com Telephone to dial a
Telephone number:
Display Panel ■ Call Logs — The logs of the most recent calls to and from your
telephone (Missed Calls, Answered Calls, Dialed Calls).
■ Directory — A list of the users on your system and their extensions.
■ Personal Speed Dials — A list of personal speed dial numbers that
you have set in NBX NetSet > Speed Dials.
■ System-wide Speed Dials — A list of the system-wide speed dial
numbers set by your administrator. You can print and view these
numbers in NBX NetSet > System Speed Dials.
3 Use the scroll keys to move to the name or number that you want to call.
Verify that the cursor is at the entry you want, and press the button under
Slct.
4 To move back to the previous menu, press the button under Back.
5 To leave the lists entirely, press the Exit soft button. OR press an Access
button that is programmed for Release. OR hang up.
Tips on After you press the up or down scroll key (3102 Business Telephone scroll
Using the Lists keys shown), if you do not select an item immediately, the display
alternates between the list:
Call Logs
Directory
Select an entry
Slct | Back | Exit
In the user directory, to move quickly to the first name that begins with a
particular letter, you can use the key pad. Example: Press 3 to show the
first name that begins with D; press 3 twice to move to the first name
that begins with E; press 3 three times to move to the first name that
begins with F. Then scroll up or down to the name that you want.
Dialing a Call This section describes standard dialing features. For information on
dialing from an analog telephone, see the NBX Feature Codes Guide in
the NBX NetSet utility.
Forwarding You can choose when and where to forward unanswered incoming calls.
Incoming Calls Unanswered calls that come in directly to your extension go to a call
coverage point. You can set different call coverage points for different
conditions: default, no answer, busy, and all calls.
When you specify call forwarding, you specify the call coverage point and
the condition under which to forward calls.
Call Coverage Points Your call coverage points are the destinations you forward your calls to
when you do not answer. They can be telephone extensions or external
telephone numbers, your voice mail box, or an automated attendant.
Setting Call Forward You can set call forwarding from your telephone. You choose the
from the Telephone condition for call forwarding (default, no answer, busy, or all) and the
destination. When you specify an external telephone number as the
destination, start by entering a 9 or 8 or whatever is required to access an
outside line. Example: 912815551212 dials (281) 555-1212. You can
From the telephone, you can set call forwarding using feature codes. Use
the NetSet utility to see your call forwarding settings. Your administrator
can also set programmable access buttons for call forwarding. And you
can select Call Forward All directly from the display panel.
Forward to Mail
From the telephone, you can set your 3Com Telephone so that all
incoming calls go directly to your default call coverage point, usually your
voice mailbox. You can change the destination to the Auto Attendant or
receptionist or a different telephone number. This feature is referred to as
FWD MAIL, Forward to Mail, Forward All Calls to Voice Mail, and Forward
All Calls to VM. When Forward to Mail is in effect, your telephone rings
once before forwarding the call to your default call coverage point.
To set your default call forwarding destination, use the NetSet utility. See
“Default” later in this section.
To prevent the telephone from ringing even once, use the Do Not Disturb
feature (see “Do Not Disturb” in Chapter 6) or use the Call Forward All
feature (see “Call Forward All” later in this section).
Call Forward No Answer, Call Forward Busy, and Call Forward All override
this Forward to Mail setting if they are in effect. If you turn off Forward to
Mail and no other call forward options are in effect, unanswered calls still
go to your default call coverage point but after the number of rings
specified in NBX NetSet > User Information > Call Forward Default.
4 If the telephone number you want was entered previously and displays,
press # to accept it. Otherwise, enter the telephone number to forward
calls to and press #.
Setting Call Forward From the NetSet utility, you can set default call forwarding or choose to
from the NetSet override the default with a condition for call forwarding (No Answer,
Utility Busy, or All) and a destination. For telephone numbers, do not use
parentheses, hyphens, or spaces. When you specify an external telephone
number, start by entering a 9 or 8 or whatever is required to access an
outside line. Example: 912815551212 dials (281) 555-1212. You can
enter a * if a pause is required between an access code and a destination
number.
Default
The Call Forward Default page defines basic call forwarding. You
choose from four destinations: voicemail box, a phone number, the
automated attendant, or disconnection. You can override these settings
on the Call Forward Override page or by making changes on the
telephone.
The check box below Forward phone number specifies where you
want to forward calls that are not answered at the internal extension
that you specified as the Forward phone number.
If you check the box, calls that are unanswered at the number you
forward them to are passed on to your choice of:
■ User Voicemail — Your voicemail box
■ Default Menu — The default automated attendant, usually
extension 500
■ Voicemail — The default system voicemail, usually extension 501
If you leave the box unchecked, calls that are unanswered at the
number you forward them to are passed on to the destination
specified for that number. This setting can result in having your calls
forwarded to another person’s voicemail or to a loop of forwarding
where the call is never answered.
■ If you select Automated Attendant, you can choose to forward calls
to your choice of:
■ Default Menu — The default automated attendant, usually
extension 500
■ Voicemail — The default system voicemail, usually extension 501
■ If you select Disconnect (no coverage), the system disconnects an
incoming call if it is not answered after the specified number of rings.
4 Click Apply, and then click OK.
Override
To set the call forward override:
1 Log in to NBX NetSet > User Information > Call Forward Override.
2 Select your call forward conditions:
■ If you select Call Forward All, calls will not ring at all on your
extension and will be immediately forwarded to the extension or
external phone number you specify in the box.
■ If you select the next button, you can select either or both of the
following conditions:
If you select Call Forward Busy, calls will not ring at all when all of
your lines are busy and will be immediately forwarded to the extension
or external phone number you specify in the box.
If you select Call Forward No Answer, calls ring the number of times
you specify in the rings box. If they are not answered then, they will be
forwarded to the extension or external phone number you specify in
the box.
■ If you select No action, call forwarding follows the specifications of
the Call Forward Default page.
3 Click Apply, and then click OK.
Call Forward Five features can interact to affect call forwarding: Forward to Mail, Call
Precedence Forward No Answer, Call Forward Busy, Call Forward All, and Do Not
Disturb. If they are enabled at the same time, the NBX system determines
precedence, which call forwarding path is in effect, according to the
following rules:
■ If Call Forward All is enabled, all calls are immediately forwarded to
the Call Forward All destination. All other feature settings are ignored.
■ If Do Not Disturb is enabled and Call Forward All is not enabled, all
calls are immediately forwarded to the Call Forward Default
destination. All other feature settings are ignored.
■ If Call Forward Busy is enabled and Call Forward All and Do Not
Disturb are not enabled, all calls received when this extension is busy
are immediately forwarded to the Call Forward Busy destination. All
other feature settings are ignored.
■ If Call Forward No Answer is enabled and Call Forward All and Do Not
Disturb are not enabled, all calls received when this extension is not
busy are forwarded to the Call Forward No Answer destination after
the specified number of rings. All other feature settings are ignored.
■ If Forward to Mail is enabled and Call Forward All, Do Not Disturb, Call
Forward No Answer, and Call Forward Busy are not enabled, all calls
received when this extension is not busy are forwarded to the Call
Forward Default destination after one ring.
Putting a Call You can put a call on hold for any reason.
on Hold
On 3Com Business Telephones:
1 Press the Hold button.
2 To return to the call, press the appropriate Access button.
Dialing Another Call You can place a call on hold to dial a new call,
More Than One Call The number of simultaneous calls that you can have on your 3Com
Telephone is limited by the number of Access buttons that are defined for
your extension. The default is the bottom three buttons in the column of
Access buttons on the left of the 3102 Business Telephone and the
bottom three Access buttons in the column on the right on the 1102,
2102, or 2102-IR Business Telephones. Your administrator can verify the
number and location on your telephone.
Transferring a Call When you answer an incoming telephone call, the Transfer feature allows
you to send that call from your telephone to any other internal line or, if
your call permissions allow, to an outside line. To view your permissions,
log in to NBX NetSet > User Information > Call Permissions. Your
administrator can change your call permissions.
Announced Before you complete a transfer, you can announce to the recipient that
(Screened) Transfer you are transferring a call. The recipient can then decide whether to take
the call. To announce a transfer:
1 While on a call, press the Transfer button. The system places the caller
on hold and selects a new line.
2 Dial the number to which you want to transfer the call.
3 When the recipient answers, announce the call.
■ If the recipient wants to take the call, press Transfer again to
complete the transfer. Hang up the handset.
■ If the recipient does not want to take the call, retrieve it by pressing
the Access button on which the call originated.
Your administrator can disable Announced Transfers (by enabling the One
Button Transfer feature) for the entire NBX system. When that setting is
enabled, every time that you transfer a call, the call is transferred as soon
as you dial the extension and hang up — without waiting for you to
announce the call.
Blind Transfer In a blind transfer, you transfer the call without notifying the recipient:
1 While on a call, press the Transfer button. The system places the caller
on hold and selects a new line.
2 Dial the number to which you want to transfer the call.
3 As soon as you hear a full ring, press the Transfer button and hang up.
(If you press the Transfer button too soon after you dial the number, the
transfer may not occur.)
Direct Mail Transfer You can transfer a call directly into another user’s voice mailbox. The call
does not ring on that user’s telephone.
Establishing a You can establish a Conference Call with up to four parties, including
Conference Call yourself. You must be using a telephone on the NBX system to establish
the call. The other three parties can be any combination of internal and
external parties.
You can also use Feature + 430 to add another party to a conference.
If the third party answers, three parties are now in the conference call.
If the third party is internal and does not answer, the attempt to
conference that party is cancelled. You cannot establish a conference call
with an NBX user’s voice mailbox.
4 Repeat steps 2 and 3 to conference in a fourth party.
■ You can activate speaker phone operation during the conference call
by pressing the Speaker button.
■ You can turn off the microphone or the mouthpiece on the handset
by pressing the Mute or button. The other parties cannot hear
you, but you can hear them.
■ For details about the Speaker and Mute features, see “Telephone
Buttons and Controls” in Chapter 2 for the 3102 Business Telephone
or “Telephone Buttons and Controls” in Chapter 3 for the 1102,
2102, and 2102-IR Business Telephones.
Disconnecting the Use the Conference Drop feature to disconnect the last person that you
Last Person add to a conference call. This feature is helpful if, when you add a party,
That You Called your call is answered by someone else.
■ Only the person who added the last caller to the conference call can
drop that caller.
■ Your administrator can configure any Access button on a 3Com
Telephone or the Attendant Console to be a Conference Drop
button.
More About ■ To place your part of a conference call on hold, press the Hold or
Conference Calls button. The other parties can talk among themselves, but they cannot
hear you. Music on Hold does not play when a conference call is on
hold.
■ To transfer a conference call to another telephone, press the Transfer
button. Dial the number to which you want to transfer the call,
announce to the recipient (optionally) that you are transferring a
conference call, and then press the Transfer button again.
■ All of the conferenced parties are transferred except yourself.
■ Your ability to drop the last person that you added to the
conference is transferred to the person who accepts the transfer.
Setting the Volume On any 3Com Telephone, use the Volume Control buttons to raise or
lower one of these volumes:
■ Ring Volume — To raise or lower the volume of the ring, press the up
or down Volume Control button repeatedly while your telephone is
ringing, until the volume is at the level that you prefer. To read how
ringer volume is different from ringer tone, see “Ringer Tones” in
Chapter 6.
■ Handset Volume — To raise or lower the volume of the dial tone or
the sound that you hear when you are using the handset, pick up the
handset and then press the up or down Volume Control button
repeatedly until the volume is at the level that you prefer. You can
change the handset volume during a conversation or by listening to
the dial tone.
■ Speaker Volume — To raise or lower the volume of the sound that
you hear when you are using the speaker phone for a conversation or
just listening to the dial tone, press the Speaker button and then
press the up or down Volume Control button repeatedly until the
volume is at the level that you prefer.
■ Headset Volume — To raise or lower the volume of the dial tone or
the sound that you hear on the headset, put on the headset and
activate it as specified for your headset. When you hear the dial tone
or during a conversation, press the up or down Volume Control
button repeatedly until the volume is at the level that you prefer. See
“Using a Headset” in Chapter 6.
For help on accessing NBX features from an analog telephone, see the
NBX Feature Codes Guide below any screen in the NBX NetSet™ utility.
For how to set up your NBX NetSet utility password for the first time, see
Chapter 1.
Guidelines About ■ If your telephone does not have a button programmed for Feature,
Features on NBX ask your administrator to program one.
Telephones ■ Because your administrator determines whether some of the features
that are described in this chapter are available for your telephone or
for the entire system, some of these features may not be available to
you.
Ringer Tones To help you to distinguish the ring tone of your 3Com Telephone from the
sound of other phones, use the NBX NetSet utility to select one of nine
ringing tones. You can also choose Silent Ring to disable audible ringing.
When you choose Silent Ring, the status light or display panel icon flashes
when a call arrives, but the telephone never rings. A headset attached to
the headset connector of a 3102 Business Telephone also plays a tone
audible only through the headset.
It also describes how you can print a list of speed dials. You can also print
a set of labels for your telephone, showing which of your buttons are
mapped to features and speed dial numbers.
Personal Speed Dials You can create a list of up to 99 personal speed dials (using ID numbers
601 through 699) for your telephone. These speed dials are available only
from the telephone for which they were created.
You create, view, and print your personal speed dial list using the NBX
NetSet utility. You can view and dial a personal speed dial number using
the telephone display panel of a 3Com Telephone.
Your first personal speed dial numbers appear on whichever of the Access
buttons at the right of your 3Com Business Telephone are not used for
other purposes.
System-wide The administrator can set up to 100 system-wide speed dials (using ID
Speed Dials numbers 700 through 799) for numbers that are dialed frequently by
many internal users. You can view the system-wide speed dial list through
the NBX NetSet utility. Or you can view and dial from it using the
telephone display panel.
Any of the remaining buttons that the administrator has not mapped to a
feature or system-wide speed dial is available for a One-Touch speed dial.
Use either the One-Touch or the Personal speed dial screen to assign or
change the One-Touch speed dial numbers on your telephone. If you
make a change in one screen, it appears in the other screen. See
“Personal Speed Dials” or follow these steps for the One-Touch screen.
Printing You may find it useful to have a paper list of personal or system speed
Speed Dial Lists dials. To print a list of speed dials:
1 Log in to NBX NetSet > Speed Dials > Personal or System-wide.
2 Click
3 A list appears with all of the personal or system-wide speed dial numbers
that are allocated to your telephone.
4 Click Print to print the list.
Printing Labels You can print labels that identify the numbers and features that are
assigned to Access buttons on your telephone or attendant console using
the LabelMaker in the NBX NetSet utility or on the NBX Resource
Pack CD.
To reuse your saved LabelMaker, you must run the file that you saved to
your computer. If you download the LabelMaker from the NBX NetSet
utility again, you get the default version, and the download might
overwrite your saved LabelMaker. To create a Windows Desktop shortcut
to your saved LabelMaker, right-click the saved file and then click
Send To > Desktop (create shortcut).
Off-Site When you enable off-site notification, the NBX Messaging system notifies
Notification you by e-mail, pager, or telephone that you have received voice mail. You
can then retrieve your messages. Off-site notification consists of one cycle
of up to five attempts to reach you, one attempt for each Attempt row
that you configure in the Off-Site Notification screen.
Additional Notes
■ You can use the same notification method for all five attempts, or any
combination of methods.
■ If your voice mailbox is full and someone tries to leave you a voice mail
message, the NBX system does not send you an e-mail notification.
Notice Behaviors
These tables explain how the cycle of notice behaviors depends on the
method that you select for the first attempt. See the definitions as well
as “Resetting the Off-Site Notification Cycle”.
■ If you specify EMail for the first attempt:
Managing Off-site To manage your off-site notification settings directly through the
Notification Using the telephone:
Telephone
1 Log in to your voice mailbox at your telephone or remotely.
2 Press 9.
3 Press 4, select one of these options, and follow the prompts:
Button Description
1 Enable off-site notification.
2 Disable off-site notification.
3 Change off-site notification settings.
4 Review current off-site notification settings.
* Return to the main menu.
Do Not Disturb When the Do Not Disturb feature is in effect, calls coming in to your
telephone immediately go to your default call coverage point without
ringing. You set the default call coverage point by logging in to NBX
NetSet > User Information > Call Forward Default. See “Forwarding
Incoming Calls” in Chapter 5.
If Call Forward All is in effect, it overrides Do Not Disturb. Calls go to the
call coverage point defined for Call Forward All in NBX NetSet > User
Information > Call Forward Override.
You can ask your administrator to map the Do Not Disturb feature to an
available Access button on your 3Com Telephone, or you can use the
Feature Code to enable and disable the feature.
To view your current Do Not Disturb setting even if you do not have a
3Com Telephone or if you are away from your desk, log in to NBX
NetSet > User Information > Feature Settings.
Telephone Locking To enable and disable the Locking feature using the feature code:
1 Pick up the handset and press Feature + 432. The display panel on a
3Com Telephone prompts you to enter your password.
2 Enter your password + # and hang up.
Your telephone is now locked. The display panel shows the Lock icon. It
displays only the directory and system-wide speed dials.
3 To turn off this feature, repeat steps 1 and 2. The Lock icon disappears.
Your call logs and personal speed dials are again available.
Additional Notes
■ When Telephone Locking is activated, a person using your telephone
can dial only toll-free calls, calls to emergency services (such as 911 in
the United States), or calls to telephone numbers that have been
programmed in your system as “internal” calls.
■ Even when Telephone Locking is active on your telephone, your
off-site notification choices remain in effect. That is, notification of
voice mail messages is sent to the outside telephone numbers or
paging numbers that you have specified in NBX NetSet > NBX
Messaging > Off-Site Notification, even if these numbers are not
toll-free.
■ You can view your current Telephone Lock setting by logging in to
NBX NetSet > User Information > Feature Settings.
Call Permissions Your administrator establishes Call Permissions to control the types of
calls that can be dialed from your telephone. The administrator can
configure these permissions to change depending on the time of day. For
example, your administrator can prevent long-distance calls from being
dialed from your telephone outside of business hours.
To view your current call permissions, log in to NBX NetSet > User
Information > Call Permissions.
Class of Service The Class of Service Override feature allows you to apply the features
Override of your own 3Com Telephone temporarily to another 3Com Telephone
on the same local network.
Example:
■ The telephone in your organization’s conference room is configured so
that long-distance telephone calls cannot be dialed from it. You may,
however, need to place a long-distance call during a meeting. Using
the Class of Service Override feature, you can apply the features of
your own telephone to the conference room telephone for one call
only and dial the call, assuming that your Call Permissions allow you
to make long-distance calls from your own telephone.
When you use Class of Service (CoS) Override, any reports that are
generated on the NBX system indicate that the CoS features of your own
3Com Telephone were applied temporarily to the telephone on which
you made the call.
Using a Headset You can use a headset that has a microphone with any telephone on an
NBX system.
■ For how to use a typical headset and amplifier with 3Com Telephones
other than the 3Com Manager’s Telephone or 3102 Business
Telephone, see “General Headset Instructions” later in this section.
■ For how to connect and use a headset with the 3Com Manager’s
Telephone and 3102 Business Telephone, read the next section.
With the 3Com The 3Com Manager’s Telephone and 3Com 3102 Business Telephone
Manager’s Telephone have a headset jack located on the underside of the telephone on the left
and 3Com 3102 side.
Business Telephone
To prepare the headset for all calls on the 3Com Manager’s Telephone
and 3102 Business Telephone:
1 Plug the headset connector into the headset jack on the underside of the
telephone. See Figure 12 in Appendix A for the location of the jack.
2 Press the Headset button. By default, this is the Access button just below
the (Program) button at the top right corner of the telephone.
3 Verify that the indicator light beside the Headset button turns on.
To end a call when you are using the headset, press the Release button
on the telephone. By default, the Release button is located at the
bottom of the right column of Access buttons.
General Headset For 3Com Telephones other than the 3Com Manager’s Telephone or
Instructions 3102 Business Telephone, follow these instructions.
You may need to modify some of these instructions for some headsets or
amplifiers. See the instructions that come with your equipment.
To prepare a headset so that you can choose either the handset or the
headset for each call:
1 Insert the cord for the headset amplifier into the handset cord receptacle
on the underside of the telephone.
2 Insert both the headset cord and the handset cord into the headset
amplifier.
3 For headset calls: Lift the handset off the telephone and leave it off. Use
the headset microphone and earphones.
Even when the headset is plugged into the amplifier, you must remove
the handset from the cradle to use the headset.
4 For handset calls: Press the button on the headset amplifier that turns
the headset off, pick up the handset, and speak into it.
Returning to the Certain brands of headsets enter a power-saving mode that prevents the
Headset After a telephone from ringing for one or more calls when both of these
Long Delay circumstances are true:
■ The headset amplifier buttons for Mute and On are both set to On.
■ The handset is off the phone for a long time (for instance, overnight).
It may take a few minutes for your headset to return from the
power-saving mode to the active mode when calls first come in, so your
telephone may not ring until the headset has returned to active mode,
and you may miss a call.
If you plan to not use the headset for a long time (for instance,
overnight), 3Com recommends that you set the mute and headset
buttons on the amplifier to Off and hang up the handset on your
telephone. When you are ready to receive calls again, set up the headset
for receiving calls:
1 Pick up the handset on your telephone and set it on your desk.
2 Put on the headset. On the amplifier, set the headset button to On.
Using Hands Free You can use your phone as an intercom. You can answer internal
Active on Intercom (intercom) calls without picking up the handset. When you receive an
internal call, your telephone sounds a tone and activates the speaker
phone.
An external call (a call from outside your NBX system) rings to your
telephone as usual.
To enable Hands Free Active on Intercom, press the Hands Free or the
button before calls come in to your telephone. When the feature is
enabled, the indicator is lit. To disable Hands Free Active on Intercom,
press the Hands Free or the button again.
Palm Integration (3Com 2102-IR Business Telephone only) — The infrared port on the
front edge of the 3Com 2102-IR Business Telephone receives infrared
signals from a hand-held device that runs the Palm operating system. You
can use your hand-held device to call numbers in its directory and to
perform standard telephone operations, such as Forward, Redial, and
Transfer.
Install the Palm Dialer software (available on the NBX Resource Pack CD)
on your hand-held device. See your administrator for details.
For help on accessing NBX features from an analog telephone, see the
NBX Feature Codes Guide in the NBX NetSet™ utility. For how to set up
your NBX NetSet utility password the first time, see Chapter 1.
Listening to Your You can listen to your voice mail from any computer that allows you to
Messages in Your access your e-mail. Your e-mail software application must be IMAP-4
E-mail compliant, such as Microsoft Outlook. See your administrator for
assistance with this feature.
When you delete the e-mail message that contains the attached voice
message, you are not deleting the voice message on the NBX system. To
delete voice messages from the NBX system, you must access your voice
mailbox through the telephone or the NBX NetSet utility.
Account (Billing) Account Codes allow your administrator to track calls that are associated
Codes with an individual client or account. When you dial a call or when you
answer your telephone, you dial a numeric account code that allows the
NBX system to track time spent on the telephone with a client, perhaps to
be associated with a billable account.
You may be forced to enter an account code for outgoing external calls.
See NetSet > Personal Settings > User Information > Call
Permissions to see if you are forced to enter an account code. See
NetSet > Personal Settings > Account Codes for a list of public
account codes.
Caller ID Your administrator can set up your NBX system to allow for Internal and
External Caller ID or can configure the system so that you can block your
identity (telephone number) from anyone you call.
Internal and External By default, the NBX system shows the extension and name of any internal
Caller ID caller on the display panel of your 3Com Telephone.
Calling Line Identity On certain NBX systems, if your organization subscribes to Caller ID
Restriction (CLIR) service from your local telephone company, you can choose to prevent
the NBX system from transmitting your Caller ID information to outside
parties when you dial a call. Your administrator must enable this feature,
called Calling Line Identity Restriction (CLIR), on the NBX system. If this
feature is enabled system-wide, you can choose to restrict calls:
■ For all external (outbound) calls that you dial
OR
■ For only the next single external (outbound) call that you dial
To disable CLIR-All:
1 Pick up the handset.
2 Press Feature + 889 again. CLIR-ALL off appears briefly in the display
panel and then disappears when you hang up the handset.
If you hang up the handset without making a call, the CLIR-NEXT feature
remains active and will apply to the next external call that you make. If
you are unsure about whether CLIR-NEXT is active, pick up the handset,
press Feature + 890, and read the status message in the display panel of
your telephone.
Call Pickup Use the Call Pickup feature to answer a call that is ringing on another
telephone. This feature is best arranged in advance when you and
another user know that it would be convenient or necessary to answer
calls ringing on that user’s telephone.
You can answer a call that is ringing on another telephone only if you and
that user both are members of the same Call Pickup group or if that user
is a member of a Call Pickup group that allows “nonmember pickup.”
Your administrator configures call pickup groups and can tell you which
group you belong to.
To view the list of Call Pickup groups of which you are a member:
1 Log in to NBX NetSet > User Information > Call Pickup.
2 Select the group number that you want to view from the Group List, and
click Details to list the members of that group.
Directed Call Pickup You can answer a call that is ringing on a specific user’s telephone.
on a Specific
Telephone Using the feature code:
1 Pick up the handset.
2 Press Feature + 455 and the user’s extension. The call is directed to your
telephone.
Group Call Pickup You can answer a call that is ringing on a group member’s telephone.
Automatic Call Your administrator can establish formal and informal call centers so that
Distribution incoming calls can be directed to several telephones that have been
Groups, Hunt associated into automatic call distribution groups, hunt groups, or calling
Groups, and Calling groups.
Groups A call center is a general term that refers to any system that accepts
incoming calls to a site and ensures that those calls are sent to the proper
destination within the site. The call center can be used, for example, as a
help desk, a reservations counter, an information hotline, or a customer
service center.
Automatic Call Automatic Call Distribution (ACD) distributes calls to agents and queues
Distribution the calls that have not been answered before a predetermined time
expires. The ACD also manages prerecorded announcements to callers,
manages individual ACD agents and groups of agents, and provides
database reports on both calls and agents.
Hunt Groups Incoming calls ring to one member of the hunt group. If that member’s
telephone is in use, or if that member does not answer the call, the
system “hunts” for another member of the group until the call is
answered or is forwarded to the group call coverage point. For example,
if there are no available members of the hunt group, the call might be
forwarded to a group mailbox or to the receptionist. Figure 5 shows the
path of a call coming into a hunt group.
To log out of a dynamic hunt group using the NBX NetSet utility:
1 Log in to NBX NetSet > Hunt Groups.
2 Select the hunt group from which you want to log out.
3 Click Log Out, and then click Close.
Calling Groups One type of hunt group is the Calling Group. Calling groups allow an
incoming call to ring simultaneously on all telephones in a group, for
example, a customer service group. To log in to or out of a calling group,
follow the steps in “Hunt Groups” earlier in this chapter.
Barge-In — allows the supervisor to speak to both the agent and the
customer.
Whisper Whisper (also called Coaching) allows a supervisor to speak to the agent
during a monitored call without the customer hearing this advice. The
administrator configures the NBX system to specify if a tone audible to
the agent is played when the supervisor enables Whisper.
To whisper to an agent:
1 Monitor the ACD or Hunt Group call.
2 Press the soft button to select Whisper from the display panel.
■ Whisper is enabled for you, either silently or with a tone announcing
the change, depending on system configuration.
■ Your display panel now provides options to Monitor, Change Agent,
or Barge-In.
Barge-In Barge-In allows a supervisor to speak to both the agent and customer
during a monitored call. The administrator configures the NBX system to
specify whether a tone audible to the agent and customer is played when
the supervisor enables Barge-In.
To barge in to a call:
1 Monitor the ACD or Hunt Group call.
2 Press the soft button to select Barge-In from the display panel.
■ Barge-In is enabled for you, either silently or with a tone announcing
the change, depending on system configuration.
■ Your display panel now provides options to Monitor, Change Agent,
or Whisper.
Interactions ■ A supervisor can monitor a call, put it on hold, and monitor a second
call. A supervisor can invoke supervisory monitoring on only two calls
(one active and one on hold) at a time.
■ If a customer or agent conferences in an additional caller, or transfers,
parks, or sends a call to voice mail, a supervisor monitoring the call is
dropped from the call.
Call Park Use Call Park to place a call in a “holding pattern” and make it available
for another person to pick up from any telephone on the system. Use the
internal paging feature, the external paging feature, or both, to
announce the call. The recipient can retrieve the call from any 3Com
Telephone or analog telephone by dialing the Call Park extension that you
give during your announcement.
When you park a call, you assign it a Call Park extension, which anyone
can use to retrieve it. Table 7 lists the default Call Park extension
numbers. Ask your administrator to verify the Call Park extensions for
your location.
Table 7 Default Call Park Extension Numbers
To park a call:
1 While you are on a call, press Feature + 444. Or press the Access button
assigned to Call Park.
2 Dial a Call Park extension from the list shown in Table 7 or the list of
extensions at your location.
If you select a Call Park extension that is already in use, Park Cancelled
appears on the display panel on your 3Com Telephone, and the call rings
back to your telephone. Try another Call Park extension.
Paging Paging is the general term used to describe the act of broadcasting a
voice message through audio speakers.
You can:
■ Page all extensions with speakers on the system
This method uses default codes in Table 8.
■ Page a subset of all extensions on the system, called a zone.
This method uses extensions that the administrator configures for this
purpose.
Do not press the Feature button before you dial the Paging code.
Paging the System When you page the system, you broadcast a message to all internal
extensions with speakers, to a Public Address (PA) system, or to both
simultaneously. Paging codes, as described in Table 8, have default values
for each destination.
Table 8 Paging Codes
Paging Zones A page zone is a subset of internal extensions to which you can direct a
broadcast using a configured extension. You can page a zone, a P.A.
system, or both the zone and the P.A. system simultaneously. Zone
extensions are configured by the administrator.
You can view zone memberships only if the administrator authorizes you
to do so.
To page a zone, a P.A. system, or both, perform the following steps using
your 3Com Telephone:
1 Pick up the handset.
2 Dial the appropriate extension to page the zone.
3 Speak the broadcast message into your handset.
4 Hang up.
Configurable The Configurable Operators feature gives a caller who is directed to voice
Operators mail the option of going to another destination.
You can configure your own operators for those who call your extension
(if the administrator allows it), and you can also use this feature as a caller
to another device.
How Configurable Following is a brief description of how the system directs a caller from
Operators Work your voice mail to operators that you designate:
1 If you do not answer a call, the system invokes your voice mail.
2 The caller listens to your prerecorded voice mail message, which includes
the instruction to press an access digit (0 or 9) in order to reach the
appropriate operator.
When you employ a configurable operator, you must re-record your
personal voice mail greeting to tell callers that an operator is available to
them if they press the appropriate access digit during the voice mail
greeting.
3 The caller presses 0 or 9.
4 The call is redirected to the operator that you designated.
The caller can leave a message, and then press 0 or 9 to transfer to a
configured operator.
Configuring the You can view the operators’ settings, and modify those settings if your
Operators administrator allows it.
The operator’s call-handling rules (such as call coverage) may apply to the
voice mail caller. Also, you must have external-to-external permissions in
order for transfers to external phone numbers to complete successfully.
If you clear an operator destination (using the Clear check box), calls
directed to that operator are directed instead to the default system
operator (extension 501).
Using Message The Message Waiting Indicator (MWI) to Telephone allows a user to light
Waiting Indicator to a status button next to a programmable access button and leave a call
Telephone back number on another telephone. This feature is distinct from voice
mail in that the telephone does not ring and there is no voice mail
message. The light appears next to the Access button, not the message
waiting light used for voice mail. Example: A principal can use this
feature to notify a teacher, without interrupting the class, to call the
office as soon as possible.
Sending an MWI You can send an MWI message to any telephone on your NBX system
Message that has an MWI Retrieve button enabled. Sending an MWI message
turns on the light on the target telephone if it is not already lit, and leaves
your telephone number as a callback number.
Retrieving an MWI To receive and retrieve an MWI message, you must have a 3Com
Message Telephone with a display panel and a programmable access button with
status light configured (by your administrator) for MWI Retrieve. Your
administrator can also configure additional buttons for MWI To Ph Send
and MWI Cancel.
When the light is lit on your telephone, you can press the MWI Retrieve
button, scroll through your display panel to see the caller ID, and return
the call. When you press the MWI Retrieve button, you turn off the MWI
light. You may still have one or more calls in a list to return.
Deleting MWI Press the MWI Retrieve button to turn off the MWI light until you receive
Messages another MWI message. It does not delete the MWI message. Messages
remain in your list until you explicitly delete them or until the NBX system
is rebooted. Your telephone can store a maximum of 30 MWI messages.
When it is full, it will reject new messages, so be sure to delete unneeded
messages.
Cancelling an MWI After you have sent an MWI message, you can cancel it and remove it
Message from the list on the target telephone. If it is the only unattended MWI
message on the target telephone, cancelling it turns off the MWI light.
You can cancel an MWI message only from the same extension from
which you sent the MWI message.
Dialing a Call to a You can dial calls between sites in your organization that are separated
Remote Office geographically but that are linked by a Wide Area Network (WAN)
connection. Each site must have an NBX system. Typical configurations
are described in the next sections.
Using Unique In the sample network shown in Figure 7, everyone in the entire
Extensions organization has a unique telephone extension. Whenever you make a
call to an extension that is not located at your own site, your NBX system
sets up a connection to the NBX system at the other extension’s site.
1 2 3
Using Site Codes If some users have overlapping telephone extensions, your administrator
can configure your telephone system to use site codes for you to dial
people at remote offices. Your administrator chooses the site codes for
your system. In this example, you dial a site code first, followed by the
extension at the site.
1 2 3
Bridged Extensions With a bridged extension, buttons and status lights on one telephone are
associated with buttons and status lights on another telephone. On the
primary telephone, you can perform all operations (such as dialing
telephone calls, placing calls on hold, forwarding calls, and so on). On the
secondary telephone, you can answer calls that are made to the primary
telephone’s extension but you cannot make calls using the buttons that
are associated with the primary telephone.
Example:
If an assistant’s job is to answer a manager’s telephone calls, the
administrator can map the manager’s extension on the assistant’s
telephone. The manager’s telephone is the primary telephone, and the
assistant’s telephone is the secondary telephone.
Example:
The administrator programs (maps) a telephone extension to appear on
both a manager’s telephone and the assistant’s telephone; that is, it is a
bridged extension. The administrator has also enabled the Delayed
Ringing feature on the manager’s telephone and has specified 4 rings (a
typical setting).
Using Pulse Dialing In some locations, analog telephone users must dial telephone calls using
pulse dialing instead of tone dialing (also called Dual Tone Multi
Frequency, or DTMF, dialing).
Your administrator must configure the Analog Line Card ports for pulse
dialing.
Examples:
■ Some of your telephone lines are provided by a telephone company
that supports only pulse dialing while other lines are provided by a
different telephone company that supports DTMF dialing.
■ Your organization’s telephone service provider offers low-cost,
pulse-dialing-only service.
■ In some situations, you must switch to DTMF dialing during a call. For
example, if your call is answered by an automated attendant that
requires that you enter information from your telephone keypad, you
must typically enter the information using DTMF dialing.
Your administrator can map a button on your telephone so that you can
press the button to change from pulse dialing to DTMF during a call.
When you hang up, the port that you were using on the Analog Line
Card reverts to pulse dialing mode.
You can configure a personal speed dial in the NBX NetSet utility to dial a
number in pulse dial mode and then to switch to DTMF. Use the left
angle-bracket character (<) in the NBX NetSet utility as the command to
switch to DTMF mode. You can also include the digits that you want the
system to dial after it switches to DTMF. The system dials any digits after
the < using DTMF tones. When you hang up, the port that you were
using on the Analog Line Card reverts to pulse dialing mode.
Additional These software applications are available on the NBX Resource Pack CD:
Applications ■ NBX Call Reports *
■ NBX TAPI Service Provider (NBXTSP)
■ NBX Desktop Call Assistant *
■ Complement Attendant Software *
■ Palm Dialer
■ pcXset™ Soft Telephone *
■ NBX Media Driver
For help on accessing NBX® features from an analog telephone, see the
NBX Feature Codes Guide in the NBX NetSet™ utility.
NBX Tones As you use your 3Com Telephone to receive voice mail and use the
feature codes on the NBX system, you hear these tones:
■ Dial Tone — When you lift the receiver to place a call or begin using
one of the features, you hear the normal Dial Tone (except for the
circumstance described in the next bulleted item).
■ New Messages Dial Tone — When your voice mailbox has either
new or unsaved messages and you pick up your handset, you hear the
New Messages Dial Tone (a repeated short tone, also called the
“stutter” tone) until you delete or save every message. Your
administrator can turn the New Messages Dial Tone on or off.
■ Feature Entry Tone — When you lift the handset and press the
Feature button to begin using one of the features, you hear the
Feature Entry Tone, which is a steady sound at a lower pitch than the
normal dial tone. You must enter data, for instance a feature code
number, your password, or an extension, as specified in Table 9.
■ Confirmation Tone — After certain steps, as when you add a party
to a conference call, you hear a short Confirmation Tone or “beep,”
which confirms that you have completed the action.
■ Error Tone — You hear the “fast busy” tone, also called the
“congestion” tone, when no circuits are available. In addition, you
hear the Error Tone if you make an error such as trying to enter an
unsupported feature code, an invalid extension, or an invalid
password. Hang up and start the feature code sequence again.
■ Feature Active Tone — Example: You activate one of the
“persistent” features, for instance, you lock your telephone, and then
hang up. The next time that you pick up the handset on your analog
telephone, you hear the Feature Active Tone. This pair of tones, a
sound followed by a higher sound, is repeated to remind you that you
have enabled one of these features:
■ Caller ID Restriction — All
■ Do Not Disturb
■ Forward All Calls to Voice Mail (that is, to your call coverage point)
■ Lock or Unlock Your Telephone
■ Call Forward All
■ Call Forward Busy
■ Call Forward No Answer
These features are “persistent,” that is, each one remains active until
you turn it off, as described in Table 9.
If you forget which of the persistent features you have activated on
your telephone, log in to NBX NetSet > User Information > Feature
Settings. See “NBX NetSet Utility” in Chapter 1 for information on
how to log in to the NBX NetSet utility.
Exception: If you have activated one or more persistent features and your
mailbox has messages, you hear the New Messages Dial Tone whenever
you pick up the handset until you have deleted all messages.
Feature Codes with A large number of telephone features are available by pressing the
3Com Telephones Feature button on a 3Com Telephone and entering a three-digit feature
code. These feature codes are listed in Table 9.
■ If your telephone does not have a button programmed for Feature,
ask your administrator to program one.
■ Because your administrator determines whether some of the features
that are described in this chapter are available for your telephone or
for the entire system, some of these features may not be available to
you.
3Com Business Most of the features that are listed in Table 9 are available on your 3Com
Telephone Business Telephone on single-purpose buttons like Hold, Conference,
Transfer, and Message, or on Access buttons that you or your
administrator can program.
Nevertheless, you can use feature codes if you like. On Models 1102,
2102, and 2102-IR, the top Access button directly below the Program
button is programmed at the factory as the Feature button for the 3Com
Business Telephone. On Model 3102, the top Access button in the left
column of 9 buttons is programmed at the factory as the Feature button.
(Your administrator can program another button as the Feature button.)
3Com Attendant The 3Com 3105 and 1105 Attendant Consoles each have 50 Access
Console buttons and 4 preprogrammed Feature buttons. Although the design of
the two Attendant Consoles is different, the buttons work the same way.
In effect, the Attendant Console is an extension of the 3Com Telephone
to which it is associated.
See Figure 9 for 3Com 3105 Attendant Console buttons and controls and
Figure 10 for 3Com 1105 Attendant Console buttons and controls.
Access Buttons The 50 Access buttons on a 3Com Attendant Console can each have two
sets of assignments: 1 through 50, and 51 through 100. To toggle
between the two sets of assignments, you press the Shift button.
Feature Buttons The four Feature buttons are preprogrammed for the most common
features needed by a receptionist: Transfer, Transfer to Voicemail, Park,
and Hold. The Shift button does not affect the operation of the Feature
buttons. Your administrator can change the features assigned to each
button using the NBX NetSet utility.
Figure 9 and the text that follows it describe the features on the 3Com
3105 Attendant Console. Figure 10 and the text that follows it describe
the 3Com 1105 Attendant Console.
8 Shift button — Enables you to toggle between the two sets of Access
button assignments on the Console. Press the Shift button to switch
between assignments 1 through 50 and assignments 51 through 100.
The Shift button LED is lighted when you have buttons 51 through 100
selected.
Figure 10 and the text that follows it describe the features on the 3Com
3105 Attendant Console.
SHIFT
1 Access buttons — A light next to each button indicates whether the line
is available or in use, or whether assigned features are enabled. Status
indicator lights show the following:
2 Shift button — Enables you to toggle between the two sets of button
assignments on the Console. Press the Shift button for assignments
1 through 50. Press Shift again for assignments 51 through 100. The
Shift button LED is lighted when you have buttons 51 through 100
selected.
3 Labels — You can print labels for your Attendant Console using the
LabelMaker forms in the NBX NetSet utility or on the NBX Resource Pack
CD. See “Printing Labels” in Chapter 6.
4 Transfer button — Enables you to send a call to another telephone. See
“Transferring a Call” in Chapter 5.
5 Direct Mail Transfer button — Allows you to send a caller directly to
another user’s voice mailbox or phantom mailbox. See “Direct Mail
Transfer” in Chapter 5.
6 Call Park button — Places a call in a “holding pattern” so that it can be
retrieved from any other telephone on the system. See “Call Park” in
Chapter 7.
7 Hold button — Places a caller on hold. See “Putting a Call on Hold” in
Chapter 5.
Attendant Console To create, print, and save labels for your Attendant Console, see “Printing
Labels Labels” in Chapter 6.
Opening the 3105 After you print the labels and then cut them out, remove the plastic cover
Attendant Console from the Attendant Console by pulling up on the two tabs at the top of
Label Cover the Attendant Console until the top of the cover pops off.
When you answer a call using the Complement Attendant Software, you
can select a user from the directory and transfer the call to that user.
Field Purpose
Display Panel Displays Caller ID information (name and extension number),
the status of a call, and the duration of the call. The number of
calls displayed depends on the number of access lines that you
have specified in your general settings.
Find/Phone# Display Provides the extension number and name of the person
selected in the directory.
Clear Button Cancels previous criteria.
Extension Tab Sorts the data in the directory by listing the extension numbers
in ascending order.
First Tab Sorts the list of users in alphabetical order by first name.
Last Tab Sorts the list of users in alphabetical order by last name.
Department Tab Sorts the directory by the user department.
Hidden Tab Hides entries in the NBX directory that you do not want to
appear on other tabs, such as conference room phones.
Quick Tab Provides access to frequently used entries in the directory.
Keyboard
Button Purpose Shortcut
Answer Answers an incoming call. Alt+A
Dial Dials a selected number to place an outgoing call. Alt+D
Park Places a call in a “holding pattern” so that it can Alt+K
be retrieved from another telephone on the
system.
UnPark Releases a caller from a “holding pattern.” Alt+U
Release Terminates a call. Alt+R
Hold Places a caller on hold. Alt+H
UnHold Removes a caller from being on hold and returns Alt+N
to the call.
Transfer Forwards a call to another telephone. Alt+T
Complete Transfer Completes the transfer of a call. Alt+M
Cancel Transfer Cancels a transfer. Alt+S
Conference Establishes a single call with up to three additional Alt+C
internal or external parties.
Complete Completes the conference call. Alt+P
Conference
Cancel Conference Cancels the addition of a party to a conference Alt+E
call.
Managing Calls To manage incoming calls using the Complement Attendant Software,
click the buttons at the bottom of the screen, as described here:
1 Select a sort method by clicking the appropriate tab. For example, to
select a user by last name, click the Last tab.
2 Click the user’s name. The user’s extension number and name appear in
the Find/Phone # field.
3 Click the button for the way that you want to handle the call. For
example, to transfer a call, click Transfer. To park a call, click Park.
Connecting the Although the connector layout varies between telephones, all 3Com
Telephone Telephones and attendant consoles use these symbols to identify the
connectors:
■ Power connection for an AC power adapter.
Network connection. Connects the device to the network. A powered
Ethernet cable that conforms to the Power over Ethernet (IEEE 802.3af)
standard is acceptable for:
■ 3Com 3100 Entry Telephones
■ 3Com 3101 Basic Telephones
■ 3Com 3102 Business Telephones
■ 3Com 3103 Manager’s Telephones
■ 3Com 3105 Attendant Consoles
■ Older 3Com telephones that include “PE” in the part number
Switch port for connecting a computer or other network device, such as a
3Com Attendant Console, to the network.
Handset connector.
CAUTION: The NBX system operates over the LAN, not through traditional
telephone wiring. Your telephone connects to the NBX system through an
RJ-45 LAN connector instead of an RJ-11 telephone connector. Your
telephone will not work unless it is connected properly. Ask your
administrator if you have questions about your telephone connection.
■ For information about the underside of each 3Com Telephone, and for
information about how to connect any 3Com Telephone or Attendant
Console to a Power over Ethernet source, see the packing sheet that
comes with the device.
■ The following device support brackets have built-in strain relief
clamps: 3101, 3102, 3103, 3105, and 3100.
Installing the 3102 The 3Com 3102 Business Telephone has a label plate with localized
Telephone Label button labels that you must install. Once you snap the plate onto the
Plate telephone, you cannot remove it.
To install the plate, slip the tabs along the top edge of the plate into the
slots on the telephone, and then press firmly along the bottom edge of
the plate until you feel it snap into place.
Attaching and The articulating support bracket is common to the following devices:
Adjusting the ■ 3Com 3105 Attendant Console
Articulating
Support Bracket ■ 3Com 3102 Business Telephone
Figure 14, Figure 15, and Figure 16 show the 3Com 3102 Business
Telephone. The instructions apply to all of these devices.
1 Bracket
2 Mounting supports
3 Cable management clamps
To attach the support bracket, snap the bracket into the mounting
supports on the bottom of the telephone. After you connect the cables to
the phone, press the cables into the cable management clamps on the
stand.
1 Lock tab
To adjust the support bracket, press to release the lock tab, rotate the
bracket to the position that you want, and then release the lock tab.
1 Bottom supports
When you mount a device on a wall, attach the support bracket and
adjust it so that the bottom of the support bracket rests against the
bottom supports on the device.
Safe wall mounting requires 3/4-inch drywall and 1.5-inch drywall screws.
Attaching and The fixed support bracket is common to the following devices:
Adjusting the Fixed ■ 3Com1105 Attendant Console
Support Bracket
■ 3Com 1102, 2102, and 2102-IR Business Telephones
The fixed support bracket can be attached in low profile, high profile, or
wall mount positions. Tabs on the underside of the telephone slip into
slots on the bracket, and the opposite mounting points snap into place.
Low-Profile and In Figure 17, the support bracket is outlined to show you how to install
High-Profile Positions the device in the low-profile and high-profile desktop positions.
Wall-Mount Position To mount a device on a wall, put the bracket on the opposite end of the
telephone in the low-profile position. Pull and twist the knob on the
underside of the phone 90 degrees (Figure 18) so that the spring- loaded
peg projects out on the top of the phone (Item 1 in Figure 19).
1
2
Security Wall-Mount An optional security wall-mount bracket that ensures that the device
Bracket cannot be removed by unauthorized persons is available for the following
devices:
■ 3Com 1102, 2102 and 2102-IR Business Telephones
For how to order this bracket, consult your 3Com NBX Voice-Authorized
Partner. Read and follow the instructions that come with the bracket.
Moving Your All 3Com Telephones have the Automatic Telephone Relocation feature.
Telephone Each telephone has a unique “address.” You can move your telephone to
another location, connect it to any Ethernet jack on the LAN, and still
maintain all of your personalized features, speed dials, and extension
number.
Swapping Because your extension number and personal settings are associated with
Telephones your physical telephone, only your administrator can move phone
extension settings from one telephone to another.
Cleaning Your Always unplug your telephone from the power source and from the
Telephone network before you clean it. Use a soft cloth dampened with mild
detergent.
Troubleshooting Table 12 lists possible problems that you may encounter and the most
Problems likely solutions. Where possible, each solution refers to the section in this
guide where you can find detailed information.
Table 12 Possible Problems
When I dial 9 or 8 to access No outside lines are available. Try again in a few
an outside line, the display minutes.
panel shows “All Ports
Busy.”
After I call another user in The other user may have the Hands Free Active on
my organization, I hear a Intercom feature enabled. Begin speaking after you
tone but no ringing. hear the tone. For details, see “Telephone Buttons and
Controls” in Chapter 2 or Chapter 3.
On my 3Com Business You have the Hands Free Active on Intercom feature
Telephone or 3Com enabled. For details, see “Telephone Buttons and
Manager’s Telephone, all Controls” in Chapter 2 or Chapter 3.
incoming internal calls
come over my speaker
phone.
When I try to access the Ask your administrator to verify the IP address that you
NBX NetSet utility, I do not typed into your web browser.
get a response after I type
the NBX system’s IP address
and press Enter.
I am unable to log in to the You must set up your voice mail before you can use the
NBX NetSet utility. NBX NetSet utility. Press the Message button. The
prompts guide you through the setup. Then use your
voice mail password to access the NBX NetSet utility. If
you are on an analog telephone, see “Setting Up Your
Password and Voice Mail for the First Time” in
Chapter 1.
call toggle
feature code 110 D
Call Transfer service (analog lines) 29 delayed ringing 103
Call Waiting service (analog lines) 29 dial tone 107
caller ID troubleshooting a 3Com Telephone 128
feature code 110 dialing calls
identity restriction 82 other methods 50
restricting on outbound calls 81 redial 50
calling groups release with headset 76
and the Do Not Disturb feature 73 switching from pulse to tone 103
feature code 109 direct mail transfer
overview 84 feature code 110
sample configuration 89 overview 59
Calling Line Identity Restriction (CLIR) 82 Direct Mail Transfer button
feature codes 110 1102, 2102, 2102-IR Business Telephones 29
CAS 118 1105 Attendant Console 117
change agent (supervisory monitoring) 92 3102 Business Telephone 23
Class of Service (CoS) override 75 3105 Attendant Console 115
feature code 110 directed call pickup 83
cleaning telephones 128 display panel
CLIR 82 1102, 2102, 2102-IR Business Telephones 26
feature codes 110 3102 Business Telephone 20
coaching 91 call logs, user directory, and speed dial lists 48
codes Do Not Disturb Feature
account and billing 80 and call forwarding 56
feature codes 107 Do Not Disturb feature 73
NBX Feature Codes Guide 9 feature code 110
Complement Attendant Software (CAS) dual tone multi-frequency (DTMF) dialing 103
computer screens and tabs 118 dynamic hunt groups 88
features 118
introduction 113
keyboard shortcuts 119 E
Conference button electrical shock, avoiding 128
1102, 2102, 2102-IR Business Telephones 27 e-mail
3102 Business Telephone 21 getting voice mail messages in 44
conference calls notification of voice mail messages 68
adding parties 59 error tone 107
dropping last party 60 External Paging
feature code 110 dial code 95
introduction 59 external telephone calls, dialing 50
configurable operators 96
confirmation tone 107
connecting a headset F
3102 Business Telephone 22, 76 feature active tone 108
general 76 Feature button
connecting telephones 64, 128 1102, 2102, and 2102-IR Business Telephone 29
caution, RJ-45 versus RJ-11 jacks 122 3102 Business Telephone 23
electrical power 121 feature codes 107
conventions, documentation 10 Feature Codes Guide in NBX NetSet utility 13
creating voice mail messages 39 feature entry tone 107
customer (supervisory monitoring) 90
Transfer button
1102, 2102, and 2102-IR Business W
Telephones 27 Wait for NCP message 130
1105 Attendant Console 117 wall-mount bracket 126
3102 Business Telephone 21 whisper 91
3105 Attendant Console 115 Windows Desktop shortcut, for LabelMaker 68
transferring calls 58
feature code 111
troubleshooting Z
introduction 121 zone paging 94
list of possible problems 128
U
unauthorized use of telephone, preventing 74
urgent messages 43
user, definition 10
V
version, feature code 111
voice mail
accessing through e-mail 44
changing your password 32
components 31
creating messages 39
forwarding 38
greeting-only mailbox 44
group mailboxes 45
groups 40
indicators 34
initializing 13
listening remotely 35
listening to messages 34
maximum message length 32
password security tips 33
personal group lists, creating and modifying 41
private messages 43
problems with 129
replying to 37
retrieving from a remote location 35
sending 39
setting up 13
urgent messages 43
volume control buttons
1102, 2102, and 2102-IR Business Telephone 27
3102 Business Telephone 22
volume settings 61
feature codes 111
speaker 61