Telephone Buttons and Controls
25
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 NBX Telephone
Display Panel”
in
Chapter 7
.
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 7
.
8 Transfer button
— Sends the currently active call to another telephone.
See
“Transferring a Call”
in
Chapter 7
.
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 7
.
10 Redial button
— Redials the last telephone number or extension that
you called. See
“Redialing a Call”
in
Chapter 7
.
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 7
.
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.
Summary of Contents for NBX 3101
Page 8: ......
Page 12: ...12 ABOUT THIS GUIDE...
Page 34: ...34 CHAPTER 4 NBX 3101 AND 3101SP BASIC TELEPHONES...
Page 54: ...54 CHAPTER 6 NBX MESSAGING...
Page 68: ...68 CHAPTER 7 STANDARD FEATURES...
Page 100: ...100 CHAPTER 9 GETTING MORE FROM YOUR TELEPHONE SYSTEM...
Page 108: ...108 CHAPTER 10 NBX 3105 AND 1105 ATTENDANT CONSOLES...
Page 126: ...126 INDEX...