3.33
Basic operation
Responding to a call request
If someone requests a call from you during a fax communication, you’ll hear a long
ring after the receiving machine has received each page. To answer the call request:
1
Lift your machine’s optional handset, and listen for a few seconds. You may
hear a brief series of fax tones.
2
Shortly, the line will open and the person at the other end of the line will
answer. You and the other person now can have a normal phone conversation.
The power of Multi tasking
Your fax machine’s Multi tasking feature sharply reduces the time you might spend
waiting for the machine to finish its work. Multi Tasking is a more powerful version
of what already is a pretty powerful feature, called dual access. While a fax with nor-
mal dual access allows you to do two things at once, Multitasking allows you to do
four operations at once. For example, even if the machine is (1) printing a copy, (2)
transmitting from memory and (3) scanning documents for a different memory
transmission, you can still (4) program the machine.
F-Code Boxes
F-Code: an introduction
The
ITU
-
T
, the United Nations agency that standardizes international telecommuni-
cations, has created a fax industry standard for using sub-addressing and
password-based communication. One name for this standard is F-Code, and that’s
what we’ll call it in these instructions and on your machine’s display.
How sub-addressing works
To help understand sub-addressing, think about how someone in a large company
receives mail. For example, mail for the Accounting department is first delivered to
the company’s main mailroom. Then the mailroom routes the mail to Accounting.
That’s the idea behind sub-addressing. Your fax and another F-Code-compatible fax
exchange special signals to indicate just where the fax really should go. It’s as if the
sending fax is saying, “Deliver this to room 48,” and the receiving fax does just that.
Your machine has up to 50 mailboxes for these special deliveries. When someone
sends an F-Code fax to you, your machine receives it into one of those 50 mailboxes
— whichever box the sender chooses.
Sending F-Code securely
For greater security, you can set up a password with each F-Code sub-address,
which lets you use secure transmission, polling and relay broadcasting when com-
municating with any other F-Code compatible fax machine.
Guidelines for using F-Code
(1) To use
ITU
-
T
sub-addressing, you must create F-Code boxes in your machine
(2) Your machine holds up to 50 of these boxes
(3) Your machine stores up to 30 documents into each F-Code box (each document
can include one or more pages)
Creating or modifying an F-Code box
Choosing the F-Code box type
Before you set up an F-Code box, first decide how your callers will use it — as a
bulletin box, a security box or a relay box.
• Bulletin box — Stores documents that people in remote locations retrieve by
polling the box. For example, your sales branches could call in at any time to get
a printout of your latest prices that you’ve stored in a bulletin box.
A bulletin box stores both scanned and retrieved documents, and it holds its
contents indefinitely (as long as the unit has
AC
power).
• Security box — Receives and stores F-Code secure communications.