Broadcasting, The basics of broadcasting, Delayed broadcasting – Muratec MFX-1500 User Manual

Page 65

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Beyond the basics

2.17

Broadcasting

The basics of broadcasting

The fastest way to fax one document to multiple recipients is broadcasting — and
your fax machine has very powerful broadcasting capabilities. You can use
broadcasting from any
function requiring the entry of a fax number! That means
you can perform delayed broadcasting (see right column), SecureMail broadcasting
(see pages 2.39–2.42) and even broadcasting to “hub” units for relay broadcast
initiation
(see pages 2.18–2.19).
In an ordinary broadcast, you send as you normally would, except for one simple
change: you just add more fax numbers! You can enter up to 220 numbers (20
normally dialled numbers plus either 200 autodialler numbers or one call group with
all 200 autodialler numbers).
We’ll assume you’ve become familiar with regular fax transmission, and shorten the
instructions a bit so you can more readily see the differences.

1.

If the machine is in Fax mode, proceed to step 2.
If it is in Copy mode, press

COPY

/

FAX

to change to Fax mode.

2.

Insert the document and make any necessary adjustments as usual.

3.

Press

BROADCAST

.

4.

Enter the first fax number — a one-touch number, a speed-dial number,
a call group or just a regular number dialled from the numeric keypad
as usual.

5.

To add each successive fax number, press

BROADCAST

between each one to

insert a comma (

GROUP DIAL

inserts its own comma), then enter the number as

in step 4. You can specify up to 220 numbers (see first paragraph, above) for a
broadcast.

Press Start
[01],9-5551204,S118

Important:

Do not insert a comma after the last fax number.

Note:

If you enter characters by mistake, just press

CANCEL

to clear them

before proceeding.

6.

Press

START

. Your fax machine will scan the document into memory and then

send it to each number or call group you’ve entered.

The main idea is: when it’s time within an operation for entering the fax number to
which you’re to send your document, you enter multiple numbers until you’ve either
reached 220 numbers or finished dialling all you want to dial for this document.

Delayed broadcasting

What if you want the broadcast to happen later? That’s the purpose of setting up a
delayed broadcast.

Note:

Actually, we’re jumping the gun a bit here; the main discussion of delayed
commands comes up in “Delayed transmission” (pages 2.20–2.22). You may
wish to read that material before proceeding.

1.

[Same as steps 1–5 of “The basics of broadcasting,” (left column).]

2.

Press

COMMUNICATION OPTIONS

,

ENTER

.

3.

Use the numeric keypad to enter the day of the month and time when you want
the fax to perform the broadcast. Here, we’ve set it to occur at
10:15

PM

on the 17th.

Delayed
Enter Time: 17/22:15

When the entry is complete, press

ENTER

.

4.

Press

START

. Your machine will return to its normal standby mode, while

showing this on the display:

** Reserved **
Sep 27 1998 17:17

This means your fax machine is “reserved” for the delayed broadcast you just
programmed.

If you have set the machine for memory transmission (see page 1.23) from the

ADF

, it will scan the document into memory, after which you can use the

machine normally.

If you have set the machine for non-memory transmission from the

ADF

, the

machine can receive faxes but can’t transmit until after the delayed broadcast
occurs.

Note:

Transmission from the

FBS

is always memory transmission.

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