Voice mail service, Using voice mail service – Panasonic BB-GT1500C User Manual

Page 66

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Voice Mail Service

66

For product assistance, visit www.globarange.com

For A assistance, visit www.joip.com

Using Voice Mail
service

This unit is compatible with Voice Mail
services offered by your landline service
provider and A. After you subscribe to
these services, the Voice Mail system of
your service provider will answer calls
for you when you are unavailable to
answer the phone or when your line is
busy. Messages are recorded by your
Voice Mail service provider, not your
telephone.
L

k

Please contact your landline

service provider for details.

L

l

Please visit www.joip.com or

contact the A service provider for
details.

Important:
L

To use the Voice Mail service rather
than the unit’s answering system, turn
off the answering system (page 58).

Voice Mail message indication
The unit lets you know that you have
new Voice Mail messages in the
following ways:
– The VM indicator on the base unit

flashes.

“VoiceMail:TEL” and/or

“VoiceMail:joip” are displayed
on the handset. “VoiceMail:TEL”
indicates the messages received by
your landline service provider.
“VoiceMail:joip” indicates the
messages received by A.

– The message indicator on the handset

flashes slowly if the message alert
feature is turned on (page 67).

k
To listen to your Voice Mail messages
received by your landline service

provider, you must dial the service
provider’s Voice Mail access number.
L

If your Voice Mail service uses Voice
Mail tones and the message is over 3
minutes long, the handset may not
indicate new messages.

l
To listen to your Voice Mail messages
received by A, access the A Voice
Mail from the A service menu using
the handset (page 74).
Note for k and l:
L

If the handset or base unit still
indicates there are new messages
even after you have listened to all new
messages, turn it off by pressing and
holding {OFF} on the handset until a
beep sounds.

Voice Mail (VM) tone detection
k

Your landline service provider sends
special signals (sometimes called “Voice
Mail tones” or “stutter tones”) to the unit
to let you know you have new Voice Mail
messages. If you hear a series of dial
tones followed by a continuous dial tone
after you press {TEL}, you have new
Voice Mail messages. Minutes after you
hang up a call or after the phone stops
ringing, your unit will check the phone
line to see if new Voice Mail messages
have been recorded.
Turn this feature off when:
– you do not subscribe to Voice Mail

service.

– your landline service provider does

not send Voice Mail tones.

– your phone is connected to a PBX.
If you are not sure which setting is
required, consult your landline service
provider.

GT15xxC.book Page 66 Tuesday, July 24, 2007 7:17 PM

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