Troubleshooting after logging on, The callpilot address book is empty, The subscriber has message access problems – Nortel Networks Alteon Link Optimizer 150 User Manual

Page 56: The subscriber has problems sending messages, Symbols

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56 Chapter 4 Troubleshooting

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Troubleshooting after logging on

The CallPilot address book is empty

Lotus Notes subscribers must log on to CallPilot before they can download the address book.

1

Make sure that your Address Book—People (CallPilot) window is the active window.

2

On the View menu, click Refresh.

3

Make sure the CallPilot Address Book has been downloaded.

Outlook and GroupWise clients:

1

Click Download CallPilot Address Book.

2

If it responds with 0 entries found, verify that the search base is correct.

The subscriber has message access problems

The subscriber has modified the settings so that they are now correct, but the subscriber still
cannot access their messages.

If you modified the settings while Desktop Messaging was open, close and reopen Desktop
Messaging so that the settings take effect.

The subscriber has problems sending messages

When the subscriber sends a message, it arrives in the recipient’s Outlook mailbox, but it does not
arrive in the CallPilot message mailbox.

1

Ensure that when you address the message, you locate the recipient’s address in the CallPilot
Address Book. If the recipient is defined in your Personal Address Book, then ensure that the
Personal Address Book entry is a CallPilot address.

2

To ensure that the recipient is defined as a CallPilot Address type, highlight the name, click
Properties, and verify that the Address Type=CallPilot.

3

Before you send the message, in the To field, highlight the Recipient, click Properties, and
verify that the Address Type=CallPilot.

In sent messages digits or symbols appear instead of language-specific
symbols

The only character sets that are supported are us-ascii and ISO-8859-1. The messaging client must
be configured to use ISO-8859-1 character encoding, usually displayed as the option Western
(ISO-8859-1) or Western European ISO in most e-mail applications. This does not restrict users in
other countries from using text messaging, only which character sets can be used to compose and
send these messages.

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