I think you've explained it enough, I just want to make sure I understand. When a call is parked, it must be parked in a particular park slot (AKA orbits on some systems) based on how a button is programmed? The system doesn't automatically pick an available park slot and display it? How many park slots are there?
----- Original Message ----- From: "Jay Thomas" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Thursday, November 14, 2002 12:21 PM Subject: Re: KX-T: Re: Park Button Illumination | | > Your customer finds something about the phone system absurd? | | Well, yes, also problematic and annoying but more to the point, | they find it (and to some extent so do I) surprising that a useful | feature, Call Park, which is present in so many telephone systems | is implemented by the KX-TD1232 in such a way as to be so awkward | to use. | | The specific problem is "double-parking". Since the "Park Buttons" | are only one-touch dialling buttons, and do not illuminate to | indicate that the associated "parking slot" in use, the three | persons who share the answering duties have difficulty knowing | which parking slots are available for use. Obviously, direct | transfer to a specific extension is preferred, but is not always | possible. | | I would expect this issue to come up any time a small office | is transitioned from an "every line has a CO button on every | phone" arrangement to one where that arrangement is no longer | feasible and personnel are not always sitting by a specifically | assigned extension. | | Jay Thomas <HALNet Operations Teammember/Telecom> | [EMAIL PROTECTED] | | _________________________________________________________________ | KX-T Mailing list --- http://kxthelp.com/ | Subscription changes: http://kxthelp.com/mailman/listinfo/kxt | _________________________________________________________________ KX-T Mailing list --- http://kxthelp.com/ Subscription changes: http://kxthelp.com/mailman/listinfo/kxt

