Specifications

OUTWARD RESTRICTED
Some people in your business may have little need to make any outside ca
either local or long distance.
During system administration you can place
outward
cull restriction on their voice terminals, and the system will ignore
attempts to dial outside telephone numbers from those voice terminals.
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if you want these people to be able to make local calls in business or
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emergencies, you can assign them an Allowed List of local exchanges and,
perhaps, emergency numbers such as 911 when you assign the call
restrictions.
You can also use System Speed Dial codes (called passwords in some
telephone systems) with Restriction Override to allow restricted voice
terminals to call selected local or long distance telephone numbers. You
simply mark the numbers for Restriction Override and store them in the
system’s memory under Speed Dial codes when you administer the systen
Then anyone in your system, including those with restricted voice termina
can use the Speed Dial codes to call the stored numbers.
On the Call Restrictions Assignment Form . . .
Put a check mark in the “Outward Restricted” column next to the
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numbers for the voice terminals you want to place outward restrictions
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when you administer the system.
ALLOWED LISTS
When you assign an Allowed List of numbers to a voice terminal, the pers
using the voice terminal can call the numbers on the list regardless of any
restriction placed on the voice terminal.
The system can store up to eight Allowed Lists of numbers with up to 10
entries in each list. Each entry can have up to eight digits. You might,
therefore, want to create one or more Allowed Lists with entries such as
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following:
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Local exchange codes
A local exchange code is the first three digits in a 7-digit telephone
number.
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Long distance area codes
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Area codes plus local exchange codes
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Emergency numbers with eight or fewer digits
For example, 911 is a multipurpose emergency number in many areas.
Call Restrictions Forms
: