User Manual
Table Of Contents
- Gigaset C530 IP – Your perfect companion
- Overview of handset
- Safety precautions
- Getting started
- Checking the contents of the package
- Installing the base station and charging cradle
- Setting up the handset for use
- Connecting the base to a router (Internet)
- Setting up the phone – installation wizard
- Date and time
- Connecting the headset to the handset (optional)
- Activating/deactivating the handset
- Locking/unlocking the keypad
- Control key
- Display keys
- Menu guidance
- Message lists
- Entering numbers and text
- Making calls
- Using provider-specific functions (network services)
- Making cost-effective calls
- Adjusting the telephone settings
- Changing the display language
- Setting the display
- Activating/deactivating Auto Answer
- Changing the handsfree/earpiece volume
- Setting the earpiece profile
- Setting the handset ringtones
- Activating/deactivating music on hold
- Resetting a handset to the default settings
- Quick access to numbers and functions
- Setting the date and time manually
- Changing the system PIN
- Entering your own local area code
- Activating/deactivating music on hold
- Setting the IP address of the base in LAN
- Configuring VoIP connections
- Assigning send and receive connections to internal participants
- Updating the phone firmware
- Restarting the base
- Checking the base MAC address
- Restoring phone to default setting
- E-mail notifications
- Info Centre – continuous Internet access from your phone
- Network mailbox
- Multiple handsets
- Directories
- Local handset phonebook
- Phonebook entries
- Opening phonebook
- Creating a new entry
- Displaying/changing an entry
- Deleting an entry
- Setting the order of the phonebook entries
- Displaying the number of entries that are available in the phonebook
- Selecting a phonebook entry, searching in the phonebook
- Transferring an entry/phonebook to another handset
- Transferring a displayed number to the phonebook
- Transferring a number from the phonebook
- Online directories
- Using a private online directory
- Using the Gigaset.net phonebook
- Local handset phonebook
- Call lists
- ECO DECT
- Alarm clock
- Calendar
- Baby monitor
- Operating the telephone on a PABX
- Display icons
- Menu overview
- Configuring the phone via the Web configurator
- Connecting the PC with the telephone's Web configurator
- Establishing a connection via Gigaset config
- Logging in, setting the interface language
- Logging off
- Menu bar
- Navigation area
- Working area
- Buttons
- Help
- Opening web pages
- Connecting the base to the local network (LAN/router)
- Making security settings – managing certificates for TLS authentication
- Managing base connections; activating/deactivating connections
- Configuring/deleting VoIP connections
- Optimising voice quality for VoIP connections
- Assigning send and receive connections
- Activating the fixed line network connection as the fallback send connection
- User-defined dialling plans – specifying rules for telephony
- Access codes – activating dialling plans when connecting to a PABX
- Local area codes – activating dialling plans for local calls using VoIP
- Entering the network mailbox, enabling/disabling the network mailbox
- Making special settings for VoIP telephony
- Making settings for access to Internet services
- Deleting handset directories and downloading to/from the PC
- Changing the base settings, registering handsets
- Rebooting the device or restoring the factory settings
- Saving and restoring system settings
- Updating firmware for the base/restoring firmware updates, activating/ deactivating automatic updates
- Displaying the phone status
- 1. Changing the port numbers for SIP and RTP on your VoIP phone
- Exclusion of liability
- Care
- Contact with liquid
- Technical data
- Connecting the PC with the telephone's Web configurator
- FCC / ACTA Information
- Service (Customer Care)
- Glossary
- Accessories
- Mounting the charging cradle on the wall
- Index
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Gigaset C530 IP / LUG - USA en / A31008-XXXXX-XXXX-X-XX / Glossary.fm / 25.03.2015
Template Borneo, Version 1, 21.06.2012
Glossary
Subnet mask
IP addresses consist of a fixed network number and a variable subscriber number. The
network number is identical for all Network subscribers. Which portion of the IP address is
the network number is determined in the subnet mask. In the subnet mask 255.255.255.0, for
example, the first three parts of the IP address are the network number and the last part is
the subscriber number.
Symmetric NAT
A symmetric NAT assigns different external IP addresses and port numbers to the same
internal IP addresses and port numbers – depending on the external target address.
T
TCP
Transmission Control Protocol
Transport protocol. Session-based transmission protocol: it sets up, monitors and
terminates a connection between sender and recipient for transporting data.
TLS
Transport Layer Security
Protocol for encrypting data transmissions on the Internet. TLS is a superordinate Transport
protocol.
Transmission rate
Speed at which data is transmitted in the WAN or LAN. The transmission rate is measured in
data units per unit of time (Mbit/s).
Transport protocol
Controls data transport between two communication partners (applications).
See also: UDP, TCP, TLS.
U
UDP
User Datagram Protocol
Transport protocol. Unlike TCP, UDP is a non session-based protocol. UDP does not establish
a fixed connection. The data packets ("datagrams") are sent as a broadcast. The recipient is
solely responsible for making sure the data is received. The sender is not notified about
whether it is received or not.
URI
Uniform Resource Identifier
Character string for identifying resources (e.g. e-mail recipient, http://gigaset.com, files).
On the Internet, URIs are used as a uniform identification for resources. URIs are also
described as SIP addresses.
URIs can be entered in the phone as a number. By dialling a URI, you can call an Internet
subscriber with VoIP equipment.
URL
Universal Resource Locator
Globally unique address of a domain on the Internet.
A URL is a subtype of the URI. URLs identify a resource by its location in the Internet. For
historical reasons, the term is often used as a synonym for URI.
User ID
See User name.