Product specifications

4-10
Chapter 4
Business Feature Package
CHAIN DIALING
Keyset users may manually dial additional digits following a speed dial call or chain together as many
speed dial numbers as are required.
CLASS OF SERVICE
The system allows a maximum of 30 station classes of service. Each class of service can be customized
in memory to allow or deny access to features and to define a station’s dialing class. Each station can
be assigned different classes of service for day and night operation.
COMMON BELL CONTROL
The MISC card provides relays that may be programmed to control a customer-provided common bell
or common audible device. These contacts must be programmed as members of a station group and
may provide steady or interrupted closure.
CONFERENCE
The system allows six simultaneous conferences up to 5 parties each.
ADD-ON (5 PARTY)
Any combination of up to five parties (stations or outside lines) can be joined together in an add-on
conference. Parties may be eliminated or added after a conference has been established.
UNSUPERVISE
A station user may set up a conference with two or more outside lines and then exit the conference
leaving the outside lines connected in an unsupervised (trunk to trunk) conference.
This feature requires individual trunk buttons and auto-hold must be enabled.
COMPUTER TELEPHONY INTEGRATION (CTI)
Computer Telephone Integration (CTI) allows integration between the iDCS 100 and a personal
computer system (PC) or a local area network (LAN). Caller ID service is required for TAPI inbound
call applications that use the CID information to display computer records in conjunction with the
presentation of the call to the station on the iDCS 100.
TAPI 2.1
TAPI 2.1 is the method of integrating the iDCS 100 system to a computer. TAPI 2.1 is a LAN based
solution allowing computers to communicate directly to the telephone system over the network
system. This establishes a logical connection rather than a physical connection between telephone and
computer. It eliminates the cost and administrative overhead of connecting every PC to a desktop
phone. It emphasizes third-party call control. (Example: calls can be tracked as they are transferred,
making it more suited to large office applications). TAPI 2.1 can emulate first-party type call control
for the iDCS 100 system, rather than from the telephone as TAPI 2.0 does. For example, to make a call
the iDCS 100, rather than the telephone would dial the phone number, and the call would be then
transferred to the telephone.