User Manual
Table Of Contents
- Table Of Contents
- TABLE OF CONTENTS 1
- Contact Information
- Using the Online Help System
- #
- a
- b
- c
- d
- e
- f
- g
- h
- i
- j
- k
- l
- m
- n
- o
- p
- q
- r
- s
- t
- u
- v
- w
- x
- y
- z
- Hardware
- Access Points
- Bar Code Readers
- Overview
- Procedures
- Specifications
- Overview
- Procedures
- Specifications
- Overview
- Procedures
- Specifications
- Overview
- Procedures
- Specifications
- Portable Printers
- Remote Listening Systems
- Overview
- Procedures
- Specifications
- Overview
- Procedures
- Specifications
- Overview
- Procedures
- Specifications
- Visual Training Devices
- Wired Portable Speakers
- Learning Zone
- Solution Zone
- Other Issues
- Equipment Problems
- Other Problems
- I can't get an assignment.
- I can't get my battery on.
- I can't get my battery off.
- I can't hear anything through the headset.
- I can't log on.
- I can't unplug my headset.
- I don't know what to say next.
- My bar code reader won't scan.
- My battery keeps falling off.
- My belt doesn't fit.
- My equipment is broken.
- My headset won't stay on.
- The Talkman terminal beeps every few seconds.
- The Talkman terminal does not appear in Terminal Manager.
- The Talkman terminal does not recognize a word.
- The Talkman terminal does not hear anything I say.
- The Talkman terminal does not respond to button presses.
- The Talkman terminal heard something I did not say.
- The Talkman terminal is telling me there are errors.
- The Talkman terminal keeps shutting off.
- The Talkman terminal makes clicking noises.
- The Talkman terminal makes static noises.
- The Talkman terminal will not load a task.
- The Talkman terminal will not load an operator template.
- The Talkman Terminal will not turn on.
- Sending Equipment Back for Repairs: Return Material Authorization (RMA) Procedures
- Other Issues
- Training Zone
- Working Zone
- Adding a Terminal to the Network
- Purpose
- Procedure
- Purpose
- Procedure
- Purpose
- Procedures
- Assembling a Talkman® OPEN Battery Housing
- Caring for Headsets & Microphones
- Purpose
- Procedures
- Changing Configurable Parameters
- Purpose
- Before You Begin
- Procedure
- Purpose
- Procedure
- Conditioning a Talkman® OPEN Battery
- Configurable Parameters
- Speech Recognition Parameters
- Configuring a Terminal
- Configuring Remote Listening Systems
- Purpose
- Before You Begin
- Procedures
- Configuring Visual Training Devices
- Creating Operator Voice Templates (enrollment training)
- Erasing Spoken Responses
- Purpose
- Before You Begin
- Procedure
- Troubleshooting
- Purpose
- Before You Begin
- Procedure
- Purpose
- Before You Begin
- Procedure
- Purpose
- Before You Begin
- Procedure
- Putting a Terminal to Sleep
- Purpose
- Procedure
- Removing a Talkman® T2 Terminal from a Belt
- Purpose
- Procedure
- Repeating Prompts
- Purpose
- Before You Begin
- Procedure
- Purpose
- Procedure
- Talkman® Terminals & Terminal Chargers
- Turning Off a Talkman® Terminal
- Turning On a Talkman® Terminal
- Using a Talkman® Terminal
- Purpose
- Procedures
- Using a Terminal During Each Shift
- Troubleshooting
- Using Bar Code Readers
- Waking a Terminal Up
- Purpose
- Procedures
25
single instance of an application.
q
QTERM-J10™: A device used to visually display information (such as vocabulary words during
enrollment training); a trademark of the QSI Corporation.
r
radio files: The firmware that is loaded onto a Talkman® terminal's radio card.
radio range: The area in which a Talkman® terminal stays in contact with an access point as
determined by a site survey. Talkman terminals have built-in radios through which information
is exchanged via an access point to and from the host computer.
RCM file: Recognizer script file. This type of file is created when a task is saved.
reported short: Occurs when there are not enough product units at a pick location for an
operator to fulfill a pick. This does not necessarily mean that the units are not in the
warehouse, just that they are not at the pick location. Reported shorts are also referred to as
scratches, exceptions, cuts, markouts, or redlines.
RF: Radio frequency.
ROM: Read-only memory.
RS-232C: A standard recommended by the Electronics Industries Association (EIA) concerning
the transmission of data between computers using serial ports. Most personal computers are
equipped with an RS-232-compatible serial port, to which external modems, printers, scanners,
and other peripheral devices can connect.
s
scratch: Occurs when there are not enough product units at a pick location for an operator to
fulfill a pick. This does not necessarily mean that the units are not in the warehouse, just that
they are not at the pick location. Scratches are also referred to as reported shorts, exceptions,
cuts, markouts, or redlines.
serial cable: A cable used to transmit serial data between two computers (or a computer and a
device such as a modem). Vocollect modifies serial cables so that one end has a standard serial
port connection to be connected to the COM port on the host computer and the other end has a
connection that connects to a Talkman® terminal.
serial port: A port that synchronizes and manages asynchronous communication between a
computer and devices such as serial printers, modems, and other computers.
short: Occurs when there are not enough product units at a pick location for an operator to