3Com NBX 100 Administrator's Manual - page 151
Creating and Managing Button Mappings
151
You can assign one-touch actions such as Speed Dial or system
features such as Do Not Disturb to any Access button.
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NBX 2101 Basic Telephones include three Access buttons. NBX 2101
Basic Telephones operate in PBX mode only, that is, you cannot map
CO lines directly to telephone buttons.
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Not all Button Type functions are available on all models of
telephones. For a description of each function you can assign to a
button, click the Help button in the NBX NetSet Button Mapping
Screen.
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The use of the Prty (priority) and Number fields depend on the
selected Button Type function.
■
The Ring field is used to enable and disable ringing for a lone
appearance button and to set delayed ringing patterns. See
“Creating
a Delayed Ringing Pattern”
on
page 152
for details.
■
A
Lock
check box at the Group Mappings level lets you control button
inheritance behavior. If you lock
a button at the Group Mappings
level, a change made to the Group always passes to every telephone
in the Group. If you clear the
Lock
box at the Group Mappings level,
you can override the mapping at the device level. An icon at the
device level indicates whether the button can be remapped.
■
The check box Show caller ID on secondary bridged extensions when
on call appears on Button Mappings for the NBX 3103 Manager’s
Telephone. This feature allows the device to display Caller IDs for
bridged extensions.
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Telephone Button Mappings are part of a device. You assign a set of
mappings to an individual by associating a particular device or group
to the user.
■
Users can see the Button Mappings in effect for their telephones by
accessing the NBX NetSet interface with a personal password.
■
Users can use the NBX NetSet interface to create and print labels for
the Access buttons on their telephones.
Mappings for Users
and Groups
When you create a new user and assign the user to a group, the button
mappings for that group become active for the user’s telephone. You can
override group mappings and create mappings for individual telephones.
For example, you can create a Group called Sales and assign three shared
direct lines to the group. Then you can assign one unshared direct line to
each of the telephones currently in use by people in the Sales group.