
AMIS Analog Networking
585-300-512 Issue 7
May 1999
Subscriber Operation
C-6Message Delivery Example
C
4. To approve the address and send the message immediately (at the first
administered interval), Subscriber L would press:
— on a DEFINITY AUDIX system, an Intuity system, or an
AUDIX R1V8 system with the standard announcement set
— on an AUDIX R1V8 system with the traditional
announcement set, or on an earlier release of AUDIX software
5. At the first administered transmission interval, Subscriber L’s local system
calls Subscriber R’s voice mail system by dialing the digits in the dial
string defined for Subscriber R’s system.
In this example, the local system would dial “9-222-5000” (this assumes
that “9” is the dial access code used to access an outgoing trunk).
6. When the remote system answers the call, the local system notifies the
remote system that it has an AMIS analog message for mailbox “1111.”
7. Subscriber L’s system plays Subscriber L’s message to Subscriber R’s
system; meanwhile, Subscriber R’s system records Subscriber L’s
message.
8. The remote voice mail system puts Subscriber L’s message in Subscriber
R’s mailbox and notifies him that he has a message. Subscriber R can
then retrieve Subscriber L’s message as he would any other voice mail
message.
9. The local system updates the status of the message header in Subscriber
L’s outgoing mailbox to indicate the message was delivered.
Message Delivery Example
Message Delivery is an extension of the AMIS Analog Networking feature that
permits Lucent Technologies voice mail subscribers to send recorded voice mail
messages to any touch-tone telephone, anywhere in the world (including
someone’s home). Figure C-2,
Message Delivery Example
, illustrates the
Message Delivery feature.
For example, suppose Subscriber L (a subscriber on a local Lucent
Technologies voice mail system) needs to contact Recipient H (her husband who
works at home), but his line is busy. In this case, she may choose to send him a
voice mail message using the Message Delivery feature.
Before Subscriber L can send a Message Delivery message to Recipient H, she
needs to know the following information:
■
Optional:
The address prefix, if assigned, used to identify numbers to
which message delivery messages can be sent. In this example, assume
the Message Delivery prefix is “6.”
■ Recipient H’s telephone number. In this example, assume the number is
“222-1234.”
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