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- 07-23-2005, 03:42 PM #1SweetAzzKANDEEGuest
OK.so i have #s on my speed dial up to #9.But i'd like to put more,like
on 10,11,12 & so forth.Is there sumthing i'm missing here? the
instruction book isnt very helpful.I thought this phone held more speed
dial? or is 9 the total?
› See More: SANYO PM 8200...Speed dial?
- 07-24-2005, 11:21 AM #2AlanGuest
Re: SANYO PM 8200...Speed dial?
SweetAzzKANDEE wrote:
> OK.so i have #s on my speed dial up to #9.But i'd like to put more,like
> on 10,11,12 & so forth.Is there sumthing i'm missing here? the
> instruction book isnt very helpful.I thought this phone held more speed
> dial? or is 9 the total?
I think the assumption (by the engineer of the phone) is that with
often called people, the call history is used to dial the number, etc.
- 07-24-2005, 10:08 PM #3Frank HarrisGuest
Re: SANYO PM 8200...Speed dial?
My wife's Sanyo 8100 is as you described. It only has 8 or 9
single-digit speedials (2-9 or 2-0). This is diffrent from most
Samsungs in which the phonebook slot number = the speedial number (1, 2
or 3 digits).
Though the Sanyo system has only 8 or 9 speedials (which is all that
many people can remember anyway), you can assign speedials to more than
one number from a phonebook slot. For example, you can have your
spouse's work and cell numbers in one phonebook entry and each can be
assigned to a single-digit speedial. With a Samsung, you have to make
separate phonebook slots for the work and cell numbers so that they can
be separate speedials.
SweetAzzKANDEE wrote:
> OK.so i have #s on my speed dial up to #9.But i'd like to put more,like
> on 10,11,12 & so forth.Is there sumthing i'm missing here? the
> instruction book isnt very helpful.I thought this phone held more speed
> dial? or is 9 the total?
>
--
Frank Harris in San Francisco with an A680
- 08-01-2005, 12:32 PM #4Oleg O.Guest
Re: SANYO PM 8200...Speed dial?
In article <[email protected]>,
Frank Harris <[email protected]> wrote:
>My wife's Sanyo 8100 is as you described. It only has 8 or 9
>single-digit speedials (2-9 or 2-0). This is diffrent from most
>Samsungs in which the phonebook slot number = the speedial number (1, 2
>or 3 digits).
>
>Though the Sanyo system has only 8 or 9 speedials (which is all that
>many people can remember anyway), you can assign speedials to more than
>one number from a phonebook slot. For example, you can have your
>spouse's work and cell numbers in one phonebook entry and each can be
>assigned to a single-digit speedial. With a Samsung, you have to make
>separate phonebook slots for the work and cell numbers so that they can
>be separate speedials.
Actually with 8200 you don't need to assign different numbers of the
same entry to different speeddials -- you can access all numbers through
one speeddial. Prese *and release* the speeddial number, and as your
programmed entry is displayed, you can use left and right arrows to
cycle through all the different numbers in that entry.
So if you program mobile numbers of your most common callees to
speeddials, pressing <number> <right arrow> TALK will call their home
numbers.
What I don't understand is why they don't have speeddials on buttons
0 and 1 (there are plenty of other buttons they could've used for
voicemail instead of 1, and 0 is practically unused).
Oleg
--
oleg | The "From" address is temporary.
@ | <---- If expired, use this one.
sashos |
.com | "Can you count to 1023 on your fingers?"
- 08-01-2005, 01:20 PM #5Bob SmithGuest
Re: SANYO PM 8200...Speed dial?
"Oleg O." <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> In article <[email protected]>,
> Frank Harris <[email protected]> wrote:
> >My wife's Sanyo 8100 is as you described. It only has 8 or 9
> >single-digit speedials (2-9 or 2-0). This is diffrent from most
> >Samsungs in which the phonebook slot number = the speedial number (1, 2
> >or 3 digits).
> >
> >Though the Sanyo system has only 8 or 9 speedials (which is all that
> >many people can remember anyway), you can assign speedials to more than
> >one number from a phonebook slot. For example, you can have your
> >spouse's work and cell numbers in one phonebook entry and each can be
> >assigned to a single-digit speedial. With a Samsung, you have to make
> >separate phonebook slots for the work and cell numbers so that they can
> >be separate speedials.
>
> Actually with 8200 you don't need to assign different numbers of the
> same entry to different speeddials -- you can access all numbers through
> one speeddial. Prese *and release* the speeddial number, and as your
> programmed entry is displayed, you can use left and right arrows to
> cycle through all the different numbers in that entry.
>
> So if you program mobile numbers of your most common callees to
> speeddials, pressing <number> <right arrow> TALK will call their home
> numbers.
>
> What I don't understand is why they don't have speeddials on buttons
> 0 and 1 (there are plenty of other buttons they could've used for
> voicemail instead of 1, and 0 is practically unused).
1 is set to call your voice mail. O is used to call the operator ...
Bob
- 08-01-2005, 01:37 PM #6Oleg O.Guest
Re: SANYO PM 8200...Speed dial?
In article <[email protected]>,
Bob Smith <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>"Oleg O." <[email protected]> wrote in message
>news:[email protected]...
>>
>> What I don't understand is why they don't have speeddials on buttons
>> 0 and 1 (there are plenty of other buttons they could've used for
>> voicemail instead of 1, and 0 is practically unused).
>
>1 is set to call your voice mail. O is used to call the operator ...
I know, but those are unfortunate choices. As I mentioned, there
are plenty of buttons that could've been used to call voicemail when
held (e.g. MENU/OK, TALK, BACK, *, #), and Operator could've been
preprogrammed as a regular speeddial, changeable if desired.
--
oleg | The "From" address is temporary.
@ | <---- If expired, use this one.
sashos |
.com | "Can you count to 1023 on your fingers?"
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