For a quick understanding of how telephone systems are configured, see the attached Telephone System Diagram. Installing a telephone system involves three discrete tasks. First is the wiring If you already have a contractor that does your computer wiring, this is probably your best source for wiring. If you do not, then the firm that installs the equipment should also install any wiring that is needed. You probably don't need new wiring if there are telephone jacks where you want them now. Unlike some systems (such as Lucent which require four pairs of wires for each telephone), our digital system uses only one pair of wires for each telephone. Second is the cabinets and phones This involves mounting the system cabinet and connecting it to both the outside telephone lines and the wires that go to the telephone jacks. Any competent telephone installer can install our system. Modular cords plug into the system cards and are "punched down" on standard telephone system termination blocks. From there, the system blocks are "cross connected" to the telephone lines and telephone instruments using industry standard color codes. Once the telephones are plugged into standard telephone jacks, the system is turned on and comes up running. Third is programming Simply put, your telephone system is a computer. Through the use of standard modems, we can access your system remotely for a modest hourly charge (presently $50 per hour with a 1/2 hour minimum). This means that you are not dependent upon any installer's specific knowledge of system programming. We will program the default system from your worksheets. Once the system is up and running, you can determine what changes you want made and we can do them remotely. | ||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||