Direct Outward Dialing (DOD) is a service of a local phone company (or local exchange carrier) that allows subscribers within a company's private branch exchange (PBX) system to connect to outside lines directly. Using DOD, a company can offer each person or workstation within the company the ability to dial numbers direct, without the need to go through an operator or dial other numbers first.

Can I set the top rear dial to direct dial ISO without pressing anything... No top ISO button, no dial functiin switch button {which i understand requires losing a function button, no dedicated hard button like on gx8 org80)


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By using "Dial Operation Switch Setup" (DOSS) (whatever that means) you can choose from a variety of direct dial operations for the front and back wheels. Someone might advise on where the DOSS happens to be

The customisation of this camera is extensive, so-glad we can now backup all these camera settings. With so many great Bracketing options i wish it had been included on the Drive mode dial, so i have also assigned Bracketing to F3.

I like having the front dial set to EC and the back to either SS or A (depending on whether I'm shooting in Aperture mode - most often - or in Shutter mode. I have assigned Fn5 (lower button on the front of the camera) to DOSS, and I have set up DOSS so that when I press Fn 5, then the front dial is WB and the back is ISO. So easy for my ring finger tip to press Fn 5 to activate this.

As some of you mentioned, I really don't like them moving the play button to the left, since you can't review your images thru the EVF with the right hand. hard to support the camera and use left button. I see that you can ASSIGN play somewhere else, I will see if I can spare one of the directional buttons on the control dial.

is there a way to assign jumping direct to autoISO to a button? i have my ISO mapped to the back control dial, and my fine iso intervals, so sometimes it takes a while for me to scroll all the way back down to autoISO. i tend to use autoISO on video and manual iso on photos. when running and gunning, i switch back and forth between video and photos quite often.

i was hoping to be able to just hit it on the back dial (up/down/left or right, either one of those) and have it jump to autoISO. because i like to reserve the C-modes all my different set of video modes.

Boss wants me to do some tuning: disallow external caller to dial certain extensions directly (like 141, 142, etc.) so the only way they (callers) could get to these numbers if someone (like 140) will patch them through first.

FreePBX is at version 2.11 now, with 2.12 imminent. You really want to update your system. In current versions you can specify a list of extensions that can be direct dialed from an IVR by creating a directory containing the appropriate extensions.

I believe older versions only have a checkbox to allow or disallow direct dialing. If you disallow direct dialing you would need to enter the extensions you want to be able to dial as entries in the IVR. Perhaps the directory option is available in older versions as well. Do you have the directory module installed?

I've found solution: Simply adding certain extensions to IVR respond options and making them hangup call does the trick. For some reason I was thinking this things where accepting one symbol input only, apparently it's not. It could be used to intercept dialed extensions as well.

In my setup, there's a PSTN line connected to IVR. Anyone can dial PSTN number from outside and once the call is connected to IVR, he can enter the desired extension number. Assume PSTN number is 0114556677 and desired extension is 1000. Is there a way to dial at once this combination. I am not referring to assign DID for each extension. I am looking for a method to dial direct number followed by extension number using special code in between, where PSTN switch will identify only the PSTN number and once the call is connected to IVR, the PSTN switch will pass the extension number automatically.

Example: if the user dials 01145566771000 (Direct number followed by extension) the PSTN switch will rejected the call, because, it's trying the search the full number, where it's not available. But if we can use some kind of special code (please refer X of the below number) in between direct number and extension, where PSTN switch will identify the first part needs to be dial first and the second part needs to be sent once the call connected.

At once from a phone? I'd say NO to that one, since the PSTN dialing pattern is already completed to route the call to the destination number and anything after that e.g 1000 will be discarded, so once connected the 1000 has to be put in at that time. Remember there is a delay factor in here.

There is nothing like the "X" you specified however if you have a dialer software, you can try putting a few commas (,) in there and try if that works. Comma creates a delay. You can try it, and see if it helps anything.

Note: On most platforms, DID is enabled by default on CAS (immediate, wink, delay) interfaces. Therefore, do not configure the direct-inward-dial command for incoming calls. On Cisco AS5300 platforms, DID is not supported on interfaces configured for E & M immediate signaling.

DID is a service offered by telephone companies that enables callers to dial directly to an extension on a Private Branch Exchange (PBX) or packet voice system without the assistance of an operator or automated call attendant. This service makes use of DID trunks, which forward only the last three to five digits of a phone number to the PBX or router/gateway. If for example, a company has phones extensions 555-1000 to 555-1999, and a caller dials 555-1234, the local central office (CO) would forward 234 to the PBX or packet voice system. The PBX or packet voice system (Cisco CallManager and IOS router/gateway) would then ring extension 234. This entire process is transparent to the caller.

When a voice call comes into the Cisco IOS router/gateway, the voice port on the router is seized inbound by a PBX or CO switch. The router/gateway then presents a dial tone to the caller and collects digits until it can identify an outbound dial peer. Whether the digits are dialed with irregular intervals by humans or in a regular fashion by telephony equipment sending the pre-collected digits, dial-peer matching is done digit-by-digit. This means the router/gateway attempts to match a dial peer after each digit is received. This process is called two-stage dialing.

However, if the PBX or CO switch sends a setup message containing "all" the digits necessary to fully route the call, those digits can be mapped to an outbound Voice-Network dial-peer directly. With DID, the router/gateway does not present a dial tone to the caller and does not collect digits. It forwards the call directly to the configured destination. This is called one-stage dialing.

When receiving an inbound call from a plain old telephone service (POTS) interface, the DID feature in dial peers enables the router/gateway to use the called number (DNIS) to directly match an outbound dial peer. When DID is configured on the inbound POTS dial peer, the called number is automatically used to match the destination pattern for the outbound call leg.

For DID to work correctly, make sure the incoming call matches the correct POTS dial-peer where the command direct-inward-dial is configured. To match the correct inbound dial peer, we recommend using the dial peer command incoming called-number dnis_string  under the DID POTS dial peer.

Other commands used to match dial-peers include: answer-address ani_string , destination-pattern string  or port voice-port . The advantage of using the incoming called-number command is that every call has associated DNIS information (called-number) and it has priority over the previous commands.

If using ANI information to match the DID POTS dial-peer, make sure the command answer-address is configured correctly and the telco-switch is providing ANI information. Some ISDN providers and most T1 channel associated signaling (CAS), except Feature Group D (fgd), do not provide ANI information.

If answer-address is NOT matched against ANI, then the ANI may be matching the destination-pattern configured (for outbound dialing) under another POTS dial-peer. If the destination-pattern is matched against ANI, make sure that the command direct-inward-dial is configured under that dial-peer.

If the incoming DID call is not matched to an inbound POTS dial-peer based on incoming called-number or answer-address or destination-pattern or port, then default dial-peer 0 will be used. DID is disabled by default on dial-peer 0.

Use the following example, to illustrate the above points. ACME Company has T1 PRI lines with 40 DID trunks in the range of 555-3100 to 555-3139. The goal is to assign the first 20 lines to Cisco IP phones. The last 20 lines are available for testing, future expansion and for now the router gives dial-tone only. Assuming that the CO switch is sending only the last five digits in the ISDN set up message, we can summarize the above information in the following table. ff782bc1db

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