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Product Features
Editorial Reviews Product Description AT&T Corded Speakerphone Amazon.com Product Description The AT&T 1070 Corded Speakerphone is perfect for businesses that need a Speakerphone that supports four lines. The phone is DSL compatible and has a three-party conferencing feature that lets you conduct business with three people together on three different lines. Each line has its own light indicator, and can be set with a different ring tones for easy distinction of incoming calls. Automatic line selection means that when the phone is ringing and you pick up, you will be connected to the one that is ringing. As your company grows, the phone system can be expanded to 16 stations with AT&T models 1040, 1080, and 1080. The phone allows you to page, intercom, and transfer calls between stations. A large display provides easy-to-read text for setup and caller information. The phone has a 200-entry memory and a 200-name-and-number caller ID history. Numbers stored in the caller ID history can be dialed directly; and with call waiting-capable caller ID, you can see who is calling even when you are already on the line. If you subscribe to a voicemail service, a red light blinks when you have voicemail waiting. The phone has 32 speed dial and 16 intercom number locations for one-button access to your most frequently called numbers. Memory loss protection prevents the phone from losing its saved data. For hands-free operation, the 2.5-millimeter jacks lets you connect a headset. Product Accessories
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Customer Reviews Elizabeth Axtell Said: Good for my growing business ( Sep. 12th 2009 )I recently had to give up my 2-line, cordless phones when I added a third phone line. While using a corded phone for business has taken some getting used to, this phone is working very well. It has many handy features that my old phones did not have - an extension for each phone (so we don't have to yell across the office at each other), transferring, etc. The one thing I would caution any buyers on is the speakerphone feature. It stinks. I read this was an issue with this phone, but I underestimated how often I would want to use the speakerphone since I now had a corded phone. The user can hear just fine, apparently the issue is on the listener's side. The speaker cuts out, hisses, is quiet too quiet - I've received numerous complaints. If you don't plan on using the speaker feature, this phone will be fine for your daily use.sparkstm Said: Non system phones will not release hold on system phones ( Aug. 16th 2009 )If the 1040-1070-1080 series is used on a line shared by non system phones (etc), the hold button on the phones will not recognize when a non-system phone picks up the line (ie: if you put a line on hold, apparantly only a system phone can release the hold) (This info is confirmed in the at&t phone website FAQ's) Sorry, no review here, I won't be able to use this system.George J. Wade Said: Misleading ad. ( Aug. 13th 2009 )We have returned these 4 line phones. The thing the ad didn't tell you is you can't have different numbers on each desk set. This RCA phone handles this requirement without a problem. The only requirement is line one must be the same number on all phones which is not a problem. The other three lines are different on each desk set which works very well in our customer service department.JM Barrie Said: Good, but what does it do? ( Nov. 26th 2008 )Okay, a pretty phone. Lots of buttons. Some even intelligible, but the documentation with it is not. A staff of 5 is still trying to figure out how to use the phones after 3 weeks. So, while the features might be theoretically nice, in practice we are still yelling down the hall to pick up the phone. Particularly annoying are lights that illuminate and messages that flash that are just plain not useful. Then, you need to do something to turn them off. Also, the "quick start" manual is little more than a diagram of what is on the face of the phone and information on how to plug a phone into a wall. Really? Does anyone believe that is actually STARTING the use of the phone?Michael C. Sharp Said: speakerphone mic bad in two of three phones ( Sep. 30th 2008 )These phones have all the features we wanted in our small business and we are convinced these are the right phones for us. Unfortunately two of the first three phones we've purchased have had the speakerphone microphones die in the first 72 hours of use.« Back |
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