NEC 9100 - how/where to change outgoing caller ID setting?

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wlampert

New User
Location
Milwaukee
Occupation
IT
At the moment, when any user calls out from their DiD, It will display the company's main name and line for caller ID (not the user's DiD). I know at one point or another that was a system setting set for all phones. My question is can that be disabled for certain individual lines? When someone sets to forward their calls to their cell phone, any/all calls forwarded still show our company name/line on their cell phones and it would be nice if they can see the actual caller ID of whos calling their DiD
 

Little Bill

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Tennessee NEC:2017
Occupation
Semi-Retired Electrician
This is a Forum for professionals in the electrical industry. There may be someone who can answer your questions but not sure there will be. Good luck!
 

synchro

Senior Member
Location
Chicago, IL
Occupation
EE
After some searching, it looks like the NEC 9100 does not support sending a diversion header. So you might try enabling a "302 return" which tells the provider to establish a direct call to the forwarded number, assuming that the provider supports this.

From the NEC 9100 maanual:

NEC-SV9100_302_return.png
 

texie

Senior Member
Location
Fort Collins, Colorado
Occupation
Electrician, Contractor, Inspector
I probably still have my SX200 manuals :ROFLMAO: (and an sx2000 + sets that I de-installed 15 years ago, really ought to get rid of that).
Those were the days. You still see some SX-50s in use in small mom and pop motels. The SX-50, SX100/200 their day were very popular and reliable and leading edge in their day. Funny you mention the manuals. We didn't have the internet then so you always had to have set with you and they were a lot to carry for sure.
 

drcampbell

Senior Member
Location
The Motor City, Michigan USA
Occupation
Registered Professional Engineer
Wrong "NEC", I'm afraid.
Small surprise. Search engines match words & phrases without any awareness of context.
I get regular calls from recruiters wanting me to work on EPIC software because my resume includes a stint working on Chrysler's electric minivan. (the Electric-Powered Interurban Commuter)

I don't even know what EPIC software is, or does.

My resume also includes a list of words that facilitate word-match searches, including popular mispelings such as "Deisel engine". They're on the last page, in white "ink" so that humans won't see them, just webcrawlers. Humans will see a "blank" page.
 

texie

Senior Member
Location
Fort Collins, Colorado
Occupation
Electrician, Contractor, Inspector
Small surprise. Search engines match words & phrases without any awareness of context.
I get regular calls from recruiters wanting me to work on EPIC software because my resume includes a stint working on Chrysler's electric minivan. (the Electric-Powered Interurban Commuter)

I don't even know what EPIC software is, or does.

My resume also includes a list of words that facilitate word-match searches, including popular mispelings such as "Deisel engine". They're on the last page, in white "ink" so that humans won't see them, just webcrawlers. Humans will see a "blank" page.
I just happen to know who EPIC software is as my healthcare system uses it. Has a very good patient facing portal. Also , our son who is in the healthcare industry says they are the big dog in their space.
 
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