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- Date: Sat, 10 Aug 85 19:37:48 cdt
- From: hplabs!csu-cs!isucs1!shaver@Berkeley (Dave Shaver)
- Subject: Some information, and request for more, on Telstar.
-
-
-
- Sometime ago there was BRIEF mention of the "Telstar" telephone control
- system. Basicly I would like additional info on this product. Is anyone
- else selling them besides Jameco Electronics? [In Belmont, CA] Did the
- project get scrapped, and then did Jameco picked up the stock? Is this really a
- good machine, and what can I expect out of it? Is $99.95 a good price
- for the unit? [Cheaper anywhere else?] Below is a copy of the information
- that is present on the cover of Jameco's Spring 1985 flyer. [#127] I
- have no contact with Jameco, or Western Electric Company which is claimed
- to manufacture the device as per Jameco. Any info outside of what's below,
- or the answers to the my questions can be mailed to me. I will summarize,
- and post if interest warrants it. [If not, I will mail copies of the
- summation to those requesting it.] My use for the Telstar system is for
- home/personal use. I would like an answering machine function of sorts.
- I don't have any info outside of what's below.
-
-
- /---=[
- // Dave Shaver
- << UUCP: {okstate|umn-cs|csu-cs}!isucs1!shaver CSNET: shaver@iowa-state
- \\ [Iowa State University - Ames, IA] These are my comments, no one else's.
- \---=[
-
- [=--=]
-
- This info included for the benefit of those interested, and that have not seen
- Jameco's Flyer. I have added comments in square brackets [like this] for
- some of my additional questions.
-
- [From the cover of Jameco's Spring Flyer {#127}]
-
- Telstar (tm)
- The call control system for you business or personal needs.
- Your programmable, 24 hour a day telephone control system is here!
-
- o Stores 30 calls for you. Its friendly voice tells caller to leave their
- number, which is stored in Telstar's memory. When you check in for
- messages, its voice reports the numbers that called, and time of call.
-
- [Does this means that the machine answers the line with a pre-canned message,
- and accepts Touch-Tone digits, then saves them for later retrieval?]
-
- o Easy to program. Voice prompts provide step by step programming
- instructions.
-
- o Remote access. Call your Telstar call control system from any Touch-Tone
- phone anywhere to receive messages and to use other features.
-
- [These "messages" I would guess are the numbers gathered above from remote
- callers. Does this unit have any form of a "standard" answering machine,
- or some comparable system? {standard: Answer the line with a taped message,
- then start another tape and record the remote callers message.}]
-
- o Voice synthesis. Talks to you and callers via friendly, life-like voice
- synthesis. It's clear, easy to understand.
-
- [I have heard other "life-like voice synthesis" that's "clear and easy to
- understand." Is this a "good" synthesis? Understandable over long distance
- lines?]
-
- o Call Screening. Identify calls you want to receive. System will announce
- only those calls you want to receive, and record all others.
-
- [Can this option be turned on and off? How many identifying numbers are
- allowed?]
-
- o Call forward announcement. Lets you tell your callers where you can be
- reached. You can change the announcement as often as needed, even remotely.
-
- [Is this option switchable with just the standard "record" option that excepts
- remote users numbers? {or however that works}]
-
- o Last number dialed. Conveniently remembers last number dialed, especially
- helpful when they are busy or unanswered.
-
- o Security controlled access. Through the use of a special code you prevent
- unauthorized access to the system.
-
- [What's the length of this "security" code, and how is it used? Do you call
- up the Telstar system, and when it asks for your number, enther the code?]
-
- o 50 name directory for convenient dialing. You can store 50 numbers and
- reach them easily by just dialing their names on your touch-Tone telephone
- keypad.
-
- o Built-in calendar. Automatically logs the time and date of incoming calls.
- Tells you the time and date via voice synthesis.
-
- o 2 button emergency calling. Telstar provides fast, reliable two-button
- dialing of medical, police, and fire numbers.
-
- o Many other features. There are additional conveniences that come with
- having Telstar, such as Intercom, Hold, Long Distance Restriction, and more.
-
- [Any comments on any of these features?]
-
- o Brand new in factory cartons.
-
- [Please note: TELECOM is not to be used as an advertising medium. Any
- blatantly commercial messages will not be posted to this list. --JSol]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 15 Aug 85 20:20:54 edt
- From: cbosgd.ATT!mark@seismo.CSS.GOV (Mark Horton)
- Subject: Telstar call control system
-
- The Telstar is not an AT&T product. It almost was, but it flunked
- the market tests at the last minute and was discontinued. AT&T had
- already manufactured lots of them, so they offered them to their
- employees at a deep discount. (They were originally to list for
- around $200.) I bought two - one to use and one for parts in case
- the first one broke. (It hasn't, I just took the second one out
- of the box tonight - see below.) So please understand that this is
- not a commercial type message - the ones being offered to the public
- are through liquidators and once the supply is gone, that's it.
- Neither I nor AT&T care whether you buy one or not. My box and
- literature say "American Bell" on them.
-
- The Telstar is a really neat gadget if you like gadgets. It does
- lots of different things, some well, some not so well. The major
- function is as an answering machine, but it's really not very good
- at that. It has no tape anywhere, everything is stored digitally
- in RAM. When someone calls you and leaves a message, all it stores
- is the date and time of the call and it has them touch tone a phone
- number in. This works well if you recognize the number, but there
- are times when a number just isn't enough. If it's a residence, you
- need to ask for a particular person. Same for a business. Someone
- left a message on my Telstar the other day, and I called them back.
- (The Telstar will dial the call for you, which is nice.) It turned
- out to be "Happy Valley Chicken Farms". I explained to the person
- answering the phone who I was and that someone at that number had
- left a message for me to call that number, and I gave the time of
- the call. He had no idea who would have called. Might even have
- been a prank. But it's embarrassing to return such calls if you
- don't recognize the number. The number of rings before it answers
- can be set from 1 to 15. When there are new messages, you are told
- by a stuttered dial tone when you pick up the phone to place an
- outgoing call. (If you go for a few days without placing an outgoing
- call, you won't find out about the message.)
-
- The Telstar is a box the size of a Kleenix box. It plugs into your
- phone line *in series*, preferrably at the demarcation point between
- the telco line and your private wiring. All phones downstream from
- it can use the features. It has a speech synthesizer (it uses the TI
- chip, as I understand it, the quality is quite good.) It can use either
- an RJ11C jack (the dual-jack Radio Shack wall outlets are handy) or an RJ31X.
- There is a membrane keyboard with 30 keys, one for each letter plus some
- duplicate functions (A-J doubles as 1-0, S-Z double as fire, police, medical,
- home, id code, time, date, and name/dir.) You can configure it from the
- keyboard directly, and also talk to it from any touch tone phone in your
- house, or from a remote phone. It has a battery backup and a clock,
- so power failures aren't a problem. (When power shuts off, the relays
- short the line back to the pre-telstar state.)
-
- Another thing Telstar has is a name directory. It holds up to 30 numbers,
- you punch in the name in alpha and the number. This is mainly useful to
- avoid hunting for your address book; the dialing sequence is about as long
- as dialing the number, so it's not useful for speed dialing. You can call
- home from a remote phone to ask it for a phone number. You can key in the
- name from a touch tone phone - it beeps as soon as you've keyed in enough
- letters to uniquely identify the name from the set it knows. One win of
- the name directory is that if someone in the directory calls and leaves
- a message, when it plays back it tells you the name of who called (it
- spells it out, no attempt to pronounce it) instead of giving the number.
-
- Telstar has a few other nifty features of lesser importance. One is that
- you program in three numbers for police, fire, and medical, and in 2
- keystrokes you can dial them. In an emergency, they are fast to dial.
-
- You can put a call on hold (possibly to change phones) by hitting H #,
- but only if the other caller called you. (Not sure why the restriction.)
-
- You can turn on "long distance restriction" which forbids long distance
- numbers from being dialed. (There is a system "password" which you have
- to enter to change this.)
-
- You can use the phone as an intercom by dialing, say, * I 4 # (think of #
- as carriage return) and hanging up; the phone will ring in burst of 4
- quick rings (or whatever number you dial) until it is answered remotely,
- then you pick up. You can encode different numbers, e.g. 2 means "dinner
- time", 1 means "pick up an incoming call".
-
- You can check messages, and have it repeat or call any number. It also
- remembers old messages (there are about 20 messages still on my Telstar,
- going back to when I hooked it up last Christmas.)
-
- You can put a "call forward announcement" which is like call forwarding
- but the caller has to dial the new number himself.
-
- You can turn on "call screening", where the telstar intercepts incoming
- calls before your phone rings at all. (You have to give a time at which
- call screening turns off, so you can't leave it on by accident.) It has
- the user key in their phone number. If it's in the name directory (and
- optionally if you assign "special status" to one or more names, only for
- special names) it will ring your phone, otherwise it just takes a message.
- If you pick up for an outgoing call, it tells you it's on before you dial.
-
- There is a "last number dialed" command to repeat it, but since you have
- to type *LND# (listen to number) C, it doesn't save many keystokes, and
- it only remembers one number. (In general, you can type at any point
- without waiting for messages to finish.)
-
- Anyway, this is a nifty gizmo for people who like to play with gizmos.
- Since I gathered people on this list would like to play with one, and
- since I have a line that isn't doing anything for a couple weeks, I dug
- out the spare Telstar and hooked it up. Feel free to call, but I reserve
- the right to turn it off if it starts to be a problem. I will only leave
- it connected for a week or two anyway. The universal reaction I've gotten
- from regular people who left a message on it is "Wow! That's a really
- neat answering machine you've got!"
-
- The number is 614-868-4276. You can do the usual "leaving a message"
- thing (I won't call you back) if you like. Or hit * to get into remote
- mode. The ID code is set to "1234". It will prompt you for most things,
- but a list of commands and general hints is useful.
-
- It doesn't understand dial pulse, just DTMF. In general, * gets its
- attention for a command, "beep beep" is a prompt for you to type in
- a command, and # is CR. Possible commands include "ND#" (name directory),
- "CM#" (check messages), "CT" (check time), "CFA#" (to check or change
- the call forward announcement),
-
- I've put three names into the name directory: "me", "myself", and
- "information", so you can see how it deals with the ambiguity. They
- aren't very interesting.
-
- Mark
-
-