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- Article 165 of comp.sys.amiga.reviews:
- Path: menudo.uh.edu!menudo.uh.edu!usenet
- From: tonyc@cryo.rain.COM (Tony Campbell)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.reviews
- Subject: REVIEW: GVP PhonePak VFX 1.01 FAX and Voice Mail System
- Followup-To: comp.sys.amiga.datacomm
- Date: 11 Dec 1992 04:00:56 GMT
- Organization: The Amiga Online Review Column - ed. Daniel Barrett
- Lines: 403
- Sender: amiga-reviews@math.uh.edu (comp.sys.amiga.reviews moderator)
- Approved: barrett@math.uh.edu
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1g93poINN1rd@menudo.uh.edu>
- Reply-To: tonyc@cryo.rain.COM (Tony Campbell)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: karazm.math.uh.edu
- Keywords: FAX, voice mail, hardware, Zorro, commercial
-
-
-
- PRODUCT NAME
-
- PhonePak VFX 1.01
-
-
- BRIEF DESCRIPTION
-
- The PhonePak VFX is an integrated voice mail and FAX system.
-
-
- AUTHOR/COMPANY INFORMATION
-
- Name: Great Valley Products (GVP)
- Address: 600 Clark Avenue
- King of Prussia, PA 19406
-
- Telephone: (215) 337-8770
- FAX: (215) 337-9922
- BBS: (215) 337-5815
-
-
- LIST PRICE
-
- $449 (US)
-
-
- SPECIAL HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS
-
- HARDWARE
-
- Amiga with Zorro II or III slots
-
- 2 megs RAM minimum
-
- Hard drive, size depending on how many voice
- and FAX messages are anticipated
-
- Accelerator not needed
-
- 512k Zorro II RAM required for use in A3000
-
- SOFTWARE
-
- OS 1.3 or 2.04 and above
-
- Some features not available under 1.3
-
-
- COPY PROTECTION
-
- None
-
-
- MACHINE USED FOR TESTING
-
- Amiga 2500/20
- 2 megs 32 bit RAM, 1 meg CHIP RAM
- OS 2.04
- 2091 SCSI controller, Quantum 80 meg hard drive
-
-
-
- OVERVIEW
-
- The PhonePak is for single line applications, but you can put
- in as many PhonePaks as you have slots and phone lines for. The
- PhonePaks can share the 'Mail Boxes' you create between them.
-
- It is compatible with the Public Switched Telephone Network,
- Centrex, and PBX. DTMF (Touch-Tone) service is required.
-
- An accelerator is not needed, even if you fill the machine with
- PhonePaks, unless you operate with voice compression turned on.
- FAX conversion will be slow without an accelerator.
-
-
- DOCUMENTATION
-
- The nearly 200-page, wire-bound manual starts with voice mail
- etiquette, and walks you through the setup of several example
- applications, from use of PhonePak as an answering machine, to
- a product information system with the ability to FAX back
- literature on the same call.
-
- The remainder of the manual is a reference to the commands and
- options available for each of the programs, along with step by
- step mini-tutorials for most functions.
-
- There is a table of contents, an index, menu summary, IFF FAXX
- format specification, and more.
-
- There is a lot of detail in the manual, and it is easy to miss
- a subtle reference or instruction, so read carefully.
-
-
- HARDWARE
-
- PhonePak is a Zorro II AutoConfig full size card.
-
- It has two RCA connectors, a line-in (digitizing), and a line-
- out (audio monitor), and two RJ-11 telephone jacks, one to the
- phone line, and the other for a local telephone.
-
- It uses a Yamaha YTM-401 voice-FAX chip.
-
- There is one jumper to be set if you are using the PhonePak on
- a PBX system. There is an undocumented 16 pin header and two
- RESERVED jumpers.
-
-
- SOFTWARE
-
- The PhonePak software comes on two disks, one containing the
- programs, and the other with prepared messages.
-
- Commodores' standard installer program is used.
-
- There are several programs that make up 'PhonePak VFX':
-
- * LineMan (60k) This is the program that must be running for
- PhonePak (the hardware) to answer or make calls, or to send
- and receive FAXes.
-
- It automatically determines if you have more than one PhonePak
- board installed, so you can set options for each line
- independently.
-
- LineMan opens a small window on your Workbench screen. The
- configurations that are made with it are: number of rings
- before answer, Auto FAX Detect on-off, audio monitor on-off,
- voice compression enable.
-
- LineMan also passes DTMF tones detected to an ARexx port,
- depending on which mail box the caller is in.
-
- * PhonePak (300k) This is the program where you setup and
- maintain mail boxes, groups of mail boxes (Systems), record
- and playback voice and FAX messages (you can do this remotely
- of course), and schedule sending FAXes.
-
- The PhonePak program opens on its own 8 color screen, has an
- integrated telephone database, and can also open another
- screen called 'Switchboard', where you see which mail boxes
- have new messages, and can check a mail box 'in' or 'out'.
- This determines how a call to that box gets handled.
-
- PhonePak has an ARexx port, with a dozen functions available,
- and its own script language, 'Operator', which also can be
- executed through ARexx.
-
- * PPakFAX (41k) This is the program/printer driver to
- intercept printouts from other applications for conversion to
- FAX.
-
- * PPakMonitor (8k) When you start this program, it opens a
- window and displays events detected by the PhonePak, like RING
- and which DTMF tones are entered. The manual does not say
- much about this, other than its being a troubleshooting program,
- but I could see this program's output being redirected, or
- piped to another program for various purposes.
-
- * ShowMode (3k) This allows you to operate the PhonePak
- hardware 'locally' without being connected to the phone line.
- This is for demoing and testing.
-
- All of these programs can be run from the Workbench or CLI, and
- have various options that can be set by command line or via
- ToolTypes in the icons. Both LineMan and PhonePak have on-line
- help, by pressing the 'Help' key.
-
-
- FEATURES
-
- AUDIO:
-
- The PhonePak records and plays back standard IFF sounds at
- 9600 8 bit samples per second. You can also record from an
- attached telephone, but the quality is better using the line-in.
-
- The IFF playback is fixed at the 9600 samples/sec speed, so
- imported sound files must be converted to this rate. I also
- own a GVP DSS-8, and this software has a resampler. It would
- be a good idea for GVP to include a sound editor program, as
- the PhonePak software does not allow you to edit your
- samples. You must either get it right, or record it again,
- just like a standard answering machine.
-
- The monitor jack is to monitor incoming calls, can be turned
- off with LineMan, and this can be overridden via an 'Operator'
- script.
-
- The Amiga's left audio channel is used for playback of
- messages, and PhonePak does not tie up the audio device when
- not in use. I ran NComm (which does tie up a channel), DSS-8,
- and played back messages with PhonePak, all at the same time,
- with no conflicts.
-
- You can also play back audio messages on the local phones'
- handset.
-
- Incoming voice messages take 10 megs per 17 minutes, or 34
- minutes with compression. Each PhonePak board only needs to
- transfer data to or from the hard drive at the rate of 48k per
- second.
-
- FAX:
-
- The FAX portion of the hardware is Group III compatible,
- send-receive 9600, fall back to 2400, with optional auto FAX
- detection.
-
- The software portion allows you to:
- * Send-Receive standard and fine mode FAXes, with 1D and 2D
- (MH, MR) compression.
- * Convert ASCII text files, with your choice of font, to a FAX
- format file. A couple of fonts are included.
- * Convert IFF graphics to a FAX format file
- * 'Print to FAX' from any application (DTP, WP, Paint) through
- the PPakFax printer driver
- * Display FAXes on screen, print to a printer or FAX machine,
- and convert to an IFF graphic file.
- * Use an attached FAX machine as a scanner
-
- FAX file sizes vary widely according to the contents, about
- 250 FAX pages per 10 meg of hard disk space.
-
- MAIL BOXES:
-
- Most voice mail software gives a limit to the number of mail
- boxes you can have, but I couldn't find anything that states
- the limits with PhonePak. So I finally thought to check the
- maximum route number you assign to get to a mail box.
- That number is 1 Billion. Yes, that is a 'B'. A mail box can
- have a route number from 0 - 999999999. And that is just from
- the 'initial' mail box. So the real limit will be the size of
- your hard drives.
-
- A mail box uses a standard AmigaDOS directory, but PhonePak
- imposes a 9 character limit for names. Mail boxes can be
- spread across multiple devices.
-
- The Switchboard screen is where you assign DTMF tone 'Routes'
- to the mail boxes. Default mail boxes can be assigned if
- the caller makes no input, or the call can be terminated.
-
- A mail box greeting is interrupted when a tone is detected.
-
- A mail box can be made not to take a message and just play a
- greeting, or can take a message up to 9999 seconds (nearly 3
- hours), and there is an option in the voice edit menu to
- continue recording the message.
-
- Mail boxes can also transfer an incoming call to another line
- if you have Centrex or are running with a PBX.
-
- It is also through a mail box where you can send an ARexx
- message, containing the current mail box, line number, and up
- to 16 digits that a caller has entered, like a VISA number, or
- a phone number, to an external program.
-
- After your external program is done, a result code is sent
- back, along with a mail box name to place the caller in.
-
- SECURITY:
-
- Each mail box can have a password to prevent message playback
- or editing. This applies for remote or local access.
-
- There is also a 'Master' password that can be assigned to
- prevent unauthorized changes to the system. The master
- password can be used to gain local access to individual mail
- boxes.
-
- This is because PhonePak is designed to be used in an office
- setting, with access to the machine to check messages, and to
- check oneself 'in' or 'out'.
-
- The security of the 'Master' access is limited. A person with
- knowledge of the Amiga's file structure, and unhindered access
- to the physical machine, could tamper with system features.
-
-
- COMMENTS
-
- The PhonePak was easy to setup. I put the installer in 'Expert'
- mode to see what software went where, and it put everything where I
- would have put it. Right after I installed mine, I left for a
- minute. The phone rang. Lo and behold, the PhonePak answered and
- took the message.
-
- The manual includes a tutorial for an information FAX back
- system. This means a person can get voice and FAX information,
- with only one call, on THEIR dime, unlike some 'FAX back'
- systems where a caller punches in their FAX number and then
- you call the caller back. But you could customize the PhonePak
- to do it this way if you wanted.
-
- Not having an integrated data modem is disappointing, but is
- not a drawback when using voice mail extensively, as you will
- want to have dedicated lines. If this is not an option for
- your situation, there are other solutions, including
- Distinctive Ringing, a Call Detector, or my own idea, the
- 'Modem Mail Box':
-
- A 'Modem Mail Box' can be directed to send a message via ARexx
- to a BBS or communication program to tell a modem to answer
- the line (ATA), if you have a modem in line before the
- PhonePak. For example: 555-1234,123 <- 123 being the mailbox
- to activate the BBS.
-
- I installed PhonePak in a BodegaBay (Zorro II slot adapter) for
- the Amiga 500, and the PhonePak appeared to function with no
- problems.
-
-
- COMPARISON TO OTHER SIMILAR PRODUCTS
-
- At the time of this review, there are no other voice mail
- systems available for the Amiga. But there is a FAX package,
- GPFax by GP Software, which you can get with a Supra modem, or
- purchase separately. There are a couple of things I like about
- the FAX interface of GPFax a little better than PhonePaks':
-
- The FAX View screen.
- The GPFax display has scalable viewing of FAXes, and saves an
- IFF exactly. PhonePaks' display is also scrollable and
- scalable, but saves a slightly distorted IFF, though you can
- view a FAX in SuperHires, and it will be very, very close to
- the original FAX.
- The PhonePak has faster display conversion, clipping of
- areas to be saved, and you can return to PhonePak while
- displaying a FAX (internal multitasking).
-
- Convert to FAX.
- GPFax has a superior ASCII to FAX, as it will keep bold,
- underline, and italics. PhonePak removes these text attributes.
- But PhonePak will let you adjust font width, and in fine mode
- the fonts look sharper.
-
- There are a couple of things to remember:
- The point of computer generated FAXes is to send great, sharp,
- impressive FAXes. This is done by printing from a desktop
- publishing or word processing program, which makes the above
- reservations about ASCII conversions a non-issue.
-
- If you find that one of the above points to be crucial, the FAX
- files generated by GPFax and PhonePak are INTERCHANGEABLE!
- So you can create a FAX with GPFax and send it with PhonePak,
- and receive a FAX with PhonePak and display it with GPFax.
-
-
- BUGS
-
- I have not had any problems with the hardware or software that
- were not my own fault, most caused by not reading the manual
- thoroughly.
-
-
- VENDOR SUPPORT
-
- In the manual, a technical support telephone number is listed,
- along with a form to help speed troubleshooting.
-
- A new version of the PhonePak software (1.00->1.01) was made
- available for downloading on the GVP BBS.
-
-
- WARRANTY
-
- 2 years warranty on the hardware.
-
-
- CONCLUSIONS
-
- I am very pleased with the PhonePak, and highly recommend it to
- anyone looking for a voicemail system, with the bonus of FAX
- send-receive-creation as a nicely integrated part of PhonePak.
-
- The PhonePak is fully capable as it now stands. In my
- experimenting, I am finding a few features I hope that GVP will
- consider adding, including a couple of addition ARexx commands,
- 'smart' IFF sound playback, better FAX to IFF saves, and
- character - pattern recognition, either integrated or stand
- alone with ARexx.
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT NOTICE
-
-
- Copyright 1992 Anthony E. Campbell. All rights reserved.
-
- Tony_Campbell@cryo.RAIN.COM "Data is a Toaster"
- Not affilitated with Cryogenic Software, just using la machine
-
- ---
-
- Daniel Barrett, Moderator, comp.sys.amiga.reviews
- Send reviews to: amiga-reviews-submissions@math.uh.edu
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- General discussion: amiga-reviews@math.uh.edu
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