About Mailboxes

Think of a system mailbox as a post office box where voice messages, instead of written memos, are collected. Company employees become "system users" when they are assigned personal mailboxes.

To "open" their mailboxes, users call the system number, log in (press the star (*) key plus the mailbox number on the telephone keypad), and enter personal passcodes. From NuPoint Receptionist, users press the star key (*) plus the mailbox number, again press the star key (*), and enter their passcodes. In an integrated system, users are taken directly to the passcode prompt.

A range of software tools are available to customize your system.

Note:  You can configure and manage mailboxes, using either the Text Console or the Web Console (see Related Topics).

Outside Callers versus System Users

Variable Length Mailbox Numbers

The variable length mailbox number capability allows the server administrator greater flexibility when assigning mailbox numbers. You can configure a dialing plan to allow variable length mailbox numbers.  Code a V in the desired digit position in the dialing plan, as described in the NuPoint Voice Application section under “Mailbox Dialing Plan.”

Without this capability, all mailboxes in the same line group that begin with the same digit must be the same length. If, for example, you specify “3” as the mailbox number length for mailboxes beginning with 1, then all 1-series mailboxes must be three digits long: 100, 101, 102-199, etc.  This means you have only 100 mailboxes available beginning with 1.

When you specify that mailboxes beginning with a certain digit can be variable length, those mailboxes can be as short as one digit (9), or as long as 11 (99999999999). This allows you over 11 billion different mailboxes beginning with 9!  (You cannot, of course, configure 11 billion mailboxes, since that would exceed the storage capacity of the disk.)

Hotel installations can make good use of variable length mailboxes.  It is convenient for a guest’s mailbox number, telephone number, and room number to be the same, but this is impossible to achieve with fixed length mailbox numbers and a single line group. To understand why, realize that most hotel dialing plans assign three-digit numbers to rooms on floors one through nine, and four-digit numbers to rooms on floor 10 and above. If the mailbox for room 111 matched the phone number, the mailbox for room 1111 could not.

Variable length mailboxes allow you to keep all mailboxes in a single line group and still assign mailboxes that match room and telephone numbers.

Configuration Considerations

If you configure variable length mailboxes, mailbox owners must modify their interactions in these ways:

Note:  If mailbox owners enter a pound sign after a mailbox number that is not variable length, the server interprets it to mean that message addressing is complete.  This can be confusing to mailbox owners, who find that pressing a pound sign at “the same time” elicits differing prompts.  To avoid this confusion, it is recommended that you make either all mailboxes variable length, or none.

After entering the final mailbox number and pound sign, they must do one of the following:

The System Time/Date Stamp for Messages

The system adds the time/date stamp to every message to tell the recipient when the message was recorded.