Xerox C165 Reference Guide

Page of 196
Quick Reference Guide
Page 6-5
Internet F
ax
Address Book Types
If configured there are two different types of address book on your machine, Public 
and Internal.
Public Address Book 
The Public Address Book stores external company addresses on the machine. The 
address book contains a list of user names and their e-mail addresses.
The file must be a CSV (Comma Separated Value) format for your machine to be 
able to read the file contents. The completed file is imported to the machine via 
CentreWare Internet Services. Your machine will not allow the import of a Public 
Address Book file that does not end with the .CSV file extension.
A valid CSV file is in the format: Name, SMTP e-mail address. For example the 
following are both valid CSV format file entries:
Smith, smith@company.com
"Smith, John", john.smith@company.com
The order in which the entries are sorted in the CSV file determines the order 
displayed in the Public Address Book at your machine.
Internal Address Book
Otherwise known as the LDAP (Lightweight Directory Access Protocol), the Internal 
Address Book stores internal company addresses on the company network. The 
System Administrator creates the Internal Address Book.
The display of the search results is defined by the LDAP. For example, the LDAP 
server can return a search query "And" as "Andrew Smith" when the result 
"Andrews, James" may have been expected. The lastname, firstname or firstname, 
lastname display is controlled by the LDAP server and not your machine.
If you have successfully logged in via Authentication mode, your machine will 
automatically attempt to match your login name to your e-mail address. Your name 
will then be entered into the From e-mail address field. You will not be able to 
change this.