Avaya 4600 Manual Do Utilizador

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Issue 2.2 April 2005
145
 
Appendix E: The Push Feature
Introduction
Release 2.1 of the 4600 Series IP Telephones provides support for a feature called “Push,” 
which applies to the 4610SW, 4620, and 4620SW Telephones. Release 2.2 introduces 
additional IP telephones, the 4621SW, the 4622SW, and the 4625SW, to which the Push 
feature also applies. Push gives the System Administrator the capability to use WML protocol 
to:
send content to a telephone without first receiving a user request, and 
potentially override what the user is otherwise experiencing. 
You can send pushed content to a single phone, a group of phones, or the entire enterprise.
Push Content
Three types of content can be pushed, with one of two types of priorities, normal and barge-in. 
The content types are:
Text Messages on the top display line. If a pushed text message has barge-in priority, the 
message overwrites whatever else is currently displayed. However, other subsequent 
messages can, in turn, overwrite the pushed message. If the pushed text message has 
normal priority, it is buffered in the telephone and displayed when no higher priority 
message is being displayed. Up to 56 characters can be pushed to the top line in a given 
message.
WML Web pages can be pushed to the telephone’s WML browser. If a pushed Web page 
has barge-in priority, the content overwrites whatever else is currently displayed to the 
user. 
If the push of a Web page has normal priority, the Web page does not override what the 
user sees. If the user has the Web application displayed, normal-priority pushed content 
overrides what is otherwise displayed. If the Web application is not being displayed, 
normal-priority pushed content loads in the background. When the user invokes the Web 
application, the pushed content displays, subject to certain restrictions. For this reason, you 
might want to accompany a Web push with a corresponding pushed text message, alerting 
users there is Web content to view.