Conference calls – Obihai OBi1000 User Guide User Manual
Page 29

OBi1000 User Guide
Copyright Obihai Technology
29
Conference Calls
A conference call is a conversation involving 2 or more remote parties. In order to start a conference, there must be
at
least
two
calls
with
at
least
one
in
the
connected
state
and
one
in
the
holding
state.
The
following
figure
shows
such
a
scenario
with
two
calls
in
progress.
To
start
a
conference,
highlight
one
of
the
calls
in
the
holding
state
and
press
the
“Add
to
Conf”
soft
key.
Figure
21:
A
two-‐call
scenario
that
may
be
turned
into
a
3-‐way
conference
call
by
highlighting
the
holding
call
and
selecting
Add
to
Conf
The OBi1000 phones support two methods to conference multiple parties:
a) Local mixing/bridging: the conference call is mixed locally by the phone
and
b) External conference bridge: The conference call is mixed by an external conference bridge. In this case the
options shown on your phone may be different. Check with your administrator for further details.
Local Mixing/Bridging
The
OBi
supports
up
to
4-‐way
conferencing
(with
3
remote
parties)
using
the
local
mixing/bridging
method.
After
starting
a
3-‐way
conference
call
the
user
can
see
the
two
remote
parties
both
in
the
connected
state,
as
shown
in
the
following
figure.
Figure 22: A locally-‐mixed conference call in progress
There
are
two
ways
to
add
a
third
remote
party,
either
make
a
new
call
to
the
target
party
or
answer
a
new
incoming
call
from
another
remote
party.
To
make
a
new
call
to
the
target
party,
either
press
the
“more”
soft
key
and
select
the
“conference”
option,
or
press
an
available
and
inactive
call
key.
In
the
event
that
the
remote
party
places
an
incoming
call
to
the
user,
the
OBi
will
automatically
place
the
two
currently
connected
calls
on
hold.
When
the
target
party
rings
or
answers,
resume
the
two
original
conferencees
one
at
a
time
by
highlighting
each
holding
call
on
screen
and
applying
the
“Add
to
Conf”
option
to
it.
Now,
you
will
have
a
4-‐way
conference
with
three
calls
in
the
connected
state.