Premier NEC Voice Support and Maintenance


ProAction Networks is the United Kingdom's leading support vendor for the NEC 2000 IPS business telephone system, the NEC IPS DM branch telephone system, the NEC SV8100 business telephone system and the accompanying Zeacom Communications Centre application server. Based in Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire and supporting, maintaining and serving 2000 IPS and SV8100 owners, administrators and users worldwide, ProAction Networks provide both ad-hoc support services and 24 hour, 365-day contractual support, warranty and maintenance. ProAction Networks, as a Cisco Certified Organisation with over a decade hands-on experience with the NEC 2000 IPS and SV8100 can also perform complete rebuild, restore and clean installation services for the NEC 2000 IPS, DM, SV8100 and Zeacom Server.


We are a fully accredited Cisco and Microsoft Partner - fully able to help with your Network, Server, Computer, Phone System and Web Presence. We partner with various other business to combine the complete range of business technology services. This includes datacentres for everything cloud-based, service providers for physical connectivity and hardware distributors to bring down costs.


Key Values


  • Collaboration - We believe everyone has something to contribute, no matter what their expertise - and we will try to harness your ideas to help you in the best possible way! Maybe you need just a nudge in the right direction, an entire solution or a little bit of both. We are here to help!
  • Professional Delivery - We strive to bring the best service delivery, from what you would expect from the infrastructure and experience of a large enterprise organisation, but with the personal touch of a small, young enterprise.
  • Innovation - We aim to think out of the box. We help you identify the alternatives, add our best opinion and help you move forward. With a wide array of backgrounds - in internet, business telecommunications, information technology and design - we can throw it all into the pot! When you have been told 'it cannot be done', ProAction Networks can do it!
  • Openness - We will tell you when we don't know, when we are wrong and when we believe we are right.
  • Mutual Dependancy - Hey! We would not be here if it not for happy customers! We like to reflect that in our work and make all our customers feel that could not live without them!

The Right Support Contract For You


ProAction Networks offer 2 types of NEC & Zeacom support contract.


Our 'traditional' contract is similar to that of most telephone companies. It is based on 12% of the original cost of the hardware. This contract is sold in 6-month segments with no minimum term to limit your exposure and assure you, the customer that we are serious about keeping you happy. If we do not perform, you do not have to remain a customer!


Within that 12% annual cost, you get a full warranty on all audited equipment. Should you experience a malfunction or some equipment fails, we will deliver, replace and reprogram - free of charge. We carry all equipment in stock and available immediately.

Alongside the warranty, we provide 24 hour, 365 day-a-year support. Your account manager is your engineer and you will have constant direct access to him or her via email, mobile and support desk.


Alternatively, we offer a Per Seat maintenance contract.


Many NEC 2000 IPS and Zeacom owners invested heavily in their systems many years ago, and in many cases their staff and premises have changed along the way. We do not insist you pay to maintain the 50% of a system which is not in use! You may have a system that is architectually over-powered but is still worth utilising and maintaining. For this reason, we offer this per-seat maintenance contact.


You get to choose which contract is right for you - which may simply be whichever is cheapest

Zeacom Communications Centre for Unified Voice Messaging


Most NEC NEAX 2000 IPS or IVS telephone systems will also have an accompanying application server in some shape or form to add lots of bells and whistles to the entire telephony system. At it's most basic, it may provide a voicemail system or operator console. However, an accompanying application server can scale upwards to include a huge array of services.


The NEC 2000 IPS is regarded by many as a fairly old-school enterprise phone system - and as a result, rather than try to utilise any of the NEC functions for Voicemail, Uniform Call Distribution (UCD) or Computer Integration (CTI), most customers in the UK, and indeed throughout New Zealand, Australia and the USA aquired a Zeacom Communications Center as well.


In the UK there were only really three options if you wanted voicemail for the NEC IPS - that was to either by an AD8 voicemail card, which was essentially a linux-based PC on a card, with a 2.5" hard drive - very unreliable (spinning hard drive without any form of redundancy) and not very management-friendly. Secondly there was the option of NEC or Philips' own voicemail and CTI applications, and lastly you could use the Zeacom.


Zeacom products were originally called Corus (for voicemail) and Q-Master (for call/contact centre) - and somewhere in the middle was CTI and it's associated applications. More recently, Zeacom rebranded their extensive product portfolio as the Zeacom Communication Center (sic) - which encompasses everything they provide in one neat portfolio. The most popular parts that make up any Zeacom installation include Console, Desktop, Voicemail, Reports and Wallboard.


Zeacom applications reside on a seperate Windows-based server and controlled the PBX using an NEC feature called OAI (Open Application Interface) - essentially a closed developer protocol to control the phone system. This OAI protocol could either be sent via RS232 or more commonly via a TCP/IP network. There would also sometimes be analogue connections between the Zeacom server and the PBX to send and recieve voice recordings, although more recently this is done via VoIP.


A Call Center is possibly the 2nd most likely component of an appication server - many providing full multimedia, networked call center solution with comprehensive management, reporting, live statistics, IVR, Auto Attendants, Callback, Web and Chat modules - the list is almost endless.


The OAI interface is probably Zeacom's greatest weapon, as it allows full control and oversight of the phone system - the server can report everything that is going on back to the end user, control devices and fully manage the NEC 2000 IPS live. This enables certain software programs, like Desktop for the standard user and Console for the operator to show a huge array of live information - such as who is at their desks, who is out of the office, who is on the phone, what calls are in the queue, how many people are on hold and so on.


If you have any specific problems with your Zeacom solve which you simply cannot resolve, then please get in touch.


Zeacom Communications Centre for Contact Centre


Most NEC NEAX 2000 IPS or IVS telephone systems will also have an accompanying application server in some shape or form to add lots of bells and whistles to the entire telephony system. At it's most basic, it may provide a voicemail system or operator console. However, an accompanying application server can scale upwards to include a huge array of services.


The NEC 2000 IPS is regarded by many as a fairly old-school enterprise phone system - and as a result, rather than try to utilise any of the NEC functions for Voicemail, Uniform Call Distribution (UCD) or Computer Integration (CTI), most customers in the UK, and indeed throughout New Zealand, Australia and the USA aquired a Zeacom Communications Center as well.


In the UK there were only really three options if you wanted voicemail for the NEC IPS - that was to either by an AD8 voicemail card, which was essentially a linux-based PC on a card, with a 2.5" hard drive - very unreliable (spinning hard drive without any form of redundancy) and not very management-friendly. Secondly there was the option of NEC or Philips' own voicemail and CTI applications, and lastly you could use the Zeacom.


Zeacom products were originally called Corus (for voicemail) and Q-Master (for call/contact centre) - and somewhere in the middle was CTI and it's associated applications. More recently, Zeacom rebranded their extensive product portfolio as the Zeacom Communication Center (sic) - which encompasses everything they provide in one neat portfolio. The most popular parts that make up any Zeacom installation include Console, Desktop, Voicemail, Reports and Wallboard.


Zeacom applications reside on a seperate Windows-based server and controlled the PBX using an NEC feature called OAI (Open Application Interface) - essentially a closed developer protocol to control the phone system. This OAI protocol could either be sent via RS232 or more commonly via a TCP/IP network. There would also sometimes be analogue connections between the Zeacom server and the PBX to send and recieve voice recordings, although more recently this is done via VoIP.


A Call Center is possibly the 2nd most likely component of an appication server - many providing full multimedia, networked call center solution with comprehensive management, reporting, live statistics, IVR, Auto Attendants, Callback, Web and Chat modules - the list is almost endless.


The OAI interface is probably Zeacom's greatest weapon, as it allows full control and oversight of the phone system - the server can report everything that is going on back to the end user, control devices and fully manage the NEC 2000 IPS live. This enables certain software programs, like Desktop for the standard user and Console for the operator to show a huge array of live information - such as who is at their desks, who is out of the office, who is on the phone, what calls are in the queue, how many people are on hold and so on.


If you have any specific problems with your Zeacom solve which you simply cannot resolve, then please get in touch.


The Rich Presence functionality in Zeacom Communications Center (ZCC) provides employees with a bird's eye view of the whereabouts of their colleagues –providing real-time information on staff availability, regardless of their location. Rich Presence is one of five key functionality sets that are part of the ZCC Unified Communications solution. ZCC will enable your organization to become more efficient and productive, by improving communications with customers, colleagues, suppliers and business partners.


Make First-Call Resolution a Reality It's frustrating for your customers if their calls can't be resolved straight away, and they need to leave a message or are informed that somebody will be in touch shortly. But delayed responses affect your organization even more – in terms of double-handling, additional costs and possibly even lost business. So wouldn't it be handy if when a call comes in – and it requires a transfer – it is always re-directed to staff who are actually available, at their desk or on their mobile? Your ability to quickly link a customer to the company 'expert', to close a sales call or resolve an inquiry, can make all the difference between a satisfied customer and a disgruntled one. ZCC Rich Presence makes first-call resolution a reality, not only for external interactions but also for internal calls. It will enable your employees to make direct contact when they call one of their colleagues, every time. Introduce Rich Presence and you'll eliminate voice mail jail, reduce frustrations, and save time across the entire enterprise – whenever a phone call successfully connects to a real person.


Key Benefits


With Rich Presence, you have instant access to information about your colleagues' availability, allowing you to make contact the first time you call. Need to find someone urgently? Presence can tell you where they are, what meeting they are in and when they are due back. If somebody walks away from their desk, their icon will show that they are no longer there. In that case you can be notified immediately upon their return, making voice mail jail a thing of the past.

You'll also find that Presence is an integral part of other key Unified Communications functionality. For example, your console operator or receptionist needs to easily and quickly transfer calls, and will appreciate the fact that their intuitive application is combined with the visibility of everybody's whereabouts.


If knowledge workers wish to organize an ad hoc conference call with colleagues in other parts of the world, they will only click on icons of co-workers who are actually at their desk.


Executives will only need a single phone number to always be contactable. ZCC will transfer calls to the office phone automatically to their mobile, as soon as they're away from their desk. And when they're traveling, they can use Presence to see on the mobile which of their 'buddies' is active at their desk, before they call the office.


Check whether colleagues are at their desk, and see when they are due back.


The entire organization will benefit:


  • Make quicker business decisions
  • Eliminate the frustration of delayed communications
  • Become more responsive through real-time communications and first-call resolution
  • Reduce voice mail jail and avoid wasting time
  • Improve efficiency and productivity
  • Features


  • View the status of all other users within the organization (eg 'In the Office')
  • Show users' availability (eg 'At my Desk')
  • See the subject of users' Calendar appointments (eg 'Weekly Sales Meeting')
  • See the 'Expected Time of Return'
  • See at a glance if someone is on an inbound, outbound, or conference call
  • Request a screenpop return notification, when a user gets off the phone / returns to the desk
  • See if users are online for IM (eg Skype)
  • Dial with a click of the mouse
  • Monitor levels of staff activity through Presence Reporting
  • Cheats, Guides and Quick Tips!

    Archive

    Posts Tagged ‘Programming’

    NEC IPS Feature Codes – Programming and Usage

    January 5th, 2010 godlike No comments

    The feature codes for system features are already set by the easy install script installed earlier. However they can be altered in command 200.

    These feature codes would normally start with a * or #. In this switch A & B represents * & # respectively when programming.

    Command 200

    FD Feature access code

    SD Feature number as defined in the command manual.

    AO1 (= dialled number *01 ) Axxx where xxx = feature number

    B01 (= dialled number #01 ) Axxx where xxx = feature number

    Preset Feature Codes as installed by that UK Easy Install.

    Access Code Access Code Description

  • *66 A160 10-Party Conference Trunk Access
  • *68 A162 6/10-Party Conference Trunk Control (Release)
  • *67 A161 6/10-Party Conference Trunk Control (Set up)
  • *65 A159 6-Party Conference Trunk Access
  • *20 A085 Account Code
  • #06 A045 ACD/UCD Station Busy-Out Reset
  • *06 A044 ACD/UCD Station Busy-Out Set
  • *38 A164 All Zone Internal Paging
  • #969 A109 Announcement Service Delete
  • *970 A104 Announcement Service Group 0 Replay
  • *971 A105 Announcement Service Group 1 Replay
  • *972 A106 Announcement Service Group 2 Replay
  • *973 A107 Announcement Service Group 3 Replay
  • *974 A108 Announcement Service Group 4 Replay
  • *969 A103 Announcement Service Record
  • *21 A086 Authorization Code
  • *980 A039 BGM on Dterm Set/Reset
  • #00 A003 Call Back Cancel
  • *00 A002 Call Back Set
  • #*6 A190 Call Forwarding Not Available Cancel
  • #*7 A191 Call Forwarding Not Available Replay
  • #*5 A189 Call Forwarding Not Available Set
  • #01 A011 Call Forwarding-All Calls Cancel
  • *01 A010 Call Forwarding-All Calls Entry
  • #03 A015 Call Forwarding-Busy Line Cancel
  • *03 A014 Call Forwarding-Busy Line Entry
  • #02 A017 Call Forwarding-Don’t Answer (-No Answer) Cancel
  • *02 A016 Call Forwarding-Don’t Answer (-No Answer) Entry
  • #04 A019 Call Forwarding-I’m here (-Destination) Cancel
  • *04 A018 Call Forwarding-I’m here (-Destination) Entry
  • #05 A013 Call Forwarding-Don’t Answer/Busy Line Cancel
  • *05 A012 Call Don’t-Don’t Answer/Busy Line Entry
  • *12 A046 Call Hold
  • #08 A009 Call Park-System Retrieve
  • *08 A008 Call Park-System Set
  • *24 A062 Call Park-Tenant Set/Retrieve
  • *22 A037 Call Pickup-Designated Group
  • #2 A021 Call Pickup-Direct
  • #8 A020 Call Pickup-Group
  • *13 A125 Call Waiting (Camp-on by Station)
  • *29 A007 Camp-on by Station (Transfer method)
  • *23 A042 Choice of Night Service from Attendant
  • *27 A156 Data programming for DISA Speed Calling-System, Data/Time Change and Tone Ringer Change from SMARTCON
  • *25 A043 Day Night Mode Change by Station Dialling
  • *26 A155 Day/Night Mode change, ATTCON Lockout from SMARTCON
  • #*2 A102 Digital Announcement Trunk Access Delete
  • #*0 A100 Digital Announcement Trunk Access Record
  • #*1 A101 Digital Announcement Trunk Access Replay
  • *960 A022 Do Not Disturb Set
  • #09 A023 Do Not Disturb/Return Message Schedule Cancel
  • #960 A023 Do Not Disturb/Return Message Schedule Cancel
  • *999 A094 Emergency Call
  • *28 A006 Executive Right of Way (Executive Override)
  • *951 A095 Individual Attendant Access/ Inter Position Transfer
  • *950 A081 Individual Trunk Access
  • #30 A138 Internal Zone Paging Group Answering 0-7
  • #31 A139 Internal Zone Paging Group Answering 0-7
  • #32 A140 Internal Zone Paging Group Answering 0-7
  • #33 A141 Internal Zone Paging Group Answering 0-7
  • #34 A142 Internal Zone Paging Group Answering 0-7
  • #35 A143 Internal Zone Paging Group Answering 0-7
  • #36 A144 Internal Zone Paging Group Answering 0-7
  • #37 A145 Internal Zone Paging Group Answering 0-7
  • *30 A130 Internal Zone Paging Group Calling 0-7
  • *31 A131 Internal Zone Paging Group Calling 0-7
  • *32 A132 Internal Zone Paging Group Calling 0-7
  • *33 A133 Internal Zone Paging Group Calling 0-7
  • *34 A134 Internal Zone Paging Group Calling 0-7
  • *35 A135 Internal Zone Paging Group Calling 0-7
  • *36 A136 Internal Zone Paging Group Calling 0-7
  • *37 A137 Internal Zone Paging Group Calling 0-7
  • *952 A034 Intra-Office termination on Tandem Connection
  • *953 A035 Intra-Office termination on Tandem Connection (Send DT)
  • *14 A069 Last Number Call (Redial)
  • 9 A126 LCR Group 0
  • *930 A029 Maid Status
  • #928 A149 Message Reminder Cancel
  • *927 A148 Message Reminder Set
  • #926 A147 Message Waiting/Message Reminder Retrieve
  • *926 A146 Message Waiting/Message Reminder Search
  • *39 A033 Monitor
  • #*9 A041 MW Lamp Control Reset
  • #*8 A040 MW Lamp Control Set
  • *11 A110 Name Display
  • #51 A195 Number Sharing Cancel from main station
  • #50 A193 Number Sharing Cancel from sub station
  • *51 A194 Number Sharing Set from main station
  • *50 A192 Number Sharing Set from sub station
  • *925 A084 OAI Terminal Mode Set Facility (MSF)
  • #921 A001 Outgoing Trunk Queuing Cancel
  • *921 A000 Outgoing Trunk Queuing Set
  • #922 A005 Outgoing Trunk Call/Call Back Cancel
  • *922 A004 Outgoing Trunk Queueing/Call Back Set
  • *40 A070 Paging Answer Zone
  • *41 A071 Paging Answer Zone
  • *42 A072 Paging Answer Zone
  • *43 A073 Paging Answer Zone
  • *44 A074 Paging Answer Zone
  • *45 A075 Paging Answer Zone
  • *46 A076 Paging Answer Zone
  • *47 A077 Paging Answer Zone
  • *48 A078 Paging Answer Zone
  • *49 A079 Paging Answer Zone
  • *52 A088 Priority Call 0
  • *53 A089 Priority Call 1
  • #70 A210 Re-participation Group Call-2Way Calling (Group 0-7)
  • #71 A211 Re-participation Group Call-2Way Calling (Group 0-7)
  • #72 A212 Re-participation Group Call-2Way Calling (Group 0-7)
  • #73 A213 Re-participation Group Call-2Way Calling (Group 0-7)
  • #74 A214 Re-participation Group Call-2Way Calling (Group 0-7)
  • #75 A215 Re-participation Group Call-2Way Calling (Group 0-7)
  • #76 A216 Re-participation Group Call-2Way Calling (Group 0-7)
  • #77 A217 Re-participation Group Call-2Way Calling (Group 0-7)
  • *09 A154 Return Message Schedule Set
  • *920 A158 Sending of Hooking Signal to C.O. line from PB telephone
  • *58 A196 Set Relocation
  • *910 A220 Simultaneous Paging Group Call-2Way Calling (Group 0-7)
  • *911 A221 Simultaneous Paging Group Call-2Way Calling (Group 0-7)
  • *912 A222 Simultaneous Paging Group Call-2Way Calling (Group 0-7)
  • *913 A223 Simultaneous Paging Group Call-2Way Calling (Group 0)
  • *914 A224 Simultaneous Paging Group Call-2Way Calling (Group 0-7)
  • *915 A225 Simultaneous Paging Group Call-2Way Calling (Group 0-7)
  • *916 A226 Simultaneous Paging Group Call-2Way Calling (Group 0-7)
  • *917 A227 Simultaneous Paging Group Call-2Way Calling (Group 0-7)
  • *70 A200 Simultaneous Paging Group Call-6/10 Party (Group 0-7)
  • *71 A201 Simultaneous Paging Group Call-6/10 Party (Group 0-7)
  • *72 A202 Simultaneous Paging Group Call-6/10 Party (Group 0-7)
  • *73 A203 Simultaneous Paging Group Call-6/10 Party (Group 0-7)
  • *74 A204 Simultaneous Paging Group Call-6/10 Party (Group 0-7)
  • *75 A205 Simultaneous Paging Group Call-6/10 Party (Group 0-7)
  • *76 A206 Simultaneous Paging Group Call-6/10 Party (Group 0-7)
  • *77 A207 Simultaneous Paging Group Call-6/10 Party (Group 0-7)
  • #40 A080 Speaker/Radio Paging Cancel (Delay Operation)
  • *54 A090 Special Operator Call 0
  • *55 A091 Special Operator Call 1
  • *56 A092 Special Operator Call 2
  • *57 A093 Special Operator Call 3
  • #07 A066 Speed Calling-Station (Station Speed Dialling) Cancel
  • *07 A065 Speed Calling-Station (Station Speed Dialling) Entry
  • ** A064 Speed Calling-Station (Station Speed Dialling) Origination
  • *15 A152 Speed Calling-System (1000 Memory BK0)
  • *16 A151 Speed Calling-System (1000 Memory BK1)
  • *18 A150 Speed Calling-System (1000 Memory BK3)
  • *17 A068 Speed Calling-System Origination (1000 Memory BK2)
  • ## A067 Speed Calling-System Origination (300 Memories)
  • #60 A181 Split Call Forwarding-All Calls (Cancel)
  • *60 A180 Split Call Forwarding-All Calls (Entry)
  • #61 A183 Split Call Forwarding-Busy Line/Don’t Answer (Cancel)
  • *61 A182 Split Call Forwarding-Busy Line/Don’t Answer (Entry)
  • *80 A047 TAS Answer A
  • *81 A048 TAS Answer B
  • *82 A049 TAS Answer C
  • *83 A050 TAS Answer D
  • *84 A051 TAS Answer E
  • *85 A058 Trunk Hold
  • *78 A163 Voice Call/Ring Tone Programming
  • *901 A114 Voice Message Waiting Service-Individual
  • *907 A165 Voice Message Waiting Service-Individual
  • *900 A113 Voice Message Waiting Service-System
  • *904 A118 Voice Message Waiting Service-System Delete
  • *902 A115 Voice Message Waiting Service-System Record
  • *903 A116 Voice Message Waiting Service-System Replay
  • *905 A119 Voice Message Waiting Service-System/Individual (Reset)
  • *906 A120 Voice Message Waiting Service-System/Individual (Retrieve)
  • *909 A028 Wake Up Call Set from Predetermined Station (MWU)
  • *908 A027 Wake Up Call Set from Predetermined Station (SWU)
  • #10 A025 Wake Up Call/Timed Reminder Cancel
  • *10 A024 Wake Up Call/Timed Reminder Set
  • *19 A188 Whisper Page
  • LEN Programming / Listup on the NEC 2000 IPS

    December 16th, 2008 alexanders 2 comments

    Note: This guide assumes you know how to input commands into MOC.

    MOC mode is a command line interface to the phone system. It is made up of a few simple keyboard commands:

    • / = Start
    • Space = Enter
    • . = Execute
    • Enter = scroll forward
    • F3 = scroll back

    Command 14 allows you to listup anything that resides on possible programmed LENs (or wirable ports on the phone system). The programming is defined as follows:

    Command > 14

    First Data: XXYYY

    XX is the module number. Main Site PIMS 0 & 1 = Module 00, PIMS 2 & 3 = Module 01, PIMS 4 & 5 = Module 02 and PIMS 6 & 7 = Module 03

    Remote Sites are generally known as Module 33 for Remote Site 01 and Module 44 for Remote Site 02.

    Second Data: Z-ZZZZZZ

    This data will be what is programmed on the port. A number such as 100 will generally be an analogue station. A number prefixed with an F is a digital station. A number prefixed with a D is a trunk (such as ISDN2 or Analogue Trunk), and a number prefixed with a DD is an IP-TDM conversion channel.

    NEC 2000 IPS Course Part 1

    November 25th, 2008 alexanders 2 comments

    Here is a downloadable version of an engineering course on the NEC 2000 IPS system, circa 2003. Some of the information is out of date, but overall it’s a great introduction to the standard architecture of the system.

    If it’s of use to you, please post a comment.

    NEC IPS Engineers Course – Basic

    2000 IPS RTFM – Here They Are!

    November 25th, 2008 alexanders No comments

    Here are some manuals for the NEC NEAX 2000 IPS. We’ve included here R14 manuals, which are pretty much backwards compatible – they list up which series release of MP firmware is required for commands which were introduced along the way.

    I’ll be posting up more in the near future – but if anyone has any problems downloading these, or need something specific, then please let me know.