wallymcdoogle
Technical User
Hi,
I set up a distribution list to 30 mailboxes. Those mailboxes each have remote notification turned on. My goal was to create an emergency broadcast system using Call Pilot. Send a single voicemail message to this distribution list, and all users get called on their cell phones that they have a message.
My test went out, and only about a third of the accounts on the dist list got their remote notification calls, even though they all got the new voicemails. I verified that the remote notification is turned on, on all of those boxes.
My alarm log had no errors in it.
Afterwards, I sent a single voicemail to my box and it remote notified my cell immediately.
Is there a capacity issue where it will drop its tasks to process if it gets too busy like this? I watched and all Multimedia and channels were busy instantly. Did it drop all those remote notification calls because it was busy?
Do you have any ideas or concerns with trying to accomplish this using Call Pilot?
BTW: We're a 5.0
Thanks
Willie
I set up a distribution list to 30 mailboxes. Those mailboxes each have remote notification turned on. My goal was to create an emergency broadcast system using Call Pilot. Send a single voicemail message to this distribution list, and all users get called on their cell phones that they have a message.
My test went out, and only about a third of the accounts on the dist list got their remote notification calls, even though they all got the new voicemails. I verified that the remote notification is turned on, on all of those boxes.
My alarm log had no errors in it.
Afterwards, I sent a single voicemail to my box and it remote notified my cell immediately.
Is there a capacity issue where it will drop its tasks to process if it gets too busy like this? I watched and all Multimedia and channels were busy instantly. Did it drop all those remote notification calls because it was busy?
Do you have any ideas or concerns with trying to accomplish this using Call Pilot?
BTW: We're a 5.0
Thanks
Willie