Отзывы о Проектор Panasonic PT-LW336
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Panasonic PT-LW336?
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The setup was very easy, the features are nice but the sound quality is horrific! With volume on as high as it will go all that can be heard is a whisper. When placed on speaker the sound is as if using a tin can with a string attached. Can just barely make out that anyone is speaking, have to hold the hand set up to the ear to be able to hear the caller. What's the point of a speaker phone if you have to hold it to your ear to hear it? It is slightly louder doing that than when on conventional use of the handset when not on speaker.
Setting up features was preset. All you have to do is charge the batteries for 12 hours, input to your phone book if you wish, and set up answering machine if you want a personal call message. We use our phone service provider answering service rather than the phone. Try as we may, we can not get the volume of this phone system up high enough to be heard. Feel like smacking it as you would a newborn baby to get it to speak up!
I fear this wasn't a great purchase and will be going back. One good thing; we found out that the old Panasonic phone set can be hooked up at the same time this new Panasonic system is hooked up. All phones work, so if you were wanting a 10-12 phone setup you could do it with Panasonic.


No tuve temas con la aduana, me llego perfecto y rápido.

I run a small business out of my home. I used to get 12 - 15 telemarketer calls every day despite being on the No Call Registry and having Nomorobo. I started using the call block feature on these phones and it is amazing. I don't know what it does to discourage telemarketers but I only get 1 - 2 calls per day from the sneaky telemarketers that use the local area code. I filtered many of those out now with the call block feature. I now have some peace in my day again. Buy these. They are worth the price just for the call block feature alone.


No tuve temas con la aduana, me llego perfecto y rápido.

I bet many of you are like me in that I get far too many damned robo-dialed "spam" phone calls. They drive me crazy! And because I am a Comcast phone subscriber, I use their NoMoRobo to cut down on the spam calls, but NoMoRobo has one fault (not of their making): there is always ONE ring that comes through before NoMoRobo hangs up on them. You'll be in bed trying to sleep and here comes one ring to jar you out of your dreams, and then ... the ringing stops. GRRRRRR.....!
The one-ring problem is no one's fault because of the way CallerID works. When a phone call reaches your home, the digital CallerID information does not arrive until AFTER the first ring. That's just the way CallerID works. Thus, no one, or no one machine, knows who is calling until AFTER that first ring. Therefore, NoMoRobo cannot do anything until after that first ring is finished, which is why you always get one ring before NoMoRobo can step in and react. For that matter, NO smart phone system can react and hang up on someone until AFTER that first ring. Blame it on CallerID and nothing else!
All of this got me to wondering "there HAS to be someone who understands this issue and who makes a phone system that lets you disable the first ring of all of your calls." If you had a phone like that, then you would be home free. The first ring still arrives at the phone, but the phone itself suppresses that first ring (while allowing all subsequent rings). But by this time, NoMoRobo has had a chance to assess "friend or foe" and hang up if it's a "foe" that is in their database. What this means is no more of those highly-annoying one-ring phone calls that disrupt your tranquil life.
After doing a little research, I found that ALL Panasonic phones these days have incorporated this feature! Hot damn, I said, and I settled on this particular KX-TGF574S model only because it looks pretty much like the old system, but is updated a little bit including this new one-ring-disable feature. I don't care about any of the other features. All I want is to eliminate the annoying spam phone calls!
To enable this feature, turn to page 36 of the instruction manual in the "Call Block" subsection. Here's the short story:
MENU --> SETTINGS --> CALL BLOCK --> ONE RING FOR BLOCKED CALL --> select NO.
For some odd reason, "no" means "do not allow the phone to ring on the first ring tone." It's a bit counter-intuitive to me, but that's the way it is. Save this setting, then hit the phone's OFF button. After this, the first ring will never be heard (although you WILL see all of the phone's LCD screens light up when the call comes in, just no sound). And if NoMoRobo is working and detects that the number is a spam call, it automatically hangs up on them. That kills all subsequent ringing, meaning your phone will not sound whatsoever for that one call. Problem (almost) solved!
Unfortunately, NoMoRobo is an imperfect system. Robo calls still make it past their system if the spoofed phone number is not in their database. I have found that the calls that usually make it past them are ones that have the same prefix as my own. For instance, if my phone number were 123-456-7890, then a call with the prefix of 123-456 usually gets past them. But there are others that escape them. I just had one this morning from allegedly a part of the state where I know no one. So what to do?
This is where the second useful feature of the Panasonic phone system comes in handy, especially if you do not have access to NoMoRobo to help you out, but it takes a bit of effort on your part to incorporate. The phone has the ability to store 3,000 phone numbers if you are willing to take the time to enter the information of people you WANT to hear from. It consumes a fair amount of time because you're stuck entering NAME and PHONE NUMBER on the numerical keyboard, no easy ting to do. (It's the same way cellphone texting USED to be!) BUT, if you're willing to do it, then you should. What you do this, you are creating a WHITE LIST. That is, "these are people I WANT to accept calls from." Family, friends, doctors, etc. You COULD use the phone's BLACK LIST feature, but this is a fruitless endeavor because the phone's ability to store blacklisted numbers is very limited, 250 numbers maximum. Phone spammers chew through bogus phone numbers far faster than you can enter them in your phone and overflow its storage capabilities. Black listing never works, but the white lists do!
Here's the key thing to do: enter all of the names and numbers of people you want to hear from in the phone. I made something like 50 entries like this, and it probably took me 2 hours to do (I'm very slow at alphanumerical texting). For each person/number you enter, make sure you assign them to a single "group." I chose Group 4, but it's arbitrary. Group 4 is as good as any. I then re-named Group 4 as "White List" but you don't need to do that. I just did it to make it obvious what Group 4 is used for on my phone.
Now for the secret sauce: once that's all done, then you have the ability to assign a different ring tone to that group, one that is different that the phone's default ring tone. The Panasonic phone offers a lot of goofy ring tones that are quite distinctive. Chose one and assign it to your white-listed people (Group 4 for me).
Once you have done that, then whenever your phone rings because the spoofed number got past your NoMoRobo filter, if that number is in your white list, the people you WANT to hear from, your phone will ring with the distinctive ringtone that you just assigned above. No longer do you have to get up to SEE who is calling by reading the phone's caller ID information on the LCD screen. No, you can let your EARS do the filtering rather than your EYES! When you hear that distinctive ring, you know to get up and answer the phone!
I still get mad as hell at the idiots who get through my spam filtering system and want to personally hang up on them (like that will do any good). Thus, when I do get the now-very-infrequent spam call, I recognize it by the standard ringtone and quickly get up to get to the phone. I do a fast check of the CallerID information on the screen, which usually says it's from some part of the country that is unknown to me, and quickly hit the CALL BLOCK button. The phone then gives me the menu option "Block call?" Choose YES, and the phone then hangs up on the call while also storing that (bogus) number in its blocked call memory. Now if they call back again using that number, as they often do, the phone will automatically hang up on them and you won't ever know what happened! I.e., you won't hear the phone ring at all, as intended. Of course, your phone's blocked call memory bank will eventually fill up. When that happens, you select the ERASE command to clear all the numbers, hoping that by now those blocked numbers are no longer being used, as is often the case.
After doing all of that, my house has been much quieter. I used to get 2-5 spam calls a day. Since I got this Panasonic system about 4 weeks ago and created my white list in it, I have had only 5 spam calls. It is not a perfect solution, but I finally feel like I have control over my phone system again.
Sorry to take so long describing all of this, but I'm sure that many of you will want to know how to cut down on your spam calls. This is my way of doing it.


No tuve temas con la aduana, me llego perfecto y rápido.

We really like the large font and lighted screen on the display (old eyes!). Also the audio announce of the callerId, though I wish there was a way to limit the number of times the audio is repeated (basically repeats on every ring, which gets old if you can't grab the phone right away).
This system replaces an earlier model pf the Panasonic DECT 6, which also performed well for several years and now is doing the same for someone else.

No tuve temas con la aduana, me llego perfecto y rápido.



No tuve temas con la aduana, me llego perfecto y rápido.



No tuve temas con la aduana, me llego perfecto y rápido.


Si ya los configuraste a un equipo inicialmente, para configurarlos a un segundo, tienes que mantener presionado el botón de encendido hasta que las luces parpadeen azul/rojo.
:)

No tuve temas con la aduana, me llego perfecto y rápido.

If you do nothing more than plug your phone into a phone line and a power outlet, you'll have a highly capable phone that will set itself up automatically with the proper date and time, and which will answer calls after the fourth ring with a generic greeting to leave a message. If you're happy with that, you need do nothing more. I like that Panasonic has gone to using standard rechargeable AAA batteries, which are included and otherwise readily available. Finding replacements is trivial, but the included batteries usually last years. Linking to a cell phone is no more difficult than pairing any two Bluetooth devices, but it still works well with a land line for those of us who still use one.
The call block function works beautifully and Panasonic has added a dedicated button on every handset. On getting a spam call, simply press the button and confirm, and you'll never get a call from that number again. That feature alone is worth upgrading your phone. Call quality is very good and call volume is easily adjusted. Call waiting works well, with the second caller's number clearly displayed with caller ID. Spoken caller ID - as with previous models - can be a bit annoying and sometimes humorous in the way it tries to pronounce things, but the feature is useful when you're not near a phone.
The one complaint, which is not unique to this phone, is what happens when there is interference. Some other reviews have touched on poor call quality as an issue, but we've found the call quality itself to be nearly perfect. The problem is that we live in a high-rise apartment building with thousands of tenants around us. At any time there are about two dozen Wi-Fi networks within range, and our wireless mice and keyboards occasionally cease to function due to all the RF interference. Although it's not common, we sometimes lose the connection during a call; most often with the person at the other end being unable to hear us. Simply turning around can affect call quality. The spread spectrum digital transmission method used by Panasonic goes a long way toward alleviating call problems - and there really has been a significant improvement over early cordless models - but in the age of extensive mesh Wi-Fi networks for the home, you'd think Panasonic could improve on the good old cordless phone. Maybe it really is time to stop using landlines.


No tuve temas con la aduana, me llego perfecto y rápido.
