Best Buy's phone system around here used to be Executone....I thinks...and I've never been able to get on their system. Staff at the Best Buys around here tend to be pretty lax though, so it probably would have been easy to watch them, especially around the holiday season when they are all busy. About six months ago, they upgraded to Cisco IP phones around here and I'm not sure how those work either. I just noticed them on a quick ten minute run to the local Best Buy and haven't even had a chance to play with them. Since Cisco is a IP phone system, there isn't, most likely, a factory programmed paging code. The new Cisco phones have displays and it's possible Page is set as a speed dial key. The old phones were from a defunct company, and I couldn't find the manuals. The phones were quite basic, with no programmable buttons or displays, just several buttons that would hold or transfer calls. Here's a picture of the old phones:
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The new phones look like this:
To Raptor: Although it's possible to hook up radios to a PA system...it's impractical and highly unlikely. You'd have to register a dedicated channel and connect a radio or scanner to the PA page port. Around here, they use basic cheap FRS radios, so giving each employee a fancy Motorola repeatered radio might be a bit of a problem. If they did it with FRS, that would however , be easy to talk on, but also interesting to hear all the old people over the intercom at the Sam's Club next door..."GEORGE...I'm in the food asile! GEORGE ANSWER ME!!!!"...
My own mediocre attempt at humor has been highly amusing to myself.afreak: I've never seen Best Buy use a Nortel System but it is not impossible...store specs probably vary with area.
LJC: Also, generally, Nortel Systems will use a proprietary button or code, not set up as an extension, so you probably wouldn't be able to remotely access it.
Just my two cents.