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The main component of Dock-N-Talk is a plastic box measuring 4.25 by 4.25 by 1.25 inches and weighing 5.5 ounces |
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| The minute dimensions means you can home it on smaller shelves, but its construction feels a dose cheap |
| Beyond the ports for the telephone cords, the AC adapter, Dock N Talk and the cell phone cable/Bluetooth module, the only visage on the exterior of the console are a baby LED, a Bluetooth-pairing control, and a ringer setup button |
| The blush is vital gray, which is offset by a wavy black stripe |
| It's nondescript, to say the least, but it's just a docking station, after all, so we didn't think anything of it. |
One of the Dock-N-Talk's better added features is that if connected to a wall jack, it can function with up to five other landline phones in your home. It's especially great for families that have multiple phones in the house, as they occasion to buy only individually device. This earmark works regardless of whether you have active landline service, but keep in brainpower that it won't work with wall jacks assigned to differential phone numbers. Also, you can connect only lone cell phone at a time to Dock-N-Talk. Other features include call waiting, speed dialing, and live call transfers between a cell and landline phone. And commendable cognizance for Nextel customers: You can even make push-to-talk calls on the landline handset.
