local land line with caller i.d.
If you are referring to whether or not the caller id ability is available on our receiver, yes it is. The caller ID ability is offered on most of the receivers we offer but there are some that do not have the ability to enable caller ID. The caller ID option will display caller information on the TV screen. In order to activate, the caller ID does requires a phone line connected to the receiver, a subscription to Caller ID service through their local phone company and Caller ID enabled in the receiver.
There are no fees for blocking caller ID. All one has to do to block caller ID is push *67 prior to dialing the phone number you are calling. This will block ones number from appearing on either a cellphone or land line phone
*67
Look at the Caller ID display.
Call your phone company or go to their site and sign up.
Caller Line Identification, also known as caller ID.
if the caller id has more than ten numbers
It should already show up. If it doesn't, there is a problem either with the phone company switch (sending incomplete data), or more likely with your caller ID device.
When a person misses a phone call on a cell phone, the phone will show all the missed calls. If a land line phone has caller ID, the missed calls will be shown on the caller ID box.
In North America, *69 will redial the number of the last person who called you. However, it does not work if the person blocked their caller ID, or if it's a telemarketer who sent a fake caller ID, or if for any other reason you didn't receive valid caller ID information.
There are a number of ways that Caller ID can deliver erroneous results. If your wife's employer has a PBX (a kind of business phone system), then the PBX must send valid Caller ID to the local phone company. If her employer and your home phone use different local phone companies, the one company has to hand off the Caller ID data to the other. The data then gets handed down the phone line to your home, where it must be accurately captured by your Caller ID display. A glitch in any one of those steps can cause you to get garbled Caller ID data.
The jacks on the back of the caller ID unit labeled, `phone` attaches to the satellite box and the one labeled, `line`, attaches to the phone line.