Setting the System Date and Time – Mitel 5000 Or Mivoice Office 250

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Setting the System Date and Time – Mitel 5000 Or Mivoice Office 250 Setting the System Date and Time – Mitel 5000 or MiVoice Office 250 You can change the date and time for an individual node or for the entire network. To set the system date and time (from administrator phone): Note: At any time, you can press * to return to the previous menu, or press the Speaker button to exit programming and cancel any unsaved changes. 1. Dial 7800 (single node) or 7810 (multi-node). The programmed date appears. 2. Use the dial pad buttons to enter the month, day, and year. For example, enter 020311 for February 3, 2011. The day of the week is automatically calculated and set by the system when you enter the date. When you have finished, the displays shows the current time. If you entered the date incorrectly, INVALID DATE appears, and you are prompted to enter a new date. If you do not need to change the date, press # or the ACCEPT menu button to skip to the TIME <programmed time> prompt. 3. Use the dial pad buttons to enter the time in hours and minutes. For example, enter 0900 for 9:00. If you entered the time incorrectly, INVALID TIME appears and you are prompted to enter a new time. If you do not need to change the time, press # or the ACCEPT menu button twice to exit. SYSTEM DATE AND TIME UPDATED appears. 4. If the system is set for 12-hour display format, SELECT AM OR PM (AM=1 PM=2) appears. Press 1 (or the AM menu button) for a.m. or press 2 (or the PM menu button) for p.m. SYSTEM DATE AND TIME UPDATED appears. If you press any button other than 1 or 2, INVALID TIME appears, and you are prompted to enter a new time. .
Recommended publications
  • 2021-2022.Pdf
    UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON DAYTON OH 2021-2022 ACADEMIC CALENDAR FALL 2021 Date Event Mon, Aug 9 Degrees conferred – no ceremony Mon-Tue, Aug 16-17 New Faculty Orientation Thu, Aug 19 New Graduate Assistant Orientation Fri-Sun, Aug 20-22 New Student Welcome Weekend Fri, Aug 20 Last Day to complete registration Sat, Aug 21 President’s Welcome and New Student Convocation Mon, Aug 23 Classes begin at 8:00 AM Fri, Aug 27 Last day for late registration, change of grading options and schedules Mon, Sept 6 Labor Day – no classes Thu, Sept 9 Last day to change Second Session and full Summer Term grades Mon, Sep 13 Last day to drop classes without record Fri, Sep 17 Faculty Meeting – via Zoom at 3:30 PM Fri, Sept 24 Academic Senate Meeting – via Zoom at 3:30 PM Wed, Oct 6 Mid-Term Break begins after last class Mon, Oct 11 Classes resume at 8:00 AM Fri, Oct 15 Last day for Graduate and Doctoral students to apply for December, 2021 graduation Wed, Oct 20 First and Second Year students’ midterm progress grades due by 9:00 AM Fri, Oct 29 Academic Senate Meeting – KU Ballroom at 3:30 PM Mon, Nov 1 Last day for Undergraduate students to apply for May, 2022 graduation Mon, Nov 15 Last day to drop classes with record of W Fri, Nov 19 Academic Senate Meeting – KU Ballroom at 3:30 PM Tue, Nov 23 Thanksgiving recess begins after last class Sat, Nov 27 Saturday classes meet Mon, Nov 29 Classes resume at 8:00 AM Wed, Dec 8 Feast of the Immaculate Conception/Christmas on Campus – no classes Fri, Dec 10 Last day of classes Sat, Dec 11 Study Day Sun, Dec 12 Study Day Mon-Fri, Dec 13-17 Exams – Fall Term ends after final examination Sat, Dec 18 Diploma Exercises at 9:45 AM Tue, Dec 21 Grades due by 9:00 AM Thu, Dec 23 End of Term processing officially complete Thu, Jan 20 Last day to change Fall Term grades CHRISTMAS BREAK Date Event Sun, Dec 19 Christmas Break begins Sun, Jan 9 Christmas Break ends SPRING 2022 Date Event Fri, Jan 7 Last day to complete registration Mon, Jan 10 Classes begin at 8:00 AM.
    [Show full text]
  • C++ DATE and TIME Rialspo Int.Co M/Cplusplus/Cpp Date Time.Htm Copyrig Ht © Tutorialspoint.Com
    C++ DATE AND TIME http://www.tuto rialspo int.co m/cplusplus/cpp_date_time.htm Copyrig ht © tutorialspoint.com The C++ standard library does not provide a proper date type. C++ inherits the structs and functions for date and time manipulation from C. To access date and time related functions and structures, you would need to include <ctime> header file in your C++ prog ram. There are four time-related types: clock_t, time_t, size_t, and tm. The types clock_t, size_t and time_t are capable of representing the system time and date as some sort of integ er. The structure type tm holds the date and time in the form of a C structure having the following elements: struct tm { int tm_sec; // seconds of minutes from 0 to 61 int tm_min; // minutes of hour from 0 to 59 int tm_hour; // hours of day from 0 to 24 int tm_mday; // day of month from 1 to 31 int tm_mon; // month of year from 0 to 11 int tm_year; // year since 1900 int tm_wday; // days since sunday int tm_yday; // days since January 1st int tm_isdst; // hours of daylight savings time } Following are the important functions, which we use while working with date and time in C or C++. All these functions are part of standard C and C++ library and you can check their detail using reference to C++ standard library g iven below. SN Function & Purpose 1 time_t time(time_t *time); This returns the current calendar time of the system in number of seconds elapsed since January 1, 1970. If the system has no time, .1 is returned.
    [Show full text]
  • Statute of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Which Was Held at the Headquarters of the United Nations
    STATUTE STATUTE AS AMENDED UP TO 28 DECEMBER 1989 (ill t~, IAEA ~~ ~.l}l International Atomic Energy Agency 05-134111 Page 1.indd 1 28/06/2005 09:11:0709 The Statute was approved on 23 October 1956 by the Conference on the Statute of the International Atomic Energy Agency, which was held at the Headquarters of the United Nations. It came into force on 29 July 1957, upon the fulfilment of the relevant provisions of paragraph E of Article XXI. The Statute has been amended three times, by application of the procedure laid down in paragraphs A and C of Article XVIII. On 3 I January 1963 some amendments to the first sentence of the then paragraph A.3 of Article VI came into force; the Statute as thus amended was further amended on 1 June 1973 by the coming into force of a number of amendments to paragraphs A to D of the same Article (involving a renumbering of sub-paragraphs in paragraph A); and on 28 December 1989 an amendment in the introductory part of paragraph A. I came into force. All these amendments have been incorporated in the text of the Statute reproduced in this booklet, which consequently supersedes all earlier editions. CONTENTS Article Title Page I. Establishment of the Agency .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 5 II. Objectives . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 5 III. Functions ......... : ....... ,..................... 5 IV. Membership . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 9 V. General Conference . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 10 VI. Board of Governors .......................... 13 VII. Staff............................................. 16 VIII. Exchange of information .................... 18 IX. Supplying of materials .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 19 x. Services, equipment, and facilities .. .. ... 22 XI. Agency projects .............................. , 22 XII. Agency safeguards .
    [Show full text]
  • How Long Is a Year.Pdf
    How Long Is A Year? Dr. Bryan Mendez Space Sciences Laboratory UC Berkeley Keeping Time The basic unit of time is a Day. Different starting points: • Sunrise, • Noon, • Sunset, • Midnight tied to the Sun’s motion. Universal Time uses midnight as the starting point of a day. Length: sunrise to sunrise, sunset to sunset? Day Noon to noon – The seasonal motion of the Sun changes its rise and set times, so sunrise to sunrise would be a variable measure. Noon to noon is far more constant. Noon: time of the Sun’s transit of the meridian Stellarium View and measure a day Day Aday is caused by Earth’s motion: spinning on an axis and orbiting around the Sun. Earth’s spin is very regular (daily variations on the order of a few milliseconds, due to internal rearrangement of Earth’s mass and external gravitational forces primarily from the Moon and Sun). Synodic Day Noon to noon = synodic or solar day (point 1 to 3). This is not the time for one complete spin of Earth (1 to 2). Because Earth also orbits at the same time as it is spinning, it takes a little extra time for the Sun to come back to noon after one complete spin. Because the orbit is elliptical, when Earth is closest to the Sun it is moving faster, and it takes longer to bring the Sun back around to noon. When Earth is farther it moves slower and it takes less time to rotate the Sun back to noon. Mean Solar Day is an average of the amount time it takes to go from noon to noon throughout an orbit = 24 Hours Real solar day varies by up to 30 seconds depending on the time of year.
    [Show full text]
  • CALENDARS by David Le Conte
    CALENDARS by David Le Conte This article was published in two parts, in Sagittarius (the newsletter of La Société Guernesiaise Astronomy Section), in July/August and September/October 1997. It was based on a talk given by the author to the Astronomy Section on 20 May 1997. It has been slightly updated to the date of this transcript, December 2007. Part 1 What date is it? That depends on the calendar used:- Gregorian calendar: 1997 May 20 Julian calendar: 1997 May 7 Jewish calendar: 5757 Iyyar 13 Islamic Calendar: 1418 Muharaim 13 Persian Calendar: 1376 Ordibehesht 30 Chinese Calendar: Shengxiao (Ox) Xin-You 14 French Rev Calendar: 205, Décade I Mayan Calendar: Long count 12.19.4.3.4 tzolkin = 2 Kan; haab = 2 Zip Ethiopic Calendar: 1990 Genbot 13 Coptic Calendar: 1713 Bashans 12 Julian Day: 2450589 Modified Julian Date: 50589 Day number: 140 Julian Day at 8.00 pm BST: 2450589.292 First, let us note the difference between calendars and time-keeping. The calendar deals with intervals of at least one day, while time-keeping deals with intervals less than a day. Calendars are based on astronomical movements, but they are primarily for social rather than scientific purposes. They are intended to satisfy the needs of society, for example in matters such as: agriculture, hunting. migration, religious and civil events. However, it has also been said that they do provide a link between man and the cosmos. There are about 40 calendars now in use. and there are many historical ones. In this article we will consider six principal calendars still in use, relating them to their historical background and astronomical foundation.
    [Show full text]
  • Package 'Date'
    Package ‘date’ February 5, 2020 Version 1.2-39 Title Functions for Handling Dates Description Functions for handling dates. Imports graphics License GPL-2 NeedsCompilation yes Author Terry Therneau [aut], Thomas Lumley [trl] (R port), Kjetil Halvorsen [trl] (R port), Kurt Hornik [trl, ctb, cre] (<https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4198-9911>, R port), R Core Team [ctb] Maintainer Kurt Hornik <[email protected]> Repository CRAN Date/Publication 2020-02-05 17:52:09 UTC R topics documented: as.date . .2 date.ddmmmyy . .3 date.mdy . .3 date.mmddyy . .4 date.mmddyyyy . .5 date.object . .5 mdy.date . .6 Index 8 1 2 as.date as.date Coerce Data to Dates Description Converts any of the following character forms to a Julian date: 8/31/56, 8-31-1956, 31 8 56, 083156, 31Aug56, or August 31 1956. Usage as.date(x, order = "mdy", ...) Arguments x input data vector. order if x is character, defines the order in which the terms are assumed to appear in a xx/xx/xx date. The default is month/day/year; any permutation of mdy is legal. ... if x is character, then any other arguments from mdy.date() can be used as well. Details If x is numeric, then floor(x) is returned, e.g., as.date(35) is the same as as.date(35.2) and gives February 5, 1960 (‘5Feb60’). If x is character, the program attempts to parse it. Value For each date, the number of days between it and January 1, 1960. The date will be missing if the string is not interpretable.
    [Show full text]
  • Date and Date Time Fields Facilities Management … Date and Date Time Fields Facilities Maintenance 1 | Updated March 29, 2016 by Casey Cantwell | Tags: None
    IBM Sign in | Register Search Submit IBM Profiles Communities Apps Wikis This Wiki Search IBM TRIRIGA Log in to participate TRIRIGA Wiki Home You are in: IBM TRIRIGA > IBM TRIRIGA Application Platform > Hints and Tips > Date and Date Time Fields Facilities Management … Date and Date Time Fields Facilities Maintenance 1 | Updated March 29, 2016 by Casey Cantwell | Tags: None Environmental & Energ… Page Actions Real Estate Management Capital Project Manage… Database Application Server Process Server My Profile Time Zone Client's Machine CAD Integrator-Publish… IBM TRIRIGA Connector… Date/Time and Date fields are stored in the database as epoch Nothing is Nothing is stored IBM TRIRIGA Anywhere Storage (long number values, number of stored permanently NA NA permanently on this server. milliseconds from 1/1/1970 on this server. IBM TRIRIGA Applicatio… 00:00:00 GMT/UTC) Support Matrix Hints and Tips In Async workflows In the context of a user When no default value Core objects in TRIR… In Sync workflows state and state transitions Uses getDate() function to with a different time is set, and the transtions, the use of local that occur on this generate new data when fields zone, the user's time date&time or date Settings to Schedul… New values system time is used for fields server, local system have their default value set to zone will be applied to picker is used, the with default values set to time is used for fields Reassigning Pendin… current time fields with defailt values current time of the current time with default values set to the current time machine is used.
    [Show full text]
  • 2020-2021 Academic Calendar Fall 2020
    UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON DAYTON OH 2020-2021 ACADEMIC CALENDAR FALL 2020 Date Event Sat, Aug 8- Sun, Aug 23 Staggered move-in days for ALL Students Mon, Aug 10 Degrees conferred – no ceremony Mon, Aug 17 New Faculty Orientation TBD New Graduate Assistant Orientation Fri, Aug 21 Last Day to complete registration Fri-Sun, Aug 21-23 Fall Welcome Weekend, student programming only Sat., Aug 22 President’s Welcome/New Student Convocation. This will be a pre- recorded, virtual event Mon, Aug 24 Classes begin at 8:00 AM Fri, Aug 28 Last day for late registration, change of grading options and schedules Mon, Sept 7 Labor Day – Monday classes will be held Fri, Sept 11 Faculty Meeting – via Zoom at 3:30 PM Mon, Sept 14 Last day to drop classes without record Mon, Sept 14 Last day to change Second Session and full Summer Term grades Fri-Sun, Sept 18-20 Virtual Family Weekend Wed, Sept 23 Fall one-day mini-break 1 – Daytime classes cancelled. Graduate classes meeting 3:35 PM or later, or only once per week, held as usual Thu, Sept 24 Classes resume at 8:00 AM Fri, Sept 25 Academic Senate – via Zoom at 3:30 PM Thu, Oct 15 Last day for Graduate and Doctoral students to apply for December, 2020 graduation Fri, Oct 16 Academic Senate – via Zoom at 3:30 PM Tue, Oct 20 Fall one-day mini-break 2 – Daytime classes cancelled. Graduate classes meeting 3:35 PM or later, or only once per week, held as usual Wed, Oct 21 Classes resume at 8:00 AM Wed, Oct 21 First Year students’ midterm progress grades due by 9:00 AM Sun, Nov 1 Last day for Undergraduate students to apply for May, 2021 graduation Fri, Nov 20 Academic Senate – via Zoom at 3:30 PM Tue, Nov 24 Last day of in person classes, except where prior permission has been granted Wed, Nov 25 Holiday exchange for Labor Day.
    [Show full text]
  • Date and Time Change FAQ
    Date and Time Change FAQ Anesthesia System A-Series______________________________________________________________________2 Bedside Monitors Accutorr Plus__________________________________________________________________3 Accutorr V , Accutorr 3/7_________________________________________________________4 DPM 2/PM-60_________________________________________________________________5 DPM 3/VS-800_________________________________________________________________5 DPM 4/5/PM8000E/PM9000E_____________________________________________________6 DPM 6/7/Beneview/T5/T8/ Passport 12/17M/T1Passport 8/12 6 Passport 2 /Passport V/ Spectrum / OR _____________________________________________7 Trio__________________________________________________________________________7 V-Series ______________________________________________________________________7 Central Stations DPM Central/BeneVision ________________________________________________________8 Panorama Central_______________________________________________________________9 eGateway 10 Mindray Technical Support 1-800-288-2121 X 8116 Part number 0002-08-9182 Rev B Page 1 A-Series To adjust the date and time: 1. Select the Date and Time icon. The Date/Time dialog is displayed (FIGURE 3-8). 2. Use the dialog keypad and softkeys to adjust the date, time, 12/24 hour format, date format, and daylight savings time. NOTE: If appliCable, seleCt Daylight Savings Time first before all other settings. NOTE: If the Daylight Savings Time On/Off button in the Date/Time dialog is inaCtive and Cannot be seleCted, it is
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter 7. Date/Time Format 7-1
    Chapter 7. Date/Time Format 7-1 Chapter 7. Date/Time Format PDS has adopted a subset of the International Standards Organization Standard (ISO/DIS) 8601 standard entitled “Data Element and Interchange Formats - Representations of Dates and Times”, and applies the standard across all disciplines in order to give the system generality. See also Dates and Times in Object Description Language (Chapter 12, Section 12.3.2) of this document. It is important to note that the ISO/DIS 8601 standard covers only ASCII representations of dates and times. ODL Date/Time Information Chapter 12, Object Description Language (ODL) Specification and Usage, Section 12.3.2, Dates and Times, of this document provides additional information on the use of ODL in date/time formation, representation, and implementation. 7.1 Date/Times In the PDS there are two recognized date/time formats: CCYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SS.sss (preferred format) CCYY-DDDTHH:MM:SS.sss Each format represents a concatenation of the conventional date and time expressions with the two parts separated by the letter T: CC - century (00-99) YY - year (00-99) MM - month (01-12) DD - day of month (01-31) DDD - day of year (001-366) T - date/time separator HH - hour (00-23) MM - minute (00-59) SS - second (00-59) sss - fractions of second (000-999) Note: See Section 7.4 “Midnight and Leap Seconds” for special cases involving the indication of midnight and leap seconds. The preferred date/time format is: CCYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SS.sss. 7-2 Chapter 7. Date/Time Format Date/Time Precision The above date/time formats may be truncated on the right to match the precision of the date/time value in any of the following forms: 1998 1998-12 1998-12-01 1998-12-01T23 1998-12-01T23:59 1998-12-01T23:59:58 1998-12-01T23:59:58.1 1998-12-01T23:59:58.12 7.2 Dates Dates should be expressed in the conventional ISO/DIS 8601 format.
    [Show full text]
  • NC Preservation Metadata for Digital Objects
    NC Preservation Metadata for Digital Objects 2013 EDITION BY LISA GREGORY, KATHLEEN KENNEY, AMY RUDERSDORF Purpose The Preservation Metadata for Digital Objects (PMDO) contains a list of preservation metadata fields that institutions creating or caring for digital objects might consider recording to help in the long- term access and management of their collections. Elements are mapped to the broader and more comprehensive PREMIS Data Dictionary for Preservation Metadata, to ensure interoperability and shareability. Audience The PMDO is meant to be a guidance document, not a mandate. It may be more useful for small to mid-sized institutions that may not have access to automated metadata creation or extraction processes. (For more information about automated metadata creation, please see Section D.) History The updated edition of this document was written by staff from the Digital Information Management Program at the Government and Heritage Library, State Library of North Carolina. This version addresses the metadata needs of not only digitized images, as the earlier edition did, but also other digitized formats and born-digital files. Questions and comments may be directed to the staff of the Digital Information Management Program at [email protected]. 2007 edition by Katherine M. Wisser, Druscilla R. Simpson, and Peter E. Hymas The original element set was adapted from "Metadata for Administration and Preservation of Digital Images (MAPDI)" prepared by Dr. Helen R. Tibbo and Claire Eager with assistance from a preservation metadata working group at the School of Information and Library Science for the State Library of North Carolina, Department of Cultural Resources, NC Exploring Cultural Heritage Online (ECHO) program through an LSTA Grant in September 2002.
    [Show full text]
  • Datetime Display Formats — Display Formats for Dates and Times
    Title stata.com datetime display formats — Display formats for dates and times Syntax Description Remarks and examples Also see Syntax The formats for displaying Stata internal form (SIF) dates and times in human readable form (HRF) are Display format to SIF type present SIF in HRF datetime/c %tc details datetime/C %tC details date %td details weekly date %tw details monthly date %tm details quarterly date %tq details half-yearly date %th details yearly date %ty details The optional details allows you to control how results appear and is composed of a sequence of the following codes: Code Meaning Output CC century-1 01–99 cc century-1 1–99 YY 2-digit year 00–99 yy 2-digit year 0–99 JJJ day within year 001–366 jjj day within year 1–366 Mon month Jan, Feb, ::: , Dec Month month January, February, ::: , December mon month jan, feb, ::: , dec month month january, february, ::: , december NN month 01–12 nn month 1–12 DD day within month 01–31 dd day within month 1–31 1 2 datetime display formats — Display formats for dates and times DAYNAME day of week Sunday, Monday, ::: (aligned) Dayname day of week Sunday, Monday, ::: (unaligned) Day day of week Sun, Mon, ::: Da day of week Su, Mo, ::: day day of week sun, mon, ::: da day of week su, mo, ::: h half 1–2 q quarter 1–4 WW week 01–52 ww week 1–52 HH hour 00–23 Hh hour 00–12 hH hour 0–23 hh hour 0–12 MM minute 00–59 mm minute 0–59 SS second 00–60 (sic, due to leap seconds) ss second 0–60 (sic, due to leap seconds) .s tenths .0–.9 .ss hundredths .00–.99 .sss thousandths .000–.999 am show am or pm am or pm a.m.
    [Show full text]