Navigator User Guide
5
About the Navigator Task Bar
Use the Navigator Task Bar to make calls and invoke features. You can program Task Bar
Personal Keys to speed call your contacts, launch PC applications, open PC documents like a
Microsoft
®
Word document, or navigate to a URL directly using your browser.
Note: To install and connect to the Navigator Task Bar application, refer to the Navigator
Installation Guide shipped with the phone. Your installer or administrator may have
completed all installation procedures for you.
Connect to the Navigator Task Bar
Your installer or administrator usually completes the association between the Navigator Task Bar
application and the Navigator phone upon installation of the Task Bar. If your Task Bar
application is not connecting to your phone (for example, if your programmed Personal Keys are
disabled or you receive an error message upon start-up), contact your administrator.
Figure 2: Navigator Task Bar
Elements of Your Navigator Task Bar
Element Function
Button Page Number Key
Scrolls between Button Page 1, 2, and 3. The left-most
Personal Key is always the Button Page # key. Press this
key to navigate to the next page of Personal Keys.
Programmable Personal
Keys
Provides 24 keys (8 physical phone keys that correspond to
3 pages of eight programmable keys each on the Task Bar).
Task Bar Personal Keys correspond to the physical
Personal Keys on your phone. Each key has a status
indicator and a programmable label. In this guide, “speed
call key”, “feature key”, and “line key” refer to either the
physical Personal Key on your phone OR the corresponding
key on the Task Bar.
Your Prime Line key is the first Personal Key (counting from
right to left) on Button Page 1 of the Task Bar. Line 2 is
usually the second Personal Key on Button Page 1 of the
Task Bar (counting from right to left). All other line
appearances may be programmed to any key.
The left-most Personal Key is always the Button Page # key.
Press this key to navigate to the next page of Personal
Keys.