Mitel UC360 User's Guide Page 42

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UC360 User Guide
36
Additional Information You May Need to Know
The following sections provide additional information on various features of the Conference
Application.
Audio Calls
A UC360 conference call consists of a four-way audio call in which the UC360 conference
room and up to three remote parties can hear each other. The UC360 unit's audio devices
consist of the hands-free speaker and 16 built-in beam forming microphones.
A conference call always starts off with a single remote party. The UC360 user adds remote
parties one at a time. Individual parties can be added to and removed from a conference
call at any time with a limit of three remote parties.
An incoming caller cannot call directly into the UC360 conference call. The incoming call
appears on a conference avatar and must be added to the conference by the UC360 user.
The audio output from UC360 calls always goes to the UC360 built-in hands-free speakers.
The HDMI device's speakers are not used.
The volume on the HDMI monitor should be muted or turned to its lowest setting.
The UC360 generates audible tones to all conferenced parties whenever a user enters or
leaves the call.
Video Calls
The Video option includes all the features of Audio, plus the following:
With the Video Enabled Conferencing option, conference calls can be video-enabled.
Simultaneous two-way video streams are established with each remote party that is video
capable. Video capable means the remote party can display a video signal from the UC360
and is optionally camera-equipped.
Parties added to a conference call start off with video connections if they are capable.
Otherwise they are audio only.
Each remote party receives a composite image consisting of the UC360-attached video
camera, their own camera/video, and the other conference party videos. The UC360 HDMI
device displays this same composite image.
In a two-party video call, the user cannot see UC360’s local camera on the HDMI display,
unless they have turned on Self View.
It is possible that for certain remote parties, the video connection could be uni-directional.
This would happen for instance if either UC360 or the remote party was not
camera-equipped.
For details on how video conferencing interacts with the Remote Desktop App, see “Basic
Rules on How Presentation Sharing Works” on page 69.
You can make video calls using MiCollab Conference as a video endpoint.
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