Discussion:
checking messages on eastlink phone?
(too old to reply)
Peter
2006-11-08 23:40:24 UTC
Permalink
Up until today, I would just dial my own number and pop in the code to check
messages on my landline.

Now I get a busy signal instead of the message box.

Is there another way to check? Am I the only one with this issue today?
Timmy Jones
2006-11-08 23:48:22 UTC
Permalink
Just checked mine, working fine!
Post by Peter
Up until today, I would just dial my own number and pop in the code to
check messages on my landline.
Now I get a busy signal instead of the message box.
Is there another way to check? Am I the only one with this issue today?
slider
2006-11-08 23:57:42 UTC
Permalink
*99 from your home phone.From remote phone..446-6245(mail)Pound key and your
number including area code,password.
Thats the way I always did it.
Post by Peter
Up until today, I would just dial my own number and pop in the code to
check messages on my landline.
Now I get a busy signal instead of the message box.
Is there another way to check? Am I the only one with this issue today?
Peter
2006-11-09 00:03:14 UTC
Permalink
Post by slider
*99 from your home phone.From remote phone..446-6245(mail)Pound key and
your number including area code,password.
Thats the way I always did it.
*99 worked great. I knew there was another way I just couldnt remember,
thanks!
Post by slider
Post by Peter
Up until today, I would just dial my own number and pop in the code to
check messages on my landline.
Now I get a busy signal instead of the message box.
Is there another way to check? Am I the only one with this issue today?
slider
2006-11-09 00:37:27 UTC
Permalink
yw!
Post by Peter
Post by slider
*99 from your home phone.From remote phone..446-6245(mail)Pound key and
your number including area code,password.
Thats the way I always did it.
*99 worked great. I knew there was another way I just couldnt remember,
thanks!
Post by slider
Post by Peter
Up until today, I would just dial my own number and pop in the code to
check messages on my landline.
Now I get a busy signal instead of the message box.
Is there another way to check? Am I the only one with this issue today?
Picasso
2006-11-09 09:40:30 UTC
Permalink
Post by slider
*99 from your home phone.From remote phone..446-6245(mail)Pound key and your
number including area code,password.
Thats the way I always did it.
Post by Peter
Up until today, I would just dial my own number and pop in the code to
check messages on my landline.
Now I get a busy signal instead of the message box.
Is there another way to check? Am I the only one with this issue today?
Just for interest sake, with Aliant in NB, you can hit #1231234password
with no spaces and it goes to your box. 1231234 would be your 7 didit
cell phone number
Heather Morrison
2006-11-09 01:20:39 UTC
Permalink
Post by Peter
Up until today, I would just dial my own number and pop in the code to
check messages on my landline.
Now I get a busy signal instead of the message box.
Is there another way to check? Am I the only one with this issue today?
I had this issue a week or so ago. I ended up discovering dialling *99 then
my code.

That seems to work fine.

I hope it works for you.

toodles

HeatherM
Terry
2006-11-09 16:40:19 UTC
Permalink
Call 446-6245 then follow the instruction.
Post by Peter
Up until today, I would just dial my own number and pop in the code to check
messages on my landline.
Now I get a busy signal instead of the message box.
Is there another way to check? Am I the only one with this issue today?
Donna Whitman
2006-11-09 21:24:59 UTC
Permalink
Post by Peter
Up until today, I would just dial my own number and pop in the code to check
messages on my landline.
Now I get a busy signal instead of the message box.
Is there another way to check? Am I the only one with this issue today?
I have never been able to do that from a remote location. It only
seems to work on Eastlink number and not an Aliant number that was
carried over.
Cape Breton Barbarian
2006-11-09 21:31:01 UTC
Permalink
Post by Donna Whitman
Post by Peter
Up until today, I would just dial my own number and pop in the code to check
messages on my landline.
Now I get a busy signal instead of the message box.
Is there another way to check? Am I the only one with this issue today?
I have never been able to do that from a remote location. It only
seems to work on Eastlink number and not an Aliant number that was
carried over.
To check your Eastlink Voice Mail from a remote location, call your number,
press * (not #) to interrupt the greeting (don't wait for the greeting to
finish) and it will ask you to enter your password.
Steve James
2006-11-09 22:22:26 UTC
Permalink
Post by Cape Breton Barbarian
Post by Donna Whitman
Post by Peter
Up until today, I would just dial my own number and pop in the code to check
messages on my landline.
Now I get a busy signal instead of the message box.
Is there another way to check? Am I the only one with this issue today?
I have never been able to do that from a remote location. It only
seems to work on Eastlink number and not an Aliant number that was
carried over.
To check your Eastlink Voice Mail from a remote location, call your
number, press * (not #) to interrupt the greeting (don't wait for the
greeting to finish) and it will ask you to enter your password.
Can't you also use 446-MAIL (6245) to access your Eastlink voicemail from
any phone?
news
2006-11-09 23:01:27 UTC
Permalink
*99 is what you do now for eastlink its new
Post by Steve James
Post by Cape Breton Barbarian
Post by Donna Whitman
Post by Peter
Up until today, I would just dial my own number and pop in the code to check
messages on my landline.
Now I get a busy signal instead of the message box.
Is there another way to check? Am I the only one with this issue today?
I have never been able to do that from a remote location. It only
seems to work on Eastlink number and not an Aliant number that was
carried over.
To check your Eastlink Voice Mail from a remote location, call your
number, press * (not #) to interrupt the greeting (don't wait for the
greeting to finish) and it will ask you to enter your password.
Can't you also use 446-MAIL (6245) to access your Eastlink voicemail from
any phone?
Donna Whitman
2006-11-11 17:13:10 UTC
Permalink
On Thu, 09 Nov 2006 23:01:27 GMT, "news"
Post by news
*99 is what you do now for eastlink its new
That's what you do to check your messages from home and it's not new.
It's in the instructions that I received when I signed up over 2 years
ago.


Also, when I call 446-6235 from a remote location, it doesn't
recognize my number as an Eastlink number.
Post by news
Post by Steve James
Post by Cape Breton Barbarian
Post by Donna Whitman
Post by Peter
Up until today, I would just dial my own number and pop in the code to check
messages on my landline.
Now I get a busy signal instead of the message box.
Is there another way to check? Am I the only one with this issue today?
I have never been able to do that from a remote location. It only
seems to work on Eastlink number and not an Aliant number that was
carried over.
To check your Eastlink Voice Mail from a remote location, call your
number, press * (not #) to interrupt the greeting (don't wait for the
greeting to finish) and it will ask you to enter your password.
Can't you also use 446-MAIL (6245) to access your Eastlink voicemail from
any phone?
Cape Breton Barbarian
2006-11-10 12:02:24 UTC
Permalink
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slider
2006-11-10 20:11:21 UTC
Permalink
dialing your own number just gets you a busy signal.At least here it does.
Post by Cape Breton Barbarian
Post by Steve James
Post by Cape Breton Barbarian
Post by Donna Whitman
Post by Peter
Up until today, I would just dial my own number and pop in the code to check
messages on my landline.
Now I get a busy signal instead of the message box.
Is there another way to check? Am I the only one with this issue today?
I have never been able to do that from a remote location. It only
seems to work on Eastlink number and not an Aliant number that was
carried over.
To check your Eastlink Voice Mail from a remote location, call your
number, press * (not #) to interrupt the greeting (don't wait for the
greeting to finish) and it will ask you to enter your password.
Can't you also use 446-MAIL (6245) to access your Eastlink voicemail from
any phone?
Yes, but it's quicker and easier to just call your own number, calling
446-MAIL requires you to
enter your area code & number (902)XXX-XXXX then password, so you enter 17
digits before enetering password. When you call your own number you enter
7 digits, * and password. a lot simpler and not as prone to errors.
Donna Whitman
2006-11-11 17:14:04 UTC
Permalink
On Fri, 10 Nov 2006 20:11:21 GMT, "slider"
Post by slider
dialing your own number just gets you a busy signal.At least here it does.
It does if you're calling from home but from elsewhere it works
like a charm!
Post by slider
Post by Cape Breton Barbarian
Post by Steve James
Post by Cape Breton Barbarian
Post by Donna Whitman
Post by Peter
Up until today, I would just dial my own number and pop in the code to check
messages on my landline.
Now I get a busy signal instead of the message box.
Is there another way to check? Am I the only one with this issue today?
I have never been able to do that from a remote location. It only
seems to work on Eastlink number and not an Aliant number that was
carried over.
To check your Eastlink Voice Mail from a remote location, call your
number, press * (not #) to interrupt the greeting (don't wait for the
greeting to finish) and it will ask you to enter your password.
Can't you also use 446-MAIL (6245) to access your Eastlink voicemail from
any phone?
Yes, but it's quicker and easier to just call your own number, calling
446-MAIL requires you to
enter your area code & number (902)XXX-XXXX then password, so you enter 17
digits before enetering password. When you call your own number you enter
7 digits, * and password. a lot simpler and not as prone to errors.
Peter
2006-11-11 23:29:24 UTC
Permalink
Post by Donna Whitman
On Fri, 10 Nov 2006 20:11:21 GMT, "slider"
Post by slider
dialing your own number just gets you a busy signal.At least here it does.
It does if you're calling from home but from elsewhere it works
like a charm!
That method worked great for me when I signed up for eastlink phone service
in June. It just stopped working a few days ago. Not that it matters much
:-)
Post by Donna Whitman
Post by slider
Post by Cape Breton Barbarian
Post by Steve James
Post by Cape Breton Barbarian
Post by Donna Whitman
Post by Peter
Up until today, I would just dial my own number and pop in the code
to
check
messages on my landline.
Now I get a busy signal instead of the message box.
Is there another way to check? Am I the only one with this issue today?
I have never been able to do that from a remote location. It only
seems to work on Eastlink number and not an Aliant number that was
carried over.
To check your Eastlink Voice Mail from a remote location, call your
number, press * (not #) to interrupt the greeting (don't wait for the
greeting to finish) and it will ask you to enter your password.
Can't you also use 446-MAIL (6245) to access your Eastlink voicemail from
any phone?
Yes, but it's quicker and easier to just call your own number, calling
446-MAIL requires you to
enter your area code & number (902)XXX-XXXX then password, so you enter 17
digits before enetering password. When you call your own number you enter
7 digits, * and password. a lot simpler and not as prone to errors.
Donna Whitman
2006-11-11 17:10:56 UTC
Permalink
On Thu, 09 Nov 2006 21:31:01 GMT, "Cape Breton Barbarian"
Post by Cape Breton Barbarian
Post by Donna Whitman
Post by Peter
Up until today, I would just dial my own number and pop in the code to check
messages on my landline.
Now I get a busy signal instead of the message box.
Is there another way to check? Am I the only one with this issue today?
I have never been able to do that from a remote location. It only
seems to work on Eastlink number and not an Aliant number that was
carried over.
To check your Eastlink Voice Mail from a remote location, call your number,
press * (not #) to interrupt the greeting (don't wait for the greeting to
finish) and it will ask you to enter your password.
Hey! It worked! Thanks a bunch.
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