This is for a government type end user. They wish to be having an internal meeting and be able to announce something - but require a push to talk button to speak. Thus the meeting can continue with the button released, then they can pause the meeting and push the button and speak more...
Something like that is my understanding.
Currently I have one of the new Ubiquity phones on my desk. There handsets have a mute button, or if you want a "speak" button, but a phone running under Android for government usage might leave some questions unanswered.

If your phones have some functions keys, you'd have a look at the MuteAudio function and map the states to DTMF sequences, which in turn are mapped to the function keys. This makes you rather independent from any hardware and you might adapt the behavior depending on what your clients wishes will finally be, if they ever find out themselves.

What I don't understand is why the normal mute button on most headsets is not 
sufficient.

jg



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