> On 20 Oct 2025, at 16:26, Rich Shepard <[email protected]> wrote: > > On Mon, 20 Oct 2025, Michał Kłeczek wrote: > >> How do you make sure a phone number is not shared by two (or more) >> customers? > > Michal, > > If it's the company's main telephone number then it's shared by all > employees with phones on their desks. If it's a direct number then it > connects to only a single phone. > > Either way it doesn't matter to me. When the person I call is at their desk > my call will either be transferred by the receptionist or directly ring their > phone. > Do you have any means to make sure you didn’t enter the same number for two different companies then? — Michal
- Re: Arrays vs separate tables Adrian Klaver
- Re: Arrays vs separate tables Rich Shepard
- Re: Arrays vs separate tables Ray O'Donnell
- Re: Arrays vs separate tables Rich Shepard
- Re: Arrays vs separate tables Peter J. Holzer
- Re: Arrays vs separate tables Rich Shepard
- Re: Arrays vs separate tables Michał Kłeczek
- Re: Arrays vs separate tables Rich Shepard
- Re: Arrays vs separate tables Michał Kłeczek
- Re: Arrays vs separate tables Rich Shepard
- Re: Arrays vs separate tables Michał Kłeczek
- Re: Arrays vs separate tables Rich Shepard
- Re: Arrays vs separate tables Michał Kłeczek
- Re: Arrays vs separate tables Ron Johnson
- Re: Arrays vs separate tables Adrian Klaver
- Re: Arrays vs separate tables Rob Sargent
- Re: Arrays vs separate tables Rich Shepard
