NEW YORK CITY -- APRIL 1 2007 -- ASSOCIATED PRESS -- The annual Panasonic 
telecom products press conference was hosted by Dr. Schlomo ("Sonny") Gaetano, 
chairman of Panasonic's Obata-Hamamura Electrical Laboratories, who is visiting 
the United States from Japan. Dr. Gaetano does not speak English, and his 
introductory remarks were translated into English by Mark Gillespie. Gillespie 
is the newly-appointed Marketing Director of Panasonic's Legacy & Analog 
Products Division, which includes all Panasonic products other than HDTV, 
digital cameras, and BluRay DVD players.

The press conference was held in the Copter Club atop New York's Pan-Am 
Building, a venue used by Panasonic in the early 1970s to announce such new 
technologies as the Liquid Crystal Display and the audio cassette changer.

Speaking to reporters and Wall Street analysts, Gillespie described a new line 
of "One-Button Instruction-Works Almost Normal" voice response phones that will 
be compatible with current Panasonic analog and digital phone systems.


These phones, which are half the width of conventional Panasonic 7700-series 
phones, have just one button, illuminated by a blue LED. There are no 
touch-tone buttons, no line buttons, and no feature keys.


An advanced voice response system, developed by the recently formed 
Panasonic-Motorola-Samsung (PMS) research group, allows the user to choose 
lines, activate features, and dial calls by speaking. The voice response system 
can work with new wide-bandwidth handsets and headsets sourced from 
Plantronics, or a built-in wideband full-duplex speakerphone that uses a new 
chipset from Texas Instruments.


The purpose of the single button is to "toggle" between commands and normal 
conversation; and an LCD display shows the current mode, as well as traditional 
information such as time, date, dialed number, and incoming Caller ID.


An idle phone is normally in the "READY MODE," as indicated in the backlit 
display. To make a call, the user first taps the button and the screen will 
then say "COMMAND MODE." At this time, the user could say, "Line one, Dial one 
two one two five five five one nine one three Extension seven three five four 
Account Code four two six seven," and the LCD would show the chosen line (or 
any line if no line was designated) and the dialing sequence. If the pre-dial 
display shows an error, the user can say "correction" and repeat the dialing 
sequence until the display shows the right information. 


When the display is correct, the user simply taps the button, and the display 
will show "TALK MODE" and the call will be dialed, as with any other phone. If 
the call is answered, either live or by voice mail, the user can speak. If the 
line is busy or unanswered, the user can then tap the button to return to 
command mode, and simply say "re-dial" or "end." The user can also enter 
command mode to issue verbal instructions for hold, transfer, conference,  
volume up or down, etc. A program mode is also available with three quick taps, 
which allows such functions as ring volume adjustment, display language choice, 
and changing color of the display illumination.


Two versions of the phone will be available in early summer, the KX-T7799 for 
use with the Panasonic KX-TA824 and KX-TAW848 systems, and the KX-TDA7699, for 
use with KX-TDA systems. Both phones will incorporate Talking Caller ID, Caller 
IQ, GlobaRange, ROHS, Trisys, TSAPI, ring tone downloads, OU supervision, and 
compatibility with ADT alarm systems; and will work with current DSS/BLF 
consoles.


Initially, the OBI-WAN phones will be English/Spanish/French trilingual, but 
the firmware will permit six more languages to be added in the future. Pricing 
has not been decided, but Gillespie said the phones should sell for less than 
$1,500. 


In a demonstration, a KX-TD7799 tried by Panasonic telecom product sales 
manager Manny Morose misdialed three times before making a successful call. 
When Michael Balsama, Training Director of Panasonic's tech support department, 
tried the phone, it dialed correctly on the first call. Balsama pointed out 
that he had been experimenting with the phone for several days, and voice 
response accuracy increases as the Digital Signal Processor "gets to know" the 
user's voice. Balsama also told the audience that the 2.0 firmware upgrade, 
scheduled for the fall, "will make voice calling almost as fast and accurate as 
tapping buttons;" and second-generation Basic Oral Recognition Algorithm 
Technology will provide phone access security and automated account codes. 


During the question period, Gillespie explained that the phones are not 
regarded as current mainstream products. "These are obviously executive, or 
trophy phones," he explained, "that won't end up on every desk. They will 
appeal to gadget lovers and early adopters of new technology, and will provide 
new freedom for the handicapped. Feedback from the field will help us to refine 
the technology for use in less expensive phones in the future. At some point, 
we may have phones with no buttons at all."


Other new developments include:

 *** New top-of-the-line analog and digital phones incorporating Wireless 
Everything/Works Everywhere technology that allows current Plantronics wireless 
headsets to work with the phones without having to install a remote handset 
lifter.


*** Advanced research into Hydraulic Wave Transmission, which can provide phone 
or data links to distant buildings in a campus environment, by modulating water 
or steam inside plumbing pipes, instead of having to install new cable or rely 
on wireless transmission.


***KX-TD7895, a multi-line proprietary cordless phone with buttons to select 
lines, replacing the KX-TD7896 that lacks line buttons. The unit operates at 
900MHz to avoid interference from wireless networks, and has a three-line 
multi-function display.

The presentation concluded with a recorded fairwell message from outgoing  
Panasonic Corp. of North America President/COO Martin Kono, shown on 
Panasonic's new 144" LCD HDTV. Kono has been dispatched to China by Yoshi 
Yamada, now Chairman/President/CEO/COO/CFO/CIO of Panasonic's African, European 
& Western Hemisphere operations. Kono will be supervising a new three-way joint 
venture in China operated by Matsushita Yeast & Fermented Spirits Asia Ltd,  
Tsingtao Breweries Ltd, and Anheuser Busch Singapore Pte Ltd. 
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