An extra code appended to a telephone number, which automatically goes through to the answer machine or voicemail, so that the caller can just leave a message without the hassle of actually interacting with someone else.
The phone would perhaps ring briefly to let the recipient know that they have recieved a message.-- dbmag9, May 19 2008 I'd use this with chatty people, when there's not time to talk, but I need to tell them something.
Can I also 'go to machine' halfway through a conversation with 'the human' if I should become bored?-- theNakedApiarist, May 19 2008 Like texting, then?-- wagster, May 19 2008 Slightly baked - You can do this on some ansafones, if you know their passkey - my old (1980's?) BT answer machine could do it - Some units come with a remote control (DTMF generator) and have features that let you change recorded messages, and (probably) add a memo. You're right though - this ought to be fully baked by now.-- Dub, May 19 2008 It's baked on some GSM mobile phone nets where it's possible to leave a voicemail for a user without ever callling them.-- 8th of 7, May 19 2008 Baked:voicemail-- Voice, May 19 2008 wagster: No, like 'voicing' them. Somehow texting feels much more informal than calling (not to mention the fact you can only text mobiles at the moment); this bridges the gap.
Voice: The difference is that this code lets you go straight to voicemail, even if the person is around to answer their phone.-- dbmag9, May 20 2008 Baked, they used to call it a "pager".-- Spacecoyote, Dec 25 2008 random, halfbakery