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Exhibit 8 Users Manual | Users Manual | 2.63 MiB | / May 09 2000 | |||
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1 2 3 | Cover Letter(s) | / May 11 2001 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Test Report | / May 11 2001 | ||||||
1 2 3 | ID Label/Location Info | / May 09 2000 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Parts List/Tune Up Info | / May 09 2000 | ||||||
1 2 3 | RF Exposure Info | / May 09 2000 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Attestation Statements | / May 09 2000 | ||||||
1 2 3 | External Photos | / May 09 2000 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Test Report | July 08 2000 / May 09 2000 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Test Report | January 09 2000 / May 09 2000 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Test Report | / May 09 2000 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Internal Photos | / May 09 2000 |
1 2 3 | Exhibit 8 Users Manual | Users Manual | 2.63 MiB | / May 09 2000 |
APPLICANT: MOTOROLA, INC. FCC ID: IHDT56AD1 INSTRUCTION MANUAL A preliminary draft copy of the Users Manual follows:
EXHIBIT 8 Phoenix Wireless Telephone User Guide Draft for FCC Type Approval March 10, 2000 Welcome Welcome to the world of Motorola digital wireless communications from a global leader in communications technology! We are pleased you have chosen the Motorola V wireless phone to keep you connected with ease. All Motorola phones are designed and manufactured to meet Motorolas rigorous specications and world-class quality standards. During development, our testing team took the Motorola phone through rigorous durability tests including temperature, humidity, shock, dust, vibration, and drop testsand the phone still worked!
V We are condent that you and your callers will nd your wireless phone to be a convenient and reliable way to stay in touch. Thank you for choosing a Motorola product and enjoy your new phone!
V 1 Contents Batteries Phone Basics Safety Information Overview
. 10
. 16 Package Content Options . 16 Phone Diagram . 18 Phone Overview . 19 Understanding the Guide . 20
. 22 Storing and Disposing of Batteries . 22 Removing and Attaching Battery Covers . 23 Installing and Removing Batteries . 25 Battery Talk Time and Standby Time . 27 Charging Batteries . 28
. 33 Turning the Phone On and Off . 33 Activating the Phone . 34 Power-Up Display . 34 The External Display . 36 The Indicators . 36 Status Light . 39 Storing the Phone in its Holster . 40 Viewing the Phone Number . 40 Placing a Call . 40 Ending a Call . 41 Redialing a Number . 41 Receiving a Call . 43 Using the Keypad to Enter Text . 45 Controlling the Volume . 48 2 The Menu System Sending and Receiving Calls The Smart Button . 49
. 50 Menu Features . 50 Navigating Through the Menu . 53 Menu Elements . 54
. 59 Menu Features . 60 Dialing Numbers and Characters . 60 Dialing with Speed Dial . 62 Dialing with Turbo Dial . 62 Dialing Numbers from Missed or Recent Calls . 63 Dialing from a Text Message . 66 Adding or Attaching Numbers . 67 Dialing Emergency Calls . 71 Receiving a Basic Call . 72 Receiving Calls with Caller ID . 73 Using Call Waiting . 73
. 76 Menu Features . 76 Receiving a Second Call . 77 Sending and Receiving Data or Fax Calls . 78 Viewing Your Phone Number . 79 Muting a Call . 80 Placing a Call on Hold . 80 Dialing and Entering Numbers . 81 Setting Up a Three-Way Analog Call . 82 Using Digital Conference Call Options . 83 Transferring a Call . 86 Sending Tones . 88 Entering a PIN (Analog) . 88 Viewing Entries . 89 In-Call Features 3 4 Recent Calls Call Forwarding Calls and Messages Using a Speakerphone (Handsfree Mode) . 92
. 93 Menu Features . 93 Tips for the Received Calls List . 93 Tips for the Dialed Calls List . 94 Using the Notepad . 101 Viewing or Resetting Call Timers . 102
. 104 Menu Features . 104 Setting up Call Forwarding . 105 Checking Call Forward Status . 108 Turning Off Call Forwarding . 109
. 112 Menu Features for Calls and Messages . 112 Sending a Text Message . 113 Sending Data and Fax Calls . 118 Receiving a Fax . 120
. 123 Menu Features for Messages . 123 Types of Messages . 124 Receiving New Messages . 124 Text and Information Services Messages . 126 Information Services and Text Message Inboxes . 138 VoiceMail Messages . 159 Quicknotes . 161 The Outbox . 165 The Drafts Folder . 170 Synchronizing Messages with PIM Software . 175 Checking Memory and Cleaning Up All Messages . 176 Troubleshooting . 178 Messages Phone Status Initial Setup
. 180 Menu Features . 180 Displaying Your Phone Number . 181 Displaying Credit Information . 181 Displaying and Changing Your Active Phone Number . 182 Changing the Current Phone Line . 183 Displaying the Battery Charge Level . 185
. 186 Menu Features . 187 Changing the Time and Date . 187 Setting the Phonebook for One-Touch Dialing . 191 Adjusting Automatic Redial . 192 Adjusting the Display Backlight . 193 Adjusting the Status Light . 194 Changing the Zoom Setting . 194 Changing Scrolling Behavior . 195 Turning Animation On and Off . 196 Setting a Language Preference . 197 Setting Battery Charge Conservation Preferences . 198 Adjusting the DTMF Setting . 198 Master Reset . 199 Master Clear . 200
. 202 Menu Features . 202 Setting Up In-Call Timers . 202 Turning Answer Options On or Off . 205 Turning Call Waiting On or Off . 207
. 208 Menu Features . 209 Locking and Unlocking Your Phone . 209 Using Lock/Security Features In-Call Settings 5 6 Phonebook Ring and Vibrate Features Locking and Unlocking the Keypad . 214 Restricting Access to Applications . 216 Restricting Calls . 218 Changing Passwords . 219
. 222 Menu Features . 223 Selecting a Ring/Vibration Type . 223 Changing the Ring Volume . 224 Selecting a Ring/Vibration for a Specic Event . 225 Selecting a Reminder . 226 Changing Keypad Volume . 226
. 228 Menu Features . 229 Making the Most of Memory . 229 Fields in Phonebook Entry Forms . 230 Storing Phonebook Entries . 231 Calling Phonebook Entries . 237 Editing/Deleting Phonebook Entries . 239 Adding or Attaching Numbers Before Calling . 244 Copying Phonebook Entries to a SIM Card . 244 Checking Phonebook Capacity . 249 Synchronization with PIM Software . 250 Phonebook Setup . 251 Troubleshooting . 254
. 256 Menu Features . 256 Help for Setting Shortcuts . 257 Setting Navigation Shortcuts . 258 Setting Voice Shortcuts . 262 Shortcut Setup Errors . 266 Editing Shortcuts . 268 Shortcuts The Datebook Personal Options Deleting Shortcuts . 270 Using Shortcuts . 273
. 277 Menu Features . 277 Reordering the Main Menu . 277 Changing the Idle Functions of the Smart and Soft Keys 278 Changing the Wake-up Greeting . 280 Changing the Phones Idle Banner . 281 Changing Quick Dial Numbers . 282
. 284 Menu Features . 285 Using the Datebook Menu . 285 Datebook Views . 286 Storing a New Event . 290 Editing Events . 297 Copying Events . 299 Deleting Events . 300 Changing the Datebook Setup . 303 Event Reminders . 306
. 309 Menu Features . 309 Calling the Quick Dial Number . 310
. 313 Viewing the VoiceNotes List . 313 Playing Back a VoiceNote . 315 The Playback Screen . 315 Using the VoiceNotes Menu . 317 Viewing VoiceNote Recording Instructions . 318 Recording a VoiceNote . 320 Quick Dial Using VoiceNotes 7 8 The Browser Hands-Free Use Locking/Unlocking a VoiceNote . 321 Deleting a VoiceNote Entry . 323 Deleting All VoiceNotes . 325 Checking VoiceNotes Memory Capacity . 326
. 328 Menu Features . 328 Setting Automatic Answer . 329 Setting Automatic Hands-Free . 329 Setting the Power-Off Delay . 330 Setting the Phone Charge Time . 331
. 333 Menu Features . 334 Starting a Browser Session . 334 Navigating the Browser . 337 Displaying Content . 338 Placing Calls in an Active Browser Session . 343 Ending Calls in an Active Browser Session . 345 Running the Browser in the Background . 345
. 349 Menu Features . 349 Viewing the Currently Registered Network . 350 Displaying Available Networks . 350 Registering on a Network . 352 Finding a New Network . 352 Finding a Public Network . 355 Changing Network Setup Values . 355 Changing Network Search Types . 358 Setting Service Tones . 360 Setting the Call Drop Alert . 361
. 363 Interactive Services Network Services Infrared Connections Menu Features . 363 Starting an Interactive Service . 364 Recognizing Error Conditions . 369 Interacting with a Service . 370
. 376 Menu Features . 376 Establishing an Infrared Connection . 376
. 378
. 381
. 386
. 403 Accessories Troubleshooting Glossary Patent Information 9 Safety Information Important:
wireless handheld phone. Read this information before using your Exposure to Radio Frequency Signals Your wireless handheld portable telephone is a low power radio transmitter and receiver. When it is ON, it receives and also sends out radio frequency (RF) signals. In August 1996, The Federal Communications Commission
(FCC) adopted RF exposure guidelines with safety levels for handheld wireless phones. Those guidelines are consistent with safety standards previously set by both U.S. and international standards bodies:
American National Standards Institute (ANSI) IEEE. C95. 1-1992 National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurement (NCRP). Report 86 International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection (ICNIRP) 1996 Ministry of Health (Canada), Safety Code 6 Those standards were based on comprehensive and periodic evaluations of the relevant scientic literature. For example, over 120 scientists, engineers, and physicians from universities, government health agencies, and industry reviewed the available body of research to develop the ANSI Standard (C95.1). 10 The design of your phone complies with the FCC guidelines
(and those standards). For additional information concerning exposure to radio frequency signals, see the statement by the FDA at the end of this user guide. To maintain compliance with FCC RF exposure guidelines, if you wear a handset on your body, use the Motorola-
supplied or approved carrying case, holster, or other body-
worn accessory. If you do not use a body-worn accessory, ensure the antenna is at least one inch (2.5 centimeters) from your body when transmitting. Use of non-Motorola accessories may violate FCC RF exposure guidelines. Antenna Care Use only the supplied or an approved replacement antenna. Unauthorized antennas, modications, or attachments could damage the phone and may violate FCC regulations. Phone Operation Normal Operation Hold the phone as you would any other telephone, with the antenna pointed up and over your shoulder. Tips on Efcient Operation Observe the following guidelines to operate your phone most efciently. Extend your antenna fully, if applicable. Do not touch the antenna unnecessarily when the phone is in use. Contact with the antenna affects call Safety Information 11 quality and may cause the phone to operate at a higher power level than otherwise needed. Batteries Caution:
All batteries can cause property damage, injury, or burns if a conductive material, such as jewelry, keys or beaded chains, touches exposed terminals. The material may complete an electrical circuit and become quite hot. To protect against such unwanted current drain, exercise care in handling any charged battery, particularly when placing it inside your pocket, purse, or other container with metal objects. When the battery is detached from the phone, your batteries are packed with a protective battery cover; please use this cover for storing your batteries when not in use. Driving Check the laws and regulations on the use of wireless telephones in the areas where you drive. Always obey them. Observe the following guidelines when using your phone while driving. Give full attention to driving--driving safely is your rst responsibility. Use hands-free phone operation, if available. Pull off the road and park before making or answering a call if driving conditions so require. Electronic Devices Most modern electronic equipment is shielded from RF signals. However, certain equipment may not be shielded against the RF signals from your wireless phone. 12 Safety Information Pacemakers The Health Industry Manufacturers Association recommends that a minimum separation of six inches (6") be maintained between a handheld wireless phone and a pacemaker to avoid potential interference with the pacemaker. These recommendations are consistent with the independent research by and recommendations of Wireless Technology Research. Persons with pacemakers:
should ALWAYS keep the phone more than six inches from their pacemaker when the phone is turned ON should not carry the phone in a breast pocket should use the ear opposite the pacemaker to minimize the potential for interference should turn the phone OFF immediately if you have any reason to suspect that interference is taking place Hearing Aids Some digital wireless phones may interfere with some hearing aids. In the event of such interference, you may want to consult your hearing aid manufacturer to discuss alternatives. Other Medical Devices If you use any other personal medical device, consult the manufacturer of your device to determine if it is adequately shielded from external RF energy. Your physician may be able to assist you in obtaining this information. Safety Information 13 Turn your phone OFF in health care facilities when any regulations posted in these areas instruct you to do so. Hospitals or health care facilities may be using equipment that could be sensitive to external RF energy. Vehicles RF signals may affect improperly installed or inadequately shielded electronic systems in motor vehicles. Check with the manufacturer or its representative regarding your vehicle. You should also consult the manufacturer of any equipment that has been added to your vehicle. Posted Facilities Turn your phone OFF in any facility where posted notices so require. Aircraft Switch OFF your phone before boarding an aircraft. Airline regulations prohibit using your phone while in the air. Check and comply with the policy of your airline regarding the use of your phone while the aircraft is on the ground. Blasting Areas To avoid interfering with blasting operations, turn your phone OFF when in a blasting area or in areas posted:
Turn off two-way radio. Obey all signs and instructions. Potentially Explosive Atmospheres Turn your phone OFF, do not remove your battery when you are in any area with a potentially explosive atmosphere, and obey all signs and instructions. Sparks from your 14 Safety Information battery in such areas could cause an explosion or re resulting in bodily injury or even death. Areas with a potentially explosive atmosphere are often but not always clearly marked. They include: fueling areas such as gasoline stations; below deck on boats; fuel or chemical transfer or storage facilities; areas where fuel odors are present (for example, if a gas/propane leak occurs in a car or home); areas where the air contains chemicals or particles, such as grain, dust, or metal powders; and any other area where you normally would be advised to turn off your vehicle engine. For Vehicles Equipped with an Air Bag An air bag inates with great force. Do NOT place objects, including both installed or portable wireless equipment, in the area over the air bag or in the air bag deployment area. If in-vehicle wireless equipment is improperly installed and the air bag inates, serious injury could result. US021600 Safety Information 15 Overview Package Content Options Your digital wireless phone typically comes equipped with a charger and at least one battery. A large selection of accessory options can customize your wireless package for maximum performance and portability. Below is a sampling of the different package options. Note:
pictured. Your phone and accessories may not look exactly as Illustration to come Lithium Polymer Battery Illustration to come Headset Motorola Telephone 16 Illustration to come Illustration to come Desktop Charger
(AC Adapter required) Holster Illustration to come Desktop Charger
(AC Adapter required) Overview 17 VibraCall Alert Indicator Battery Level Indicator Power/Status Indicator Voice Key Alphanumeric Keypad Microphone Accessory Connector Port Overview 18 Phone Diagram Earpiece Icon Indicators Signal Strength Indicator Headset Jack Volume Keys Smart Key Power On/Off Key 3 6 9 1 4 7 2 5 8 0 Overview 19 Indicates the strength of your Ultra-compact phone speaker. Connects an optional headset. Provides status information on The upper and lower volume keys can Use the Smart key to recall information from Phone Overview See Phone Diagram on page 18 for an illustration of the components described below. Earpiece Headset Jack Power/Status Indicator the current type of service and message status. Signal Strength Indicator phones connection with the local wireless system. Volume Keys adjust keypad, earpiece, and ringer volume. Smart Key memory, place and end calls, select menu features, and toggle features on and off. The symbol in your display represents the Smart key. Voice Key or to record a voice name for a phonebook entry. Icon Indicators digital, in use, in building, no service, message waiting, and voice message waiting indicators. Battery Level Indicator remaining in your battery. VibraCall Alert Indicator the ringer and VibraCall alert. Microphone Accessory Connector Port an external power supply and vehicular and optional accessories. Use the voice key to record a VoiceNote memo Positioned for convenient conversation. Displays various indicators such as Indicates the on/off status of Provides the connections for Show the amount of charge Special Keys P O N The power key turns the phone on and off The send key places or answers calls The end key ends phone calls M The menu key enters the menu system S The scroll key scrolls through memory entries and menu features, and moves the cursor when entering names or messages
and
The soft keys perform context-sensitive functions as indicated by prompts in the bottom line of the display. The - (left soft key) usually returns to a previous menu or exits the menu system. The + (right soft key) usually selects an item or conrms an action. Understanding the Guide Key Presses Key presses are represented in this guide using symbols so that you may locate and use the required sequence quickly. A sequence of key presses may be shown as follows:
0 1 8 This means you should press 1 followed by 0 and then 8, in sequence, not simultaneously. 20 Overview Prompts and Messages Your phone responds to key presses by displaying either a prompt that guides you to the next action or a message conrming that your action is complete. Prompts and messages are represented in this guide in LCD style, for example: Reset Timer. Shortcuts and Tips In the margins of your guide are shortcuts and useful tips to improve your phones performance. Overview 21 Batteries Your digital phone uses Lithium Polymer batteries. In this chapter, you will learn how to:
remove and attach the cover to the battery store and dispose of batteries charge batteries using the internal charger and the interpret battery talk time and standby time install and remove batteries desktop charger Storing and Disposing of Batteries To prolong the life of your batteries, do not expose them to temperatures below -10C (14F) or above 45C (113F). Always take your phone with you when you leave your car. To dispose of batteries, check with your local recycling center for a battery recycler near you. Never dispose of batteries in a re. Caution: To prevent injuries or burns, do not allow metal objects to contact or short-circuit the battery terminals. 22 Removing and Attaching Battery Covers Your phones battery is shipped in an uncharged state and tted with a protective cover. Before you can use your phone, you will need to remove the cover and charge the battery. The cover prevents metal objects from contacting the battery terminals, thereby reducing the risk of injury or damage from a battery short circuit. Removing the Battery Cover Press tab Remove cover 1. Hold one end of the battery cover in one hand. Press down on the tab at the opposite end of the cover with your other hand. 2. Rotate the cover away from the battery. Illustration to come Attaching the Battery Cover Insert side 1. Insert one end of the battery into the cover, so that the battery ts the notches on the cover. Batteries 23 Click latch 2. Push down the other side of the battery until it clicks into place. Illustration to come 24 Batteries Installing and Removing Batteries Installing the Battery Remove cover 1. Use your thumb to slide the release latch toward the base of the phone. 2. With your other hand, rotate the cover away from the phone. 2 1 Insert battery 3. Insert the battery, printed arrows rst, into the top edge of the battery compartment. 4. Push down the bottom edge of the battery until it snaps into place. 3 4 Batteries 25 Replace cover 5. Insert the tabs of the battery cover into the top edge of the battery compartment. 6. Rotate the battery cover down until it snaps into place. 5 6 Removing the Battery Turn off phone 1. Press P to turn off your phone. Remove cover 2. Use your thumb to slide the release latch toward the base of the phone. 3. With your other hand, rotate the cover away from the phone. 3 2 26 Batteries Remove battery 4. Push the battery toward the top of the phone until the bottom edge comes clear. 5. Rotate the bottom edge of the battery up and lift the battery from the phone. 5 4 Replace cover 6. Insert the tabs of the battery cover into the top edge of the battery compartment. 7. Rotate the battery cover down until it snaps into place. 6 7 Battery Talk Time and Standby Time Talk time refers to the time you can talk on your phone before the battery is fully discharged. Standby time is the time that your phone is on but not used for talking. Batteries 27 B Empty J Low H Medium F High Tip: If you talk on the phone while charging your battery, charging takes more time. To place the phone in charger-only mode, turn off the phone by pressing P once. Notes:
Talking on the phone uses more power than leaving it idle. The more power you use for talking, the less you will have for standby time, and vice versa. Talk time and standby time can vary, depending on the battery used, network conguration, signal strength, and the features selected. Charging Batteries Using the Internal Charger Your phone has a built-in battery charger. Using either the AC or vehicle power adapter, you can plug the handset directly into a power source to charge any attached batteries. You can still place and answer calls while using the internal charger. To place the phone in charger-only mode, turn off the phone by pressing P once. To charge:
Attach adapter to phone 1. Plug the AC adapter or vehicle power adapter into the accessory connector on the bottom of your phone as shown, with the release tab facing up. 28 Batteries Illustration to come Plug in adapter 2. Plug the power adapter into an AC electrical outlet. or Plug the vehicle power adapter into the cigarette lighter opening in the vehicle. Note: In some cars, the ignition must be on to use the vehicles accessory power. In both cases, a beep tone sounds, and the battery icon ashes. Using the Desktop Charger You can use the desktop charger to charge batteries while they are attached to your phone, or you can charge a battery separately. To charge:
Attach adapter to charger 1. Plug the AC adapter into the back of the charger, with the release tab facing up. Batteries 29 Illustration to come Plug in adapter Insert phone and/or battery 2. Plug the power adapter into an AC electrical outlet. 3. With battery attached, place the phone into the chargers front pocket. Optionally, place an additional battery into the chargers back pocket. Note: When the phone is charging, the battery level indicator ashes. When the battery is fully charged, the indicator stops ashing. If your phone cannot charge the battery, this indicator does not appear. Desktop Charger Indicator Lights The front LED light for charging a battery attached to the phone in the chargers front pocket is:
Yellow The phone is inserted. Check phone for battery charge status. The rear LED lights for charging a battery in the rear pocket are:
Red The battery is rapid charging. Flashing yellow The battery is waiting for its charge. 30 Batteries Green The battery is charged over 90% of its capacity and can be used. Another hour of charging will bring it up to 100% capacity. Flashing red Either the battery or the power supply is damaged and cannot be charged. Battery Charging Tips To ensure that you enjoy maximum battery life and use your battery to its fullest capacity:
Always use Motorola approved battery chargers. For the best results, charge Lithium Polymer batteries using the EP Desktop Charger or your phones internal charger. The battery should be at or near room temperature when charging. New batteries or batteries that have been stored for long periods of time may not rapid charge properly. In these instances, the battery requires an overnight charge. When you do not intend to use a battery for a while, store it uncharged in a cool, dark, dry place, such as a refrigerator. Over extended periods of time, batteries gradually wear down and require longer charging times. This is normal. If you charge your battery regularly and notice a decrease in talk time or an increase in charging time, then it is probably time to purchase a new battery. Batteries 31 Expert Performance EP Charging System The Expert Performance EP Charging System enables your phones built-in charger to communicate with installed batteries and tailor its charging cycle to optimize performance. If you see Invalid Battery when you power up the phone, the built-in charger is not able to communicate with the battery and cannot charge it. There are several possible reasons for this message. The most likely one is that the battery is not a Motorola original, and it does not have the appropriate EP technology. We recommend that you use only Motorola original batteries and accessories and that you store your batteries in their protective covers when not in use. 32 Batteries Phone Basics This chapter introduces you to the basic features of your new phone. It describes how to:
read the displays turn the phone on and off activate your phone read the status line indicators store the phone in its holster view the phone number place a call end a call control the volume use the smart button redial a number receive a call Turning the Phone On and Off To turn the phone on and off:
On Off Press the P button. Press the P power button again. 33 Activating the Phone The rst time you turn on your phone, you may see one of the following messages: Press to Activate or Activation required. If you do not see one of these displays, your phone was activated at the time of purchase, and you may skip the steps below. If you do see one of the activation messages, complete the activation procedure as follows:
Place Call 1. Press O to place the call. or Press and hold the smart key on the left side of your phone until you hear a high tone. Once the connection is made, activation begins. Help?
2. If necessary, contact your service provider for further assistance. Power-Up Display When you turn on the phone, it plays a single power-up tone and displays an animated Motorola wake-up greeting for two seconds. 9 34 Phone Basics Afterwards, the phone displays a customer wake-up greeting for two seconds. Safety: Your Most Important Call If the phone detects an invalid battery, it displays the following message for two seconds:
Invalid Battery K Next, the phone scans the area for a network signal and displays the message: Searching for Network. If the phone does not nd an appropriate network, it displays the message Registering every two seconds until a network is found. When the phone has completed its power up sequence and is ready to use, it displays the Ready message. Number Display Your phone can be activated with two unique phone numbers. If more than one number is programmed, the phone displays the active number whenever it is turned on. To change the active number, see Changing the Current Phone Line on page XX. Power Saver Mode If you travel outside the range of available networks, your phone continues to search for a signal. To save power, it Phone Basics 35 stops searching ever few minutes and displays a Power Save message. Your phone begins searching again in a minute or two. Press any key to immediately resume searching. Standby Mode Your phone may turn off the backlight to save power when in standby mode. The backlight comes back on whenever you press a key. The External Display Add information on viewing the external display to nd out information on caller id, voice mail, time and date, call forwarding status, and alert status. The Indicators Signal Strength (1) The Signal Strength indicator is one of the status icons at the top of the display. It shows the strength of your phones connection with the local wireless system. A strong signal increases your ability to place and receive calls. Weak signal strength can occur at the edge of a wireless service area or in buildings, tunnels, and during bad weather. Weak signal strength can interfere with or block your ability to place and to receive calls and can affect your reception. v Strong w Weak 36 Phone Basics B Empty J Low H Medium F High W Z p Battery Level Indicator (2) The Battery Level indicator at the top of the display shows the amount of charge left in your battery. The more segments visible, the greater the charge. When the battery level is low and only a few minutes of talk time remain, your phone signals you in three ways:
Low Battery appears in the rst line of the display. No bar segments are highlighted. A short tone plays periodically. Clock (3) Your phone displays the current time and date when it is on a digital network. You can set your clock for either 12 or 24 hour format. Digital or Analog Indicator (4) The digital icon appears when you are receiving a digital signal. The analog icon appears if you receive an analog signal. In Use Indicator (5) The In Use indicator appears when a call is in progress. Roam Indicator (6) The roam indicator appears when your phone accesses a wireless system outside your home network. When you leave your wireless service area, your phone roams or seeks another service area. Phone Basics 37 w P No Service Indicator (7) If you travel beyond the range of wireless service, the No Service indicator appears to let you know that you cannot place or receive a call. Message Waiting Indicator (8) The Message Waiting indicator is displayed when the phone receives a text message. (This is an optional, network and subscription-dependent feature that is not available in all areas.) O Voice Message Waiting Indicator (9) The Voice Message Waiting indicator is displayed when your voicemail has received a message.(This is an optional, network and subscription-dependent feature that is not available in all areas.) Alphanumeric Display (10) Text and number messages appear in the middle of the phones display. Text and numbers show keypad input, information recalled from memory, and other messages. Alert Indicators (11) Your phone displays the current selected alert. The default alert is a ringer. h Ringer onYour phones ringer is turned on and vibrate alert is off. j Vibrate onYour vibrate alert is on and ringer is turned off. 38 Phone Basics g Vibrate then ringBoth ring and vibrate alerts are turned on. f Ring then vibrateBoth ring and vibrate alerts are turned on. i SilentAll of your phones tones are silenced and the vibrate alert is turned on. e Vibrate with all tones off Your vibrate alert is on. d All Alerts offBoth vibrate and ring alerts are turned off. Status Light You can check the status light on top of the phone for status information on your current type of service and message status. The messages can include voice mails and messages, or the receipt of recent calls. (This is an optional, network and subscription-dependent feature that is not available in all areas.) The status light changes color and ashes or remains on to indicate different states. Status lights are as follows:
alternating red and green incoming call or message ashing green In Service, home-type system slow ashing yellow no service fast ashing yellow roaming, non-home type system Phone Basics 39 Storing the Phone in its Holster To slip your phone into its holster, make sure the battery is facing the outside of the holster. Then clip the holster onto a belt, purse or briefcase. The holster has been designed for your convenience and is not meant to secure your phone under all circumstances. Viewing the Phone Number Placing a Call To place a call:
Turn on 1. Press and hold P until the display appears and you hear an audible alert. Enter number 2. Enter the number you want to call, for example: 555-1212. Press -to erase one digit at a time if you make a mistake. Press and hold - to clear the entire entry. You can also recall a previously dialed or stored number. See Using Phone Memory for details on storing or recalling numbers. 40 Phone Basics Place call 1. Press O to place the call. or Press and hold the smart key on the left side of the phone until you hear a high tone. The phone sounds a single-tone alert
(if the keypad tones are turned on) and displays Dialing 555-1212. 2. You can dial phone numbers with up to 32 digits, but only the last 24 digits appear in the display. Ending a Call To end a call:
Press N or Press and hold the smart key until you hear a second tone. The display reads *smart key* To End Call. Press *smart key* again to end the call. Redialing a Number Automatic Redial You may not be able to complete a call if the wireless system is busy. When this happens, the system transmits a fast busy signal, and the phone displays one of the following messages :
Call Failed. Press O to redial. Phone Basics 41 WIth Automatic Redial, your phone repeats the call attempt over the next four minutes. When the call goes through, your phone rings or vibrates until the other party answers. To activate Automatic Redial:
Auto Redial To redial the busy number, press O or Press and hold the smart key. In either case, Calling is displayed. If you hear an ordinary busy signal, the phone number you dialed is busy. Hang Up 1. Press N to hang up. Redial 2. Press the smart key or O to redial the busy number. Dialing 5551234 is displayed. Recent Calls Your phone keeps track of the last ten numbers that you have dialed. You can display this list and select a number to call. Display 1. Press M. Press S to scroll down to Recent Calls. Press +. 2. Scroll down and select either Received Calls or Dialed Calls. Press +. 3. Review the list and select a phone number. Press O. 42 Phone Basics Review Call 4. Press S to scroll through the last calls. The display includes the time, date and phone number. 5. Press O or press and hold *smart key*
to call the number in your display. The Calling message is displayed. Receiving a Call Answering a Call Your phone must be turned on to receive calls. When the phone rings or vibrates, press O to answer the call. Unanswered Call Indicator When you cannot answer a call, your phone keeps a record and a count of your unanswered calls and displays a message like :
2 Missed Calls 1 Unknown Call To view and place missed calls:
View list 1. Press +. The received calls list is displayed. 2. Press S to scroll through the list. Select any call that you wish to return. Phone Basics 43 Place call 3. Press O. The number is dialed and the call processed for you. To clear the display, press N. Caller ID Caller ID is an optional feature that allows you to see who is calling before you answer. Contact your service provider for information about availability. If the callers name is recorded in your phone book, the name is displayed. If the name is not in your phone book, the callers phone number is displayed. If you prefer to always see the callers phone number, see Turn Number Preference On. Your phone stores IDs for the last sixteen callers. See xxx to learn how to review the stored Caller ID list. Canceling the Ring or Vibrate Alert Press either of the volume keys while the phone is ringing to cancel the ring or vibrate alert. The ringer or vibrator remains off while the current call lasts. The caller still hears ringing, and you can still answer the call by pressing O. Call Waiting Call Waiting is an optional service available through many service providers. If you subscribe to call waiting, you may 44 Phone Basics hear a tone while you are on a call. This tone indicates that you have received a second call. To answer the second call:
Answer 1. Press O to answer the new call and place the rst call on hold. or End and Answer 1. Press N to end the current call. Your phone then rings or vibrates to signal the new call. 2. Press O to answer the new call. Using the Keypad to Enter Text When you want to add names to your phonebook or send text messages, you can use your phones keypad to enter letters and other characters. Each number key represents several letters, which you can cycle through by pressing the key repeatedly. For instance, 2 represents a, b, c, and 2. Press 2 once to enter the character a, twice to enter the character b , and three times to enter c. Follow these steps:
Press key once 1. When you press 2 once, the letter a appears with a ashing block cursor highlighting the letter. Phone Basics 45 Continue pressing keys Toggle case Enter character 2. As long as the block cursor highlights the letter, press 2 a second time to see the b, a third time to see the c, a fourth time to see the 2, a fth time to see the a again, and so on. 3. Press S to toggle between upper or lower case characters. 4. When the block cursor highlights your selected character, wait for two seconds. The block cursor disappears, and a thin I-beam cursor appears next to the letter. 5. Enter the next character. The following table shows you what letters each key represents, and how many times you have to press the key for each letter:
Number of key presses Key 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 1 2 1 1 1 0 1 3
= > < # (repeat)
1 4
) 1 5 0 x
1 ? !
0 + -
1 . 2 a b c 2 (repeat) 3 d e f 3 (repeat) 4 g h i 4 (repeat) 5 j 5 (repeat) l 6 m n o 6 (repeat k 46 Phone Basics y z 9 (repeat) s 7 (repeat) u v 8 (repeat) 7 q r 8 t 9 w x The following table explains the roles other keys play while you enter text. Key
* Moves the I-beam cursor one character to the left. If the cursor is a block cursor, it changes to an I-beam cursor. Explanation
# Moves the I-beam cursor one character to the right. If the cursor is a block cursor, it changes to an I-beam cursor. Moves the I-beam cursor up or down one line in the message. If the cursor is a block cursor, the scroll buttons change the case of the highlighted character. S
- Cancels the message eld and returns you to the text message form before you enter any characters Deletes the character to the left of the cursor after you have entered a character.
+ Takes you to the QuickNote menu, which lets you select from a list of pre-written messages, before you enter any characters. See Sending a Message With a QuickNote on page 113. Accepts the message and returns to the text message form after you have entered a character. Phone Basics 47 Controlling the Volume Use the upper and lower volume keys to adjust earpiece, keypad, and ringer volume. When you press these keys, the phones speaker demonstrates the current volume level. This audio feedback is called keypad tones. For more advanced volume settings, refer to Ring and Vibrate Features. Earpiece Volume You can adjust the earpiece volume only during a call. Press the up volume key to increase earpiece volume. Press the down volume key to decrease volume. A volume meter in the display indicates the volume level you have selected. Ringer Volume You can adjust the ringer volume when you are not on a call. Press the up volume key to increase ringer volume, and press the down volume key to decrease volume. A volume meter in the display indicates the volume level you have selected. Keypad Volume Refer to Changing Keypad Volume for details on adjusting the keypad volume. 48 Phone Basics The Smart Button The smart button is the lower key on the left side of the phoneeasy to feel, easy to nd, and easy to use. Use the Smart Button to place and end calls, select menu items, select items in a display, toggle features on and off, and open your phonebook. Place and End Calls Use the smart button to place or to end a call as described in Placing a Call on page 40 and Ending a Call on page 41. Select Menu or Display Items When you access the menu system, you can press the smart button to select a menu or display item. Toggle Features On and Off Some of the phones features toggle on and off. Use the smart button to select the on or off setting of a feature. Open Your Phonebook Before you make a call, press the smart button to open your phonebook. Press S to scroll to the phone number you want, the press *smart button* again to place the call. You can set up your smart button to open an application other than the phonebook. Refer to Personalizing Phone Display Items. Phone Basics 49 The Menu System You can access many of the features in your phone through a menu system. This chapter provides a table of menu features and shows you how to navigate through the menus. It also introduces you to the menu elements, including lists, forms, and meters. Menu Features The menu is the gateway to accessing phone features. This section provides a list and description of the menu features. Menu Name Features Submenu Features Recent Calls Service Dial Fixed Dial Phonebook Received Calls Dial Calls Notepad Call Time Call Cost Service Dial Application Fixed Dial Application Phonebook Application 50 Datebook Quick Dial Radio Messages Datebook Application Quick Dial Application Radio Application Message Application SMS Interactive SMS Interactive Application Shortcuts VoiceNotes Shortcuts Application VoiceNotes Application mymotorola.com mymotorola.co m Application SIM Apps SIM Application Browser World TIme Calculator Browser Application World Time Application Calculator Application The Menu System 51 Settings Ring/Vibrate Call Forward Phone Status Alert Detail Voice Calls Fax Calls Data Calls Cancel Status My Tel. No. Credit Available Credit Info PhoneLine 1/2 Signal Strength Battery Meter Other Information Connection IRDA Link In Call Setup In Call Timer Call Cost Setup My Caller ID Talk & Fax Answer Options Call Waiting 52 The Menu System Settings Security Other Settings Phone Lock Lock Keypad Lock Application Talk Secure Fixed Dial Restrict Calls Call Barring User Group SIM PIN New Passwords Personalize Initial Setup Network Car Settings Head-set Note: Some features are optional network and subscription-dependent features that are not available in all areas. Contact your service provider for availability. Navigating Through the Menu provides a detailed example of how to navigate through the menu. The Menu System 53 Navigate through the menu system as follows:
M Press the menu key to enter the menu display.
- + The soft keys are the two unmarked keys at the top of your keypad. S Press the scroll key to move up or down through menu items. When scrolling through menus, you can also use the keys
* and #. Menu Elements Menu elements include lists, forms, and meters. Lists Lists present menu items, such as tasks or data items that you can select. When you see a list, you can look at the entries and select an item. List Title All lists begin with a title that identies the information contained in the list. Scrollbar If a list contains three or more entries, a scrollbar appears on the right side of the display. The scrollbar indicates that more items are included in the list than are currently displayed on the screen. 54 The Menu System The scrollbar changes, depending on where you are in the list. If unseen items are above the list, the scrollbar contains an up arrow. If unseen items are below a list, the scrollbar contains a down arrow. When you see a scrollbar, press S to move up or down through the list. End of List Indicator Lists can also contain an end of list indicator, such as New Entry, that appears at the bottom of the list. You can often select the end of list indicator to add new entries to the list. Soft Key Function The soft keys are the two unmarked keys at the top of your keypad. Their functions change, but their current function names always appear in the lower corners of the display. The last display line, just below a list, describes the function of the soft keys as they relate to the list. Following is a common use of soft keys:
Key Soft Function Action M M
(left)
(right) Exit Select activate a sub-menu return to a previous menu or exit the list select an item or conrm an action Tip: To move quickly through a list, press the letter or number key for the selection you want. The list moves automatically to your selection. The Menu System 55 Some lists, like lists of messages, contain long text entries. In such cases, the soft keys provide navigation through the message as follows:
Key Soft Function Action
- BACK
+ MORE
+ NEXT
) return to earlier lines in the message ask for more text to go forward through a message ask for the next message when you reach the last line of a message Forms Forms allow you to add or change text or number characters to update information stored in your phone. They appear when you select a menu item to enter or change information, such as a Phonebook entry. You can update any part of the entry using the form. Refer to Adding Names and Numbers on page xxx to learn how to enter data. Begin 1. When you begin using a new or empty form, press - to CANCEL; press
+ to CHANGE. 56 The Menu System Enter letters Enter numbers Use soft keys 2. When you enter character data, such as letters for a name, in an empty eld, the ashing cursor appears on the right. 3. When you enter numbers, such as for a phone number, the ashing cursor appears on the left. 4. While youre entering data, navigate as follows:
Press - to DELETE. Press + to accept the data (OK). After youve entered data, the soft keys change:
Press - to remove or CLEAR the data that is entered. Press + to accept the data (OK). Add lines 5. When you complete and accept a line of data, the form automatically advances to the next line. Continue entering information into the form. Finish 6. When you have entered all the required information, the soft keys change again:
Press - to accept the entry (DONE). Press + to CHANGE the entry. The Menu System 57 Meters Meters provide measurements stored in your phone, such as how much talk time is left in your battery or how strong the signal is from your wireless network. Meters also appear on the display when you need to see or change a volume. You can display a meter by pressing a key. The meter only appears for a few seconds and then disappears. You can also display a meter by going through a menu. In this case, press - to EXIT, and press + to dismiss
(CHANGE) or edit the setting. 58 The Menu System Sending and Receiving Calls Your phone provides several dialing options, from dialing basic numbers to dialing stored numbers joined into a single string. You can also receive basic phone calls and calls with caller ID or call waiting. In this chapter you will learn how to:
dial numbers and special characters dial with Speed Dial and Turbo Dial dial numbers from missed or recent calls, your phonebook, or a text message add or attach stored numbers dial emergency numbers using call waiting receiving calls with caller ID receiving a basic call 59 Menu Features Dialing Attach Number Insert Pause Insert Wait Insert n Send Message Dialing Numbers and Characters The simplest way to dial a number is to enter the number from the idle state and then send it. This section describes how to dial numbers and enter special characters, such as pauses. To dial a number from the idle state:
Dial number 1. Enter the phone number. 2. Press N. The phone displays Calling .
(phone number). 60 Sending and Receiving Calls Inserting Pause, Wait, and n Characters for Calling Cards You can insert the following types of characters, typically for calling card numbers:
Pause character Wait character n character tells your phone to wait for a dened length of time before it dials the next digit in a series tells your phone to wait for an undened length of time before it dials the next digit in a series tells your phone to stop and prompts you for a number before it continues dialing To insert a pause, wait, or n character in a number:
Insert character 1. While dialing, press M. 2. Press S to scroll to Insert Pause, Insert Wait, or Insert n. 3. Press +. The phone displays the special character: p for pause, w for wait, or n for n. Inserting the International Dialing Prex The international dialing prex lets you call from any country without knowing its international access code. Shortcut:
While dialing, press and hold
*. The phone will cycle through p, w, and n. Release the
* when you see the character you want. Sending and Receiving Calls 61 To insert the international dialing prex:
Insert +
1. Before dialing any digits, press and hold 0. The phone displays a +. Dial 2. Enter the number and press N. Dialing with Speed Dial You can dial numbers from your phonebook without viewing them rst. Speed Dial lets you call any phonebook entry just by entering the two-digit index number. To dial with Speed Dial:
Dial number Press the phonebook entrys index number, followed by the N key. The phone displays Calling .
(entry phone number). To see the index numbers for your phonebook entries, refer to Phonebook on page XX. Dialing with Turbo Dial You can dial some numbers from your phonebook with the press of a single key. Turbo Dial lets you call your rst nine phonebook entries (one to nine) just by entering their single-digit index number. 62 Sending and Receiving Calls To dial with Turbo Dial:
Dial number Press and hold the phonebook entrys index number for one second. The phone displays Calling .
(entry phone number). To see the index numbers for your phonebook entries, refer to Phonebook on page XX. Note: Pressing and holding 0 inserts the international dialing prex. Dialing Numbers from Missed or Recent Calls Your phone saves a list of phone numbers from the calls that you recently dialed or received. You can view this list, or even select one of the numbers and instantly place a call. Dialing Missed Calls Your phone tells you when you have missed a calls by displaying X Missed Calls, where X is the number of missed calls. Note: If your answering machine feature answers a call, it is not considered missed. Your display may also tell you that a missed call is one of the following:
Unknown the callers name or number is not available Sending and Receiving Calls 63 Shortcut:
From the missed call dialog, Press and hold the smart key to dial the last missed call. Private the callers name or number is intentionally blocked by the caller or the network If the callers number is not available , you cannot redial the call with this procedure. To dial the number from a missed call:
Dial the number 1. Press the smart key. The phone displays the Received Calls list, with the most recent call selected. Press S to scroll to the number in the list that you want to call. Calls are listed from newest (10) to oldest (1). 2. Press N, or press and hold the smart key to dial the selected number. Note: You can use + in place of the smart key in this procedure. Dialing Recent Calls You can view the last ten calls that you dialed or received by checking the lists under the Recent Calls menu. To view or dial the number from a recent call:
Find the feature Choose dialed /
received 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Recent Calls. 2. Press S to scroll to either Received Calls or Dialed Calls. 3. Press +. The phone displays a list of the last ten calls. 64 Sending and Receiving Calls Dial the number 4. Press S to scroll to the call you want to dial. Calls are listed from newest
(10) to oldest (1). 5. Press + to dial the number of the selected call. Dialing from the Phonebook You can dial the numbers in your phonebook either from the list view or the detail view. To dial a number from your phonebook:
Find the feature Dial the number 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Phonebook. The phone displays the phonebooks list view. If you want to see an entrys details, press S to scroll to the entry and press +. 2. 3. Press S to scroll to the entry you want to call. Icons next to the entries identify the entries for work, home, main, mobiles, faxes, or pagers. 4. Press + to dial the entrys number. Sending and Receiving Calls 65 Dialing from a Text Message Phone numbers can be included in text messages. If you view a text message with an embedded phone number, you can call the number directly. Your phone tells you when you have an incoming text message. Before you open the inbox, you must set it up. See Inbox Setup on page XX. When you see this display, you can go directly to the text message and dial the embedded number, if there is one. Even if your phone is idle, you can open your inbox and dial the embedded numbers in old messages. To view or dial a number from a text message:
From new msg From idle 1. Press +. The phone displays the text message inbox. or Press M and navigate to the feature Text Msgs. The phone displays the text message inbox. 66 Sending and Receiving Calls Use Call Back 2. Press S to scroll to the message you want. Messages are listed from newest to oldest (#1). You can press + to see the full message and the call back number. Press M. The phone displays the Text Message Menu. 3. 4. Press S to scroll to Call Back. 5. Press +. If a message has more than one embedded number with no preferred number, the phone displays a list of all the numbers. Press S to scroll to the number you want and press +. The phone displays Calling...
(phone number). Adding or Attaching Numbers Sometimes you may want to dial a number from your phonebook or recent calls list with a special prex or sufx. If you want to use a prex, you can enter it and then attach a number from your list. If you want to use a sufx, you can select the listed number and then add the sufx. Sending and Receiving Calls 67 Attaching Digits While Dialing This is an easy way to attach digits to the beginning of a number from your phonebook or recent calls list. To attach a number while dialing:
Enter prex Select source 1. Enter the prexthe numbers that precede the number from your phonebook or recent calls list. 2. Press M. 3. Press S to scroll to Attach Number. 4. Press +. The phone displays the attach menu, with options such as phonebook and dialed numbers. 5. Press S to scroll to the source of the number you want to attach. 6. Press +. The phone displays the list of numbers from the source you selected. Attach number 7. Press S to scroll to the entry you want to attach. 8. Press +. 9. The phone displays your prex plus the attached number. You can enter more numbers to add to the end, or press N to dial. 68 Sending and Receiving Calls Attaching Numbers from Your Phonebook or Recent Calls List You can attach two or more numbers stored in your phonebook or recent calls list. To attach numbers in your phonebook or recent calls list:
For Phone-
book For Recent Calls Select rst number 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Phonebook. The phone displays the phonebook list. or Press M and navigate to the feature Dialed Calls or Received Calls. The phone displays the list of recent calls for the type you selected. 2. Press S to scroll to the rst number you want to attach. 3. Press M. 4. Press S to scroll to Attach Number. 5. Press +. The phone displays the attach menu, with options such as phonebook and dialed numbers. Sending and Receiving Calls 69 Select second number 6. Press S to scroll to the source of the second number you want to attach. 7. Press +. The phone displays the list of numbers from the source you selected. 8. Press S to scroll to the second number you want to attach. 9. Press + to attach the number and go to the idle number editor, or press M to attach another number (go to step 4). The phone displays the attached numbers in the idle number editor. 10. Press N to dial. Adding Digits to the End of a Number You can open your phonebook or recent calls list, select a number, and then add digits to the end of the number. To add digits to numbers from your phonebook or recent calls list:
For Phone-
book 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Phonebook. The phone displays the phonebook list. or 70 Sending and Receiving Calls For Recent Calls Press M and navigate to the feature Dialed Calls or Received Calls. The phone displays the list of recent calls for the type you selected. Attach number 2. Press S to scroll to the entry to which you want to attach a number. 3. Press M. 4. Press S to scroll to Add Digits. 5. The phone displays the selected number in the idle number editor. Enter sufx 6. Enter the sufxthe numbers that will follow the number you selected from your list. 7. Press N to dial. Dialing Emergency Calls Your phone stores one or more emergency numbers, which can only be changed by your provider or another authorized technician. You should always know the emergency numbers stored in your phone. To dial an emergency number, simply enter the numbers and press N, just like other number. Emergency numbers are different, because you can dial them even if the phone, keypad, and SIM card are locked. You can also dial them if the SIM card is damaged or missing. Sending and Receiving Calls 71 Refer to your phone provider for questions about the emergency numbers stored in your phone. Receiving a Basic Call When a new call arrives, your phone noties you with a new call dialog and your chosen alert (for example, ring or vibrate). When you receive a call:
Setup Choose answer or Ignore Your phone noties you with a new call dialog and your chosen alert (for example, ring or vibrate). The phone displays information about the caller if:
you subscribe to caller ID service (CLI) the network issues a call waiting ash with information Complete one of the following:
Press N or + to answer the call. or Press O or - to ignore the call (the network handles the call appropriately). or Press and hold O for one second to end the call without forwarding it to voicemail or any other designated number. 72 Sending and Receiving Calls Receiving Calls with Caller ID If you subscribe to caller ID (CLI), your phone usually displays the callers name or number when a new call arrives. If the callers information is not available, the word Private is displayed in place of the information. You can choose to answer or ignore these calls. When you receive a call with no caller ID:
Setup Choose answer or ignore An incoming call with no caller information displays Private in place of the callers information. Complete one of the following:
Press - or O to ignore the call. or Press + or N to answer the call. The phone resumes normal function. Using Call Waiting If you subscribe to call waiting, your phone noties you with a call waiting tone if you receive a second call while you are on another call. You can choose to switch to the other call or not. Note: If you already have an active call and another call on hold, your phone does not notify you of additional incoming calls. Sending and Receiving Calls 73 Call waiting is an optional feature. Contact your service provider for information about availability. Using Call Waiting on an Analog System When a second call arrives on an analog system, complete the following:
Setup Answer the new call While you are on a call, you hear a call waiting tone, and the current call stays active. The phone displays a call waiting dialog that identies the new caller if:
you subscribe to caller ID service (CLI) the network issues a call waiting ash with info If you see this notication, you can press
+ to answer the new call. 1. Press N to switch to the new call and put the current call on hold. or Press O to end the current call and switch to the new call. Switch calls 2. If you put the original call on hold, press + to return to it. 3. Press O to end the current call. Your phone switches to the other call, if present, or returns to the idle state. 74 Sending and Receiving Calls Using Call Waiting on a Digital System When a second call arrives on a digital system:
Setup Answer new call While you are on a call, you hear a call waiting tone, and the current call stays active. The phone displays a call waiting dialog that identies the new caller if your technology supports this feature. 1. Press N or + to switch to the new call and put the current call on hold. You see both calls on your display, with a ashing phone icon next to the active call. or Press O to end the current call and switch to the new call. or Press - to ignore the new incoming call. The network handles the call appropriately. Switch calls 2. If you put the original call on hold, press + to return to it. 3. You can press - to link the two calls into a conference, so that you can talk to both people at the same time. See Conference Calls on pgXX. Press O to end the current call. Sending and Receiving Calls 75 In-Call Features Phone features that are available during an active call are called in-call features. In this chapter you will learn how to:
receive other calls look up your phone number, recent calls, phone book entries, messages, and datebook items put a call on mute or hold dial/enter numbers, tones, and PIN numbers set up a three-way or conference call use a speakerphone (handsfree mode) transfer calls Menu Features Call Menu Call/Dial Menu My Tel. Number Hold Mute/Unmute Talk to One**
Transfer New Call Dialed Calls Received Calls Messages Datebook Spkrphone On/Off*
My Tel. Number Hold Mute/Unmute Send Tones Attach Number Hide ID/Show ID Insert Pause Insert Wait Insert n Send Message 76 2 Calls Menu 2 Calls/Dial Menu Spkrphone On/Off*
Mute/Unmute Transfer Phonebook Dialed Calls Received Calls Messages Datebook Switch Link Spkrphone On/Off*
Mute/Unmute Send Tones Attach Number Hide ID/Show ID Insert Pause Insert Wait Insert n Send Message
* appears only if a speakerphone is connected to the phone
** appears only if a conference call is in progress Receiving a Second Call When you receive a second call while you are already on the line, complete the following steps:
Setup When a second call arrives, your phone noties you with a new call dialog and an in-call tone. The phone displays information about the caller if either:
you subscribe to caller ID service
(CLI) the network issues a call waiting ash with information In-Call Features 77 Choose answer or Ignore Press N or + to answer the call. or Press O or - to ignore the call.
(The network handles the call appropriately.) or Press and hold O for 1 second to end the call without forwarding it to voicemail or to any other designated number. Note: You can only keep two calls open at a time. If a third call arrives while you already have two calls open, your phone does not notify you. Sending and Receiving Data or Fax Calls While your phone is being used as a wireless modem to send or receive data or fax calls, your phone cannot perform any other functions. The following conditions occur:
Fax call Your phone queues all call waiting and new events (incoming text messages, voicemail, etc.) so that they reappear after the fax is complete. You cannot view or act on them during the fax call. 78 In-Call Features Data call Your phone ignores all call waiting and new events (incoming text messages, voicemail, etc.) unless they are supported by peripheral software. You cannot view or act on them. For more details about these calls, refer to Sending and Receiving Data or Fax Calls on page 78. For details about how to handle a fax call that arrives while you are on another call, refer to Receiving a Second Call on page 77. Viewing Your Phone Number You can view your own phone number while you are on an active call. Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature My Tel. Number. The phone displays its own telephone number. Exit 2. Press - to return to the active call dialog. In-Call Features 79 Muting a Call You can turn off or mute your phones microphone during a call. When you mute a call, you temporarily stop the caller from hearing you. Turn mute on 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Mute. The phone displays the message Mute is on, followed by the Mute dialog. Turn mute off 2. Press + again to turn the mute feature off and turn the microphone on. Placing a Call on Hold Your phone lets you put a call on hold. Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Hold. or Press + when the phone displays Hold above the key. The phone displays an On Hold message, followed by the On Hold dialog. Dial another call 2. Optionally, while a call is on hold, you can press - to open the phonebook and dial another call. Exit 3. Press + to resume the call. 80 In-Call Features Dialing and Entering Numbers You can enter digits during an active call, whether it is to dial another number or to enter a password or credit card number. Following are some of the tasks you can complete:
Enter digits Delete digits Dial number Create phone-
book entry Enter the digits on the keypad or select a number from your phonebook or other list. The digits appear in the active call dialog as you enter them. The phone automatically stores the digits to Notepad. Refer to Using the Notepad on page 101. To delete a single digit, press -. To delete all of the digits you entered, press and hold - for one second. To dial the number you entered, press N. Refer to Setting Up a Three-Way Analog Call on page 82 or Using Digital Conference Call Options on page 83. If you do not have a call on hold or muted, you can create a phonebook entry by pressing +. Refer to Storing Phonebook Entries on page 231. If you have a call on hold, pressing +
will return to the call. If you have a call muted, pressing +
will unmute the call. In-Call Features 81 Send as DTMF If you do not have a call on hold, you can send the numbers as Dual Time Multi-
Frequency (DTMF) tones, which are used for passwords, credit card numbers, and other codes. For more detail, refer to Sending Tones on page 88. Send as MMI To send MMI commands , press N. Your network may give you MMI commands to perform certain tasks. Time Out If you do not take any action within 20 seconds, the phone clears the digits you entered. However, they are still stored in the Notepad. Setting Up a Three-Way Analog Call You can set up a three-way call on an analog network by calling a third party during an active call. However, since calls on hold have higher priority than three-way calls, you cannot set up a three-way call if you already have a call on hold. Note: Three-way calling is an optional network feature. Contact your service provider for information about availability. 82 In-Call Features To set up a three-way call on an analog network:
Call third party 1. During an active call, dial the third party and press N. or Select a number from your phonebook or other list and press N. Your phone will briey display:
Dialing
(third partys phone number) Your active call display returns, and the third party should be connected. Since the phone does not receive any indication of whether the call connects, it does not display any notication. Exit 2. Press O to disconnect. Using Digital Conference Call Options If you want to talk to several people at once, you can set up a conference call. To do this, call each person separately and add or link them to the call. While you are connected to a conference call, you can also choose to have a private conversation with one of the people in the call. Note: You can only set up one conference call at a time. Conference calls are only available on digital networks. For analog networks, refer to Setting Up a Three-Way Analog Call on page 82. In-Call Features 83 Setting Up a Conference Call To set up a conference call:
Call another party 1. During an active call, dial the new party and press N. or Select a number from your phonebook or other list and press N. Your phone displays the Calling and Connected dialogs while calling the new party. When your phone returns to the active call display, you see a list of the connected calls, with a hold icon n next to the call on hold and an active icon q next to the active call. Press - to link the two calls. Your phone links the new call to the previous call. To add more people to the conference call, repeat these two steps. Since you can only keep two calls open at once, you must link each new call to the conference before making another call. Link calls 2. Exit 3. Press O to disconnect. 84 In-Call Features Setting up a Private Call From a Conference Call Note: This feature is only available if you initiated the conference call and no one else is on hold. To step out of a conference call and set up a private call with one of the participants, complete these steps:
Find the Feature Select a single party Return to conf. call 1. During an active conference call, press Mand navigate to the feature Talk to One. Your phone displays the Talk only with menu, listing all the parties in the conference call. 2. Scroll S to the party with whom you want to have a private call. 3. Press +. You begin a private call with the selected party. The conference call is on hold, but its participants can continue to converse. 4. To return to the conference call:
Press - to link both of you back into the conference call. or Press + to put the private call on hold and return temporarily. Exit 5. Press O in the conference call to disconnect. In-Call Features 85 Transferring a Call When you receive a call, you can transfer the call to another phone, called the target phone. This section describes how to use a warm and a cold transfer. Using a Warm Transfer A warm transfer permits you to speak to the person who answers the target phone rst. You can tell them whom you are transferring or why, before you transfer the call. To transfer a call with a warm transfer:
Put call on hold 1. When you are talking to someone who you want to transfer to another phone number, Press M. Press S to scroll to Hold. Call target phone 2. Press +. The phone displays the On Hold dialog. Refer to Placing a Call on Hold on page 80. 3. Dial the target phone number and press N to call. or Select a number from your phonebook or other list and press N to call. The phone displays the 2 calls dialog. 4. Speak to the person who answers the target phone. 86 In-Call Features Transfer the call 5. Press M. Press S to scroll to Transfer. 6. Press +. The phone displays the Transfer conrmation dialog. 7. Press + to conrm the transfer. The phone displays the Transferring dialog and the transfer is complete. Using a Cold Transfer A cold transfer sends an active call directly to another phone, without giving you the chance to speak to the person on the target phone. To transfer a call with a cold transfer:
Choose transfer Transfer the call 1. When you are talking to someone you want to transfer to a target phone, press M B Transfer. The phone displays the Transfer to dialog. 2. Dial the target phone number and press N to call. or Select a number from your phonebook or other list and press N to call. The phone displays the Transferring dialog and the transfer is complete. In-Call Features 87 Sending Tones You can enter digits and send them as Dual Time Multi-
Frequency tones (DTMF) tones. These tones are used to access automated calling systems, such as credit card entry, password entry, or number linking. Your phone transmits DTMF tones when you press a key on the keypad. This feature only applies in certain situations, such as when you are on an active call, dialing, or viewing your phonebook, dialed calls, or received calls. To send tones:
Enter digits Send tones 1. Enter the digits on the keypad or select a number from your phonebook or other list. 2. Press M. Press S to scroll to Send Tones, and press +. or Press and hold N for one second. You can hear the tones in your earpiece as the phone sends them to the network. Entering a PIN (Analog) On some analog networks, you have to enter a PIN
(Personal Identication Number) to dial certain numbers. If your Auto-PIN feature is turned on, you can send your PIN with the press of a button whenever required. 88 In-Call Features Otherwise, you can enter your PIN digits and then send them. To dial a number with a PIN:
Dial number Send PIN 1. Enter the number you want to dial and press N. 2. If the network requires a PIN for this number, complete one of the following steps:
a. If Auto-PIN is on, your phone displays the Send PIN Code dialog. Press + or N to send your PIN. or b. If Auto-PIN is off, you hear the network prompt (beep or recording), and your phone displays the Connected dialog. Enter your PIN and press N to send your PIN. The call proceeds to connect. Viewing Entries Recent Calls You can view your list of recent calls while you are on a call. The list shows you the names or numbers from calls you In-Call Features 89 recently dialed or received. To view the recent calls list during a call:
Display the list 1. Press M. 2. Press S to scroll to Dialed Calls or Received Calls, depending on which list you want to see. 3. Press +. Your phone displays the list of the ten most recent calls, numbered from the oldest (1) to the most recent (10). For more details, refer to Recent Calls on page 93. Exit 4. Press - to return to the active call. The Phonebook You can open your phonebook during a call, to see a list of your entries. To view your phonebook during a call:
Display phone-
book 1. If you have only one call, press -. or If two calls are active, press M. Then press S to scroll to Phonebook, and press +. Your phone displays your list of phonebook entries. For more detail, refer to Using the Phonebook on page XX. Exit 2. Press - to return to the active call. 90 In-Call Features Messages During a call, you can look at your messages from any category, such as Voicemail or Text. To view your messages during a call:
Display message menu 1. Press M. 2. Press S to scroll to Messages. 3. Press +. Your phone displays the Message Center menu, where you can select the messages you want to see. For more detail, refer to Using the Message Center on page XX. Exit 4. Press - to return to the active call. The Datebook During a call, you can open your datebook and view, edit, or create entries. To view your datebook during a call:
Display date-
book 1. Press M. 2. Press S to scroll to Datebook. 3. Press +. Your phone displays your datebook, where you can select days to view and edit. For more detail, refer to Using the Datebook on page XX. Exit 4. Press - to return to the active call. In-Call Features 91 Using a Speakerphone
(Handsfree Mode) If you connect your phone to an external earpiece and microphone, you can switch your phone to communicate through this handsfree device. You can even do this during a call. Note: Speakerphone options are not available on phone menus unless a speakerphone is plugged into the phone. To switch to a speakerphone during a call:
Switch speaker on Switch speaker off 1. Press #. Your phone displays a Spkrphone On notication. 2. Press #. Your phone displays a Spkrphone Off notication. 92 In-Call Features Recent Calls Your phone keeps track of the most recent calls you dialed and received. You can nd out what numbers you called (or what numbers called you) and how long the calls lasted. In this chapter you will learn how to:
look at your list of received calls and use its options look at your list of dialed calls and use its options use the notepad view and reset your call timers Menu Features Recent Calls Received Calls Dialed Calls Notepad Call Time Last Calls Store Delete Delete All Send Message Add Digits Attach Number Send Tones Tips for the Received Calls List Your phone keeps a list of numbers for calls that you most recently receivedboth calls that you answered and calls that you missed. This list tells you the callers name and 93 number (if available) and whether you spoke to the caller or not. The list entries are sorted from newest (10) to oldest (1). Each call is represented by the name or, if the name is unavailable, the number of the other party. An icon next to an entry indicates if you answered the call or have since placed a call to the number. Unknown entries and duplicate entries are included in the list as individual entries. Fax and data calls are included in the list, with any unrecognizable characters represented by an asterisk *. SIM or Browser programs may not provide a number to call back. You can call back the entry if a name is present, but if none is present and the program suppressed the number, then the call does not appear in the list. The list reects changes in the phonebook. For example:
If you make a phonebook entry for a number in the list and assign a name to it, the list updates to show the name. If caller information is unavailable, the entry says Unknown. If caller information is withheld, the entry says Private. The list includes calls that are answered by network voicemail. Tips for the Dialed Calls List Your phone keeps a list of the numbers that you called most recently. This list tells you the callers name (if available) 94 Recent Calls and number, and it indicates whether they answered the call or not. The list entries are arranged from newest (10) to oldest
(1). Each call is represented by the name or, if the name is unavailable, the number of the other party. Conference calls do not appear as entries in the list. Each call placed to each member of the conference is a separate dialed calls entry. Duplicate entries are included in the list as individual entries. Fax and data calls are included in the list. Viewing the Received Calls or Dialed Calls List To view the received calls or dialed calls list:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Recent Calls B Received Calls or Dialed Calls. The phone displays the list. Recent Calls 95 Complete tasks 2. You can press S to scroll to an entry and complete one or more of the following tasks:
Press N to call the entrys number. Press and hold N for one second
(with a call in progress) to send the entrys number as DTMF tones. Press + to view the entrys details, if View appears above the key. Refer to Viewing Details for Received Calls and Dialed Calls on page 98. or Press + to store the entrys details in the phonebook, if Store appears above the key. Refer to Storing Phonebook Entries on page 231. Press M to open the Last Calls menu. Refer to Received Calls and Dialed Calls Menu Options on page 97. Exit 3. Press - to return to the previous dialog or Press O return to the main dialog. 96 Recent Calls Received Calls and Dialed Calls Menu Options If you are viewing the received calls or dialed calls list, or the details of a received calls or dialed calls list entry, you can press M to see the following options:
Store Delete or Delete all Send msg. Add digits Attach number Create a new phonebook entry, with the selected number in the Tel No. eld. Refer to Storing Phonebook Entries on page 231. This option is not available if Store appears on the list dialog. Refer to Deleting Entries from the Received Calls or Dialed Calls List on page 100. Create a new message, with the selected number in the Tel No. eld. Refer to Sending a Text Message on page 113. Add digits to the end of the selected number. Refer to Adding Digits to the End of a Number on page 70. Attach digits to the beginning of the selected number. You can either use the keypad or select another number from your phonebook or other list. Refer to Adding or Attaching Numbers on page 67. Recent Calls 97 Send tones Send tones, only with a call in progress. Refer to Sending Tones on page 88. Viewing Details for Received Calls and Dialed Calls To view a calls details in the received calls list:
Find the feature Select entry 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Recent Calls B Received Calls or Dialed Calls. The phone displays the list. 2. Press S to scroll the desired entry. If details are available, the phone displays View over the +. If details are not available, the phone displays Store over the +. This opens a new phonebook entry with the calls number in the Tel No eld. To complete this entry, refer to Storing Phonebook Entries on page 231. 3. Press + to see an entrys details, if they are available. The details form includes: caller name, caller number, start date and time, and duration. 98 Recent Calls Complete tasks 4. You can complete the following tasks from the received calls details form:
Press - to close the entrys details and return to the list. Press + to delete the entry (if a phonebook entry already exists for the entrys number) or Press + to create a phonebook entry for the entrys number, if one does not exist. Refer to Storing Phonebook Entries on page 231. Press N to place a call to the entrys number, if you do not already have two calls open. Press and hold N for one second
(with a call in progress) to send the entrys number as DTMF tones. Press M to open the Last Calls menu. Refer to Received Calls and Dialed Calls Menu Options on page 97. Exit 5. Press - to return to the previous dialog or Press O return to the main dialog. Recent Calls 99 Deleting Entries from the Received Calls or Dialed Calls List To delete entries in the received calls list:
Find the feature Delete entry 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Recent Calls B Received Calls or Dialed Calls. The phone displays the list. 2. Press S to scroll the entry you want to delete. If you want to delete all of the entries, select any entry and continue. 3. Press M. 4. Press S to scroll to Delete. If you want to delete all of the entries, select Delete All instead. 5. Press +. The phone displays a delete conrmation dialog. 6. Press - to conrm the deletion. Exit 7. Press - to return to the previous dialog or Press O return to the main dialog. 100 Recent Calls Using the Notepad Your phone uses a notepad to store the most recent string of digits entered. You can use this notepad to recall the last number you entered, even if you did not place a call. Example: You enter a number, but decide not to dial it yet. You turn off your phone. Later, you decide to dial the number, so you turn on your phone again. The number does not appear on the display, but it is still on the notepad. The notepad even records digits that you enter during a call or other activity. It stores these digits until they are cleared from the display and you dial new digits. To view the Notepad:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature:
Recent Calls B Notepad The phone displays the digits on the notepad. Complete tasks 2. You can complete the following tasks from the Notepad dialog:
Press - to delete the numbers one at a time. Press M to open the phonebook menu. Refer to Storing Phonebook Entries on page 231. Recent Calls 101 Press + to open the new phonebook entry form, with the notepad number copied into the Tel No. eld. Refer to Storing Phonebook Entries on page 231. Exit 3. If the notepad is empty, press +
to return to the recent calls menu. or Press O to return to the phones main dialog at any point. Viewing or Resetting Call Timers Your phone keeps track of the amount of time you spend on calls. This time is broken down into ve different categories, each of which is a separate timer:
Last Call timerthe time spent on the last call you dialed or received (cannot be manually reset) Dialed Calls timerthe total amount of time you spent on all dialed calls since the last time you reset this timer Received Calls timerthe total amount of time you spent on all received calls, since the last time you reset this timer All Calls timerthe total amount of time you spent on all calls (dialed and received) since the last time you reset this timer Lifetime timerthe total amount of time spent on all calls ever made on this phone (cannot be manually reset) 102 Recent Calls To view or reset your call timers:
Find the feature View time 1. Press M and navigate to the feature:
Recent Calls B Call Times The phone displays the call times menu. 2. Press S to scroll to the call timer you want to see (for call timer denitions, refer to the timer list that precedes this procedure). 3. Press +. 4. The phone displays the time recorded by the selected call timer. Reset time 5. If you want to reset the time, press
+. The phone displays a Reset Timer conrmation. To conrm the reset, press -. The phone resets the timer and returns you to the call times menu. To cancel, press +. Exit 6. Press - to return to the call times menu (if you are still viewing a call timer). or Press O to return to the main dialog. Recent Calls 103 Call Forwarding You can tell your phone to forward your calls to another phone number, and you can assign a different number to different types of callsvoice, fax, or data. You can even provide second forwarding numbers for voice calls, in case the rst number is busy or unanswered. In this chapter you will learn how to:
set up your call forwarding check your call forwarding settings on the network turn off your call forwarding Menu Features Call Forward Voice Calls Fax Calls Data Calls Cancel All Forward Status 104 Setting up Call Forwarding Your phone lets you specify which types of calls you want to forwardvoice, fax, or data, and how you want to forward them. You have three eld options for forwarding calls:
All Calls If Unavailable Detailed This forwards all of your calls of the selected type. You want all of your voice calls to go to the same number without ringing on your phone. This forwards calls of the selected type if your phone is out of range, unanswered, or turned off. You want all of your voice calls to go the same number, if you do not answer them rst. This lets you specify three different forwarding numbers. Your phone can forward calls to one number if you are busy, another one if your phone is off or out of range, and a third number if you do not answer your phone. Note: You can choose any of the above for voice calls, and you can choose either All Calls or If Unavailable for fax and data calls. Call Forwarding 105 To set up call forwarding:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to:
Settings B Call Forward The phone displays the call forward menu. Select call type 2. Press S to scroll to the call type you want to set up: Voice Calls, Fax Calls, or Data Calls. Select Forward option 3. Press +. The phone displays the call type form. 4. Select an option in the Forward eld:
a. Press S to scroll to Forward. b. Press + to open the Forward eld list and press S to scroll to the eld option you want to select.
(Detailed is not available for fax or data calls.). Press - to store your selection and return to the call type form. or Press *# to scroll through the Forward eld options to the eld option you want to select. 106 Call Forwarding Open number editor Select or enter number 5. Press S to scroll to the To eld. For Detailed forwarding, the To eld is replaced by the If Busy, If No Answer, and If Unreachable elds. Complete these elds as follows (the same as the To eld). 6. Press - to open the eld editor. or Enter the forwarding number using the keypad. The eld editor opens automatically. 7. Press + to browse through the numbers in your phonebook or recent calls. The phone displays a browse menu with selections such as Voicemail and Phonebook. 8. Press S to scroll to the list you want and press + to view the list. (If you select Voicemail, the phone enters your voicemail number or prompts you for one.) Press S to scroll to the number you want and press + to select it. Browse is only available before you enter any characters in this eld. or Enter the forwarding number using the keypad. Call Forwarding 107 Edit and cancel or store number 9. After you enter digits, you can:
Press - to delete digits Press - (with all digits deleted) to cancel 10. Press + to store the number and return to the entry form. Exit 11. Press - to close the entry form and store your changes. 12. Press - to return to the settings menu. or Press O to return to the main dialog. Checking Call Forward Status Sometimes, network settings interfere with the call forwarding you set up on your phone. You can check your call forwarding status on the network to make sure the settings match what you want. To check your call forward status on the network:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to:
Settings B Call Forward B Forward Status The phone displays the forward status menu. 108 Call Forwarding Select call type 2. Press S to scroll to Voice Calls, Fax Calls, or Data Calls. 3. Press +. The phone displays the call type form, with the elds that you completed when you set up your call forwarding. Examine the elds to make sure they match what you want. (You cannot modify the elds here.) You can press + to see each elds details. To make changes, refer to Setting up Call Forwarding on page 105. 4. Press - to close the form. 5. Press - to return to the call forward menu. or Press O to return to the main dialog. Exit Turning Off Call Forwarding You can switch your call forwarding off for a single type of callvoice, fax, or data, or for all calls together. Call Forwarding 109 To turn of call forwarding:
Find the feature Turn off call forward for all calls Turn off call forward for a call type 1. Press M and navigate to:
Settings B Call Forward The phone displays the call forward menu. 2. To turn off call forwarding for all types of calls togethervoice, fax, or data:
a. Press S to scroll to Cancel All. b. Press +. 3. To turn off call forwarding for a specic type of call:
a. Press S to scroll to Voice Calls, Fax Calls, or Data Calls (the one you want to turn off). b. Press +. The phone displays the call type form. c. Press S to scroll to Forward. d. Press +, press S to scroll to Off, and press - to store your selection and return to the call type form. or Press *# to scroll through the Forward eld options to All Calls, If Unavailable, or Detailed. 110 Call Forwarding e. Press - to return to the call forward menu. Although your forwarding number elds disappear, their data is not lost. Your forwarding numbers return when you re-select All Calls, If Unavailable, or Detailed. Exit 4. Press - to return to the settings menu. or Press O to return to the main dialog. Call Forwarding 111 Calls and Messages In addition to voice calls, your phone can send and receive text and fax messages. Your phone incorporates several dialing options to give you the most versatility and ease of use. This chapter describes how to use these options, from basic number dialing to joining stored numbers into a single string. In this chapter you will learn how to:
use the keypad to enter text send a text message send data and fax calls receive a call or fax use call waiting Menu Features for Calls and Messages Dialing Attach Number Insert Pause Insert Wait Insert n Send Message 112 Sending a Text Message You can use your phone to create and send text messages. You can start either with a blank message or a QuickNote. QuickNotes are little pre-written messages that you can select, edit, and send, such as Call me at ... You can also create your own QuickNotes. If a QuickNote matches what you want to say, you can save time by selecting it to start your message. Sending a Message With a QuickNote To send a text message with a QuickNote:
Find the feature Select Quick-
Note 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Quicknotes. The phone displays the QuickNote list. If a QuickNote is longer than the list display, you can press S to scroll to it and press + to read it. 2. Press S to scroll to the QuickNote you want and press N. The phone displays the text message form, with your selected QuickNote in the Msg: eld. Calls and Messages 113 Enter To
3. Press S to scroll to the To: eld. 4. Press +. The phone displays the To: editor. 5. Press + to browse through the numbers in your phonebook or recent calls. The phone displays a browse menu, containing Received Calls, Dialed Calls, and Phonebook. Press S to scroll to the list you want and press + to see the list. Then Press S to scroll to the number you want and press + to select it. Browse is only available before you enter any characters in this eld. or Use your number keys to enter the number. 6. Press + to return to the text message form. Edit msg 7. Press S to scroll to the Msg: eld. 8. Press +. The phone displays the message editor, containing your selected QuickNote. 114 Calls and Messages Enter Priority 9. Use the keypad to add any extra text, as described in Using the Keypad to Enter Text on page 45. 10. When you nish entering text, press
+ to return to the text message form. 11. Press S to scroll to the Priority:
eld. You can use * # to scroll through the priority options without opening the Priority menu (when complete, skip to step 15). 12. Press +. The phone displays the priority menu. 13. Press S to scroll to the priority you want. 14. Press + to return to the text message form. Enter Call #
15. Press S to scroll to the Call: eld. 16. Press +. The phone displays the call editor. 17. Enter the number that you want your recipient to call back (the From number for your message). 18. Press + to return to the text message form. Calls and Messages 115 Send msg When you have completed the elds in the text message, continue with these steps:
19. From the text message form, press 20.
-. The phone displays the Send Message dialog. 21. Press - to send the message or Press + to cancel. If you cancel, select one of the options, such as Save to Drafts. Sending a Message Without a QuickNote To send a text message without a QuickNote:
Enter prex Open new msg form 1. From the idle display, enter the number to which you are sending the message. 2. Press M. 3. Press S to scroll to Send Message. 4. Press +. The phone displays the text message form, with the number you entered in the To: eld. Note: You can also open this form by selecting Create Message to complete the To: eld. 116 Calls and Messages Enter msg 5. Press S to scroll to the Msg: eld. 6. Press +. Enter Priority The phone displays the message editor. 7. Enter your message using the keypad as described in Using the Keypad to Enter Text on page 45. 8. When you nish entering text, you can press + to return to the text message form. 9. Press S to scroll to the Priority:
eld. You can use * # to scroll through the priority options without opening the Priority menu. 10. Press +. The phone displays the priority menu. 11. Press S to scroll to the priority you want. 12. Press + to return to the text message form. Calls and Messages 117 Enter Call #
13. Press S to scroll to the Call: eld. 14. Press +. Send msg The phone displays the call editor. 15. Enter the number that you want your recipient to call back (the From number for your message). 16. Press + to return to the text message form. When you have completed the elds in the text message, continue with these steps:
17. From the text message form, press 18.
-. The phone displays the Send Message dialog. 19. Press - to send the message or press + to cancel. If you cancel, select one of the options, such as Save to Drafts. Sending Data and Fax Calls If your phone is connected to a computer or fax machine, you can use it as a wireless modem to send and receive information. You can connect your phone using an infrared (IRDA) link. Once your phone is connected, you can send fax and data calls through your phone by initiating them on the machine connected to it. You can also receive fax and data calls on 118 Calls and Messages your phone, sending the information directly to the machine connected to it. Two types of data and fax calls are available:
Active calls Background calls occur when a machine connected to your phone sends data or a fax
(All of your other phone functions are temporarily unavailable, and any calls are put on hold.) occur when a program on your phone sends data or a fax (such as a browser making a packet data call to exchange data) To send a data or fax call:
Set up IRDA link 1. Press M and navigate to the feature IRDA Link. The phone displays Infrared Link Connecting, then IRDA Link is active. If the IRDA link fails, you have the option of trying again. Tip: To set up an IRDA connection, your phone must be within one meter
(with nothing interfering in the line of sight) of the other IRDA-
compatible device. Calls and Messages 119 About the IRDA link The link remains active until the connected machine begins a transfer, but closes if no transfer begins within 60 seconds. If the connection is lost, the phone continues to display IRDA Link is active for 15 seconds while it tries to re-
establish the connection. You cannot leave this dialog without closing the connection.
- To restart the connection, press
- To close the connection, press -. 2. Initiate the transfer Initiate the data or fax call from the connected machine. Your phone displays the data or fax dialog. Exit 3. Press -to end the connection when the call is complete. Receiving a Fax You can receive incoming faxes through your phone. When a fax call arrives, your phone rings and displays a new call dialog. Note: If a fax call arrives while you are on another call, refer to Using Call Waiting on page 73. To send a fax call directly to a fax machine, connect your phone to a fax machine with an infrared (IRDA) link. Once 120 Calls and Messages your phone is connected, you can also send fax and data calls through your phone by initiating them on the machine connected to it. You can receive both data and fax calls, as described in Sending Data and Fax Calls on page 118. When you receive a fax call:
Setup Answer fax Your phone noties you of an incoming fax according to the selected fax alert. Refer to Selecting a Ring/Vibration for a Specic Event on page 225). 1. Press + to set up an infrared link, if your phone supports IRDA and is not connected to a peripheral device. To set up an IRDA connection, your phone must be within one meter (with nothing interfering in the line of sight) of the other IRDA-compatible device. or Press - to ignore the fax. The network handles the fax appropriately. or Press and hold O for 1 second to end the fax without sending it to a fax mailbox or any other designated number. Calls and Messages 121 Setting up IRDA link 2. If you selected an infrared link, the phone attempts to set up the link:
If the link is successful, the call can be answered by the peripheral device. Refer to Using Infrared Links on XX. If the connection is lost, the phone continues to display IRDA Link is active for 15 seconds while it tries to re-establish the connection. If the link is unsuccessful, the phone gives you the option to try again or quit. 122 Calls and Messages Messages You can check on several types of messages in your phones message center. In this chapter you will learn how to:
receive new messages read and manage messages set up inboxes for messages access voicemail messages manage QuickNotes use your outbox use your drafts folder check memory and clean up all messages Menu Features for Messages Msg Centr Text Msg New Message Cleanup All Memory Meter VoiceMail Setup Text Msg Setup Info Srvc Setup Outbox Setup Call Back Go To Reply Lock UnLock Store Number Delete Delete All New Setup 123 Types of Messages You can send and receive the following types of messages:
VoiceMail messages that are stored on the network rather than on your phone Text Messages brief text messages, sometimes including phone numbers or URLs Information Services broadcast or browser messages QuickNote customizable pre-written text messages that you can send quickly Drafts Folder messages that you have written but have not sent yet Receiving New Messages When you receive a new message, your phone displays a new message dialog and gives an alerta sound or vibration, unless you set your alert to silent. A new message dialog is displayed:
New (message type) message X New (message type) messages where message type can be VoiceMail, Text, Info. Service, or Browser. If you receive more than one message, then X is the number of new messages. One of 124 Messages the following message icons is displayed at the top of your dialog:
You have new text, information service, or browser messages in your message center. You have new VoiceMail messages (or any, depending on your network). New message P New VoiceMail O Notes:
If reminders are turned on, your phone plays a reminder every ve minutes until you close the new message dialog, read the message, or turn off your phone. If you turn off your phone, the new message dialogs reappears ve minutes after you turn it on again. If another type of message arrives while the new message dialog is still open, the newest message dialog overrides the older one. Once you close or read the newest message, the older one comes up again. Your phone does not display new message dialogs if you are in a detailed view or already in the message center. Messages 125 When you see a new message dialog:
Respond to new msg dialog Receive new msg Press - to close the new message dialog and return to your previous state. or Press + to review the message or messages. If you chose to receive the new message, your phone does one of the following:
dials your VoiceMail (for VoiceMail messages) displays the message (for a single new text, info. services, or browser message) opens the appropriate inbox (for multiple new text, info services, or browser messages) Respond to new msg For instructions on responding to, saving, or deleting the new message, refer to the appropriate section in this chapter. Text and Information Services Messages Text messages are brief messages that you can enter, send, and receive. You use your number keypad to enter 126 Messages the message text (refer to Using the Keypad to Enter Text on page 45). Information Services are information messages delivered via Broadcast or a Browser service. They can include stock updates, news headlines, and so on. You usually have to subscribe to the service. Unlike text messages, new information services messages can overwrite old unlocked messages in the information services inbox. If the inbox is full of locked messages, the phone cannot receive any new information services messages. Reading and Saving Messages You can open your message inbox at any time to read the stored text and information service messages. Before you can use your inbox, you need to set it up. Refer to Information Services and Text Message Inboxes on page 138. Note: If you open a message directly from the new message dialog, you can skip the Find the feature and Open msg steps in the following procedure. To read a text or information services message:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to Messages. The phone displays the Message Center. Messages 127 To the right of each message type is a count of the new/total messages for that type. 2. Press S to scroll to Text Msgs or Info Srvc. 3. Press +. If you have one unread text message, your phone opens the unread message. Otherwise, your phone displays the inbox, sorting messages from newest
(highest number) to oldest (number one). The following icons can appear next to the messages:
! unread and urgent 1 read b read and locked Open msg 4. Press S to scroll to the message you want to read. 5. Press +. Your phone displays the text message. 128 Messages Read or delete msg 6. Press S to scroll through the message as you read it. 7. Press - to save the message and return to the inbox. or Press + to page down through the message, until you get to the end. Notes:
At the end of the message, the function of the soft key + changes to Delete. The phone displays a conrmation dialog before it deletes the message and returns to the Inbox. Pressing + unlocks a locked message. You cannot delete a locked message unless you unlock it rst. Exit 8. Press - to return to the Message Center. or Press O to return to the main dialog. Reading and Saving QuickView Messages QuickView messages are brief one- or two-line information service messages that appear in your idle display. They are received from your specied QuickView channel from a broadcast or browser service. Refer to Information Messages 129 Services and Text Message Inboxes on page 138 for instructions on setting up a QuickView channel. QuickView messages usually carry information such as stock quotes or news updates. When a QuickView message arrives, your phone rings or vibrates just as it does when you receive any new message (unless you set your phone to silent). Rather than displaying a new message dialog, your phone displays the QuickView message itself. Unlike the new message dialog, QuickView messages only appear when your phone is idle. If you are on a call or performing some other activity with your phone, the phone waits until it is idle before it displays the QuickView message. Also, if a new QuickView message arrives while one is already present, the new one overwrites the old one. To read or save a QuickView message:
Single Line msg When a single-line QuickView message appears, read it and press O to clear your display (returning to idle). If you set up your phone to save QuickView messages in your Information Services inbox, the message becomes a read message in your inbox. (Refer to Information Services and Text Message Inboxes on page 138.) If you did not set up your phone to save QuickView messages in your Information Services inbox, then pressing O clears the message without saving it. 130 Messages Multiple Line msg When a multiple-line QuickView message appears, you can:
Press - to clear the message and save it as a read message in your Information Services inbox. Press O to clear the message without saving it. Press + to scroll through the message to the end. Press + at the end of the message to clear it without saving it. Deleting Messages This feature lets you delete some or all of the unlocked text and information services messages in your inbox at once. You can complete the following procedure or delete messages as described in Reading and Saving Messages on page 127. To delete a message:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to:
Messages B Text Msgs or Info Srvc If you have one unread text message, your phone opens the unread message. Press - to view the inbox. Otherwise, your phone displays the inbox. Messages 131 Delete msg 2. Press S to scroll to the message you want to delete. If the phone displays a locked icon (b) next to the message you want to delete, you rst must unlock the message by opening it and pressing
+. 3. Press M and navigate to:
Delete or Delete All The phone displays a conrmation dialog. 4. Press - to conrm the deletion and return to the inbox. Exit 5. Press - to return to the Message Center. or Press O to return to the main dialog. Calling Phone Numbers from Messages Some text and information services messages include embedded numbers (including the number that sent the message, unless that number is withheld ). To dial these numbers, refer to Dialing from a Text Message on page 66. 132 Messages Storing Phone Numbers from Messages Some text and information services messages have numbers embedded in them (including the number that sent the message, unless that number is withheld ). You can store these numbers in your phonebook. To store a number from a message:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to:
Messages B Text Msgs or Info Srvc If you have one unread text message, your phone opens the unread message. Press - to view the inbox. Otherwise, your phone displays the inbox. Use Call Back 2. Press S to scroll to the message with the number you want to store. You can press + to open the message if you want to read it. Messages 133 3. Press M. The phone displays the menu. 4. Press S to scroll to Store Number. 5. Press +. If a message has more than one embedded number with no preferred number, the phone displays a list of all the numbers. Press S to scroll to the number you want and press +. The phone displays a new phonebook entry form. Complete the form and store it. For instructions on completing this form, refer to Storing Phonebook Entries on page 231. Going to URLs in Messages Some text and information services messages have an embedded WAP URL. To go directly to a URL embedded in a text message:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to:
Messages B Text Msgs or Info Srvc If you have one unread text message, your phone opens the unread message. Press - to view the inbox. Otherwise, your phone displays the inbox. 134 Messages Select msg Go to URL 2. Press S to scroll to the message with the URL. You can press + to open the message and see the URL. The site name or (if name is unavailable) URL appears at the bottom of the message, next to the Go To prompt. 3. Press M. The phone displays the message menu. 4. Press S to scroll to Go To. 5. Press +. The phone displays the URL text. For instructions on using your browser, refer to Browser on page XX. If the message contains multiple URLs, the phone displays a list. Press S to scroll to the URL you want, and press
+ to select it. 6. Messages 135 Replying to Text Messages You can reply to a text message from the view display. If you are already viewing the message, you can skip the Find the feature and Select msg steps below. Find the feature Select msg Create reply 1. Press M and navigate to:
Messages B Text Msgs If you have one unread message, your phone opens the unread message. Press - to view the inbox. Otherwise, your phone displays the Text Msg Inbox. 2. Press S to scroll to the message to which you want to reply. You can press + to read the message. 3. Press M and navigate to Reply. The phone displays a new text message, with the messages sender or reply to number in the To: eld. 4. Complete the text message. For instructions on completing a text message, refer to Sending a Text Message on page 113. Locking and Unlocking Messages When a text and information services message is locked, you cannot delete it. This prevents accidental deletions and 136 Messages keeps your phones cleanup process from deleting messages you want to keep. To lock and unlock a message:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to:
Messages B Text Msgs or Info Srvc If you have one unread text message, your phone opens the unread message. Press - to view the inbox. Otherwise, your phone displays the inbox. Select msg 2. Press S to scroll to the message you want to lock or unlock. An icon (b) appears next messages that are locked. Lock/
Unlock msg 3. Press M. 4. Press S to scroll to Lock or Unlock. 5. Press +. The phone displays a notication that it locked/unlocked the message and you return to the inbox. Exit 6. Press - to return to the Message Center. or Press O to return to the main dialog. Messages 137 Sending a New Text Message For instructions on sending a new text message, refer to Sending a Text Message on page 113. Information Services and Text Message Inboxes You can customize how the inboxes for your information services and text message handle messages.You must establish these settings before you can use the inboxes. Setting Up the Text Message Inbox Before you use your text message inbox for the rst time, and optionally at later times, you must congure the following settings:
Service Center Number the service center number for incoming and outgoing messages Expiration period Reply type Cleanup the point when the network stops trying to deliver a message you sent that is still unreceived type of repliestext messages, faxes, or other formats how many days your phone waits or how many messages are kept before the phone automatically deletes messages that are read and unlocked Your phone runs cleanup every night at midnight. 138 Messages Shortcut:
If you are already in the text message inbox, press M and select Setup to open the setup form. To set up your text message inbox:
Find the feature Open Service Center No. editor 1. Press M and navigate to:
Messages Your phone displays the Message Center. 2. Press M and navigate to:
Text Msg Setup Your phone displays the Text Msg Setup form. 3. Press S to scroll to Service Center No. 4. Press + to display the Service Center No. eld editor. or Enter the number you want. The Service Center No. editor overwrites the old entry and opens automatically. Messages 139 Enter Service Center No. 5. Press + to browse through the numbers in your phonebook or recent calls. The phone displays a browse menu, containing Received Calls, Dialed Calls, and Phonebook. Press S to scroll to the list you want, and press + to see the list. Then Press S to scroll to the number you want and press + to select it. Browse is only available before you enter any characters in this eld. or Use your number keys to enter the number. or Press - to cancel. Close Service Center No. editor 6. After you have entered digits, you can:
Press - to delete digits Press - (with all digits deleted) to cancel 7. Press + to store the number and return to the entry form. 140 Messages Open Expire After editor Enter Expire After date Close Expire After editor Change Reply Type 8. Press S to scroll to Expire After. The phone displays the default expiration period next to the Expire After prompt. If you do not want to change this period, skip to the reply type setup. 9. Press + to display the Expire After eld editor. 10. Press - to delete the numbers in the expire after eld. 11. Use the keypad to enter a new number of days for the expiration period. 12. After you have entered digits, you can:
Press - to delete digits Press - (with all digits deleted) to cancel 13. Press + to store the number and return to the entry form. 14. Press S to scroll to Reply Type. The default entry is SMS (text message). If you do not want to change this entry, skip to the cleanup setup. Messages 141 Change Cleanup period 15. Press + to display the Reply Type eld list. Press S to scroll to the item you want and press +. or Press #* to scroll through Reply Type eld entries without opening the eld list. 16. Press S to scroll to Cleanup. If you do not want to change this entry, skip to closing the form. 17. Press + to display the Cleanup eld list. Press S to scroll to the item you want and press +. or Press #* to scroll through Cleanup eld entries without opening the eld list. 18. Custom Cleanup period If you choose Custom as your cleanup option, the phone displays the Custom dialog with the number eld selected. Press S to change the entry in the number eld. Press #* to switch between the number and the period elds. Press S to change the entry in the period eld. 142 Messages Exit 19. Press - to close the Text Msg Setup form and return to the previous dialog. or Press O to return to the main dialog. Setting Up the Information Services InboxCell Broadcast Before you use your information services message inbox for the rst time, and optionally at later times, you must congure the following settings:
These settings apply to technologies that support a point-to-multipoint broadcast service:
specifying the subscription turning cell broadcasts on or off channels specifying the QuickView channel specifying whether to save single-
line QuickViews to the inbox These settings apply to phones that support background browser sessions:
specifying the subscription turning browser services on or off channels/folders by accessing the home page. Cell Broadcast Browser Services Messages 143 Shortcut:
If you are already in the info services message inbox, press M and select Setup B Cell Broadcast to open the setup form. Cleanup This lets you specify how long your phone waits before it automatically deletes messages that are read and unlocked. You can specify the number of days to wait or the number of messages to keep. To set up cell broadcasts for your information services inbox:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to Messages. Your phone displays the Message Center. 2. Press M and navigate to:
Info Srvc Setup Your phone displays the Info Srvc Setup menu. 3. Press S to scroll to Cell Broadcast. 4. Press +. Your phone displays the Cell Broadcast form. 144 Messages Turn on/
off cell bcast Open active channel list Open new channel editor Enter new channel 5. Press S to scroll to Service. 6. Press + to display the Service eld list. Press S to scroll to the setting you want and press +. or Press #* to scroll through Service eld entries (on and off) without opening the eld list. 7. Press S to scroll to Active Channels. 8. Press + to open the Active Channels list (sorted by channel number or name). 9. Open the new channel eld editor to add a new channel by completing one of the following:
Press S to scroll to New Channel and press +. or Press M, then press S to scroll to New, and press +. 10. Press + to browse through the list of available channels. Press S to scroll to the channel you want and press + to select it. Browse is only available before you enter any characters in this eld. or Messages 145 Use your number keys to enter the channel number. or Press - to cancel. 11. After you have entered digits, you can:
Press - to delete digits Press - (with all digits deleted) to cancel 12. Press + to store the channel and return to the Active Channels list. 13. Press M. 14. Press S to scroll to Disable or Disable All. The disable all option disables all active channels. Both options are unavailable if the Active Channels list is empty. 15. Press +. Your phone displays a conrmation message. 16. Press - to conrm the disable and return to the Active Channels list. 17. Press - to return to the Cell Broadcast form. Close new channel editor Disable an active channel Close active channel list 146 Messages Open Quick-
View channel editor Enter Quick-
View channel 18. Press S to scroll to QuickView. 19. Press +. The phone displays the QuickView channel editor. 20. Press + to browse through the list of available channels. Press S to scroll to the channel you want and press + to select it. Browse is only available before you enter any characters in this eld. or Use your number keys to enter the channel number. or Press - to cancel. Close Quick-
View channel editor 21. After you have entered digits, you can:
Press - to delete digits Press - (with all digits deleted) to cancel 22. Press + to store the channel and return to the Cell Broadcast form. Messages 147 Turn on/
off save Q.View 23. Press S to scroll to Save Q. View. This setting tells your phone whether you want it to save single-line QuickView messages in your Info Srvc inbox. If not, the phone deletes them when you clear them. Your phone automatically saves multi-line QuickView messages when you clear them. 24. Press + to display the Save Q. View eld list. Press S to scroll to the setting you want and press +. or Press #* to scroll through Save Q. View eld entries (yes and no) without opening the eld list. Exit 25. Press - to close the Cell Broadcast form (when you nish your changes) and return to the Message Center. or Press O to return to the main dialog. 148 Messages Setting Up the Information Services InboxGeneral and Personal Broadcast Before you use your information services message inbox for the rst time, and optionally at later times, you must congure the following settings:
General Broadcast Personal Broadcast These settings apply to technologies that support General and Personal Broadcast settings:
specifying the subscription turning cell broadcasts on or off channels specifying the QuickView channel specifying whether to save single-
line QuickViews to the inbox These settings apply to technologies that support General and Personal Broadcast settings:
turning personal broadcasts on or off specifying the subscription channels specifying the QuickView channel specifying whether to save single-
line QuickViews to the inbox Messages 149 Browser Services Cleanup These settings apply to phones that support background browser sessions:
specifying the subscription turning browser services on or off channels/folders by accessing the home page. This lets you specify how long your phone waits before it automatically deletes messages that are read and unlocked. You can specify the number of days to wait or the number of messages to keep. Your phone runs cleanup every night at midnight. To set up general and personal broadcasts for your information services inbox:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to Messages. Your phone displays the Message Center. Shortcut:
If you are already in the info services message inbox, press M and select Setup B General Bcast or Personal Bcast to open the setup form. 150 Messages 2. Press M and navigate to Info Srvc Setup. Your phone displays the Info Srvc Setup menu. 3. Press S to scroll to General Bcast or Personal Bcast. 4. Press +. Your phone displays the broadcast form. 5. Press S to scroll to Service. 6. Press + to display the Service eld list. Press S to scroll to the setting you want and press +. or Press #* to scroll through Service eld entries (on and off) without opening the eld list. Toggle bcast Open active channel list 7. Press S to scroll to Active Channels. 8. Press + to open the Active Channels list (sorted by channel number or name). Messages 151 Open new channel editor Enter new channel 9. Open the new channel eld editor to add a new channel by completing one of the following:
Press S to scroll to New Channel and press +. or Press M, then press S to scroll to New, and press +. 10. Press + to browse through the list of available channels. Press S to scroll to the channel you want and press + to select it. Browse is only available before you enter any characters in this eld. or Use your number keys to enter the channel number. or Press - to cancel. Close new channel editor 11. After you have entered digits, you can:
Press - to delete digits Press - (with all digits deleted) to cancel 12. Press + to store the channel and return to the Active Channels list. 152 Messages Disable an active channel In the Active Channels list, you can disable active channels as follows:
13. Press M. 14. Press S to scroll to Disable or Disable All. The disable all option disables all active channels. Both options are unavailable if the Active Channels list is empty. 15. Press +. Your phone displays a conrmation message. 16. Press - to conrm the disable and return to the Active Channels list. In the Active Channels list, you can return to the broadcast form as follows:
17. Press - to return to the broadcast form. In the broadcast form, you can set up your QuickView channel as follows:
18. Press S to scroll to QuickView. 19. Press +. The phone displays the QuickView channel editor. Close active channel list Open Quick-
View channel editor Messages 153 Enter Quick-
View channel Close Quick-
View channel editor Turn on/
off save Q.View 20. Press + to browse through the list of available channels. Press S to scroll to the channel you want and press + to select it. Browse is only available before you enter any characters in this eld. or Use your number keys to enter the channel number. or Press - to cancel. 21. After you have entered digits, you can:
Press - to delete digits Press - (with all digits deleted) to cancel 22. Press + to store the channel and return to the broadcast form. 23. Press S to scroll to Save Q. View. This setting tells your phone whether you want it to save single-line QuickView messages in your Info Srvc inbox. If not, the phone deletes them when you clear them. Your phone automatically saves multi-line QuickView messages when you clear them. 154 Messages 24. Press + to display the Save Q. View eld list. Press S to scroll to the setting you want and press +. or Press #* to scroll through Save Q. View eld entries (yes and no) without opening the eld list. 25. Press - to close the broadcast form (when you nish your changes) and return to the Message Center. or Press O to return to the main dialog. Exit Setting Up the Information Services InboxBrowser Services Before you use your information services message inbox for the rst time, you must congure the settings to turn browser services on and off and to let you specify the subscription channels/folders. Messages 155 Shortcut: If you are already in the info services message inbox, press M and select Setup B Browser Services to open the setup form. To set up browser settings for your information services inbox:
Find the feature Turn on/
off browser services 1. Press M and navigate to Messages. Your phone displays the Message Center. 2. Press M and navigate to Info Srvc Setup. Your phone displays the Info Srvc Setup menu. 3. Press S to scroll to Browser Services. 4. Press +. Your phone displays the Browser Services form. 5. Press S to scroll to Service. 6. Press + to display the Service eld list. Press S to scroll to the setting you want and press +. or Press #* to scroll through Service eld entries (on and off) without opening the eld list. 156 Messages Set up browser services options 7. Press S to scroll to Options. 8. Press + to display the Options form. Your browser services options are stored entirely on your network, and your network provider determines which options you have. For more information about these options, contact your network provider. Exit 9. Press - to close the browser services form and return to the Message Center. or Press O to return to the main dialog. Setting Up the Information Services InboxCleanup Before you use your information services message inbox for the rst time, you must congure the cleanup settings to specify:
how long your phone waits before it automatically deletes messages that are read and unlocked the number of days to wait or the number of messages to keep Your phone runs cleanup every night at midnight. Messages 157 To set up cleanup settings for your information services inbox:
Find the feature Change Cleanup period Custom Cleanup period 1. Press M and navigate to Messages, Your phone displays the Message Center. 2. Press M and navigate to Info Srvc Setup. Your phone displays the Info Srvc Setup menu. 3. Press S to scroll to Cleanup. 4. Press + to display the Cleanup eld list. Press S to scroll to the item you want and press +. or Press #* to scroll through Cleanup eld entries without opening the eld list. 5. If you choose Custom as your cleanup option, the phone displays the Custom dialog with the number eld selected. Press S to change the entry in the number eld. Press #* to switch between the number and the period elds. Press S to change the entry in the period eld. 158 Messages Exit 6. Press - (when you nish your changes) to return to the Message Center. or Press O to return to the main dialog. VoiceMail Messages You can use your phone to quickly access your VoiceMail messages. Your phone noties you of new VoiceMail messages and lets you dial a preset VoiceMail access number. Storing the VoiceMail Number Once you store your VoiceMail systems number, you can call your VoiceMail immediately from the New VoiceMail Message notication. To store your VoiceMail number:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to Messages. Your phone displays the Message Center. 2. Press M and navigate to VoiceMail Setup. Your phone displays the VoiceMail No. editor. Messages 159 Enter Voice-
Mail number 3. Press + to browse through the numbers in your phonebook or recent calls. The phone displays a browse menu, containing Received Calls, Dialed Calls, and Phonebook. Press S to scroll to the list you want, and press + to see the list. Then press S to scroll to the number you want, and press + to select it. Browse is only available before you enter any characters in this eld. or Use your number keys to enter the number. or Press - to cancel. Exit 4. After you have entered digits, you can:
Press - to delete digits Press - (with all digits deleted) to cancel 5. Press + to store the number and return to the Message Center. 6. Press + to return to the main dialog. Listening to VoiceMail Messages You can call your VoiceMail at any time to listen to the messages stored there. 160 Messages To listen to VoiceMail messages:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to Messages. The phone displays the Message Center. To the right of each message type is a count of the new/total messages for that type. 2. Press S to scroll to VoiceMail. 3. Press +. Your phone dials your preset VoiceMail number and your VoiceMail connects. If you have not stored your VoiceMail number yet, refer to Storing the VoiceMail Number on page 159. Manage Voice-
Mail 4. Use the functions specic to your VoiceMail system to listen to and manage your messages. For more information, contact your network provider. Quicknotes QuickNotes are small, pre-written messages that you can select, edit, and send, for example what time is .... You can also create your own QuickNotes. If a QuickNote matches what you want to say, you can save time by selecting it to start your message. Messages 161 Reading and Sending QuickNotes To read and send QuickNotes, refer to Sending a Message With a QuickNote on page 113. Creating a New QuickNote You can create your own QuickNote to capture a message that you frequently send. To create your own QuickNote:
Find the feature Enter Quick-
Note text 1. Press M and navigate to:
Messages B QuickNotes Your phone displays the QuickNotes menu. 2. Press S to scroll to New QuickNote and press +.The phone displays the QuickNote editor. or Press M, press S to scroll to New, and press +. The phone displays the QuickNote editor. 3. Use your keypad to enter the QuickNote text. For instructions on entering text with your keypad, refer to Using the Keypad to Enter Text on page 45. 162 Messages Exit 4. Press + to store your QuickNote and return to the QuickNotes menu. or Press - to delete letters (press
- with all digits deleted to cancel). 5. Press - to return to the Message Center. or Press O to return to the main dialog. Editing a QuickNote You can edit an existing QuickNote if you want to change its text. To edit a QuickNote:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to:
Messages B QuickNotes Your phone displays the QuickNotes menu. 2. Press S to scroll to the QuickNote you want to edit. 3. Press M and navigate to:
Edit The phone displays the QuickNote editor. Edit Quick-
Note text 4. Use your keypad to edit the QuickNote text. For instructions on entering text with your keypad, refer to Using the Keypad to Enter Text on page 45. Messages 163 Exit 5. Press + to store your QuickNote and return to the QuickNotes menu. or Press - to delete letters (press
- with all digits deleted to cancel). 6. Press - to return to the Message Center. or Press O to return to the main dialog. Deleting a QuickNote If you have QuickNotes that you never use, you can delete them from your list. To delete a QuickNote:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to:
Messages B QuickNotes Your phone displays the QuickNotes menu. Delete the Quick-
Note 2. Press S to scroll to the QuickNote you want to delete. 3. Press M and navigate to Delete. 4. Press +. Your phone displays a delete conrmation. 5. Press - to conrm the delete and return to the QuickNote menu 164 Messages Exit 6. Press - to return to the Message Center. or Press O to return to the main dialog. The Outbox Your phones outbox stores your most recent sent messages. You can look in the outbox to re-read messages and check their statusread, sent, sending, or failed. You can even re-send them. Viewing, Resending, or Creating Messages in the Outbox When you open your outbox, you can read your messages, check their status, or resend them. Note: Every ve minutes, your phone automatically resends any undelivered messages in the outbox. If it succeeds, it displays a Sent Message conrmation. Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to:
Messages B Outbox Your phone displays the Message Outbox list, sorting messages from newest (highest number) to oldest
(number one). Messages 165 Select or create msg Read msg The following icons can appear next to messages:
Z read Y sent X sending W failed 2. Press S to scroll to the message you want to read. or To create a new message, press M and navigate to New. The phone displays a blank new message form. For instructions on completing this form, refer to Sending a Text Message on page 113. 3. Press +. Your phone displays the message. 4. Press S to scroll through the message as you read it. 5. Press - to save the message and return to the outbox. or 166 Messages Resend msg To resend the message:
a. Press + to page down through the message, until you get to the end. At the end of the message, +
becomes Resend. b. Press + to resend the message. The phone displays a conrmation dialog before it resends the message. c. Press - to conrm the resend and return to the outbox. Exit 6. Press - to return to the Message Center. or Press O to return to the main dialog. Deleting Outbox Messages You can delete one or all of the messages in your outbox with a single command:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to:
Messages B Outbox Your phone displays the Message Outbox list, sorting messages from newest (highest number) to oldest
(number one). Messages 167 Delete one or all msgs The following icons can appear next to messages:
Z read Y sent X sending W failed 2. Press S to scroll to the message you want to delete. or To delete all messages:
a. Press M and navigate to:
Delete All The phone displays a delete conrmation. b. Press - to conrm the delete and return to your outbox. 3. Press M and navigate to:
Delete Your phone displays a delete conrmation. 4. Press - to conrm the delete and return to your outbox. Exit 5. Press - to return to the Message Center. or Press O to return to the main dialog. 168 Messages Setting Outbox Cleanup Your outbox can automatically clean itself by deleting old messages. Your cleanup settings let you specify how long your phone waits before it cleans up the outbox. You can specify the number of days to wait or the number of messages to keep.Your phone runs cleanup every night at midnight. To set up cleanup settings for your outbox:
Find the feature Change Cleanup period 1. Press M and navigate to Messages. Your phone displays the Message Center. 2. Press M and navigate to Outbox Setup. Your phone displays the Outbox Setup menu. 3. Press S to scroll to Cleanup. 4. Press + to display the Cleanup eld list. Press S to scroll to the item you want and press +. or Press #* to scroll through Cleanup eld entries without opening the eld list. Messages 169 Custom Cleanup period Exit 5. If you choose Custom as your cleanup option, the phone displays the Custom dialog with the number eld selected. Press S to change the entry in the number eld. Press #* to switch between the number and the period elds. Press S to change the entry in the period eld. 6. Press - (when you nish your changes) to return to the Message Center. or Press O to return to the main dialog. The Drafts Folder If you create a message (or start to create one) and you do not want to send it yet, you can save it to your drafts folder. Once a message is in your drafts folder, you can read, edit, or send it whenever you like. Saving a Message If you are creating a message, you can use the context menu to save it as a draft. There are several ways to create or edit a message. For instructions on creating a text message from your phones idle state, refer to Sending a Text Message on page 113. 170 Messages The following procedure assumes that you are already have a message form. To save a message as a draft:
Close msg 1. From the message form, press -
to indicate that you are done with the message for now. The phone displays a Send Message conrmation dialog. Save to drafts 2. Press + to cancel the send. The phone displays the Send Message? menu. 3. Press S to scroll to Save to Drafts. 4. Press +. The phone displays a saved conrmation message and returns you to your previous display. Viewing, Editing, Sending, or Creating Messages You can read, edit, or send the messages in your drafts folder at any time. Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to:
Messages B Drafts Folder Your phone displays the Drafts list, sorting messages from newest
(highest number) to oldest (number one). Messages 171 Select or create msg Read or edit msg 2. Press S to scroll to the message you want to read, edit, or send. or To create a new message, press M and navigate to New. The phone displays a blank new message form. For instructions on completing this form, refer to Sending a Text Message on page 113. 3. Press +. Your phone displays the message form. 4. Press S to scroll to the Msg eld. 5. Press +. Your phone displays the text message. 6. Press S to scroll through the message as you read it. or 172 Messages Edit msg To edit the message, press #* to move your cursor and use your keypad to enter text. For instructions on entering text with your keypad, refer to Using the Keypad to Enter Text on page 45. 7. Press + to save the message text and return to the message form. 8. Press S to scroll to other elds in the form, if you want to. Send, save, or delete msg 9. Press - when you are done with the message. The phone displays a conrmation dialog. 10. Press - to send the message and return to the drafts folder. or Press + to choose from the Send Message menu (Save to Drafts or Do not Save) and return to the Drafts folder. Note: If you choose to save a message that you opened from the drafts folder, the old copy remains, and the new copy is another draft message. Messages 173 Exit 11. Press - to return to the Message Center. or Press O to return to the main dialog. Deleting Draft Messages You can delete one or all of your drafts with a single command. Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to:
Messages B Drafts Folder Your phone displays the Drafts list, sorting messages from newest
(highest number) to oldest (number one). 174 Messages Delete one or all msgs 2. Press S to scroll to the message you want to delete. or To delete all messages:
a. Press M and navigate to:
Delete All The phone displays a delete conrmation. b. Press - to conrm the delete and return to your outbox. 3. Press M and navigate to:
Delete Your phone displays a delete conrmation. 4. Press - to conrm the delete and return to your drafts folder. Exit 5. Press - to return to the Message Center. or Press O to return to the main dialog. Synchronizing Messages with PIM Software You can synchronize your phone with PIM (Personal Information Management) software to let you edit your messages away from your phone. Messages 175 Using PIM software, you can create and change text messages both on your phone and on a separate computer. Then you can connect the two and update them both with the most current entries. The Motorola Accessories (refer to page XX) group denes the correct PIM software for your phone. Checking Memory and Cleaning Up All Messages You can quickly check the memory for your whole message center, as well as clean up your whole message center at once. Message Center Overall Memory In addition to checking the number of messages in your individual message boxes, you can quickly check the amount of overall message center memory available on your phone. To check overall memory:
Find the feature Check memory 1. Press M and navigate to Messages. Your phone displays the Message Center. 2. Press M and navigate to Memory Meter. Your phone displays the Memory Meter gauge. 176 Messages Exit 3. Press - to return to the Message Center menu. or Press O to return to the main dialog. Message Center Cleanup You can set cleanup preferences in each of your message boxes. For instance, you can tell your text inbox to delete messages that are more than three days old. Every night at midnight, your phone checks your message boxes for messages that it should delete, based upon the preference you set. If you want your phone to clean up old messages during the day, you can run this check manually:
Find the feature Check memory 1. Press M and navigate to Messages. Your phone displays the Message Center. 2. Press M and navigate to Cleanup All. Your phone displays a Cleanup All conrmation dialog. 3. Press - to conrm the cleanup and return to the Message Center menu. Messages 177 Exit 4. Press - to return to the Message Center. or Press O to return to the main dialog. Troubleshooting You may encounter some errors when working with your messages. This section describes some common errors and their resolutions. Memory Low or Memory Full Errors Low memoryWhen your phone displays a new message dialog, it may also tell you that your memory is low, that is, the new message brings your phones memory to 85%
capacity. Full memoryWhen your phone displays a new message dialog, it may also tell you that your memory is full. You may also see a display that tells you messages are waiting on the network but cannot be delivered because your memory is full. Note: If your memory is too full to accept a long message and a short message arrives, your phone accepts the short message while the long one is waiting. Try the following to free up some memory:
Run an overall message center cleanup. Refer to Message Center Cleanup on page 177. If your memory is still full, your phone displays a ashing message icon (P) at the top of your idle display. To 178 Messages check your message memory, refer to Message Center Overall Memory on page 176. If memory errors persist or quickly reappear, delete some or all of the messages from your individual message boxes. Refer to the procedures for these message boxes for detailed instructions. Other Errors Cannot Delete a Locked MessageIf you try to delete a locked message, your phone displays this error. You must unlock the message from the message centers context menu before you delete it. For more details, refer to Locking and Unlocking Messages on page 136. No MessagesIf you try to check a message box that contains no messages, your phone displays this notice. No Number (VoiceMail)If you try to automatically call your VoiceMail before you have stored your VoiceMail number, your phone displays a No Number error. No Reply AddressIf you try to reply to a message that has no reply address, your phone displays this error. You must create a new blank message and ll in the destination. Unable to SendIf network conditions prevent your phone from sending a message when you tell it to, your phone displays this error. Your phone then displays a notice that your message is saved in your outbox, and that your phone will try to send the message later. Your phone tries to send unsent messages every ve minutes. To open your outbox and see the message, refer to Viewing, Resending, or Creating Messages in the Outbox on page 165. Messages 179 Phone Status Phone Status displays your phone number, credit information, and current battery level. It also allows you change your active phone number on two-line phones. This chapter describes how to:
display your phone number display credit information display the active telephone number if you have a two-line phone change the current telephone line display the battery charge level Menu Features Phone Status Menu My Tel Number Credit Available Credit Info Phone Signal Strength Battery Meter Other Information Displays phones number Displays credit available optional item Phones current active line Displays relative signal strength Displays relative battery strength Displays phone specic information 180 Displaying Your Phone Number To display your own phone number:
Find the feature Show number 1. Press M and navigate to the feature My Tel. Number. 2. Press + to select My Tel. Number. Your phone number is displayed. Exit 3. Press - to exit. Displaying Credit Information If you use a pre-pay option with your phone, you can view your available credit, its expiration date, and the date of the last deposit. To view credit information:
Find the feature Display credit 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Credit Info. 2. Press + to select Credit Info. Your credit information is displayed. Exit 3. Press - to exit. Phone Status 181 Displaying and Changing Your Active Phone Number You can view and change the way your phone number is displayed at any time. To change the display for a single line phone:
Find the feature Show number Change name Change number 1. Press M and navigate to the feature My Tel No. 2. Press + to select My Tel No. Your phone number is displayed. 3. Press + to scroll to the Name line. 4. Enter the new name. 5. Press + to conrm the new name. 6. Press - to exit. 7. Press S to scroll down to the phone 8. number on the next line. If your carrier has provided a new phone number, you can update the phone number listed here. 9. Press + to conrm the new number display. Exit 10. Press - to exit. To change the display for a two-line phone:
Find the feature 1. Press M to navigate to the feature My Tel. Number 182 Phone Status Find number Select number 2. Press + to select My Tel. Number. Your phone numbers are displayed. 3. Press S to scroll between Edit Line 1 or Edit Line 2. 4. Press + to select a phone line. Change number 5. Press S to scroll down to the phone number on the next line. Change next number 6. Edit the phone number, if necessary, and press + to conrm the new number display. 7. Press S to scroll down to the phone number on the next line. 8. Edit the phone number, if necessary, and press + to conrm the new number display. Exit 9. Press - to exit. Changing the Current Phone Line With a two-line phone, you can place or receive calls from either of the available numbers. Note: If you have added a name to Line 1 or Line 2, your phone displays the name, in addition to the telephone number, instead of the Line 1 or Line 2 label. Phone Status 183 To view the current active number:
Find the feature Show number 1. Press M and navigate to the feature My Tel. Number. 2. Press + to select My Tel. Number. Your phone number is displayed. To change the active number for a two-line phone:
Find the feature Change current number 1. Press M and navigate to the feature My Tel. Number. 2. Press S to scroll down to Line 1. Press + to change the number. Your phone displays the Phone Out menu, listing the phone numbers you can activate for making and receiving calls. Phone Out indicates the active phone number for incoming and outgoing calls. Accept the new number 3. Press S to highlight the number you want to use as the current line. 4. Press + to select the number. The selected line is displayed as the current Phone Out. When you return to the Phone Status menu, this number is listed as your current phone number. Exit 5. Press - to exit. 184 Phone Status Displaying the Battery Charge Level The battery meter on the phone display provides basic information about the battery charge level. If you would like more detailed information about your batterys current state, then display the Phone Status battery meter. To display the battery meter:
Find the feature Show Battery Meter 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Battery Meter. 2. Press + to select the battery meter. The phone displays the batter meter. The Battery Meter shows the available charge in a power strip display. The more segments visible, the greater the charge. I G E If you have installed the wrong battery, the phone displays an Invalid Battery message. Exit 3. Press - to exit. Phone Status 185 Initial Setup Your phone comes equipped with many factory defaults. You can set up many features according to your own preference. They include:
setting the time and date setting the phonebook for one touch dialing activating automatic redialing adjusting the display backlight adjusting the status light changing the zoom setting changing scrolling behavior setting a language preference setting battery charge conservation preferences adjusting the DTMF Setting master reset master clear turning animation on and off 186 Menu Features Initial Setup Menu Time and Date Time 1 Touch Dial Auto Redial Backlight Status Light Zoom Setting Scroll Animation Language Preferred Card Battery Save DTMF Master Reset Master Clear Changing the Time and Date You can change the actual time, the format in which the time is displayed, and the date displayed on your phone. Changing the Time To change the time:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Initial Setup. 2. Press + to open the Initial Setup Menu. Initial Setup 187 3. Press S to scroll to Time and Date. 4. Press + to open the Time and Date display. Change time 5. Press S to scroll to the time display. 6. Press + to CHANGE the time. Change hour Change minutes The hour display is highlighted. 7. Press S to scroll to the hour you want to select. or Enter the hour using the keypad numbers. 8. Press + to accept the change and move to the minute display. 9. Press S to scroll to the minutes you want to select. or Enter the minutes using the keypad numbers. 10. Press + to accept the change and move to the format display. Change format 11. Press S to select pm or 24 hr. 12. Press +. 188 Initial Setup Note:
If you change the display from am or pm to 24 hr, the phone immediately displays time in the 24 hour format. If you change from 24 hr format to am or pm, the phone immediately displays time in the 12 hour format. Exit 13. Press - to exit. The phone displays the changed time message for a few seconds, then returns to the Time and Date menu line. If you want to set the date next, remain in the Time and Date menu. Changing the Date To change the date:
Display the date 1. While you are in the Time and Date menu, press S to highlight the date display. 2. Press +. The month is highlighted. Initial Setup 189 Change the month Change the day Change the year 3. Press S to scroll to the month you want to select. or Use the keypad numbers to enter the month. Press + to accept the change and move to the day display. 4. Press S to scroll to the day you want to select. or Use the keypad numbers to enter the day. Press + to accept the change and move to the year display. 5. Press S to scroll to the year you want to select. or Use the keypad numbers to enter the year. Press + to accept the change. The phone displays the new date. 190 Initial Setup Change the format 6. Highlight the date. 7. Press +. 8. Press S to scroll through the date format menu. Select month rst, day rst, or month abbreviation. 9. Press +. Exit 10. Press - to exit. Setting the Phonebook for One-Touch Dialing You can change the setting for one-touch dialing so that the turbo dial keys are synchronized with the rst nine speed dial locations in your phonebook. To set up one touch dialing:
Find the feature Select a setting 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Touch Dial under the Initial Setup menu. 2. Press +. 3. Press S to scroll to Phone to synchronize one-touch dialing with your phonebook. or Press S to scroll to SIM to synchronize one touch dialing with the SIMs phonebook. Initial Setup 191 or Press S to scroll to Fixed Dial to synchronize one-touch dialing with the SIM. 4. Press +. Exit 5. Press - to exit. Adjusting Automatic Redial Sometimes you may not be able to complete a call because the wireless system is busy. When this happens, you hear a fast busy signal. With Automatic Redial, your phone automatically redials a call that originally fails due to network conditions. To turn Auto Redial on or off:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Automatic Redial under the Initial Setup menu. 2. Press +. The Auto Redial menu is displayed. Change the setting 3. Press S to toggle between Auto Redial On or Off. 4. Press +. The phone briey displays the new setting. Exit 5. Press - to exit. 192 Initial Setup Adjusting the Display Backlight Most phones can sense the amount of ambient light. If there is enough light for you to see the display, the backlight is turned off. If there is not enough light, the backlight automatically turns on to illuminate the display. You can, however, adjust the backlight display at any time. To adjust the backlight display:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Backlight Display under the Initial Setup menu. 2. Press +. The Backlight menu is displayed. Change the setting 3. Press S to scroll through the menu to select Off or the length of time the backlight remains on, ranging from ve seconds to continuous. 4. Press +. The phone briey displays the new setting. Exit 5. Press - to exit. Initial Setup 193 Adjusting the Status Light A status light is available on top of the phone to provide status information on your current type of service and message status. See Status Light for more details. You may want to turn the Status Light off to conserve battery power or turn it back on to display status. Follow these steps:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Status Light under the Initial Setup menu. Change the setting 2. Press +. 3. Press S to toggle the setting ON or OFF. 4. Press +. Exit 5. Press - to exit. Changing the Zoom Setting Your phone can display either three or four lines of display. In both cases, the bottom line displays the Soft Key information. The Zoom setting allows you to switch between the three or four line-display. To change the zoom setting:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Zoom under the Initial Setup menu. 2. Press +. 194 Initial Setup Change the setting 3. Press S to toggle the settings between 3-Line and 2-Line. 4. Press +. The phone briey displays the new setting. Exit 5. Press - to exit. Changing Scrolling Behavior You can select one of two scrolling behaviors for navigating up and down a menu list with the S key:
Up/Down The cursor stops when it reaches the top or bottom of the items displayed on the screen. Wrap Around The cursor wraps around when it appears at the top. It then appears at the bottom of the display. The cursor wraps around when it appears at the bottom. It then appears at the top of the display. To change the scrolling behavior:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Scroll under the Initial Setup menu. 2. Press +. Initial Setup 195 Change setting 3. Press S to scroll to Up/Down or Wrap Around. 4. Press +. The phone briey displays the new setting. Exit 5. Press - to exit. Turning Animation On and Off Animation helps give context to menu items. It provides smooth scrolling within and between text elds and highlights menu selections and soft key choices. When animation is turned off, the cursor jumps from eld to eld, rather than moving between them. You can conserve battery life by turning the animation feature off. To change the animation setting:
Find the feature Change the Setting 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Animation under the Initial Setup menu. 2. Press +. 3. Press S to toggle the setting between ON and OFF. 4. Press +. The phone briey displays the new setting. 196 Initial Setup Exit 5. Press - to exit. Setting a Language Preference Some phones support multiple languages and include a language setting. By default, your phone is set to the language of the country where it is sold. To change the language setting:
Find the feature Change the setting 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Language under the Initial Setup menu. 2. Press +. The phone displays a list of all available language settings. 3. Press S to scroll to the preferred language setting. If your phone contains a SIM chip and you want to use the language identied on the SIM, you can select Automatic. All languages are listed with spelling and characters that are unique to the language. For example, Spanish is listed as Espaol and Turkish is listed as Trke. 4. Press +. Exit 5. Press - to exit. Initial Setup 197 Setting Battery Charge Conservation Preferences Some networks and phones include a battery save setting to conserve battery power. To change the battery save setting:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Battery Save under the Initial Setup menu. Change setting 2. Press +. 3. Press S to toggle between ON and OFF. 4. Press +. The phone briey displays the changed setting. Exit 5. Press - to exit. Adjusting the DTMF Setting You can enter digits and send them as Dual Time Multi-
Frequency tones (DTMF) tones. Your phone transmits DTMF tones when you press a key on the keypad. These tones are used to access automated calling systems, such as credit card entry, password entry, or number linking. Refer to Sending Tones on page XX for more information on using DTMF tones. Your phone can send the DTMF transmission to the network in long or short form. 198 Initial Setup To change the DTMF setting:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature DTMF under the Initial Setup menu. Change the setting 2. Press +. 3. Press S to toggle between Short or Long. 4. Press +. The phone briey displays the new setting. Exit 5. Press - to exit. Master Reset Use the master reset feature to reset all user-selectable options back to their original factory settings. All of the original settings are restored except for the unlock code and security code. Note: The wireless network controls and takes priority over some of your phones settings. For example, call forwarding settings are controlled by the network. If your phone is reset to the factory default Call Forwarding: Off, but if the network setting is On, the network setting takes precedence over the phones new setting. To use the master reset:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Master Reset under the Initial Setup menu. 1. Press +. Initial Setup 199 Security Code 2. Enter your security code. 3. Press + to accept the code. Reset the phone 4. The phone displays a conrmation message: Reset All Phone Settings?
5. Press - to change all settings. or Press + to cancel the request. The phone briey displays a Completed: Phone Settings message and returns you to the Initial Settings menu. Exit 6. Press - to exit. Master Clear If you want to start over, use Master Clear to reset all user-
selectable options, clear the resettable timer and recent call lists, and erase all Phonebook information. The master clear feature also resets the phone, except for the unlock and security codes, to the factory defaults. Note: The wireless network controls and takes priority over some of your phones settings. For example, call forwarding settings are controlled by the network. If your phone is reset to the factory default Call Forwarding: Off, but if the network setting is On, the network setting takes precedence over the phones new setting. Note: The master clear feature does not delete information stored on a SIM card, such as phonebook entries, xed dial 200 Initial Setup entries, messages, language preferences, network lists, and call cost information. To use the master clear feature:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Master Clear under the Initial Setup menu. 1. Press +. Security Code 2. Enter your security code. 3. Press +. Clear the data 4. The phone displays a message: Clear All Phone Data?
5. Press - to clear the data. or Press + to cancel the request. The phone briey displays a Competed: Phone Settings message and returns you to the Initial Settings menu. Exit 6. Press - to exit. Initial Setup 201 In-Call Settings You can use your phones timer to view the length and cost of your calls, you can switch between a current call and an incoming call, and you can answer a call by pressing any key (or just opening the phone). Use the in-call settings to customize your preferences for these options, or to just turn them on and off. In this chapter you will learn how to:
set up your call timer display and alert turn answering options on or off turn call waiting on or off Menu Features In-Call Setup In Call Timer Answer Options Call Waiting Setting Up In-Call Timers Your phone can keep track of the length and cost of your calls. If you want, it can show you a running timer whenever you are on the phone. It can also notify you when a call reaches a specied time limit. 202 This feature lets you indicate which timer you would like to see during your calls, if any. The following timers are available:
Timer Time Cost Total Cost Credit Available Description shows the time elapsed for the current call shows the cost of the current call This feature is only available if you subscribe to call cost features or advice of charge. For information about setting call cost, refer to Call Cost on page xx. shows the cost of all calls since the last time you reset the timer This feature is only available if you subscribe to call cost features or advice of charge. For information about setting call cost, refer to Call Cost on page xx. shows how much credit you have left This feature is only available if you subscribe to call cost features or advice of charge. Off no in-call display for the timer In-Call Settings 203 To set up your in-call timer Find the feature Select timer display 1. Press M and navigate to:
Settings B In-Call Setup B In-Call Timer Note: On some systems, In-Call Timer may be called In-Call Setup. The phone shows the in-call timer form. 2. Press S to scroll to Display. 3. Press + to see the Display eld list. Press S to scroll to the item you want and press +. or Press #* to scroll through Display eld entries without opening the eld list. 204 In-Call Settings Select timer alert 4. Press S to scroll to Beep. Note: On some systems, Beep may be called Beep Timer. 5. Press + to see the Beep eld list. 6. Press S to scroll to the item you want. If you select a beep interval from this list, your phone beeps once when a call reaches that interval. 7. Press + to select the option. If you selected a beep interval, the phone displays the eld editor. Enter any number of seconds (1-999) to change your beep interval. Use
- to delete digits, and + to store them and return to the in-call timer form. If you selected Off, the phone does not beep to indicate an interval during your calls. You return to the In-call timer form. Exit 8. Press - to return to the in-call setup menu. Turning Answer Options On or Off When your phone rings, you can answer it by pressing N. You can also answer a call by pressing any key (the In-Call Settings 205 Multikey option) or by opening the ip when it is closed
(the Open to Answer option). To set up your answer options:
Find the feature Toggle multi-
key answer Toggle open to answer 1. Press M and navigate to:
Settings B In-Call Setup B Answer Options The phone displays the answer options form. 2. Press S to scroll to Multi-key. 3. Press + to see the Multi-key eld list (On and Off). Press S to scroll to the item you want and press
+. or Press #* to scroll through Multi-key eld entries without opening the eld list. 4. Press S to scroll to Open to answer. 5. Press + to see the Open to Answer eld list (On and Off). 6. Press S to scroll to the item you want. 7. Press +. Exit 8. Press - to return to the in-call setup menu. 206 In-Call Settings Turning Call Waiting On or Off Your phone can notify you when another call arrives while you are already on a call. You can turn this feature on or off. Note: Call waiting is an optional network and subscription-
dependent feature that is not available in all areas. Contact your service provider for availability. To switch call waiting on or off:
Find the feature Switch multi-
key answer on or off 1. Press M and navigate to:
Settings B In-Call Setup The phone displays the in-call setup menu. 2. Press S to scroll to Call Waiting. 3. Press + to see the Call Waiting eld list (On and Off). Press S to scroll to the item you want and press
+. or Press #* to scroll through Call Waiting eld entries without opening the eld list. Exit 4. Press - to return to the Settings menu. In-Call Settings 207 Using Lock/Security Features While you probably should not leave your phone unattended, your phone has a number of built-in security features to prevent unauthorized use. In this chapter you will learn how to:
lock and unlock your phone lock and unlock your phones keypad change your lock code and security code restrict access to phone applications restrict incoming and outgoing calls 208 Menu Features Settings Security (continued) Passwords Unlock Code Security Code Settings Security Phone Lock Lock Now Auto Lock Unlock Code Lock Keypad Lock Application Recent Calls Fixed Dial Phonebook Datebook Radio Messages Shortcuts SIM Apps Browser Restrict Calls Outgoing Calls Allow Incoming Calls Allow Locking and Unlocking Your Phone Locking Your Phone You can manually lock your phone or set it to lock automatically. Using Lock/Security Features 209 Notes:
The phone prompts you to enter your unlock code before locking. This prevents you from locking the phone without knowing the unlock code. Once you unlock your phone, it remains unlocked until you lock it again. You do not have to enter the unlock code when you turn off the automatic lock feature. Locking Your Phone Manually You can lock your phone manually at any time to prevent unwanted use. Once you lock the phone, it remains locked whether it is powered on or off. Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature:
Settings B Security B Phone Lock B Lock Now Verify code Exit 2. Enter your four-digit unlock code and then press +. 3. Press - to return to the previous dialog. or Press O return to the main dialog. 210 Using Lock/Security Features Locking Your Phone Automatically When you turn this feature on, your phone automatically locks itself each time you turn it off. Find the feature Select setting Verify code 1. Press M and navigate to the feature:
Settings B Security B Phone Lock B Automatic Lock 2. Press S to scroll to On or Off, and then press + to select. 3. If you selected On, enter your four-digit unlock code and then press + to lock the phone. Exit 4. Press - to return to the previous dialog. or Press O return to the main dialog. Unlocking Your Phone The factory-programmed lock code for unlocking the phone is 1234. If you have changed this code and cannot remember it, see If You Forget Your Unlock Code on page 214. To unlock your phone:
Enter unlock code Enter your four-digit unlock code and then press +. Tip: If you forget your lock code, try entering 1234 or the last four digits of your wireless phone number. Using Lock/Security Features 211 Changing the Unlock Code The unlock code is originally set to 1234. You should change it as soon as possible. Find the feature Enter old code Enter new code 1. Press M and navigate to the feature:
Settings B Security B Phone Lock B Unlock Code 2. Enter your old four-digit unlock code and then press +. or If you dont know your unlock code, press M to go to the security code editor. (See If You Forget Your Unlock Code on page 214.) 3. Enter a new four-digit unlock code and then press +. 4. Enter the new four-digit unlock code again to conrm, and then press
+. Exit 5. Press - to return to the previous dialog. or Press O return to the main dialog. 212 Using Lock/Security Features Answering Calls and Reading Messages When the Phone Is Locked You can still receive calls and messages when the phone is locked. Your phone rings or vibrate to indicate an incoming call or message, but you do not see any visual indication in the display. When you receive an incoming message, the P
(message) icon is displayed in the status area. You must unlock the phone in order to answer a call or read an incoming message. SeeUnlocking Your Phone on page 211. Placing Emergency Calls When the Phone is Locked When the phone is locked, you cannot place any outgoing calls, except for emergency calls. To place an emergency call:
Enter emergency number 1. When the phone prompts you to Enter Unlock Code ____, enter the digits of your emergency phone number (for example, 911). Place call 2. Press N to place the call. Note: See Storing an Emergency Number on page XX for instructions on how to store your emergency phone number. Using Lock/Security Features 213 If You Forget Your Unlock Code If you forget or dont know your unlock code, use the following procedure to bypass the unlock code editor. Bypass unlock code Enter security code 1. When the phone prompts you to Enter Unlock Code ____, press M to go to the security code editor. 2. Enter your six-digit security code and then press + to unlock the phone. Locking and Unlocking the Keypad You can lock your phones keypad to prevent accidental usage of the phone. All keys are disabled except for the volume keys and the M and * keys. Locking and Unlocking the Keypad To access the keypad lock feature from the Security menu:
Find the feature Lock keypad 1. Press M and navigate to the feature:
Settings B Security B Lock Keypad 2. The phone describes which keys you use to lock/unlock the keypad. Press M then * to lock the keypad. Shortcut:
You can also press M
* to lock or unlock the keypad. 214 Using Lock/Security Features Answering Calls and Reading Messages When the Keypad is Locked Your phone noties you of an incoming call or message in the usual way, and temporarily unlocks the keypad so you can acknowledge the notication message. If you choose to answer the call or read the message, the keypad lock is disabled, and the phone functions normally until you nish the call or message and return to the idle display. If you choose to ignore the call or message, the phone returns to the idle display and the keypad is relocked. Placing Emergency Calls When the Keypad is Locked When the keypad is locked, you cannot place any outgoing calls except for emergency calls. To place an emergency call:
Enter emergency number 1. When the phone display shows Keypad Locked, enter the digits of your emergency phone number (for example, 911). Place call 2. Press N to place the call. Note: See Storing an Emergency Number on page XX for instructions on how to store your emergency phone number. Using Lock/Security Features 215 Restricting Access to Applications You can lock specic phone applications to prevent others from using these applications when they borrow your phone. The following applications may be locked from the Security menu:
Recent Calls Datebook Fixed Dial Radio Shortcuts SIM Apps Phonebook Messages Browser You can also set the Phonebook application to View Only mode, so that phonebook information may be read but not written, edited, or copied. See Phonebook XXX on page XX for information about the functionality that is unavailable in view only mode. Locking and Unlocking Applications To lock or unlock an application:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature:
Settings B Security B Lock Application Select application 2. Press S to scroll to the desired application, and then press +. 216 Using Lock/Security Features Select setting 3. Press S to scroll to Locked or Unlocked, and then press + to select. or If you selected the Phonebook application, press S to scroll to Locked, Unlocked, or View Only, and then press + to select. Note: A check mark identies the current selection. Exit 4. Press - to return to the previous dialog. or Press O to return to the main dialog. Using Locked Applications When an application is locked, you must enter the unlock code to access the application. Select application Enter code 1. Select the locked application you want to use. The phone prompts you to Enter Unlock Code ____. 2. Enter your four-digit unlock code. 3. Press + to access the application. Using Lock/Security Features 217 Restricting Calls You can restrict both outgoing and incoming calls. This feature is useful if you are loaning your phone to others or when you wish to control incoming calls. Restricting Outgoing Calls This feature enables you to receive incoming calls but prevents outgoing calls. You can restrict all outgoing calls, or allow calls only to the numbers stored in your phonebook. Note: You can still place calls to the emergency phone number when outgoing calls are restricted. Find the feature Select setting 1. Press M and navigate to the feature:
Settings B Security B Restrict Calls B Outgoing Calls 2. Press S to scroll to All, None, or Phonebook, and then press + to select. Note: A check mark identies the current selection. Exit 3. Press - to return to the previous dialog. or Press O return to the main dialog. 218 Using Lock/Security Features Restricting Incoming Calls This feature allows you to place calls but refuses incoming calls. You can restrict all incoming calls or allow incoming calls only from phone numbers that match an entry in your phonebook. Find the feature Select setting 1. Press M and navigate to the feature:
Settings B Security B Restrict Calls B Incoming Calls 2. Press S to scroll to All or None, or Phonebook, and then press + to select. Note: A check mark identies the current selection. Exit 3. Press - to return to the previous dialog. or Press O return to the main dialog. Changing Passwords The New Passwords menu groups together the codes and passwords required to unlock or change phone settings. This feature is only available on phones with multiple user-settable passwords. If the unlock code is the only password you can change, then the Unlock Code option is available on the Phone Lock menu, and the New Passwords menu is not available. Using Lock/Security Features 219 Changing the Unlock Code The unlock code is originally set to 1234. You should change it as soon as possible. Find the feature Enter old code Enter new code 1. Press M and navigate to the feature:
Settings B Security B New Passwords B Unlock Code 2. Enter your old four-digit unlock code and then press +. or If you dont know your unlock code, press M to go to the security code editor. (See If You Forget Your Unlock Code on page 214.) 3. Enter a new four-digit unlock code and then press +. 4. Enter the new four-digit unlock code again to conrm, and then press
+. Exit 5. Press - to return to the previous dialog. or Press O return to the main dialog. Changing the Security Code The security code is your phones primary security number. It is originally set to 000000. 220 Using Lock/Security Features To change your security code:
Find the feature Enter old code Enter new code 1. Press M and navigate to the feature:
Settings B Security B New Passwords B Security Code 2. Enter your old six-digit security code and then press +. 3. Enter a new six-digit security code and then press +. 4. Enter the new six-digit security code again to conrm, and then press
+. Exit 5. Press - to return to the previous dialog. or Press O return to the main dialog. Note: Your phones security code may be retained by your service provider for customer service purposes. In this case the Security Code option will not appear on the New Passwords menu. Using Lock/Security Features 221 Ring and Vibrate Features You can customize your phones ring and vibration alerts for incoming calls or other events, such as incoming text messages, voicemail messages, information service notications, answering machine messages, alarms, data calls, and fax calls. You can also customize your keypad sounds. In this chapter you will learn how to:
choose a type of ring/vibration change the ring volume specify different rings for different events change the ring for your reminders change the volume for your keypad sounds Note: To adjust the voice volume on your phone, see Controlling Volume on page XX. 222 Ring and Vibrate Features Menu Features Ring/Vibrate Alert Detail Ring Volume Calls Line 1 Line 2 Text Msgs VoiceMail Info Svcs Ans Machine Alarms Data Calls Fax Calls Key Volume Reminders Selecting a Ring/Vibration Type Your phone can vibrate and ring for incoming calls or other events. Use this feature to select a ring type, a vibration type, or both ring and vibration for all events. Note: You can also customize your ring or vibration for a specic event. Refer to Selecting a Ring/Vibration for a Specic Event on page 225. Ring and Vibrate Features 223 Shortcut:
After you highlight Alert, you can use
*# to show each option next to the Alert:
prompt without opening the Alert menu. To select a ring/vibration type:
Find the feature Select ring or vibrate type 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Ring/Vibrate. 2. Scroll S through the various ring and vibration types. 3. Press + to select a type. The phone displays:
Changed: Alert alert type where alert type is the ring or vibration type that you selected. Exit 4. Press O to exit. Changing the Ring Volume This feature allows you to adjust the volume level of your phones ring for all events. Note: You cannot select a different volume setting for different events. To change the ring volume:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Ring Volume. The volume meter appears. Shortcut:
After you highlight Ring Volume, you can enter a new value (0-
6) on the number keypad. 224 Ring and Vibrate Features Adjust volume 2. Scroll S or type 0-6 on the number keypad to adjust the volume. The phone displays:
Changed: Ring Volume setting where setting is the selected volume. Exit 3. Press O to exit. Selecting a Ring/Vibration for a Specic Event In Selecting a Ring/Vibration Type on page 223 you learned how to select a ring or vibration type that applies to all events. You can also select a different ring/vibration type for a specic phone event. The type specied for the particular event overrides the type for all events. Note: You can select vibrate (rather than ring) for an event, even if you chose ring for your ring/vibration type. To change the ring for a specic event:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Ring/Vibrate ---> alert type Detail. Select an event 2. Scroll S to scroll through the various events. 3. Press + to select an event. The events menu is displayed. Shortcut:
After you highlight the event, you can use *#
to show each option next to the event prompt. Ring and Vibrate Features 225 Change ring or vibrate type 4. Scroll S to scroll to the ring sound you want to change. 5. Press + to select a ring. The phone displays:
Changed: event ring_sound Exit 6. Press O to exit. Selecting a Reminder Reminders periodically notify you of missed events, such as calls or messages. This feature lets you switch these reminders to beep, vibrate, or off. To select a reminder:
Find the feature 1. Press M to navigate to the feature alert type Detail ---> Reminder. 2. Press +. The reminder menu appears. 3. Scroll S to the reminder option you want and press +. 4. You will see Changed: Reminders
(option) Exit 5. Press O to exit. Changing Keypad Volume Your keys make a sound when you press them. This feature allows you to adjust the volume level for this sound. Shortcut:
After you highlight Reminder, you can enter a new value on the number keypad. 226 Ring and Vibrate Features To change the keypad volume:
Find the feature 1. Press M to navigate to the feature alert type Detail ---> Key Volume. Select number 2. Press +. The volume meter appears. 3. Adjust the volume (S or type 0-6 on the number keypad) and press +. 4. You will see Changed: Key Volume
(setting) Exit 5. Press O to exit. Shortcut:
After you highlight Key Volume, you can enter a new value
(0-6) on the number keypad. Ring and Vibrate Features 227 Phonebook You can store a list of names and numbers in your phonebook. Afterwards, you can look up a number and dial it directly from your phone. Your phonebook can hold 99 entries, and a SIM card can hold additional entries. In this chapter you will learn how to:
store phonebook entries call phonebook entries edit/delete phonebook entries copy phonebook entries to a SIM card check your phonebook capacity change your phonebook setup 228 Menu Features Phonebook New Edit Delete Send Message Add Digits Attach Number Copy Entry Copy Entries Phone Capacity SIM Capacity Send Tones Talk then Fax Talk then Data Setup Making the Most of Memory You can create a phonebook with names and numbers stored in memory locations. Numbered 01-99, each memory location lets you store a name and up to four phone numbers. In one location you can store the home, mobile, work, and fax numbers of a single contact. To help you nd the right number, you can assign an icon to each number. When you view memory locations with stored information, the phone displays the name, location, and one icon for each number stored. To organize your phonebook for convenient recall, try storing related numbers in groups of ten. For example, Phonebook 229 store your nine most frequently called numbers in locations 01-09, and then use the Turbo Dial keys to call them with the push of a key. (See Dialing with Turbo Dial on page 6.) You could store business contacts in locations 10-
19, family in 20-29, friends in 30-39, and so on. You can also store names to identify phone numbers. Later, you can recall a number by the name that corresponds to it. Fields in Phonebook Entry Forms Each phonebook entry contains a form that holds its details, such as name and type of number. The phonebook entry form contains the following elds:
Name No. Type Voice Name the name of the person or group for the phone number the phone number for the entry the type of number stored in the entrys No. eld (work, home, main, mobile, fax, or pager) a recording of you saying the entrys name If you record a voice name for an entry, you can call the entry just by saying the name from your phones idle state. 230 Phonebook Speed No. the number that you can enter from idle if you want to speed dial this entry In choosing a speed dial number, refer to Making the Most of Memory on page 47. The speed number also determines if the entry is stored in the phones memory
(numbers 01-99) or in the SIM cards memory
(numbers 100 plus). Note: Numbers stored in the SIM card do not have a Type or Voice Name eld. Storing Phonebook Entries To create a new phonebook entry, you start by opening a new phonebook entry form. You can open a new phonebook entry form in several ways:
Press + whenever the phone displays Store above the key. Select Store whenever it is available in a menu. Select New Entry from the phonebook list. Select New from the phonebook menu. Use a shortcut for Store, if you have one.Refer to Creating Shortcuts on page XX. The following procedure shows how to open a new form by selecting New from the phonebook menu. If you already Phonebook 231 have a form open, skip the Open a new form steps. To create and store a new phonebook entry:
Find the feature 1. Press M. 2. Press S to scroll to Phonebook. 3. Press +. The phone displays the phonebook list. 4. Press M. 5. Press S to scroll to New. 6. Press +. The phone displays a blank phonebook entry form. Enter name 7. Press S to scroll to Name. 8. Press + to open the Name eld editor. or Enter the name you want. The Name editor opens automatically. 232 Phonebook 9. Press + to browse through a list of the names that are already in your phonebook, if you want to choose a name that is used for another entry. Browse is only available before you enter any characters in this eld. or Use your number keys to enter a name for the phonebook entry (refer to Using the Keypad to Enter Text on page 2). or Press - to cancel. 10. After you enter text, you can:
Press - to delete characters. Press - (with all characters deleted) to cancel. Press + to store the text and return to the entry form. Enter number 11. Press S to scroll to No. 12. Press + to open the No. eld editor. or Enter the number you want. The No. editor opens automatically. Phonebook 233 13. Press + to browse through the numbers in your phonebook or recent calls. The phone displays a browse menu, containing Received Calls, Dialed Calls, and Phonebook. Press S to scroll to the list you want and press + to see the list. Then Press S to scroll to the number you want and press + to select it. Browse is only available before you enter any characters in this eld. or Enter the number from your number keys. or Press - to cancel. 14. After you have entered digits, you can:
Press - to delete digits Press - (with all digits deleted) to cancel 15. Press + to store the number and return to the entry form. 234 Phonebook Enter type Enter Voice Name 16. Press S to scroll to Type. Note: Entries do not have Type elds if they are stored on a SIM card. 17. Press + to display the Type eld list. Press S to scroll to the item you want and press +. or Press #* to scroll through Type eld entries without opening the eld list. 18. Press S to scroll to Voice Name. Note: Entries do not have Voice Name elds if they are stored on a SIM card. 19. Press + to record the voice name. The phone displays Press Voice Key then say name. 20. Press the voice key on the right side of the phone and say the entrys name
(within two seconds). The phone displays Press Voice Key then REPEAT name. 21. Press the voice key again and repeat the name for conrmation. The phone displays Trained: Voice Name and returns you to the phonebook entry form. An icon in the voice name eld indicates that the phone stored a voice name. Phonebook 235 Enter speed number 22. Press S to scroll to SpeedNo. The phone automatically lls in the rst available number when you open a new form. If you want to change the speed number:
a. Press + to display the 23. SpeedNo. editor and enter the number you want. or Enter the number you want. The SpeedNo. editor opens automatically. b. Press - to delete numbers if you want to (press - with all numbers deleted to cancel). c. Press + to save the new speed number and return to the phonebook entry form. An indicator tells you if the entry is in the phones memory (numbers 01-99) or the SIM cards memory. The entry is only saved in the SIM cards memory if you assign a speed dial number from the SIM card. If your chosen speed number is already assigned to another entry, your phone will ask you if you want to replace that entry. 236 Phonebook 24. Enter more numbers If you want to store another number for the same Name (for example, a fax number or other type of number) then press S to scroll to More and press
+. The phone displays another set of number elds and creates another phonebook entry for this new number, copying the Name from the original entry. Exit 25. Press - to return to the phonebook list. or Press O to return to the main dialog. Calling Phonebook Entries You can call the numbers stored in your phonebook from:
SpeedDial (refer to Dialing with Speed Dial on page 49) TurboDial (refer to Dialing with Turbo Dial on page 50) the phonebook list view the phonebook details view VoiceDial Phonebook 237 Calling Entries from the List or Details View If you do not know an entrys SpeedDial number, you can search your phonebook for the entry and dial it from there. To call from the list or details view:
Find the feature 1. Press M. 2. Press S to scroll to Phonebook. 3. Press +. Call an entry The phone displays the phonebook list. 4. Press S to scroll to the entry you want to call and press N. or Press S to scroll to an entry and press
+ to see its details. If you choose to call it, press N from the details view. Calling Entries Using Voice Dial You can use your phones voice recognition capabilities to call an entry just by speaking the name into the phone. Note: You must store a voice name for a phonebook entry before you can call it with Voice Dial. Refer to Storing Phonebook Entries on page 135. 238 Phonebook To call an entry with Voice Dial:
Press key and say name Phone dials entry 1. Press the voice key on the right side of the phone. 2. Say the entrys voice name (within two seconds). The phone displays the entry that matches the name you said, and plays back the voice name. Check to make sure the phone chose the correct entry. 3. The phone dials the entry after displaying it for two seconds. Press any key other than the voice key or N to cancel the call. Editing/Deleting Phonebook Entries Each phonebook entry has a form that holds its details, such as name and other numbers. To edit an entrys details, open the entrys form and edit the elds within it. Refer to Fields in Phonebook Entry Forms on page 134 for a description of the forms elds. Phonebook 239 To edit a phonebook entry:
Find the feature 1. Press M. 2. Press S to scroll to Phonebook. 3. Press +. The phone displays the phonebook list. 4. Press S to scroll to the entry you want to edit. 5. Press +. The phone displays the entrys details. 6. Press +. The phone displays the entrys form. Edit name 7. Press S to scroll to Name. 8. Press + to display the Name eld editor. or Enter the name you want. The Name editor overwrites the old entry and opens automatically. 9. Press - to delete characters, if you want to. Press - (with all characters deleted) to cancel. 10. Use your number keys to enter characters (refer to Using the Keypad to Enter Text on page xx). 11. Press + to store the text and return to the entry form. 240 Phonebook Edit number 12. Press S to scroll to No.. 13. Press + to display the No. eld editor. or Enter the number you want. The No. editor overwrites the old entry and opens automatically. 14. Press - to delete digits, if you want to. Press - (with all digits deleted) to cancel. 15. Enter the new digits that you want. 16. Press + to store the number and return to the entry form. 17. Press S to scroll to Type. Note: Entries do not have Type elds if they are stored on a SIM card. 18. Press + to display the Type eld list. Press S to scroll to the item you want and press + to select it and return to the entry form. or Press #* to scroll through Type eld entries without opening the eld list. Edit type Phonebook 241 Edit Voice Name 19. Press S to scroll to Voice Name. If a voice name exists for an entry, the phone displays an icon T in the voice name eld and next to the name eld. Note: Entries do not have Voice Name elds if they are stored on a SIM card. 20. Press +. The phone displays Press Voice Key then say name. 21. Press the voice key on the right side of the phone and say the entrys name
(within two seconds). The phone displays Press Voice Key then REPEAT name. 22. Press the voice key again and repeat the name for conrmation. The phone displays Trained: Voice Name and returns you to the phonebook entry form. 242 Phonebook Edit speed number 23. Press S to scroll to SpeedNo.. 24. Press + to display the SpeedNo. editor and enter the number you want. or Enter the number you want. The SpeedNo. editor overwrites the old entry and opens automatically. 25. Press - to delete digits, if you want to. Press - (with all digits deleted) to cancel. 26. Press + to save the new speed number and return to the phonebook entry form. An indicator tells you if the entry is in the phones memory (numbers 01-99) or the SIM cards memory. The entry is only saved in the SIM cards memory if you assign a speed dial number from the SIM card (100+). If your chosen speed number is already assigned to another entry, your phone will ask you if you want to replace that entry. Phonebook 243 27. Enter more phone
#s if desired If you want to store another number for the same Name (for example, a fax number or other type of number) then Press S to scroll to More and press
+. The phone displays another set of number elds (No., Type, Voice Name, Speed No.). The phone creates another phonebook entry for this new number, copying the Name from the original entry. Exit 28. Press - to return to the phonebook list. or Press O to return to the main dialog. Adding or Attaching Numbers Before Calling You can add digits to the end of a phonebook entrys number (or attach multiple phonebook numbers together) before you dial. To do so, refer to Adding or Attaching Numbers on page 67. Copying Phonebook Entries to a SIM Card You can copy one or several entries from your phonebook list to a SIM card. This lets you free up speed dial numbers, or archive entries that you do not use very often. 244 Phonebook Note: The SIM card cannot store Type and Voice Name data for entries. If you try to copy an entry with a type or voice name to the SIM card, the phone asks you for conrmation before dropping those elds and copying the entry. Copy Single Entries To copy a single phonebook entry from your phone to your SIM card:
Find the feature 1. Press M. 2. Press S to scroll to Phonebook. 3. Press +. Select entry The phone displays the phonebook list. 4. Press S to scroll to the entry you want to copy. or Press S to scroll to an entry and press
+ to see its details. If you choose to copy it, proceed to the next step. Phonebook 245 Enter new location 5. Press M. 6. Press S to scroll to Copy Entry. 7. Press +. Copy entry The phone displays the Copy To dialog, with the next available speed dial number loaded by default. 8. Enter a speed dial number for a location in your SIM Card memory, if necessary. 9. Press + to approve the copy. The phone displays the Stored message and returns to your phonebook list. You can now delete the old entry if you want to. If you specify a location that is already taken, the phone asks you if you want to overwrite the old entry. Exit 10. Press - to return to the main menu. or Press O to return to the main dialog. 246 Phonebook Copy Multiple Entries To copy multiple phonebook entries from your phone to your SIM card:
Find the feature 1. Press M. 2. Press S to scroll to Phonebook. 3. Press +. The phone displays the phonebook list. Select entries to copy 4. Press M. 5. Press S to scroll to Copy Entries. 6. Press +. Enter current location The phone displays the Copy Entries dialog. 7. Enter the From (start) speed dial number. This is rst (lowest) speed dial number of the entries you want to copy. You can type the number while the eld is selected, or press + to open the eld editor and type the number. 8. Press + to close the eld editor and return to the Copy Entries dialog. 9. Press S to scroll to From (end) Phonebook 247 10. Enter the From (end) speed dial number. This is last (highest) speed dial number of the entries you want to copy. If this is empty, the phone copies all entries from the From (start) eld to the end of the phonebook (entries in both phone and SIM card memory). You can type the number while the eld is selected, or press + to open the eld editor and type the number. 11. Press + to close the eld editor and return to the Copy Entries dialog. 12. Press S to scroll to To. 13. Enter the To speed dial number. This is the rst (lowest) speed dial number for the entries new location. You can type the number while the eld is selected, or press + to open the eld editor and type the number. 14. Press + to close the eld editor and return to the Copy Entries dialog. Enter new location 248 Phonebook Copy entries 15. Press - to copy the entries. The phone displays the Copied Entries message and returns to your phonebook list. You can now delete the old entries if you want to. If you specify a location that will overwrite existing entries, the phone asks you if you want to overwrite the old entries when you try to approve the copy.If you specify locations that do not have memory available, the phone displays an Invalid Range message. Exit 16. Press - to return to the main menu. or Press O to return to the main dialog. Checking Phonebook Capacity You can check your phonebooks capacity to see how many entries are used and how many more are available. Since you can store phonebook entries on both your phone and your SIM card, you can check either your phones capacity or your SIM cards capacity. Phonebook 249 To check your phonebook capacity for your phone or SIM card:
Find the feature 1. Press M. 2. Press S to scroll to Phonebook. 3. Press +. Check capacity The phone displays the phonebook list. 4. Press M. 5. Press S to scroll to Phone Capacity or SIM Capacity, depending on which you want to check. 6. Press +. The phone displays the Capacity display, listing the number of entries in use and the number that are empty. Exit 7. Press - to return to the phonebook list. or Press O to return to the main dialog. Synchronization with PIM Software You can synchronize your phone with PIM (Personal Information Management) software, which allows you to edit your phonebook without your phone. Using PIM software, you can change your phonebook list both on your phone and on a separate computer. Then you 250 Phonebook can connect the two and update them both with the most current entries. The Motorola Accessories (refer to page XX) group denes the correct PIM software for your phone. Phonebook Setup You can specify the sort order for your phonebook entries and the locations for your TurboDial entries. Phonebook List Sort Preference You can tell your phone to sort your phonebook list by speed dial number (the default), name, or voice dial. Note: The voice dial sort is identical to the name sort, except that the entries with voice tags are displayed before those without voice tags. To change your phonebook lists sort order:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to Phonebook. The phone displays the phonebook list. Phonebook 251 Select sort order 2. Press M. 3. Press S to scroll to Setup. 4. The phone displays the Phonebook Setup form. 5. Press S to scroll to Sort by. 6. Press + to open the Sort by list. Press S to scroll to the entry you want, and press + to select it and return to the Setup form. or Press #* to scroll through the sort list options while the Sort by eld is selected. Exit 7. Press - to return to the phonebook list. or Press O to return to the main dialog. TurboDial Preference Your phone lets you specify whether your TurboDial entries are located in your phone memory or your SIM card. To specify your TurboDial entry locations:
Find the feature 1. Press M. 2. Press S to scroll to Phonebook. 3. Press +. The phone displays the phonebook list. 252 Phonebook Select Turbo-
Dial location 4. Press M. 5. Press S to scroll to Setup. 6. The phone displays the Phonebook Setup form. 7. Press S to scroll to Turbo Dial. 8. Press + to open the Turbo Dial list. Press S to scroll to the entry you want, and press + to select it and return to the Setup form. or Press #* to scroll through the sort list options while the Turbo Dial eld is selected. Exit 9. Press - to return to the phonebook menu. or Press O to return to the main dialog. 253 Phonebook Troubleshooting You may encounter some errors while working with your phonebook. This section describes some common problems and their resolutions. Problem Resolution You cannot save any more phonebook entries unless you delete some existing entries. If your phone uses a SIM card, it will automatically switch to the SIM cards memory when the phones memory is full. You must delete some of the existing voice dial names. After the phone displays this error, it gives you a second chance to record the name. If it still cannot capture a sample on the second try, it cancels the recording and returns to the phonebook entry form. From the form, you can try to record the name again. Phonebook Full If you try to store a new entry when the entire phonebook memory is full, the phone displays a Phonebook Full error before the phonebook entry form. Voice Dial Full Your phone has a section of its memory where it stores voice dial names. If it runs out of space in this section, it shows you an error (Voice Dial memory is full) when you try to store another voice name. Unacceptable Voice Sample When you record a voice name for a phonebook entry, the phone prompts you if it does not capture an adequate voice sample 254 Phonebook Problem Resolution The phone returns you to the phonebook entry form. From these, you can try to record the name again. Repeat the voice name to try to call it again. Similar Name When you record a voice name for a phonebook entry, the phone prompts you if the name is too similar to another voice name already stored in the phone. Voice Name Not Found When you try to dial an entry using the voice name, the phone tells you if it cannot nd any entries that match what you said (or if the phone did not understand what you said). 255 Phonebook Shortcuts You can create shortcuts to mark frequently used menu items. If, for example, you change your ringer style often, you can set up a shortcut to navigate to the alert setting and bypass the steps to go to the alert menu. Shortcuts are entirely personal! There are no default shortcuts. Menu Features Use the shortcut menu to navigate to any of the shortcut features. Shortcuts New Edit Help le for setting up shortcuts Opens Shortcut forms for editing data on phones with voice recognition
-Shortcut Shortcut form title
-Key
-Voice
-Record
--Delete Reorder Shortcut key editor Voice shortcut eld Records a voice shortcut Deletes a recorded voice shortcut Changes the order of shortcuts 256 Delete Erases the highlighted shortcut Delete All Erases all assigned shortcuts Help for Setting Shortcuts To obtain help on shortcuts:
Select New Entry from the Shortcut list. Select New from the Shortcut menu. Selecting New Entry from the Shortcut List To get help by selecting the New Entry menu item:
Find the feature to get help 1. Press M and navigate to the Shortcuts feature. 2. Press S to New Entry. 3. Press + to select New Entry. The phone displays help information for setting up a new shortcut. Press + to display more information. Press - to return to the Shortcuts menu. Shortcuts 257 Selecting New from the Shortcut Menu To get help by selecting New from the Shortcut menu:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Shortcuts feature. Display help 2. Press M to display the context-
sensitive Shortcuts menu. 3. Press S to navigate to New. 4. Press + to display the help information. The phone displays help information for setting up a new shortcut. Press + to display more information. Press - to return to the Shortcuts menu. Setting Navigation Shortcuts You can set up a shortcut from any highlighted item on the phone except for items:
in a context-sensitive menu that are grouped together in a form in a SIM Toolkit or SmartCard application 258 Shortcuts If your phone has voice recognition and you want to set up a voice shortcut, refer to Setting Voice Shortcuts on page 262. Setting Up a Shortcut To set up a shortcut:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the item to which you want to assign a shortcut. 2. Press S to highlight the item. Set shortcut 3. Press and hold M. The phone displays :
Assign Shortcut Item to key no: #
where Item is the name of the item you selected, and # is the number of the next available shortcut. 4. Optionally, if you want to change the shortcut number to something other than the next available number, complete the following:
a. Press - to delete the assigned number. b. Use the keypad numbers to enter a new number. 5. Press + to accept the shortcut. Shortcuts 259 The phone briey displays a message:
Assigned: Shortcut MENU + #
where # is the number of the new shortcut. Types of Shortcuts You can set up shortcuts to a variety of elements in the menu structure. Following are descriptions and tips for types of shortcuts that are available. Data Objects You can set up a shortcut to a data object, such as a phonebook entry or a text message. Note: If you delete a data object, the corresponding shortcut is also automatically deleted. Lists When you create a shortcut to an item in a list, the phone displays not only the item, but the entire page marked by the shortcut. For example, if you create a shortcut to the phones backlight setting, when you use the shortcut, the phone displays the backlight option page. Highlighted Items When you set up a shortcut to a highlighted item, the +
action is performed as soon as you access the shortcut. For example, if you used a shortcut to Voicemail, your phone dials Voicemail as soon as you press the shortcut key. 260 Shortcuts Dialogs or Meters You can only access shortcuts to meters if they are set up from menu items. For example, you would press M and navigate to the Battery Meter menu item to set up a shortcut to display the battery level M. Editors or Time Pickers You can only set up shortcuts to date or time editors if they can be accessed from a menu. Forms You can only set up blank forms as shortcuts. For example, you can mark the phonebook new entry form or the new text message form as a shortcut. Setting Values When you set up a shortcut to a value, such as the time setting for the backlight, the setting is changed to the marked value each time you access the shortcut. For example, you set up a shortcut to the 5 seconds backlight value. If you changed the value to 20 seconds, then later accessed the shortcut, the value would be immediately changed to 5 seconds. Browser Applications If your phone is set up for browser services, you can set up shortcuts to web pages available from your wireless provider. The URL of each highlighted item in a web page or service card is stored as a shortcut. Shortcuts 261 SIM Toolkit Applications You can set up the rst screen of a SIM Toolkit or SmartCard application as a shortcut. If you try to set up a shortcut deeper in the SIM Toolkit or SmartCard application, though, the phone displays an error message and does not create the shortcut. Accessing a shortcut that you have assigned to a SIM Toolkit or SmartCard application launches the SIM session. Items Requiring a Security Code If you set up a shortcut to an item that requires a security code, the phone prompts you for the security code as soon as you access the shortcut. Setting Voice Shortcuts Phones that have voice recognition also have the ability to store voice shortcuts. Voice Recording Shortcuts To set up a shortcut with a voice recording:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the menu item you want to set up with a voice shortcut. 2. Press S to highlight the item. 262 Shortcuts 3. Press and hold M. The phone displays :
Assign Shortcut for Item where Item is the highlighted menu item. The phone displays the Shortcut form. Set type 4. Press S to scroll to Voice:___ 5. Press + to accept the selection. Record shortcut The phone displays the Say Shortcut Now message. 6. Press the Voice key. 7. Speak the voice shortcut within two seconds after pressing the Voice key. 8. Press the Voice key again. 9. Repeat the voice shortcut to train the phone to recognize the shortcut The phone displays the message:
Trained: Voice Shortcut and returns you to the original shortcut item. Shortcuts 263 Re-recording Voice Shortcuts You can record over an existing voice shortcut. To re-record a voice shortcut:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Shortcut form. Select voice option Re-
record shortcut 2. Press S to scroll to Voice. The phone plays the recorded voice shortcut. 3. Press + to change the recording. The phone displays the Voice menu. 4. Press S to move to Record. 5. Press + to select Record. The phone displays the Say Shortcut Now message. 6. Press the Voice key. 7. Speak the voice shortcut. 8. Press the Voice key again. 9. Repeat the voice shortcut. The phone displays the message:
Assigned: Shortcut Menu + #
and returns you to the original shortcut item. 264 Shortcuts Keypad Shortcuts with Voice Recording You can also set up keypad shortcuts on phones with voice recognition:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the menu item you want to set up as a shortcut. 2. Press S to highlight the item. 3. Press and hold M. The phone displays the message:
Assign Shortcut for:item where the item is the menu item you have highlighted. The phone displays the Shortcut form. 4. Press S to scroll to Key:___ 5. Press + to accept the selection. The phone displays the Key: editor. 6. Press + to accept the assigned key. or Press - to erase the digits and enter a keypad number. Change type Enter shortcut number Shortcuts 265 7. Press + when you have completed the shortcut number entry. The phone briey displays the message:
Assigned: Shortcut Menu + #
where # is the shortcut number, and returns you to the menu from which you selected the shortcut item. Shortcut Setup Errors Errors sometimes occur in the shortcut set up process. The messages below illustrate some of the problems that may occur. Invalid Shortcuts If you try to set up a shortcut to an item that cannot be marked, the phone displays the message:
Shortcut not allowed for this item and returns you to the previous screen. Entering a Previously Assigned Position If you try to set up a shortcut with a key number that has already been assigned, the phone displays the message:
Replace Item Name?
Press - to assign the shortcut key to the new item or press + to return to the previous screen. 266 Shortcuts Shortcuts Full If you try to store a new shortcut when the shortcut positions have all been lled, the phone displays the message:
Shortcuts Full You must delete a shortcut before creating a new one. Voice Shortcuts Full Because of memory constraints, phones that support voice recognition have a limited number of available voice entries. If you try to assign a voice shortcut when there are no more available entries, the phone displays the message:
Voice shortcut memory is full and returns you to the Shortcut menu. When the Shortcut menu appears, it displays only the Key option for a keypad shortcut. Storing a Shortcut Without a Position Number If you try to store a shortcut without a position number, the phone displays the message:
Shortcut Key No. Required and returns you to the Shortcut menu. The Shortcut Number form is re-displayed and contains the next available key number. Unacceptable Voice Sample If the phone was not able to collect an adequate voice sample or if it did not detect a signal for either the rst or second training attempt, the phone asks you to repeat the Shortcuts 267 shortcut. If the voice sample is still inadequate, the phone displays the message:
Unable to Store Voice Shortcut and returns you to the Shortcut form. A second voice training window may provide tips for more successful recordings, such as Say Shortct Louder, if it detects your voice, but it is too soft. Try to record the shortcut again, following the screen directions. Similar Voice Shortcut When a voice shortcut is recorded, the phone compares it to others already in memory. If the voice shortcut is similar to other entries, and creates a chance of recognition errors, the phone displays the message:
Similar voice s-cut stored. Try again. Try the voice shortcut again, but with a different recording. Editing Shortcuts You can change existing shortcuts or reorder the numbering of shortcuts. Changing Shortcuts You can edit or change shortcuts. To edit a shortcut:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Shortcuts menu. 2. Press S to scroll down to Edit. 268 Shortcuts 3. Press + to select Edit. The phone displays the Shortcut form. Edit shortcut 4. Press S to move to Key: or Voice:. 5. Change the assigned key or the voice recording. 6. Press + to make the change. Conrm change 7. Press - to signal that you have nished making changes. Reordering Shortcuts Once you have added some shortcuts, you can change the order in which they are listed. To reorder a shortcut list:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Shortcut menu. 2. Press S and scroll down to Reorder List. 3. Press + to select Reorder List. 4. Press S to nd the shortcut you want to move. 5. Press + to grab the shortcut. Grab shortcut Shortcuts 269 Move shortcut 6. Press S to move the shortcut up or down in the list. 7. When youve placed the shortcut correctly in its new position, press
+ to insert it. 8. Press - when you are done moving shortcuts. Deleting Shortcuts You can delete any or all shortcut. Deleting Navigation Shortcuts To delete a shortcut:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Shortcut menu. Delete shortcut 2. Press S to scroll down to the shortcut you want to delete. 3. Press M to display the context-
sensitive menu. 4. Press S to scroll to Delete. Press + to delete the shortcut. The phone displays:
Delete item Shortcut?
where item is the name of the shortcut. 270 Shortcuts 5. Press - to delete the shortcut. or Press + to cancel the delete process. The phone displays:
Deleted: Shortcut Menu + #
where # is the number of the deleted shortcut, and returns you to the Shortcuts menu. Deleting a Voice Shortcut To delete a voice shortcut:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Shortcut menu. 2. Press S to scroll to Edit. 3. Press + to select Edit. The phone displays the Shortcut form and plays the recorded voice shortcut. 4. Press + to change the shortcut. 5. Press S to Delete. 6. Press + to select Delete. The phone displays a Delete Voice Shortcut? message. Delete shortcut Shortcuts 271 7. Press - to delete the shortcut or Press + to cancel the deletion and return to the Shortcut menu. Conrm delete If you press -, the phone displays the message:
Deleted: Voice Shortcut and returns you to the Shortcut form. Deleting All Shortcuts To delete all shortcuts:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Shortcuts menu. 2. Press S to scroll to Delete All. 3. Press + to select Delete All. Delete shortcuts The phone displays the message:
Delete All Shortcuts?
4. Press - to delete all shortcuts. The phone displays the message:
Deleted: All Shortcuts and returns you to the empty Shortcuts list. 272 Shortcuts Using Shortcuts You can use a shortcut at any time, whether you are on a call or in a menu. Notes:
Entries that include a voice shortcut are marked with a voice icon. Voice shortcuts play back the recorded shortcut when they are highlighted in the Shortcuts list. Using Shortcuts by Number or Name Use the following procedure if you know the shortcut number or name:
Use shortcut View display 1. Press M. 2. Press the number on the keypad that corresponds to the shortcut number. or Press the Voice key and speak the shortcut name. The phone displays the detail view of the shortcut result. For example, if you marked a phonebook entry as a shortcut, then when you use the shortcut, the phone displays the name and telephone contained in the phonebook entry. Shortcuts 273 Selecting Shortcuts From the List You can select and access shortcuts directly from the shortcut list. To select a shortcut:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Shortcuts feature. Find and select shortcut 2. Press + to open the Shortcuts menu 3. Press S to scroll up or down the list of shortcuts. Note: If the shortcut list is empty, the only item in the list is New Shortcut. Select the New Shortcut item to display a help le for setting shortcuts. 4. Press + to Go To a specic shortcut. Exit 5. Press - to return to the Shortcut list. Using Voice Shortcuts To use a voice shortcut:
Use voice shortcut 1. Press M. 2. Press the Voice key. 3. Speak the shortcut name into the phone. 274 Shortcuts Errors in Using Shortcuts Voice Shortcut Errors Sometimes the phone cannot resolve a voice shortcut because:
The voice shortcut is not stored. The system recognizes the wrong voice shortcut. The system doesnt recognizes the voice shortcut at all. No Voice Shortcuts Stored When you press M and the Voice Key and no voice shortcuts are stored, the phone displaysthe message:
No Voice Shortcuts are stored Press + to go to the shortcut feature, or press - to go back to the previous screen. Wrong Voice Shortcut Recognized If you use a voice shortcut and the wrong shortcut is played back, you can press - to cancel the shortcut or press the voice key to nd the next match. Voice Shortcut Not Recognized If you use a voice shortcut and the phone does not nd a match, the phone displays the message:
Repeat Shortcut Repeat the shortcut. If the phone does not recognize the shortcut after the second attempt, it displays the message:
Voice Shortcut not found Shortcuts 275 and returns you to the previous screen. Some phones display a second recognition tip for more successful recordings, such as Say Shortct Louder, if it detects your voice, but it is too soft. Try the shortcut again, following the screen directions. 276 Shortcuts Personal Options You can personalize some of your phones features, such as reordering the phones main menu items, changing the text that the phone displays when it is idle, and changing the phones Quick Dial number. In this chapter you will learn how to:
reorder the items in the main menu change the functions that your smart key and soft keys activate when your phone is idle change your wake-up greeting and banner text change the number your phone dials when you choose QuickDial Menu Features Personalize Main Menu Keys Greeting Banner QuickDial Reordering the Main Menu You can change the order of the items in your phones main menu. For instance, if you use your Messages more often than your Phonebook, you can move the Messages option up to the top of the menu. 277 To reorder your main menu:
Find the feature Reorder menu items 1. Press M and navigate to:
Settings B Other Settings B Personalize B Main Menu The phone displays the menu reordering list. 2. Press S to scroll to the menu item you want to move. 3. Press + to grab the menu item
(indicating that this item is the one you want to move). 4. Press S to move the item up and down the menu. 5. Press + to position the item in the right location. Repeat these steps for other menu items, if you want. Exit 6. Press - to return to the personalize menu. Changing the Idle Functions of the Smart and Soft Keys When your phone is idle, you can use *S* , -, and
+ to instantly access three main menu items, such as Messages, Recent Calls, or Phonebook. For example, you can set up - to open Recent Calls and + to open Datebook. 278 Personal Options To change your smart and soft key idle functions:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to:
Settings B Other Settings B Personalize B Keys The phone displays the keys form. Set a key function 2. Press S to scroll to Left, Right, or
*S* (the key you want to change). 3. Complete one of the following steps:
c. Press + to open the eld editor. d. Press S to scroll to the function you want to set for the button. e. Press + to select the function and return to the keys form. or Press *# to scroll through the elds entries without opening the eld editor. 4. You may repeat this process for the other keys. Exit 5. Press - to return to the personalize menu. Personal Options 279 Changing the Wake-up Greeting When you turn on your phone, you phone greets you with a text message. You can personalize this wake-up greeting to say whatever you like. Note: This feature may not be available from your network provider. If it is unavailable, it does not appear in the personalize menu. To change your wake-up greeting:
Find the feature Enter the wake-up greeting text 1. Press M and navigate to:
Settings B Other Settings B Personalize B Greeting The phone displays the greeting eld editor. 2. Enter the text you want to see for your wake-up greeting. For instructions on how to use your keypad to enter text, refer to Using the Keypad to Enter Text on page 45. Note: The greeting eld is two lines long, with 16 characters per line. You can press - to delete characters. 3. Press + to store the message and return to the personalize menu. Exit 4. Press - to return to the other settings menu. 280 Personal Options Changing the Phones Idle Banner When your phone is in idle state, it displays a brief text message (such as Ready). You can personalize this message to say whatever you like. Note: This feature may not be available from your network provider. If it is unavailable, it does not appear in the personalize menu. To change your idle banner:
Find the feature Enter the banner text 1. Press M and navigate to:
Settings B Other Settings B Personalize B Banner The phone displays the Banner eld editor. 2. Enter the text you want to see for your idle banner. For instructions on how to use your keypad to enter text, refer to Using the Keypad to Enter Text on page 45. Note: The banner eld holds one line with 12 characters. You can press - to delete characters. 3. Press + to store the message and return to the personalize menu. Exit 4. Press - to return to the other settings menu. Personal Options 281 Changing Quick Dial Numbers You can dial numbers just by selecting QuickDial from the main menu. The QuickDial settings let you edit numbers that your phone dials with QuickDial. Refer to Quick Dial on page 309 for details. Note: This feature may not be available from your network provider, or it may have a different name). If it is unavailable, it does not appear in the personalize menu. To change QuickDial numbers:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to:
Settings B Other Settings B Personalize B Quick Dial The phone displays one of the following:
If your provider allows only one QuickDial number, your phone displays the QuickDial eld editor. If your provider allows two or three QuickDial numbers, your phone displays a list of the available numbers. Press S to scroll to the number you want to edit, and press
+ to select it. 282 Personal Options Enter the Quick-
Dial number 2. Enter the number you want your phone to dial for the QuickDial number. You can press - to delete digits. 3. Press + to store the number and return to the previous display. Exit 4. Press - to return to the previous display. Personal Options 283 The Datebook The datebook lets you schedule and organize appointments and keep track of special events like birthdays. It can display events for the week or a day, or it can display details for a specic event. The datebook is not meant to be a complete organizer. It stores basic date and time information and can be set up to work with software such as Microsoft Outlook and Starsh Sidekick. You may nd, though, that the datebook gives you all the schedule and reminder information that you need. In this chapter you will learn how to:
use the datebook menu select a weekly, a daily, or an event view set up and manage events and reminders change the datebook setup synchronize your datebook with PIM software You can also set up Shortcuts to the datebook or set up the datebook as one of your soft application keys. See Shortcuts and Personalizing Phone Display Items for more information. 284 Menu Features Datebook Menu Go To Today New Setup Displays the week view and highlights todays date Allows you to add a new event to the selected day Allows you to:
change the start time for the week view display boxes set the phone to power up and display reminders when they occur change the length of time an event is stored before it its deleted Using the Datebook Menu You may schedule or change events on many different days, perhaps ending up weeks away from todays date. You can access the datebook menu anywhere within the datebook feature to return to todays date or to help you schedule a new event. To open the datebook menu:. Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Datebook. The phone displays the datebook week view and highlights todays date. Access item 2. Press S to scroll to a menu item, such as Go to Today. Press +. The Datebook 285 Exit 3. Press - to exit. Datebook Views When you enter the datebook, the phone displays the current week view. The week view lists all seven days, Sunday through Saturday, for the week. The week, day, and event views are tied together. Views move from broad to specic, beginning with a week view, then a day view, and nally, an event view. Week View The week view displays all the scheduled activities for a Sunday through Saturday time span. It provides the feel of your schedule without the details of each day or event. The week display is interactive:
Navigate To move to the item you want to display or change:
Press * # to scroll left and right. Press S to scroll up and down Zoom Once you have selected an item, press
+ to view it in more detail. Previous screen Press - to go back to the previous screen. The top line indicates the dates for the rst and last days of the week. Boxes displayed below the days indicate events scheduled for that day. 286 The Datebook 1. Left and right arrows are displayed at the beginning and end of the week. Press S up to display previous weeks. Press S down to display future weeks. If you press S to scroll up and down through the week view, the highlighted day remains the same, but the week changes to the previous or following week. 2. The day and month are listed for the beginning Sunday of the displayed week. 3. The day and month are listed for the ending Saturday of the displayed week. 4. The rst letter of each day of the week is listed. Todays date is highlighted. Press * to move to previous days; press # to move to future days. When S (Sunday) is highlighted and you continue to press * to scroll to the left, the phone displays the previous week and highlights S (Sunday). When S (Saturday) is highlighted and you continue to press * to scroll to the right, the phone displays the next week and highlights S (Saturday). 5. Small bars under the day of the week indicate events like birthdays that last the entire day. 6. Boxes under each day indicate events for that day. The box represents a twelve hour period, beginning at 7:00 a.m. Each line represents a specic event and time. A one-hour meeting at 7:00 a.m. is displayed as a single line at the top of the box. An eight hour meeting is displayed as eight lines. 7. Press + to display the day view for the highlighted day. 8. Press M to display the datebook menu. The Datebook 287 9. Press - to exit the datebook. Changing to Day View To change from the week view to a day view, follow these steps:
Find the feature Open Day View Exit 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Datebook. The phone displays the datebook week view and highlights todays date. 2. Press * or # to scroll to the day you want to view. 3. Press + to open the day view. 4. Press - to return to the week view. Day View The day view displays all the scheduled events for a particular day. You can store, edit, view, copy, and delete events from the day view. The day view display is interactive. The scroll keys *,
#, and S and soft keys - +, operate the same as for the week view. 1. Up and down scroll arrows indicate that you can press S to move within the event list. 288 The Datebook 2. Left and right arrows indicate that you can press *
to change to a previous date and # to change to a future date. 3. The day view screen title shows the date for the current display. 4. Events are listed in order by time. Events that do not have a time are preceded by a bullet. 5. Press + to display details about the highlighted event 6. M indicates that a sub-menu is available for the highlighted event. 7. Press - to take you back to the previous screen. Changing to Event View To change from day view to event view:
Find the feature 1. Open the day view for the date you want to review. (Refer to Changing to Day View on page 288.) Open Event View 2. Press S to scroll down to the event you want to view. 3. Press + to view the event. Exit 4. Press - to return to the day view. Event View The event view displays all the event details, including day of the week, time, event title, event duration, alarm time, and repeat cycle. The Datebook 289 You can edit, copy and delete events within the event view. 1. Up and down scroll arrows indicate that you can press S to move within the event list. 2. The Reminder/Alarm Icon h is displayed when you have set a reminder or an alarm. 3. The screen title displays the events day and time. 4. The beginning of the event title indicates the event. The complete event text wraps around to the next lines. Press S down to view the complete event entry and to view the duration. 5. Press + to edit the event. 6. M indicates that a sub-menu is available for the event. 7. Press - to return to the previous screen. Press + to obtain details for call alerts, call screens, and call forward information. Storing a New Event Complete these steps to begin storing entries for a new event:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature New within the Datebook menu. 290 The Datebook Open form Enter event title
(required) Enter other elds 2. Press + to open the event entry form. The event entry form lets you enter details, such as title, start time, duration, date, repeat, and alarm. 3. Use the keypad to enter the new title. Press - to clear any mistakes. or Press + open the title browser. The title browser offers a variety of options, such as Meeting and Dinner. Press S to scroll to highlight the title, and press + to select it. 4. Press + to conrm the new title. Note: If you try to store an event without a title, the phone displays a Title Required message and returns you to the Title line. 5. While you are in the event entry form, press S to scroll to various elds and enter information, as described in the following sections. The Datebook 291 Setting the Time Since some events, like birthdays and anniversaries, are not time dependent, event time is not a required eld. If you want to enter the time for an event, complete these steps:
Select time editor Enter editor Enter the hour Enter the minutes 1. While you are in the event entry form, press S to scroll to the Start line. 2. Press + to enter the time editor. 3. Use the keypad numbers to enter the hour. or Press S to scroll up or down to select the hour. 4. Press + to move to the minutes eld. 5. Use the keypad to enter the minutes or Press S to scroll up or down to select the minutes. Enter am/pm 6. Press + to move to am/pm. 7. Press S to scroll up or down to toggle between am and pm. Conrm 8. Press - to conrm the time. 292 The Datebook Setting the Duration Event duration is not a required eld. The default duration is one hour, but if you do not set a duration when you enter an event, the duration is reset to none. The duration menu offers a variety of options, from 30 minutes to all day. A custom setting is also available. Complete these steps to set the duration:
Select duration menu 1. While you are in the event entry form, press S to scroll down to Duration. 2. Press + to display the duration menu. Select duration value Conrm duration Specify custom value
(optional) 3. Press S to scroll through the duration menu. When you have highlighted the preferred duration, press +. 4. Press - to accept the duration. 5. If you selected the custom value, complete these sub-steps:
a. Enter the duration using the keypad or Press S up or down to select the duration time. b. Press + to move to the time measurement. c. Press S up or down to select from minutes, hours, days, or weeks. The Datebook 293 Conrm duration 6. Press - to accept the duration. Setting the Date Complete these steps to set the date:
Select date editor 1. While you are in the event entry form, press S to scroll to Date. 2. Press + to display the date editor. Change month 3. Press S to scroll up or down to the event month. or Use the keypad to enter the event month. Change day 4. Press + to move to the day. 5. Press S to scroll up or down to the event day. or Use the keypad to enter the event day. Change year 6. Press + to move to the year. 7. Press S up or down to the event year. or Use the keypad to enter the event year. 294 The Datebook Conrm date 8. Press - to accept the new date. Specifying Repeating Events You can enter events, such as staff meetings, that repeat themselves on a regular basis. Repeat events are marked as none until you change the repeat value. To mark an event as a repeating event:
Select repeat editor Select option 1. While you are in the event entry form, press S to Repeat. 2. Press + to display the Repeat list. Press S to scroll through the various values for repeating events, which range from daily to yearly. You can also specify multiple days during the week, or a specic day or date per month. 3. Press + to select the option. Conrm option 4. Press - to accept the repeat option. Setting Alarms You can set an alarm to notify you about events. The default value is Off. Notes:
If you select one day before or one week before for an event alarm, the phone displays the reminder alert as soon as you turn the phone on that day. If the The Datebook 295 phone is turned on at midnight, the reminders are displayed shortly after midnight. If you try to set an alarm before the present time, the phone displays a brief message telling you that the alarm must be set to a future time and returns you to the alarm editor. You cannot set an alarm to a time that has already past. To set an alarm:
Select alarm editor 1. While you are in the event entry form, press S to scroll to Alarm. 2. Press + to display the alarm editor. Select an alarm interval 3. Press S to scroll to an alarm interval.Options range from ve minutes before to 1 week before the event. 4. Press + to accept the selection. Specify custom value
(optional) 5. If you select a custom alarm, complete these substeps:
a. Press + to display the custom alarm screen. b. Use the keypad to enter the custom alarm time, or press S to scroll to the correct time. 296 The Datebook c. Press + to move to the date. Use the keypad to enter the date or press S to scroll to the correct date. d. Press + to move to the alarm year. Use the keypad to enter the alarm year, or press S to scroll to the correct year. Conrm alarm 6. Press - to accept the alarm. Editing Events Editing or changing event information is very similar to entering new information. To change information that has already been entered, complete the following:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Week View within the Datebook menu. 2. Press * or # to scroll to the day on which the event is scheduled. 3. Press + to display the Day View. Find event 4. Press S to scroll to the event you want to change. 5. Press + to edit the event. or 6. Press M to display the datebook menu. The Datebook 297 Display event form Edit the event 7. Press S to scroll to Edit. 8. Press + to display the event form. 9. Press S to scroll to the item that needs to be changed. 10. Press + to open the edit form for the item. 11. Press - to delete the information on the screen. or Press + to change the information. 12. Enter the new information. 13. Press + to accept the new information. 14. Press - when you have nished. The phone briey displays a Changed:
Event message that displays the new information. Exit 15. Press - to exit. See Storing a New Event on page 290 for information about how to enter specic event details. 298 The Datebook Copying Events The copy feature allows you to copy event information to use in creating a new event. To copy an event:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Week View within the Datebook menu. Find the event Copy event Set the date 2. Press * or # to scroll to the day on which the event is scheduled. 3. Press + to display the Day View. 4. Press S to scroll to the event you want to copy. 5. Press - to display the event 6. Press M. 7. Press S and scroll to Copy. 8. Press + to copy the event. The display assumes that you want to change the date and opens the date editor. 9. Use the keypad to enter the new month or press S to scroll to the month. 10. Press + to move to the date. 11. Use the keypad to enter the new date or press S to scroll to the date. 12. Press + to move to the year. 13. Use the keypad to enter the year or press S to scroll to the year. The Datebook 299 Exit 14. Press - to save the changes. The phone displays the new event details. You can continue to edit the event information, or press - to return to the day view. Deleting Events Deleting events allows you to remove unwanted events from the datebook. You can delete events from the day view, or you can delete the events title. You can also delete repeating events. Deleting Events From the Day View To delete an event from the day view:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Week View within the Datebook menu. Delete the event 2. Press * or # to scroll to the day on which the event is scheduled. 3. Press + to display the Day View. 4. Press S to scroll to the event you want to delete. 5. Press + to display the event The phone briey displays a message indicating that the event has been deleted. Exit 6. Press -to exit. 300 The Datebook Deleting Events From the Title To delete an event by deleting the title:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Week View within the Datebook menu. 2. Press * or # to scroll to the day on which the event is scheduled. 1. Press + to display the Day View. Find the title 2. Scroll to the event you want to delete. 3. Press + to display the event details. 4. Press S to scroll to Title. The event editor opens the title form. Delete title 5. Press + to change the title text. 6. Press - until all the title text is deleted. 7. Press + to accept the blank title eld. 8. Press - to indicate that you have completed editing the event information. The phone displays a message asking whether you want to delete the event. 9. Press - to delete the event. The phone briey displays a message conrming the deletion and returns you to the day view. The Datebook 301 Exit 10. Press - to exit. Deleting Repeating Events You have the option to delete one of a series of repeating events or all related repeating events. To delete repeating events:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Week View within the Datebook menu. Find event 2. Press * or # to scroll to the day on which the event is scheduled. 1. Press + to display the Day View. 2. Navigate to the event date. Press
+to display the days events. 3. Press S to scroll to the repeating event you want to delete. Press +. The event details are displayed. Delete event 4. Press M. 5. Press S to scroll to Delete. 6. Press +. The phone displays the Delete Event menu. 7. Press S to This Event Only if you only want to delete this specic event. 8. Press S to Repeat Events if you want to delete all related events. 302 The Datebook 9. Press + to select the delete option. The phone briey displays a delete conrmation message. Exit 10. Press - to exit. Changing the Datebook Setup You can change the way the datebook manages:
the start time displayed for each day in the week view whether your phone turns itself on to remind you about events how long events are stored in your phone before they are automatically deleted Changing the Start Time To change the start time for the week view display boxes:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Daily Begin within the Datebook menu. 2. Press + to open the Daily Begin form. The Datebook 303 Change begin time 3. Press S to scroll to the new begin time. 4. Press # to highlight the time format
(am/pm). Press S to scroll to the new format. 5. Press + to accept the change. Exit 6. Press - to exit. Setting Your Phone to Automatically Power On for Reminders To set the phone to turn itself on and display event reminders:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Reminder within the Datebook menu. 2. Press + to open the Reminder. Change Reminder Setting 3. Press S to scroll to the desired setting. Press + to conrm the reminder. If you select Always, the phone turns itself on and reminds you about scheduled events. or 304 The Datebook If you select Delayed if Off, the phone does not turn itself on to remind you of an event. When you have changed and conrmed the new setting, the phone briey displays a Changed: Reminder message. Exit 4. Press - to exit. Changing the Event Storage Duration To set or change the length of time an event is stored in the phone:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Delete After feature within the Datebook menu. 2. Press + to open the Delete After screen. Set storage time 3. Press S to scroll through the possible settings, which range from one week to eight weeks, or never. If you select a specic duration, such as 1 week, the events remain in your phones memory until the specied time period after the event date. Then, they are automatically deleted. The Datebook 305 Tip: See Managing Phone Sounds and Alerts to set up audible reminders. If you select never, events remain in your phones memory until you delete them. Press + to accept the setting. Exit 4. Press - to exit. Event Reminders When you set an alarm for an event, the phone displays or sounds an event reminder. Possibilities include:
If the phone is turned on, it displays the reminder as soon as the event triggers the reminder. When you turn the phone on and an event reminder is scheduled, the phone displays or sounds the reminder immediately. If you have congured the phone to turn itself on and display the reminder (that is, the Reminder is set to Always), then the phone displays the reminder until:
- you review the event or exit the screen
the event passes
- 90 minutes elapse If you review the event or exit the screen, the phone remains on. If the event passes or if 90 minutes elapse from the time the phone turns itself on and displays the reminder, the phone automatically turns itself off. If the phone is turned off and you did not congure events to turn the phone on to display reminders, you 306 The Datebook may miss reminders. If you have missed reminders, the phone does not display expired events. An event expires two weeks after its end date. When you see the event reminder, you can review the event or go back to the previous screen or state. The reminder remains on the display until you view the event or dismiss the reminder. To view and dismiss an event reminder:
View reminder 1. View the reminder when it appears on 2. the display. If you have set a lock code to secure your phone, enter the unlock code to enable the keypad. 3. Press + to view the event. Review and dismiss event 4. Review the event details. Press S to scroll down to view complete event details. or Press the smart keyto view event information. Press the down volume key to scroll through the event details. Press the smart key again to dismiss the reminder. The Datebook 307 If more than one event is set up for the same time, the phone displays each event in sequence. Events are displayed in order of date and start time with the earliest events displayed rst. As you view and dismiss each event reminder, the next one is displayed. Exit 5. Press - to dismiss the reminder. or If you have not displayed the event details, press the up or down volume key to dismiss the reminder. Synchronizing with PIM Software Some datebook users also use Personal Information Management (PIM) software such as Microsoft Outlook and Starsh Sidekick. You can synchronize the datebook information in your phone to the information in your PIM using Starshs TrueSync software. When you connect your phone to your PIM device, the TrueSync software loads current information onto both devices. Refer to xx for information on using your PIM. Please consult the TrueSync user guide for more information about how to synchronize the datebook with your PIM. 308 The Datebook Quick Dial Quick Dial is an optional feature that provides a fast method of dialing a specic phone number or phone numbers programmed by your service provider. Typically, the service provider uses this feature to program a customer service number. In this chapter you will learn how to dial the quick dial number. Menu Features The menu conguration for Quick Dial varies depending on whether one or multiple Quick Dial number numbers are available. Your service provider can program up to three individual Quick Dial numbers. Note: Your service provider may have customized the Quick Dial feature name and any sub-menu option names when your phone was activated. One Quick Dial Number Available Quick Dial 309 Multiple Quick Dial Numbers Available Quick Dial Quick Dial 1 Quick Dial 2 Quick Dial 3 Calling the Quick Dial Number The Quick Dial number(s) can be accessed from the main menu or from an application key. (See Personalizing Your Phone on page XX for information on how to customize application keys.) The procedure for calling the Quick Dial number varies depending on whether one Quick Dial number or multiple Quick Dial numbers are available. One Quick Dial Number Available Find the feature Call number 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Quick Dial (or the name assigned by your service provider). 2. Press + to call the Quick Dial number. Note: A service charge may be assessed to your account when you call the Quick Dial number. Contact your service provider for additional information. Tip: You can also press N to call the Quick Dial number. 310 Quick Dial Multiple Quick Dial Numbers Available Find the feature Select number 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Quick Dial (or the name assigned by your service provider). 2. Press S to scroll to a quick dial number. 3. Press + to call the number. Note: A service charge may be assessed to your account when you call a Quick Dial number. Contact your service provider for additional information. No Quick Dial Number Stored If no Quick Dial number is available, or if one of the multiple Quick Dial entries does not have a number stored, you are prompted to enter a Quick Dial number. Find the feature Store number 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Quick Dial. 2. The phone displays:
No Quick Dial Number Stored. 3. Press + to access the Quick Dial editor. The phone displays:
Quick Dial No: _____________ Tip: You can also press N to call the highlighted Quick Dial number. Quick Dial 311 4. Enter the digits of the Quick Dial number, and then press + to store the number. or Press + to browse the phonebook and select the number you wish to store. Exit 5. Press - to return to the previous dialog. or Press O return to the main dialog. 312 Quick Dial Using VoiceNotes The VoiceNotes application lets you record personal messages or phone calls for playback at a later time. In this chapter you will learn how to:
view the VoiceNotes list playback a recorded VoiceNote use the VoiceNotes menu view VoiceNote recording instructions delete one or all VoiceNote entries check VoiceNotes memory capacity lock and unlock a VoiceNote record a VoiceNote Viewing the VoiceNotes List
(To launch the VoiceNotes application from the main menu:
Find the feature Press M and navigate to the feature VoiceNotes. Note: You can also access the VoiceNotes application through a user-dened shortcut or a customized application key. See Creating and Using Shortcuts on page XX for shortcut information. See Personalizing Your Phone on page XX for information on how to customize application keys. 313 When you launch the VoiceNotes application, you are presented with a list of recorded VoiceNotes (see following illustration). Scroll arrow Lock icon
---VoiceNotes---
b 4) 2:20pm 23-Mar 3) 4:05pm 22-Mar EXITMPLAY Returns you to the previous screen Takes you to the VoiceNotes menu Takes you to the playback screen for the highlighted VoiceNote VoiceNote entries are numbered in the order in which they were recorded, with the oldest entry (number 1) at the bottom of the list. Each entry is identied by the time and date when it was recorded. Press S to scroll through the VoiceNotes list and highlight the entry you want. Alternatively, you can enter a one- or two-digit number to highlight that VoiceNote entry. The item [New VoiceNote] appears at the end of the list, after the oldest VoiceNote entry. Selecting this item displays instructions on how to record a new VoiceNote. If no VoiceNotes are stored in memory, this is the only item listed. A b (lock) icon to the left of a VoiceNote entry indicates that the VoiceNote is locked. See Locking/Unlocking a VoiceNote on page 321 for more information. 314 Using VoiceNotes Playing Back a VoiceNote To playback a recorded VoiceNote:
Find the feature Select VoiceNote 1. Press M and navigate to the feature VoiceNotes. 2. Press S to scroll to the desired VoiceNote, and then press + to select. Note: You can playback a VoiceNote while a call is in progress. The VoiceNote will not be transmitted to the called party. The Playback Screen The playback screen is displayed while the VoiceNote plays in the earpiece/speaker. (see following illustration). Left scroll rewinds 3 seconds per keypress VoiceNote X SAVEMDELETE VoiceNote entry number Right scroll fast forwards 3 seconds per keypress Returns you to the previous screen Takes you to the VoiceNotes menu Erases the VoiceNote Notes:
The animated playback meter shows the progression of the VoiceNote recording. Using VoiceNotes 315 A b (lock) icon to the left of the VoiceNote X label indicates that the VoiceNote is locked. When you playback a locked VoiceNote, the right soft key option changes to Unlock. See Locking/Unlocking a VoiceNote on page 321 for more information. At any time during playback, you can press the following keys to perform the associated tasks:
Key
Function Stops playback and returns you to the VoiceNotes list. If VoiceNote is Unlocked: Stops playback and displays a Delete VoiceNote X? conrmation dialog prior to deleting the VoiceNote. If VoiceNote is Locked: Stops playback and unlocks the VoiceNote. Stops playback, rewinds the recording three seconds, and continues playing from the new position. Press and hold
* for one second to rewind to the beginning of the recording. Stops playback, fast forwards the recording three seconds and continues playing from the new position. Press and hold # for one second to fast forward to the end of the recording. If playback is completed, press # to restart playback from the beginning of the VoiceNote recording. 316 Using VoiceNotes Key Function M Stops playback and takes you to the context-sensitive VoiceNotes menu. (See Using the VoiceNotes Menu on page 317.) 0 - 9 Press any number key to alternately start and stop VoiceNote playback. S Stops playback and proceeds to the playback screen for the next VoiceNote
(up scroll) or the previous VoiceNote
(down scroll) in the list. Using the VoiceNotes Menu The following table shows the complete list of VoiceNotes menu options accessible from the VoiceNotes list and the playback screen. Only options that are applicable to the highlighted/selected VoiceNote are displayed when you access this menu. Menu Item Description New Lock Unlock Delete Displays VoiceNote recording instructions. Locks the VoiceNote. Unlocks the VoiceNote. Deletes the VoiceNote. Delete All Deletes all unlocked VoiceNotes. Using VoiceNotes 317 Menu Item Description Memory Displays the amount of VoiceNotes memory in use, and gives you the option of clearing memory. Note: When you exit the VoiceNotes menu and return to the playback screen, the playback position is stopped and queued where it left off when the menu was accessed. You must press # to restart playback. Viewing VoiceNote Recording Instructions You can use several methods to display instructions for recording a new VoiceNote. Note: If you try to view the recording instructions when VoiceNotes memory is full, you will see the message VoiceNotes Memory Full. See Deleting a VoiceNote Entry on page 323 to free some memory. From the VoiceNotes List Select option 1. From the VoiceNotes list, press S to scroll to the [New VoiceNote]
option, and then press + to select. 318 Using VoiceNotes Read instructions 2. Press S to scroll through the VoiceNote recording instructions one line at a time. or Press + to display the next page of text. Exit 3. Press - to return to the previous dialog. or Press O return to the main dialog. From the VoiceNotes Menu Select option Read instructions 1. From the VoiceNotes menu, press S to scroll to the New menu option, and then press + to select. 2. Press S to scroll through the VoiceNote recording instructions one line at a time. or Press + to display the next page of text. Exit 3. Press - to return to the previous dialog. or Press O return to the main dialog. Using VoiceNotes 319 From a Shortcut You can assign a shortcut that takes you directly to the new VoiceNote recording instructions. See Creating and Using Shortcuts on page XX for shortcut information. Recording a VoiceNote Begin recording 1. Press and hold the Voice key on the right side of your phone for one second to begin recording. A tone sounds in the earpiece, and the recording window displays a timer that tracks the length of the recorded VoiceNote. Note: You must continue pressing the Voice key to record a VoiceNote. Record VoiceNote 2. After the tone, leave your message by speaking normally into the phone. You can also record a phone call. This is convenient for saving things like phone numbers and directions. Note: Use of this function is subject to varying state and federal laws regarding privacy of phone conversations. 320 Using VoiceNotes Stop recording 3. When you are nished, release the Voice key to stop recording. A conrmation notice is displayed with the VoiceNotes list number and the total recording time. The phone then displays the VoiceNotes list with the new entry highlighted. If the current VoiceNote uses up the remaining memory while recording, the recording window is replaced with the message VoiceNotes Memory Full. The partially recorded VoiceNote is stored in the VoiceNotes list. Locking/Unlocking a VoiceNote When a VoiceNote is locked, it cannot be deleted. This prevents you from inadvertantly deleting an important VoiceNote. Locking a VoiceNote Go to VoiceNotes menu 1. Highlight the desired entry in the VoiceNotes list, and then press M to go to the VoiceNotes menu. Tip: A b
(lock) icon beside a VoiceNote entry indicates that the VoiceNote is locked. Using VoiceNotes 321 or When the desired VoiceNote is displayed on the playback screen, press M to go to the VoiceNotes menu. 2. Press S to scroll to Lock, and then press + to select. 3. Press - to return to the previous dialog. or Press O return to the main dialog. Select option Exit Unlocking a VoiceNote Go to VoiceNotes menu Tip: A b
(lock) icon beside a VoiceNote entry indicates that the VoiceNote is locked. 1. Highlight the desired entry in the VoiceNotes list, and then press M to go to the VoiceNotes menu. or When the desired VoiceNote is displayed on the playback screen, press M to go to the VoiceNotes menu. Select option 2. Press S to scroll to Unlock, and then press + to select. 322 Using VoiceNotes Exit 3. Press - to return to the previous dialog. or Press O return to the main dialog. Alternatively, you can use the following procedure to unlock a VoiceNote directly from the playback screen:
Unlock VoiceNote 1. When the desired VoiceNote is displayed on the playback screen, press + to unlock it. Exit 2. Press - to return to the previous dialog. or Press O return to the main dialog. Deleting a VoiceNote Entry You can remove unwanted entries from VoiceNotes memory. Using VoiceNotes 323 Tip: A b
(lock) icon beside a VoiceNote entry indicates that the VoiceNote is locked. Note: You cannot delete a locked VoiceNote. See Locking/
Unlocking a VoiceNote on page 321 for instructions on how to unlock a locked VoiceNote. Go to VoiceNotes menu Select option Conrm deletion 1. Highlight the desired entry in the VoiceNotes list, and then press M to go to the VoiceNotes menu. or When the desired VoiceNote is displayed on the playback screen, press M to go to the VoiceNotes menu. 2. Press S to scroll to Delete, and then press + to select. The phone display asks if you want to Delete VoiceNote X?
3. Press - to delete the VoiceNote. or Press + to return to the VoiceNotes list or playback screen without deleting the VoiceNote. Exit 4. Press - to return to the previous dialog. or Press O return to the main dialog. 324 Using VoiceNotes Alternatively, you can use the following procedure to delete a VoiceNote directly from the playback screen:
Delete VoiceNote Conrm deletion 1. When the desired VoiceNote is displayed on the playback screen, press + to delete it. The phone display asks if you want to Delete VoiceNote X?
2. Press - to delete the VoiceNote. or Press + to return to the VoiceNotes list or playback screen without deleting the VoiceNote. Exit 3. Press - to return to the previous dialog. or Press O return to the main dialog. Deleting All VoiceNotes You can save time by deleting all VoiceNote entries at one time instead of deleting multiple individual entries. Using VoiceNotes 325 Tip: A b
(lock) icon beside a VoiceNote entry indicates that the VoiceNote is locked. Note: You cannot delete a locked VoiceNote. See Locking/
Unlocking a VoiceNote on page 321 for instructions on how to unlock a locked VoiceNote. Go to VoiceNotes menu 1. When the VoiceNotes list or the playback screen is displayed, press M to go to the VoiceNotes menu. Select option Conrm deletion 2. Press S to scroll to Delete All, and then press + to select. The phone display asks if you want to Delete All VoiceNotes?
3. Press - to delete all unlocked VoiceNotes. or Press + to return to the VoiceNotes list or playback screen without deleting any VoiceNotes. Exit 4. Press - to return to the previous dialog. or Press O return to the main dialog. Checking VoiceNotes Memory Capacity Use this option to view the amount of memory used and remaining in VoiceNotes memory. When viewing the 326 Using VoiceNotes remaining memory, you have the option of deleting all unlocked VoiceNotes to clear more memory. Go to VoiceNotes menu 1. When the VoiceNotes list or the playback screen is displayed, press M to go to the VoiceNotes menu. Select option Select option 2. Press S to scroll to Memory, and then press + to select. The phone displays a completion meter that shows the approximate percentage of VoiceNotes memory in use. 3. Press + to delete all unlocked VoiceNotes. or Press - to return to the VoiceNotes list or playback screen without deleting any VoiceNotes. Exit 4. Press - to return to the previous dialog. or Press O return to the main dialog. Using VoiceNotes 327 Hands-Free Use The hands-free car kit provides the convenience of hands-free speaker-phone operation while you are driving your vehicle. (Refer to Accessory Limited Warranty Information on page 380 for details.) The Car Settings menu lets you adjust features related to using your phone with the hands-free car kit or other hands-free accessories. In this chapter you will learn how to:
set your phone to automatically answer after two rings route your phones audio to an attached car kit power down your phone at a set time after you turn off the ignition control how long the phone battery continues to charge after you turn off the ignition Menu Features Settings Other Settings Car Settings Auto Answer Auto Handsfree Power-off Delay Charger Time 328 Setting Automatic Answer You can set your phone to automatically answer incoming calls after two rings. Note: This feature takes effect only when the phone is connected to a hands-free device, such as a car kit or headset. Find the feature Select setting Exit 1. Press M and navigate to the feature:
Settings B Other Settings B Car Settings B Auto Answer 2. Press S to scroll to On or Off, and then press + to select. 3. Press - to return to the previous dialog. or Press O return to the main dialog. Setting Automatic Hands-Free This feature routes the phone audio to an attached car kit for hands-free operation. This feature takes effect only when the phone is connected to an appropriate car kit. Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature:
Settings B Other Settings B Car Settings B Auto Handsfree Hands-Free Use 329 Select setting Exit 2. Press S to scroll to On or Off, and then press + to select. 3. Press - to return to the previous dialog. or Press O return to the main dialog. Setting the Power-Off Delay You can set a time delay for powering off the phone when you turn off your vehicles ignition. This can be useful when you make short stops, so that you dont have to re-enter the unlock code each time you turn on the ignition. The Power-off Delay feature also guards against leaving the phone on indenitely and draining the vehicles battery while the ignition is off. Note: This feature takes effect only when the phone is connected to an appropriate car kit. Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature:
Settings B Other Settings B Car Settings B Power-off Delay 330 Hands-Free Use Select setting 2. Press S to scroll to the desired time delay, from zero to sixty minutes or continuous. Caution: If you select the Continuous option, the phone does not power off when the ignition is turned off. Be careful not to inadvertantly drain the vehicles battery if you select this option. 3. Press + to select. Exit 4. Press - to return to the previous dialog. or Press O return to the main dialog. Setting the Phone Charge Time You can set the phone to charge itself for a period of time after you turn off your vehicles ignition. This can help ensure that the phone battery gets fully charged while the vehicle is parked. Note: This feature takes effect only when the phone is connected to an appropriate car kit. Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature:
Settings B Other Settings B Car Settings B Charger Time Hands-Free Use 331 Select setting 2. Press S to scroll to the desired charge time, from one to eight hours or off. 3. Press + to select. Exit 4. Press - to return to the previous dialog. or Press O return to the main dialog. 332 Hands-Free Use The Browser The Browser is an application provided directly by your wireless service provider. It delivers customized services from the wireless server directly to your phone. Browser sessions can be:
active sessions that you initiate background sessions that the wireless server automatically or directly initiates In this chapter you will learn how to:
start a browser session navigate the browser place and end calls during a browser session run the browser in the background Note: This chapter does not discuss specic Browser applications, such as Unwired Planet. Your phone was built to enable wireless servers to use any type of browser application to deliver information. 333 Menu Features Browser Menu Service 1 Service 2 Service 3 Determined by the wireless carrier Although you cannot predict exactly what is displayed on the browser menu, its structure is the same as all other menus. Starting a Browser Session Depending on the features supported on your phone or by your wireless carrier, you can access the browser menu in any of the following ways:
select the browser from the main menu press the browser soft key use a browser shortcut select a URL from a message Selecting Browser from the Main Menu To open the browser menu:. Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Browser. Note: The browser menu item is always positioned after SIM. 334 The Browser Access item 2. Press S to scroll to a menu item, such as Service 1. Press +. Exit 3. Press - to exit. As soon as you select the browser from the main menu, the wireless server begins an active browser session. Note:
Using the Browser Soft Key to Select the Browser If you have personalized your phone to display a browser soft key, simply press the + soft key to begin an active browser session. Using the Browser Shortcut If you have created a browser shortcut, it is available from the Recent Calls menu. To begin a browser session using a shortcut:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Recent Calls feature. 2. When the Recent Calls menu opens, navigate to the Browser Home Page. Select service 3. Press S and select a browser service. 4. Press + to select a service. The Browser 335 Start session Your phone may or may not support active calls during a browser session. If you have a call in progress when you select a service, and the phone does not support both a call and a browser session, it displays the message Going to Browser will end call. 5. Press + to end the call and begin the browser session. or 6. Press - to cancel the browser session. Note: You can mark any screen within a browser session for a shortcut that is stored on the phone. See Shortcuts for more information. Using a URL to Initiate the Browser If a text message or an Information Services message includes a URL (web address) either in the header or as part of the message text, you can use the phones menu to go directly to the URL. To use a URL to start a browser session:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature Information Services. 2. Begin an interactive services session. 3. Display interactive service text. 336 The Browser Open Info Services 4. When the text message or message header displays a URL that you want to open, press M to display the Information Services sub-menu. Find Go to 5. Navigate to the Go to menu item. 6. Press + to select Go to. The phone starts an active browser session and goes to the selected URL. Error Messages You may not able to connect to a specic browser service. Following are some common error messages:
Browser not available The wireless server is unable to make a browser connection. Home Page not available If you are able to connect to the browser server, but not to the URL, either the browser server is busy or the stored URL is incorrect. Home Page not setup The URL you want is not stored in the phone. Navigating the Browser Unless you specify a URL when you begin a browser session, the session always starts with your home page. From your home page you can start applications or go to bookmarks and services provided by content suppliers. The Browser 337 Home Page Setup Some home page information, like your home page URL and browser software name and version number, is stored on your phone; other home page information, such as information you or your wireless service adds, is stored on the wireless server. Your default home page is mymotorola.com. If a wireless provider requires their own customized home page, then mymotorola.com is stored in the phone as an additional URL. All home page information stored in your phone is set up before your phone is shipped. You cannot change this information. Home page information that you or your wireless service adds is stored on the wireless server. You are able to change this information. Error Messages If your phone does not display your home page within two seconds of starting a browser session, it displays the Please Wait message until the home page is displayed or until it displays the Home Page Unavailable message. Displaying Content The browser can display information as a choice card, a display card, or an entry card. The browser software identies the card type and selects elements on your phone to use when displaying the information. 338 The Browser Choice Cards Choice cards are displayed as lists. To use choice card information:
Find and display item 1. Press M and navigate to the Browser feature. 2. Press S to select an item on the browser menu. 3. Press + to start an active browser session. Choice card 4. When a Choice Card list is displayed, press S to navigate to an item on the choice card list. 5. Press + to select the item. When you press +, the highlighted choice card is selected. If a card does not exist, the +
soft key becomes the rst option identied on the current card. An M indicates that other options are available for the item. Press M to display the other options. Display Cards Display cards are displayed as text elds. Information is usually displayed as continuous text, without line breaks or The Browser 339 punctuation, unless the wireless server adds specic formatting information. To use display card information:
Find and display item 1. Press M and navigate to the Browser feature. 2. Press S to select a browser menu item. Display card 3. Press + to start an active browser session. When the Display Card title appears, information is displayed as text on the screen. 4. Press + to select the rst option identied on the card. When you press +, the highlighted option card is selected. An M indicates that other options are available for the item. Press M to display the other options. Entry Cards Entry cards appear as text or number editors. They ask you to enter data for the server. To use an entry card:
Find and display item 1. Press M and navigate to the Browser feature. 2. Press S to select a browser menu item. 3. Press + to start an active browser session. 340 The Browser Entry card 4. When the Entry Card title appears, the screen opens to entry form. It asks you to Enter Info. If the line is blank, enter the requested information and press + to submit it to the browser application. or If there is information in the Enter Info: form that needs modication, press - to erase the characters and re-enter the information. Press
+ to submit the new information. Shortcuts You can mark and use any highlighted item in a choice or display card as a shortcut, except for items in a card sub-
menu. To set up a shortcut to a card:
Find and display card 1. Press M and navigate to the Browser feature. 2. Press S to select a browser menu item. 3. Press + to start an active browser session. 4. Navigate to the desired option or text on the card display. The Browser 341 Set shortcut 5. With the option or text highlighted, press and hold M for two seconds. The phone displays the message:
Assign Shortcut Item to key no: #
where Item is the selected option and the key number is the next available shortcut number. 6. Press + to conrm the shortcut. The phone displays the message:
Assigned: Shortcut Menu + #
where # is the assigned shortcut number. Conrm After you have assigned a shortcut, the phone returns you to the current choice or display card. When you mark a card as a shortcut, the choice cards URL is stored with your phones shortcuts. When you access the shortcut, the phone starts an active browser session and displays the cards URL. To use a shortcut to a browser setting:
Find shortcut 1. Press M. 2. Enter the shortcut number within two seconds of pressing M. The phone starts an active browser session and goes directly to the URL associated with the shortcut. 342 The Browser To view the shortcuts in the shortcut list:
Display the shortcut list 1. Press M. 2. Press S and navigate to the Shortcuts feature. The phone displays the numbered list of assigned shortcuts. If a card title is available, it is displayed in the list. If a card title is not available, the cards URL is displayed in the list. Select a shortcut 3. Press S to scroll to the desired shortcut. 4. Press + to Go To the shortcut. The phone starts an active browser session and goes directly to the URL associated with the shortcut. Please see the Shortcuts chapter for more information on setting and using shortcuts. Placing Calls in an Active Browser Session During an active browser session, some cards indicate that a call can be placed to a specied number. Notes:
If the number supplied by the card is an emergency call number, the phone sets up an emergency call as described in the Calling chapter. The Browser 343 If a call is already in progress, it is placed on hold. The phone then sets up the second call. If the phone cannot set up the call from the browser, it displays an error message. If the card includes a name or card title for the number being dialed, the phone displays the name to which the call is being connected. If a name or title is not available, then the phone displays the number being dialed. The name, title, or number is then added to the Dialed Calls list. To place such a call:
Display a card 1. Press M and navigate to the Browser feature. 2. Press S to select a browser menu item. 3. Press + to start an active browser session and display a card. Select the call 4. Press S to scroll to the available call, for example, to Customer Service. 5. Press + to send the call. 344 The Browser Ending Calls in an Active Browser Session A browser either can or cannot remain active during a call. The following conditions and resulting actions occur:
Condition Action The browser application does not specify that the browser should remain active during a call. The browser application species either that the browser should:
remain active during a call return to the application when the call has ended The phone ends the browser session when the call is connected. It returns the phone to the idle state when the call ends. The phone displays the Return to Browser?
message. Press - to return to the browser. Press + to end the browser session and return the phone to the idle state. Running the Browser in the Background Some phones are congured so that a browser session is started in the background when the phone registers with a network. There is no indication that a browser session is in progress, other than the signal strength meter. The Browser 345 If your phone supports background browser sessions, the setup option for that feature is available in the Info Srvc Setup menu. Setting up a Background Browser Session Some phones are set up to start a browser session in the background when you power them on. Your wireless carriers uses the background session to deliver information services or other types of services to the phone. Other than the signal strength meter, there is no indication that a browser session is in progress Turning a Background Browser Session On or Off If your phone is set up to run browser sessions in the background, a setup option is available in the Info Srvc Setup submenu. The factory default setting for background browser sessions is On. To turn background browser sessions On or Off:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Info Srvc Setup feature. 2. Press S to scroll to Browser Services. 3. Press + to open Browser Services. 346 The Browser Change setting 4. Press S to toggle the background browser On or Off. 5. Press + to conrm the change. The phone briey displays the Changed: Service On (or Off) message and returns you to the Browser Services feature. Setting Up Background Browser Session Channels When the phone is set up for background browser sessions, you must set up channels, or folders, to indicate your preferred type of services. These channels are specic to your wireless carrier and must be set up in the wireless server. Please contact your wireless carrier for a list of available options, channels or folders. To set up background browser session channels:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Info Srvc Setup feature. 2. Press S to scroll to Browser Services. 3. Press + to open Browser Services. 4. Press S to scroll to Options. Open Options 5. Press + to open the Options feature. The phone opens an active browser session. The Browser 347 Open URL 6. Open your home page or go to the URL your wireless carrier has designated as the place to set up folders or channels. 7. Set up your options. Exit 8. Press - to end the browser session and return to the idle state. Getting Information Via a Background Browser Session Obtaining information from a background browser session is the same as obtaining information from a cell broadcast. The phone displays a message dialog box and gives you the option to read the Info Service message. Please see the Messages chapter to learn how to navigate the Info Service Inbox and to manage messages. 348 The Browser Network Services The Network menu allows you to change settings related to network features. In this chapter, you will learn how to:
register on a network view the currently registered network display available networks nd a new network change network setup values change network setup types specify preferred networks set service tones set the call drop alert Menu Features Main Menu Settings Other Settings Network Current Network Network Setup Mode Type 349 Search Type Service Tone Call Drop Tone Viewing the Currently Registered Network All phones register to a network in order to place and to receive calls. The following steps describe how to view the Network ID or name on which your phone is registered:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Network feature. Display Network ID 2. Press S to scroll to Current Network. 3. Press + to view the network registration. The phone displays the ve digit system ID or the network name. 4. Press - to exit. Displaying Available Networks Some phones provide a menu option that allows you to view a list of available non-public networks. This feature is useful when you want to register on a desirable network and you:
350 Network Services enter a new city, region, or country are unfamiliar with area networks To display the non-public list:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Network feature. 2. Press S to scroll to the New Network menu item. 3. Press + to select New Network. Display list 4. Press S to scroll to Non-Public List. 5. Press + to select it. The phone displays the Searching for Networks. Please Wait message. When the phone has resolved the list of available networks, it displays them sorted by signal strength. Networks are listed in descending order of signal strength. If the phone is not registered on a network when you try to view Current Network, it displays a Not Registered message and returns to the previous display. Display Network ID 6. Press S to move down the list. 7. Press + to display an entry. Network Services 351 Registering on a Network When you display network registration information, you can register on the displayed network. To register on a displayed network:
Find the feature Select a network Register 1. Display the Non-Public Network List. See Displaying Available Networks on page 350 for details. 2. Press S to scroll through the list of available networks and highlight a network. 3. Press M to display the network sub-menu and highlight Register Now. Press + to register. or 4. Press + to select a highlighted network. When the network details are displayed, press + to register. Finding a New Network Because of network coverage or roaming conditions, sometimes you may want to switch to another network to 352 Network Services improve the calling conditions. To search for and select a new network:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Network feature. 2. Press S to scroll to the New Network menu item. 3. Press + to select it. The phone displays the Searching for Network message. If a network is available and test registration is successful, the phone displays the Network System ID. 4. Press - to register the phone. The phone displays the Registering message, then displays the message:
Registered: Sys ID #####
The messages time out and the phone returns to the Network menu. or Register phone Network Services 353 Continue search 5. Press + to continue searching for the next available network. The phone displays the message:
Continue Non-Public Search?
6. Press - to continue searching until no more networks are found or until you select a network on which to register. If your search does not nd any non-
public networks, or if you search through and reject all available networks, the phone displays the message:
Non-Public Not Available and returns to the Network menu. Exit 7. Press + to end your search and return to the Network menu. After you successfully register on a new network, the phone remains on the network until:
You turn off the phone. A call is originated and terminated. The signal strength falls below a specied level. You register to a different network. When you leave a network system, the phone automatically changes the network registration from New Network to Normal. 354 Network Services Finding a Public Network A normal network scan may lead you to register your phone on a private network. Once you are registered on a private network, you may want to re-register on a public network. To nd a public network:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Network feature 2. Press S and scroll to New Network. Press + to select it. 3. Press S and scroll to Use Public. 4. Press + to select Use Public. Search The phone displays the Searching for Network message. When it nds a public network, it displays the Registering message. f you search for a public network when your phone is already registered to a public network, the phone displays a Public Registered message. If you search for a public network and none is available, the phone displays a Public Not Available message. Changing Network Setup Values Use the Network Setup feature to change the mode, type, or call mode. Actual eld names and values may change Network Services 355 depending on available technologies of the wireless carriers. To change network setup values:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Network Setup feature. 2. Press + to select Network Setup. The phone displays the Network Setup form. Each of the procedures outlined below uses the Network Setup form. Changing Mode Phones that allow you to select the mode include a Mode eld in the Network Setup form. Available modes include:
Digital Preferred Places calls on a digital voice channel if available. Otherwise, uses an analog voice channel. Analog Only Places calls only on analog channels. Digital only Places calls only on digital channels. To change the mode:
Find the feature 1. Open the Network Setup form. 2. Press S to navigate to the Mode:
eld. 3. Press + to change the mode. 356 Network Services Select mode 4. Press S to scroll down the list of modes. 5. Press + to select a mode. Conrm change The phone briey displays a Changed:
Mode message and returns to the Network Setup form. 6. Press - to conrm the change. The network mode immediately changes to the selected mode. If you have selected Analog only, the setting reverts to Digital Preferred if the phone is turned off or when a call is placed and ended. Changing Type Type values vary with each phone. They may include:
Preferred List (scans for networks on the preferred list only), Home Only (scans for networks that match the home setting), Automatic, Standard A/B, Reverse B/A, A Systems only, and B Systems only. To change the type:
Find the feature 1. Open the Network Settings form. 2. Press S to navigate to the Type: eld. 3. Press + to change the type. Network Services 357 Select type 4. Press S to scroll down the list of available types. 5. Press + to select a type. The phone briey displays a Changed:
Type message and returns to the Network Settings form. 6. Press - to conrm the change. Conrm change Changing Network Search Types Some phones allow you to specify the type of network search that is performed when your phone searches for a network as it powers up and registers. Search Values Network search values include:
Home only Searches only for networks that match the Home Network ID number Automatic Searches with standard roaming lists 358 Network Services Accessing Search Types To access the network search type:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Network feature. 2. Press + to display the Network menu. 3. Press S to scroll to the Search Type feature. Display feature 4. Press + to select the Search Type feature. Changing Search Type To change the search type:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Search Type feature. 2. Press + to display the Search Type details. Change type 3. Press S to toggle between Home Only and Automatic. 4. Press + to conrm the selection. The phone briey displays a Changed:
Search Type message and returns you to the Network menu. Network Services 359 Setting Service Tones Some phones are set up to use the service tone feature. When the phone uses the service tone feature, it beeps each time the registration status changes. Registration changes include:
losing network coverage regaining network coverage powering up and registering on a network roaming and registering onto another Network ID Accessing Service Tones To access the service tone setting:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Network feature. 2. Press + to display the Network menu. 3. Press S to scroll to the Service Tone feature. 4. Press + to display Service Tone settings. Display feature settings 360 Network Services Adjusting Service Tone Settings You can toggle service tone settings on or off:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Service Tone feature. 2. Press + to change Service Tone settings. Change settings 3. Press S to toggle between On and Off selections. 4. Press + to conrm the selection. Shortcut:
Once you navigate to the feature, press
# to toggle the setting On or Off. The phone briey displays the message:
Changed: Service Tone On (or Off) and returns to the Network sub-
menu. Setting the Call Drop Alert Some phones include a call drop feature, which, when turned on, produces an audible tone whenever the network has just dropped a call. Because digital networks are so quiet, the call drop alert is needed to tells you that a call has been dropped. Network Services 361 Accessing the Call Drop Tone To access the call drop tone feature:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Other Settings feature. 2. Press + to select Other Settings. 3. Press S to scroll to the Network feature. 4. Press + to display My Network List. 5. Press S to scroll to Call Drop Tone. Display settings 6. Press + to display Call Drop Tone settings. Adjusting the Call Drop Tone Setting To adjust call drop tone settings:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the Call Drop Tone feature. Change setting 2. Press + to change Call Drop Tone settings. 3. Press S to toggle the setting On or Off. 4. Press + to conrm the change. The phone briey displays a Changed:
Call Drop To On (or Off) message and returns you to My Network List. Shortcut:
Once you navigate to the feature, press
# to toggle the setting On or Off. 362 Network Services Interactive Services Interactive services is a messaging service, provided by some wireless vendors, that lets you download text information about things like trafc and restaurants. It supports limited two-way text messaging between the wireless provider and phone subscribers. Interactive services is called Info on Demand in the phones menu system. In this chapter, you will learn how to:
use the interactive services menu select and access interactive services interact with a service Menu Features The interactive services menu on your phone is a top menu or a cover menu for items provided by your wireless carrier. Since the items can change at any time, the top menu provides a way to display whatever menu items are available. Interactive Services Menu Info on Demand Trafc Info Restaurants Reconnect Enter Title Enter Code The menu title for the wireless carriers sub-menu items. Common wireless carrier service Common wireless carrier service Reconnects you to the service you last used 363 Starting an Interactive Service To start an interactive service:
Start Info On Demand 1. Press M. Navigate to the feature Info On Demand. 2. Press +. An interactive service session begins. Select service 3. Press S to select a service. 4. Press + to select a service. or Press M to display the service submenu. Exit 5. Press - to exit. Displaying Text During an interactive session, your phone displays text sent from the wireless server. If all of the interactive services information is contained within the display, press + when you are done to return to the previous screen. If more information is available than can be displayed on the screen, press + to display the additional information. Press - to return to the previous screen. 364 Interactive Services Providing Input Sometimes, while responding to your interactive service requests, the wireless server asks you for information. When this happens, the phone displays: Enter Data (for text) or Enter Digits (for numbers) and provides a line in which to input text or numbers. To respond to an Enter Data or Enter Digits request:
Enter data Accept or change Get service 1. Use the keypad letters and numbers to enter the requested data. 2. Press + to accept the data or Press - to delete any incorrect characters. Re-enter the information and press +. The phone displays the Please Wait message while it reads the data you entered. When the data is read, the phone connects the service. Displaying Help Information If the server provides help information for an interactive service, the phone displays M for Menu in the center of the last display line. To display help for an interactive service:
Open help menu 1. Press M. The phone displays a Please Wait message. Interactive Services 365 Select details 2. Press S to select Details. 3. Press + to display help information. View details The phone displays help details. 4. Press + to display more help information. Exit Press - to exit interactive services help. Reconnecting Reconnecting is an option that may or may not be offered by your wireless carrier. Reconnecting allows you to use the menu to bring up the service you last used. To reconnect to the last service:
Start Info On Demand 1. Press M. Navigate to the feature Info On Demand. 2. Press +. An interactive service session begins. Reconnect 3. Press S to Reconnect. 366 Interactive Services Display Details 4. Press +. The phone displays a Please Wait message while it reconnects you to the title of the last interactive service used. When reconnected, the phone displays the last service. menu 5. Press + to display detailed interactive service information. The phone displays a Please Wait message while it reconnects you to the details of the last interactive service used. 6. Press S to help info for to display any available help information. or Press S to get to the title of the service. 7. Press + to display detailed information. Exit 8. Press - to exit. Interactive Services 367 Entering Titles You can enter the title of the interactive service. This title is actually a shortcut to a particular category. To start an interactive service by entering a title:
Find the feature 1. Press M. Navigate to the feature Enter Title. 2. Press +. Enter Title 3. Enter the interactive service title. 4. Press +. The phone displays a brief Please Wait message. The title is displayed as the top of a menu that contains sub-menu items for the service you have requested. Get Info 5. Press S to the information you want. 6. Press + to select it. Exit 7. Press - to exit. Entering Codes The Enter Code menu item is a shortcut that allows you to enter the code to start an interactive session. The code is a map to a particular category. 368 Interactive Services To start an interactive service by entering a code:
Find the feature Enter the Code Select the Service 1. Press M. Navigate to the feature Enter Code 2. Press +. The phone displays the Enter Code form. 3. Enter the interactive services code. 4. Press +
The phone displays a brief Please Wait message and then displays the Interactive Service submenu. 5. Press S to the service you want to initiate. 6. Press +. Exit 7. Press - to exit. Recognizing Error Conditions If the interactive service cannot connect with the requested session, the phone displays an error message. Errors can occur when the phone is unable to connect with the server or when you make a mistake in entering interactive titles or codes. The errors listed below only occur when you use shortcuts in the menu to start an interactive session. Interactive Services 369 Reconnecting Error Some wireless carriers can only support reconnection for a limited period of time. If the time period has expired, the phone displays a Reconnect not available error message. Input Error If you have entered an incorrect title or code and the interactive service cannot connect, the phone displays a Title not allowed or Code not allowed message. Interacting with a Service Setting Up a Message With a Call-
Back Number You can send a message with a call-back number to begin an interactive session. If you select this option, the wireless server takes the phone number from your message and instructs the phone to set up a voice call. If your wireless provider has made the technology available, the server can:
set up a call when no other calls are in progress place all other calls on hold and set up a call end any other calls and set up a call end interactive services calls 370 Interactive Services Setting up a Call (No Calls In Progress) To set up a call when no other calls are in progress:
Find the feature 1. Press M. 2. Press S to Info on Demand. 3. Press + to open interactive services sub-menu. Select service 4. Press S to nd the interactive service you want to start. 5. Press + to select the service and begin the session. If the call back message includes text, it displays the name of the service, for example: Calling...Traffix. If the call back message does not include text, the message displays the call back number, for example:
Calling...5557000. Service Connect When the call is complete, the phone moves to the In Call state. Setting up a Call (Place Other Calls On Hold) When a call is in progress, the phone displays a Connected message with the persons name. Notes:
The original call is placed on hold before the new call is set up. Interactive Services 371 The original call is placed on hold only if your wireless provider supports the technology. Please contact your provider for more information. To set up a call while another call is in progress:
Find the feature 1. Press M. 2. Press S to Info on Demand. 3. Press + to open interactive services sub-menu. Select service 4. Press S to nd the interactive service you want to start. 5. Press + to select the service and begin the session. If the call back message includes text, it displays the name of the service, for example: Calling...Traffix. If the call back message does not include text, the message displays the call back number, for example:
Calling...5557000. Service Connect 6. When the call is complete, the phone moves to Active Call + Call on Hold state. Switch 7. Press + to switch between the calls. Setting up a Call (End Other Calls) When a call is in progress, the phone displays a Connected message with the persons name. 372 Interactive Services To set up a call and end any other calls in progress:
Find the feature 1. Press M. 2. Press S to Info on Demand. 3. Press + to open interactive services sub-menu. Select service 4. Press S to nd the interactive service you want to start. 5. Press + to select the service and begin the session. The phone displays the Call Ended message. If the call back message includes text, it displays the name of the service, for example: Calling...Traffix. If the call back message does not include text, the message displays the call back number, for example:
Calling...5557000. Service Connect 6. When the call is complete, the phone moves to the In Call state. Ending an Interactive Services Call When normal calls end, the phone returns to the idle display. When an interactive services call ends, the phone gives you the option to return to Info on Demand. Interactive Services 373 To end an interactive services call:
End the call New Service?
1. Press N. The phone displays the Return to Info on Demand? message. 2. Press - to return to the Info on Demand menu. 3. Press + to exit the Info on Demand application. Exit 4. The phone returns to the idle display. Sending a Text Message Sometimes when setting up interactive sessions, the remote server asks you to enter information. When an interactive session requires more information, the call progresses as follows:
Find the feature 1. Press M. 2. Press S to Info on Demand. 3. Press + to open interactive services sub-menu. Start the session Enter info 4. Press S to nd the interactive service you want to start. 5. Press + to select the service and begin the session. 6. The server asks you for information. Use the keypad to enter letters or numbers. 374 Interactive Services Service Connect 7. The interactive service connects and displays requested information. Interactive Services 375 Infrared Connections Some phones can connect to devices such as fax machines or computers without wires. These connections are made using infrared data links. In this chapter you will learn how to establish an infrared connection from your phone to other devices that accept infrared links. Important: In order to create and maintain an infrared connection, the phone must be within one meter
(approximately three feet) of the other infrared device. Nothing can block the line of sight between the two devices. Menu Features Main Menu Settings Connection IRDA Links Establishing an Infrared Connection To establish an infrared connection:
Find the feature 1. Press M and navigate to the feature IRDA Links. 376 Activate link Retry link 2. Press + to activate the IRDA link. The Infrared Link activates and searches for a compatible device. The phone displays the message:
Infrared link connecting This message continues for 60 seconds or until the link is established
(whichever comes rst). When the phone successfully links with another infrared device, it displays the message:
IRDA link is active If the phone does not nd an infrared device, it displays the message:
Infrared link failed. Retry now?
3. Press - to attempt another connection. Exit 4. Press + to abandon the connection attempt. Infrared Connections 377 Accessories An exciting line of Motorola accessories, now smaller and lighter than ever, can enhance and personalize your wireless experience. Lithium Polymer Batteries Add Illustration Motorolas Polymer (LilON) batteries are high-energy density batteries that offer increased capacity and are light in weight. Simple Desktop Charger Add Illustration The simple Desktop Charger has one pocket that can charge a battery attached to a phone. An AC adapter is required. Dual-Pocket Desktop Charger Add Illustration This desktop charger can be loaded with two batteries at once. , The chargers front pocket can charge a battery attached to a a phone, and the rear pocket can charge a battery by itself. An AC adapter is required. 378 Travel Chargers Standard, economy, and Rapid Travel travel chargers are available to conveniently charge your batteries. The standard and Rapid Travel chargers use universal voltage with Klaus adapters, whereas the economy charger uses a single voltage with xed plugs. Add Illustration Headset The convenient mono headset provides both an earphone and microphone in one small piece for simple hands-free and private telephone conversations. The headset plugs directly into the jack on the top of your phone, so that you can wear your phone and move freely. Place the foam cover on the earpiece for a more comfortable t. This headset includes a send/end button. Add Illustration Holster Your phone is so small and light, it is positively wearable. Slip it in and clip it onfor the ultimate in high-tech fashion. Add Illustration Accessories 379 Accessory Limited Warranty Information We recommend that you use Motorola original batteries and accessories. Under its limited wireless telephone warranty, Motorola specically disclaims any responsibility for damage caused by the use of portable wireless telephone accessories not manufactured by Motorola. For details on the complete line of Motorola wireless accessories, see your dealer or visit our Web site at http:/
/www.motorola.com/. 380 Accessories Troubleshooting Question Answer I pressed the power button, but nothing happened. Whats wrong with my phone?
Be sure to press and hold the power button until the display appears and you hear an audible alert. If nothing still happens, check that you have installed a battery and that the battery is charged. For more information about batteries and charging see the sections on batteries starting with Installing and Removing Batteries on page XX. My battery didnt last as long as I expected. What can I do to extend battery life?
Your batterys talk-time and standby-time are relative measurements of the batterys capacity. The more you talk on the phone, the less standby-time you have, and vice versa. To get the most from your battery, allow it to charge fully. To charge the battery to 100% of its capacity, leave it in the charger for an extra hour after the chargers light turns green. You can also turn off the Service Light to extend battery life. Use only batteries that are compatible with your phone. Exposing your battery to extreme temperatures below -10C (14F) or above 45C (113F)can shorten battery life. Batteries are especially sensitive to high temperature extremes. As a good rule, always take your phone with you when you leave your car. Troubleshooting 381 Question Answer The display says, Locked. How do I unlock my phone?
Enter the last three digits of your wireless number. If that doesnt work, use the factory preset lock code:
123. If all else fails, call your service provider (the company that sends you your monthly wireless bill).
(See Locking/Unlocking Your Phone on page xxx for more information on security features.) I tried to place a call and received a fast busy signal. The wireless system did not process your call. For example, the wireless system may be overloaded with call attempts. To redial, press O before ending your call attempt, or press N and try the call again later.
(See Redialing a Number on page xx.) Your call did not reach the wireless system. You may have dialed the number too soon after turning the phone on. Wait until the NS light stops blinking before placing a call. An alternating tone may also indicate that your phones signal is blocked. Be sure youre clear of any obstructions such as bridges, parking garages, or tall buildings. You may have turned off the Scratchpad tones. Place your call, enter the access numbers when prompted by the recording, then press O To avoid this problem in the future, follow the directions Turning Scratchpad Tones On and Off on page xx to turn the Scratchpad tones on. I tried to place a call and received an alternating high/low tone. I tried to listen to my Voice Mail (or use a paging service, a calling card, etc.) but nothing happened. 382 Troubleshooting Question Answer My phone was stolen. What should I report and to whom?
Report a stolen phone to the police and to your service provider (the company that sends you your monthly wireless service bills). I tried to place a calling card call using the internal Phone Book, but it didnt work. You may have turned off your Scratchpad tones. Follow the directions in Turning Scratchpad Tones On and Off on page 107 to turn the Scratchpad tones on. Check that you stored your calling card information in the correct order, and make sure the groups of numbers are separated by pauses. The easiest way to correct the sequence may be to start from scratch. Follow the instructions on Storing and Placing Numbers for Calling Card Information on page 63, enter your calling card information again, and store it in the same memory location as your previous attempt. Also keep in mind that when using your calling card, you must enter the number you are calling with the area code, but without the initial 1. Check with your long distance carrier for details on using your calling card. Troubleshooting 383 Question Answer I plugged the data cable into my phone but my phone did not beep. How do I know if the data cable is ready to go?
My phone beeped when I attached the data cable but my fax and data applications dont work at all. Whats wrong?
The beep indicates that you are setup correctly. If you did not hear the beep, the rst thing to check is that your phone is data capable. To do so, see Using Data Features on page 1. Next, make sure that both ends of the data cable are connectedthe smaller end to your phone and larger to your computer. Also, check the model number of the cable to be sure you have the right one. Look for SYN7464 printed on the cable. If all of the above checks out, your computer may have deactivated the port to save power. Try opening an application that uses the port, like a fax or dial-up application, and your computer will automatically activate the port. You must be in an area with digital coverage. Check your phones display for the digital icon W to be sure youre in a digital coverage area. Some wireless networks may not support data or fax transmission. If you see the digital indicator, but you are roaming on an unfamiliar network, this may be the case. Also, remember that data and fax transmission usually requires a subscription. Call your Service Provider for more information. 384 Troubleshooting Question Answer When sending data with the data cable, why does the computer show a connection rate of 19200 Kbps?
I cant end my data call by closing the application on my computer. What can I do?
I launched the MiniBrowser but the display says:
Service Not Available. What is wrong?
I launched the MiniBrowser but the display says:
Data Server Unavailable. What is wrong?
19200 is the rate of the connection between your computer and the phone. The rate of the connection between your phone and the network is displayed on your phone, and will be either 14400 or 9600. If necessary, try pressing N on the phone. Also try disconnecting the cable or turning off the phone. If possible, always close the connection through your computer. These alternative methods may disrupt the application on your computer. You are in an area without service. If you have wireless service, look in the display for the Digital indicator. If you dont see it, you may have only Analog service or no service at all. If you do see the Digital indicator, you may be connected to digital network that does not support Internet access. Try again in a few minutes. The servers may be temporarily busy. Troubleshooting 385 Glossary A AC adapter An accessory device that allows you to power your phone and charge any attached batteries from a wall outlet. accessory connector port A socket on the bottom of the phone where you can attach accessories such as an AC adapter, battery charger, vehicle power adapter, or optional accessories. air-time The amount of time you spend using a wireless system. Especially, the time between successfully placing a call and terminating a call. antenna The device attached to your phone that sends and receives wireless signals. Auto Answer When you activate this feature, your phone automatically answers after two rings. Automatic Redial When your wireless network cannot handle your call, this feature enables your phone to automatically redial for the next four minutes. C Call Back number A phone number in a text message, provided by the sender. Caller ID A network/subscription dependent service that allows you to view information on incoming calls before answering. Not available in all areas. 386 CDMA (Code Division Multiple Access) CDMA takes digitized voice and encodes it in a unique scheme that is sent out over the air. CDMA digital reduces the probability of dropped calls. Your phone is equipped to handle CDMA digital voice transmission. D DTMF tones See Dual Tone Multi-Frequency tones. default A features original setting as pre-programmed in the factory. Dual Tone Multi-Frequency tones The tones that your telephone transmits when you press a key on the keypad. These tones are used to access automated calling systems such as Voice Mail, paging services, and banking-by-
phone. These tones are also heard by the party on the other line if you use the Scratchpad while a call is in progress. Synonymous with Scratchpad tones or touch tones. E emergency call This feature allows you to make an emergency call even if your phone is locked, by dialing 911 or another emergency access number. F fringe area The outermost range of a wireless system where signals are weak. H Home Only Mode When your phone is active in this System Mode setting and you are beyond the range of your home Service Provider, your phone will not operate. Glossary 387 I icon One of the variety of symbols used to designate menu features and messages. indicator A symbol on your phone that gives you information about your phones status. Instant Redial This feature enables your phone to redial when your wireless network is temporarily unable to handle your call. Your phone automatically attempts the call for four minutes or until it is picked up by the network. Internal Charger A charger built into your phone for use with an AC adapter or vehicle power adapter. K Keypad Tones The sounds produced through your phones speaker when you press the keys. Note that Keypad Tones does not refer to the tones sent by your phone to communicate with automated phone systems. L Lithium Ion (LiIon) A battery technology used in personal wireless telephones. Lithium Ion batteries generally provide more energy capacity than Nickel Metal Hydride batters of the same weight. lock Use this feature to prevent unauthorized access to your telephone. lock code A three-digit code used to access your phone once it has been locked. The factory programmed lock code is 123. 388 Glossary M memory location A space in the internal Phone Book where you can store a telephone number and a name. Each of the Phone Books 99 memory locations (numbered 01-99) can hold 24 letters and up to four numbers, each with as many as 32 digits. menu feature Any feature that can be accessed through the menu system. menu system The hierarchical arrangement of your phones features that allows for quick, intuitive access. Message Center Key Located on the bottom row of the keypad, the dedicated Message Center Key provides quick access to messages and messaging functions. Messages A network/subscription dependent services that enables your phone to receive text messages and numeric pages just like a pager. Messaging Function Menus While viewing your Caller IDs, reading your messages, or checking your Voice Mail, you can use these menus to manage your messages. Examples are locking/unlocking a text message or deleting one or all of your Caller ID or text messages and numeric pages. MiniBrowser Software in your phone that allows you to access information like stock prices and sports scores with your wireless phone. N name directory An alphabetical list of the names and telephone numbers you have stored into your phones internal Phone Book. Glossary 389 Notepad A memory feature that automatically remembers the most recent number entered into the keypad. P pause A special character that tells your phone to pause or wait for your input before sending a group of numbers stored in memory. Pause Dialing A method of storing Phone Book entries that allows you to store multiple strings of numbers in one memory location; useful, for instance, in accessing automated phone systems. Personal Identication Number (PIN) A private numeric password that protects personal accounts such as bank-by-
phone or Voice Mail. Phonebook An alphabetical list of the names and telephone numbers you have stored into your phones internal memory. Priority Call This feature allows you to place a call from memory location 01 even if the phone is locked. prompt A message requesting input. R roam To use a wireless system outside of your home system, usually when you travel beyond the range of your home system. S scroll To move backward or forward through a list; for example: to move backward or forward through the menu system or the Phone Book using either the < and > keys or the * and # keys. 390 Glossary secure code A six-digit code used to access and change certain security features. The factory-programmed secure code is 000000. service provider A company afliated with a wireless carrier that provides wireless service to its customers. Service Tones Two short beeps used to alert you to changes in your wireless service. signal The radio waves that carry information between your phone and the wireless system. Silent Mode Select this feature and all your phones tones are silenced and the VibraCall alert activated. Smart Button The bottom key on the side of your phone used to access the Phone Books name directory, send calls, end calls, enter the menu system, select features, and toggle features on and off. soft handoff Unlike traditional analog technology where you are disconnected from one site and then connected to another, CDMA digital technology connects you to a new site before disconnecting you from the old site. This is known as a soft handoff. With soft-handoff technology, you can experience fewer dropped calls. Speed Dial A feature that enables you to place a number by entering the two-digit location of your number and then pressing and holding = (or pressing and holding S or TALK). standby-time The length of time your phone is on but not used for talking. Standard Mode When your phone is active in this System Mode setting and you are beyond the range of your home Glossary 391 Service Provider, your phone seeks a home -type system, then a non-home-type system. status indicator See indicator. submenu A secondary level of your phones menu system hierarchy. System Identication A ve-digit number that identies your home wireless system. An even number indicates a wireline system and an odd number indicates a non-
wireline system. System Mode A setting that determines the system type that your wireless phone accesses. T talk-time The total time that you can talk on the phone before your battery is fully discharged. toggle To switch between two possible options; for example: on versus off. Pressing = toggles features on and off. Turbo Dial keys a feature that enables you to dial numbers stored in memory locations by pressing and holding a single number key. V vehicle power adapter An accessory device that allows you to power your phone and charge any attached batteries from a cars cigarette lighter. VibraCall alert Motorolas silent vibration mode that discreetly alerts you to incoming calls. It can be used alone or in conjunction with the ringer. Voice Mail Contact your Service Provider for availability. 392 Glossary volume keys Located on the side of your phone, the upper and lower volume keys are used to adjust phone volume. W wireless carrier One of multiple competing organizations in a given geographic area that owns and operates a wireless system. wireless signal The radio waves that carry information between your wireless phone and the wireless system. wireless system The wireless equipment in a given geographic area that relays signals to and from individual wireless telephones and the landline telephone system. Glossary 393 The U.S. Food and Drug Administration's Center for Devices and Radiological Health Consumer Update on Mobile Phones FDA has been receiving inquiries about the safety of mobile phones, including cellular phones and PCS phones. The following summarizes what is knownand what remains unknownabout whether these products can pose a hazard to health, and what can be done to minimize any potential risk. This information may be used to respond to questions. Why the concern?
Mobile phones emit low levels of radio frequency energy
(i.e., radio frequency radiation) in the microwave range while being used. They also emit very low levels of radio frequency energy (RF), considered non-signicant, when in the stand-by mode. It is well known that high levels of RF can produce biological damage through heating effects
(this is how your microwave oven is able to cook food). However, it is not known whether, to what extent, or through what mechanism, lower levels of RF might cause adverse health effects as well. Although some research has been done to address these questions, no clear picture of the biological effects of this type of radiation has emerged to date. Thus, the available science does not allow us to conclude that mobile phones are absolutely safe, or that they are unsafe. However, the available scientic evidence does not demonstrate any adverse health effects associated with the use of mobile phones. 394 What kinds of phones are in question?
Questions have been raised about hand-held mobile phones, the kind that have a built-in antenna that is positioned close to the user's head during normal telephone conversation. These types of mobile phones are of concern because of the short distance between the phone's antennathe primary source of the RFand the person's head. The exposure to RF from mobile phones in which the antenna is located at greater distances from the user (on the outside of a car, for example) is drastically lower than that from hand-held phones, because a person's RF exposure decreases rapidly with distance from the source. The safety of so-called cordless phones, which have a base unit connected to the telephone wiring in a house and which operate at far lower power levels and frequencies, has not been questioned. How much evidence is there that hand-
held mobile phones might be harmful?
Briey, there is not enough evidence to know for sure, either way; however, research efforts are on-going. The existing scientic evidence is conicting and many of the studies that have been done to date have suffered from aws in their research methods. Animal experiments investigating the effects of RF exposures characteristic of mobile phones have yielded conicting results. A few animal studies, however, have suggested that low levels of RF could accelerate the development of cancer in laboratory animals. In one study, mice genetically altered to be predisposed to developing one type of cancer developed more than twice as many such cancers when they were exposed to RF energy compared to controls. There is much uncertainty among scientists about whether results obtained from 395 animal studies apply to the use of mobile phones. First, it is uncertain how to apply the results obtained in rats and mice to humans. Second, many of the studies that showed increased tumor development used animals that had already been treated with cancer-causing chemicals, and other studies exposed the animals to the RF virtually continuouslyup to 22 hours per day. For the past ve years in the United States, the mobile phone industry has supported research into the safety of mobile phones. This research has resulted in two ndings in particular that merit additional study:
1. In a hospital-based, case-control study, researchers looked for an association between mobile phone use and either glioma (a type of brain cancer) or acoustic neuroma (a benign tumor of the nerve sheath). No statistically signicant association was found between mobile phone use and acoustic neuroma. There was also no association between mobile phone use and gliomas when all types of types of gliomas were considered together. It should be noted that the average length of mobile phone exposure in this study was less than three years. When 20 types of glioma were considered separately, however, an association was found between mobile phone use and one rare type of glioma, neuroepithelliomatous tumors. It is possible with multiple comparisons of the same sample that this association occurred by chance. Moreover, the risk did not increase with how often the mobile phone was used, or the length of the calls. In fact, the risk actually decreased with cumulative hours of mobile phone use. Most cancer causing agents increase risk with increased exposure. An ongoing study of brain 396 cancers by the National Cancer Institute is expected to bear on the accuracy and repeatability of these results.1 2. Researchers conducted a large battery of laboratory tests to assess the effects of exposure to mobile phone RF on genetic material. These included tests for several kinds of abnormalities, including mutations, chromosomal aberrations, DNA strand breaks, and structural changes in the genetic material of blood cells called lymphocytes. None of the tests showed any effect of the RF except for the micronucleus assay, which detects structural effects on the genetic material. The cells in this assay showed changes after exposure to simulated cell phone radiation, but only after 24 hours of exposure. It is possible that exposing the test cells to radiation for this long resulted in heating. Since this assay is known to be sensitive to heating, heat alone could have caused the abnormalities to occur. The data already in the literature on the response of the micronucleus assay to RF are conicting. Thus, follow-up research is necessary.2 FDA is currently working with government, industry, and academic groups to ensure the proper follow-up to these industry-funded research ndings. Collaboration with the Cellular Telecommunications Industry Association (CTIA) in particular is expected to lead to FDA providing research recommendations and scientic oversight of new CTIA-
funded research based on such recommendations. Two other studies of interest have been reported recently in the literature:
397 1. Two groups of 18 people were exposed to simulated mobile phone signals under laboratory conditions while they performed cognitive function tests. There were no changes in the subjects' ability to recall words, numbers, or pictures, or in their spatial memory, but they were able to make choices more quickly in one visual test when they were exposed to simulated mobile phone signals. This was the only change noted among more than 20 variables compared.3 In a study of 209 brain tumor cases and 425 matched controls, there was no increased risk of brain tumors associated with mobile phone use. When tumors did exist in certain locations, however, they were more likely to be on the side of the head where the mobile phone was used. 2. Because this occurred in only a small number of cases, the increased likelihood was too small to be statistically signicant.4 In summary, we do not have enough information at this point to assure the public that there are, or are not, any low incident health problems associated with use of mobile phones. FDA continues to work with all parties, including other federal agencies and industry, to assure that research is undertaken to provide the necessary answers to the outstanding questions about the safety of mobile phones. What is known about cases of human cancer that have been reported in users of hand-held mobile phones?
Some people who have used mobile phones have been diagnosed with brain cancer. But it is important to 398 understand that this type of cancer also occurs among people who have not used mobile phones. In fact, brain cancer occurs in the U.S. population at a rate of about 6 new cases per 100,000 people each year. At that rate, assuming 80 million users of mobile phones (a number increasing at a rate of about 1 million per month), about 4800 cases of brain cancer would be expected each year among those 80 million people, whether or not they used their phones. Thus it is not possible to tell whether any individual's cancer arose because of the phone, or whether it would have happened anyway. A key question is whether the risk of getting a particular form of cancer is greater among people who use mobile phones than among the rest of the population. One way to answer that question is to compare the usage of mobile phones among people with brain cancer with the use of mobile phones among appropriately matched people without brain cancer. This is called a case-control study. The current case-control study of brain cancers by the National Cancer Institute, as well as the follow-up research to be sponsored by industry, will begin to generate this type of information. What is FDA's role concerning the safety of mobile phones?
Under the law, FDA does not review the safety of radiation-
emitting consumer products such as mobile phones before marketing, as it does with new drugs or medical devices. However, the agency has authority to take action if mobile phones are shown to emit radiation at a level that is hazardous to the user. In such a case, FDA could require the manufacturers of mobile phones to notify users of the health hazard and to repair, replace or recall the phones so that the hazard no longer exists. 399 Although the existing scientic data do not justify FDA regulatory actions at this time, FDA has urged the mobile phone industry to take a number of steps to assure public safety. The agency has recommended that the industry:
support needed research into possible biological effects of RF of the type emitted by mobile phones design mobile phones in a way that minimizes any RF exposure to the user that is not necessary for device function cooperate in providing mobile phone users with the best possible information on what is known about possible effects of mobile phone use on human health At the same time, FDA belongs to an interagency working group of the federal agencies that have responsibility for different aspects of mobile phone safety to ensure a coordinated effort at the federal level. These agencies are:
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health Environmental Protection Agency Federal Communications Commission Occupational Health and Safety Administration National Telecommunications and Information Administration The National Institutes of Health also participates in this group. 400 In the absence of conclusive information about any possible risk, what can concerned individuals do?
If there is a risk from these productsand at this point we do not know that there isit is probably very small. But if people are concerned about avoiding even potential risks, there are simple steps they can take to do so. For example, time is a key factor in how much exposure a person receives. Those persons who spend long periods of time on their hand-held mobile phones could consider holding lengthy conversations on conventional phones and reserving the hand-held models for shorter conversations or for situations when other types of phones are not available. People who must conduct extended conversations in their cars every day could switch to a type of mobile phone that places more distance between their bodies and the source of the RF, since the exposure level drops off dramatically with distance. For example, they could switch to:
a mobile phone in which the antenna is located outside the vehicle a hand-held phone with a built-in antenna connected to a different antenna mounted on the outside of the car or built into a separate package a headset with a remote antenna to a mobile phone carried at the waist Again, the scientic data do not demonstrate that mobile phones are harmful. But if people are concerned about the radio frequency energy from these products, taking the simple precautions outlined above can reduce any possible risk. 401 Where can I nd additional information?
For additional information, see the following websites:
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) RF Safety Program (select Information on Human Exposure to RF Fields from Cellular and PCS Radio Transmitters):
http://www.fcc.gov/oet/rfsafety World Health Organization (WHO) International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection (select Qs & As): http://www.who.int/emf United Kingdom, National Radiological Protection Board: http://www.nrpb.org.uk Cellular Telecommunications Industry Association
(CTIA): http://www.wow-com.com U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Center for Devices and Radiological Health:
http://www.fda.gov/cdrh/consumer/
1. Muscat et al. Epidemiological Study of Cellular Telephone Use and Malignant Brain Tumors. In: State of the Science Symposium;1999 June 20; Long Beach, California. 2. Tice et al. Tests of mobile phone signals for activity in genotoxicity and other laboratory assays. In: Annual Meeting of the Environmental Mutagen Society; March 29, 1999, Washington, D.C.; and personal communication, unpublished results. 3. Preece, AW, Iwi, G, Davies-Smith, A, Wesnes, K, Butler, S, Lim, E, and Varey, A. Effect of a 915-MHz simulated mobile phone signal on cognitive function in man. Int. J. Radiat. Biol., April 8, 1999. 4. Hardell, L, Nasman, A, Pahlson, A, Hallquist, A and Mild, KH. Use of cellular telephones and the risk for brain tumors: a case-control study. Int. J. Oncol., 15: 113-116, 1999. FDA020400 402 Patent Information Manufactured under one or more of the following U.S. patents:
4291475 4302845 4312074 4365221 4369516 4369520 4369522 4374370 4378603 4390963 4398265 4400584 4400585 4434461 4455534 4486624 4491972 4523155 4546329 4574243 4581602 4581749 4585957 4593155 4594657 4602218 4605987 4616314 4617520 4628529 4629829 4633141 4636593 4636741 4648125 4649543 4654655 4680787 4704588 4711361 4715063 4717884 4730195 4731813 4736277 4737976 4741018 4742562 4761621 4764737 4775998 4791527 4794489 4797929 4797947 4798975 4802236 4803726 4809356 4811377 4811404 4817157 4827507 4829543 4831647 4843621 4845772 4851966 4852090 4860336 4860341 4868576 4870686 4872196 4873683 4876552 4876656 4876740 4879533 4885553 4887050 4890199 4896124 4896361 4897873 4903326 4903327 4904549 4904992 4905288 4905301 4912602 4916262 4918431 4918732 4922178 4941203 4942570 4945570 4956854 4959851 4963812 4964121 4970475 4972355 4972432 4972455 4975808 4977589 4977616 4979207 4984219 4984290 4989230 4992753 4996529 5008925 5010309 5010570 5014294 5014346 5017856 5018188 5020076 5020091 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5263055 5265271 5267230 5276588 5276707 404 5696821 5699070 5699389 5699408 5701130 5701244 5701589 5703470 5703539 5703909 5706019 5706313 5708445 5710862 5710987 5711001 5715520 5715524 5717307 5722052 5724004 5726983 5729221 5732350 5737327 5737685 5738954 5739792 5740525 5742894 5745116 5745566 5745848 5747970 5748727 5754141 5754455 5754583 5754645 5754956 5758271 5760714 5761300 5761610 5764100 5764111 5764730 5764743 5766794 5771182 5771471 5777521 5777856 5784368 5784419 5784585 5787128 5787577 5793315 5793866 5796822 5797101 5798716 5799011 5799256 5801513 5801567 5802111 5805992 5807012 5808585 5808586 5809020 5809419 5809421 5809430 5809433 5809544 5812093 5812542 5812590 5814798 5815507 5815570 5815804 5815805 5815807 5815820 5821820 5822726 5826224 5831826 5832080 5832388 5835006 5835535 5835785 5838202 5841851 5842122 5844943 5846094 5848072 5848152 5848356 5848718 5850440 5854549 5854785 5854972 5856763 5856766 5857148 5857192 5859522 5859567 5859890 5861853 5862460 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D299232 D300742 D300827 D301473 D301476 D301883 D302015 D303656 D304189 D305427 D305717 D306015 D306163 D306293 D306299 D306441 D306583 D306594 D307271 D309301 D309451 D314173 D315330 D315346 D315543 D315559 D315565 D315907 D316417 405 D372703 D372896 D372919 D373585 D373764 D374013 D374014 D374227 D374424 D374872 D375732 D375733 D375734 D375932 D375935 D375952 D376127 D377792 D377934 D378366 D378911 D379558 D379624 D379981 D379982 D380468 D380751 D381021 D381664 D382537 D382538 D382872 D383115 D383748 D383749 D383759 D384080 D384662 D384951 D384952 D385271 D385283 D385555 D385873 D385874 D385875 D385877 D385888 D386175 D386494 D386757 D387054 D387055 D387199 D387346 D388078 D388079 D388080 D388081 D388082 D388424 D388429 D388430 D388775 D388783 D388793 D389157 D389476 D389478 D389488 D389641 D390221 D390222 D390509 D391567 D391955 D391966 D393470 D394256 D394423 D394425 D394433 D394438 D394439 D395301 D395302 D395431 D395642 D395875 D396472 D397337 D397689 D397694 D398926 D400161 D400165 D400204 D400209 D400496 D400526 D400527 D400874 D401554 D401929 D403265 D404397 D405080 D405782 D405801 D406098 D406191 D406586 D406695 D406812 D407063 D407685 D407708 D408401 D408402 D408418 D408783 D408815 D409186 D410459 D410460 D410929 D411165 D411196 D411202 D411204 D411507 D411535 D411843 D411844 D412000 D412487 D412709 D413893 D413898 D414159 D415122 D415499 D416226 D417224 D417449 D419155 D419290 D419565 PAT022500 D343615 D343616 D343834 D343835 D343836 D344087 D344271 D344444 D344511 D344512 D344945 D345977 D346785 D346786 D346798 D348071 D348250 D348427 D348470 D348665 D348666 D348668 D348674 D348880 D349273 D349701 D350113 D350348 D350349 D350350 D351375 D351840 D352497 D352503 D352946 D353131 D353361 D353587 D316859 D320780 D322783 D324024 D324388 D325028 D325029 D325032 D325583 D325915 D327061 D327062 D328302 D332261 D332785 D334746 D337332 D338012 D338887 D339127 D339335 D339336 D339337 D339564 D339578 D339581 D339582 D340709 D340710 D340711 D340906 D341589 D342248 D342663 D342729 D342730 D342741 D343173 Other patents pending. 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frequency | equipment class | purpose | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2002-12-23 | 1851.25 ~ 1908.75 | PCE - PCS Licensed Transmitter held to ear | Class II permissive change or modification of presently authorized equipment |
2 | 2001-11-05 | 1851.25 ~ 1908.75 | TNE - Licensed Non-Broadcast Transmitter Held to Ear | |
3 | 2000-09-05 | 1851.25 ~ 1908.75 | PCE - PCS Licensed Transmitter held to ear | Original Equipment |
app s | Applicant Information | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 2 3 | Effective |
2002-12-23
|
||||
1 2 3 |
2001-11-05
|
|||||
1 2 3 |
2000-09-05
|
|||||
1 2 3 | Applicant's complete, legal business name |
Motorola Mobility LLC
|
||||
1 2 3 | FCC Registration Number (FRN) |
0004321311
|
||||
1 2 3 | Physical Address |
Motorola Mobility LLC
|
||||
1 2 3 |
Chicago, Illinois 60654
|
|||||
1 2 3 |
United States
|
|||||
app s | TCB Information | |||||
1 2 3 | TCB Application Email Address |
r******@pctestlab.com
|
||||
1 2 3 | TCB Scope |
B1: Commercial mobile radio services equipment in the following 47 CFR Parts 20, 22 (cellular), 24,25 (below 3 GHz) & 27
|
||||
app s | FCC ID | |||||
1 2 3 | Grantee Code |
IHD
|
||||
1 2 3 | Equipment Product Code |
T56AD1
|
||||
app s | Person at the applicant's address to receive grant or for contact | |||||
1 2 3 | Name |
J**** N******
|
||||
1 2 3 | Title |
Director Product Compliance
|
||||
1 2 3 | Telephone Number |
847-6********
|
||||
1 2 3 | Fax Number |
847-6********
|
||||
1 2 3 |
n******@motorola.com
|
|||||
app s | Technical Contact | |||||
n/a | ||||||
app s | Non Technical Contact | |||||
n/a | ||||||
app s | Confidentiality (long or short term) | |||||
1 2 3 | Does this application include a request for confidentiality for any portion(s) of the data contained in this application pursuant to 47 CFR § 0.459 of the Commission Rules?: | No | ||||
1 2 3 | Yes | |||||
1 2 3 | Long-Term Confidentiality Does this application include a request for confidentiality for any portion(s) of the data contained in this application pursuant to 47 CFR § 0.459 of the Commission Rules?: | No | ||||
if no date is supplied, the release date will be set to 45 calendar days past the date of grant. | ||||||
app s | Cognitive Radio & Software Defined Radio, Class, etc | |||||
1 2 3 | Is this application for software defined/cognitive radio authorization? | No | ||||
1 2 3 | Equipment Class | PCE - PCS Licensed Transmitter held to ear | ||||
1 2 3 | TNE - Licensed Non-Broadcast Transmitter Held to Ear | |||||
1 2 3 | Description of product as it is marketed: (NOTE: This text will appear below the equipment class on the grant) | Dual Band Cellular/ PCS Transceiver | ||||
1 2 3 | Dual Band Cellular / PCS Transceiver | |||||
1 2 3 | Dual Band Cellular PCS Transceiver | |||||
1 2 3 | Related OET KnowledgeDataBase Inquiry: Is there a KDB inquiry associated with this application? | No | ||||
1 2 3 | Modular Equipment Type | Does not apply | ||||
1 2 3 | Purpose / Application is for | Class II permissive change or modification of presently authorized equipment | ||||
1 2 3 | Original Equipment | |||||
1 2 3 | Composite Equipment: Is the equipment in this application a composite device subject to an additional equipment authorization? | No | ||||
1 2 3 | Related Equipment: Is the equipment in this application part of a system that operates with, or is marketed with, another device that requires an equipment authorization? | No | ||||
1 2 3 | Grant Comments | Class II Permissive Change Power output listed is ERP for Part 22 and EIRP for Part 24. SAR compliance for body-worn operating configurations is limited to the specific Motorola belt-clip tested for this filing. End-users must be informed of the body-worn operating requirements for satisfying RF exposure compliance. The highest reported SAR values are: AMPS/CDMA modes (Part 22)- Head: 0.46 W/kg, Body-worn: 1.45 W/kg PCS mode (Part 24)- Head: 0.60, Body-worn: 1.05 W/kg. | ||||
1 2 3 | Power output listed is ERP for Part 22 and EIRP for Part 24. SAR compliance for body-worn operating configurations is limited to the specific Motorola belt-clip tested for this filing. End-users must be informed of the body-worn operating requirements for satisfying RF exposure compliance. The highest reported SAR values are: AMPS/CDMA modes (Part 22) - Head: 0.40 W/kg, Body-worn: 1.23 W/kg PCS mode (Part 24) - Head: 0.42 W/kg, Body-worn: 1.05 W/kg. | |||||
1 2 3 | Is there an equipment authorization waiver associated with this application? | No | ||||
1 2 3 | If there is an equipment authorization waiver associated with this application, has the associated waiver been approved and all information uploaded? | No | ||||
app s | Test Firm Name and Contact Information | |||||
1 2 3 | Firm Name |
Motorola Inc.
|
||||
1 2 3 | Name |
J**** M****
|
||||
1 2 3 | Telephone Number |
561-7********
|
||||
1 2 3 | Fax Number |
561-7********
|
||||
1 2 3 |
e******@email.mot.com
|
|||||
Equipment Specifications | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 1 | 22H | BC | 824 | 849 | 0.28 | 2.5 ppm | 40K0F8W | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 2 | 22H | BC | 824 | 849 | 0.28 | 2.5 ppm | 40K0F1D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 3 | 22.901(d) | 824.7 | 848.31 | 0.14 | 300 Hz | 1M25F9W | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 4 | 24E | 1851.25 | 1908.75 | 0.24 | 150 Hz | 1M25F9W | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2 | 1 | 22H | BC | 824 | 849 | 0.28 | 2.5 ppm | 40K0F8W | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2 | 2 | 22H | BC | 824 | 849 | 0.28 | 2.5 ppm | 40K0F1D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2 | 3 | 22.901(d) | 824.7 | 848.31 | 0.14 | 300 Hz | 1M25F9W | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2 | 4 | 24E | 1851.25 | 1908.75 | 0.24 | 150 Hz | 1M25F9W | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3 | 1 | 22H | BC | 824 | 849 | 0.28 | 2.5 ppm | 40K0F8W | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3 | 2 | 22H | BC | 824 | 849 | 0.28 | 2.5 ppm | 40K0F1D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3 | 3 | 22.901(d) | 824.7 | 848.31 | 0.14 | 300 Hz | 1M25F9W | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3 | 4 | 24E | 1851.25 | 1908.75 | 0.24 | 150 Hz | 1M25F9W |
some individual PII (Personally Identifiable Information) available on the public forms may be redacted, original source may include additional details
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