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1 2 3 | Test Report | December 07 2005 / August 07 2005 | ||||||
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1 2 3 | Test Report | July 09 2005 / August 07 2005 | ||||||
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1 2 3 | User Manual | Users Manual | 3.34 MiB |
Users Guide TX-210 WELCOME TABLE OF CONTENTS Thank you for choosing the up-to-date TX-210, our new model, developed by top researchers to support the CDMA2000 1X system through Qualcomm-manufactured MSM6050 chips and CDMA technologies. This product allows for high speed communication services, such as web browsing, data services, and a GUI animation menu. T9 input mode makes it much easier to enter text, while VR
(Voice Recognition) makes the TX-210 more user friendly. Other proven technologies include:
Full graphic display of 9 text input lines and 1 icon line with variable font size. Easy to dial through the VR feature. Easy to enter letters through the T9 text input mode. Enhanced for web browsing & data services (i.e.; wireless internet access, UP browser) GUI & Animation display compliant with CDMA2000 1X. Full graphic - Main LCD : TFT 65K color wide LCD Navigation Key and 21 keys aligned for more convenience. Sophisticated features of speaker phone and voice recognition. Additional services of text messaging and Web browsing on top of authentication, call forwarding, call transfer, call waiting. IMPORTANT INFORMATION This TX-210 user guide contains very important information about how to handle and use the product. Please read this manual thoroughly, pay attention to the warranty on the back page and be alert to the exclusions and limitations of your warranty, which are related with the unauthorized use of components. CHAPTER 1. BEFORE USING YOUR PHONE .................................5 INSIDE THE PACKAGE .....................................................................................6 HANDSET DESCRIPTION.................................................................................7 THE FUNCTION KEYS.............................................................................................8 DISPLAY INDICATORS ...........................................................................................9 BATTERY USAGE...........................................................................................11 BATTERY INSTALLATION....................................................................................11 BATTERY REMOVAL.............................................................................................11 BATTERY CHARGING...........................................................................................12 POWER CONNECTION ......................................................................................12 PCS AND 1X BATTERY TIMES ...........................................................................13 BATTERY LIFE (FOR NEW BATTERY)................................................................13 BATTERY HANDLING INFORMATION..........................................................14 DOs.........................................................................................................................14 DONTs...................................................................................................................14 Chapter 1 Chapter 2 CHAPTER 2. BASIC OPERATION ..................................................15 TURNING THE PHONE ON / OFF ..................................................................16 TURNING THE PHONE ON...................................................................................16 TURNING THE PHONE OFF..................................................................................16 ACCESSING THE MENU................................................................................17 MENU SUMMARY .........................................................................................18 BASIC FUNCTIONS ........................................................................................20 MAKING A CALL ...................................................................................................20 ANSWERING CALLS.............................................................................................21 SPEAKER PHONE..................................................................................................21 WAIT/PAUSE FEATURE........................................................................................22 ANSWERING A CALL............................................................................................22 3-WAY CALLING ...................................................................................................23 CALLER ID FUNCTION..........................................................................................23 CALL WAITING FUNCTION..................................................................................24 ADJUSTING VOLUME..........................................................................................24 ENTER LOCK MODE .............................................................................................25 DURING A CALL .............................................................................................26 MUTE (UNMUTE)..................................................................................................26 SEND TXT MSG ....................................................................................................26 CONTACTS............................................................................................................26 RECENT CALLS .....................................................................................................26 SEND DTMF...........................................................................................................26 VOICE PRIVACY.....................................................................................................27 LOCATION .............................................................................................................27 MAKING AN EMERGENCY CALL..................................................................28 911 IN LOCK MODE ..............................................................................................28 911 USING ANY AVAILABLE SYSTEM ...............................................................28 CHAPTER 3. MEMORY FUNCTION...............................................29 STORING A PHONE NUMBER ......................................................................30 ENTERING LETTERS, NUMBERS & SYMBOLS ...........................................31 STANDARD INPUT MODE....................................................................................32 T9 INPUT MODE....................................................................................................33 NUMERIC MODE...................................................................................................34 SYMBOL MODE ....................................................................................................34 MAKING A CALL THROUGH THE PHONE BOOK ........................................35 ONE-TOUCH/TWO-TOUCH DIALING...................................................................35 ONE-TOUCH DIALING:.......................................................................................35 TWO-TOUCH DIALING: ......................................................................................35 Chapter 3 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter 4 CHAPTER 4. MENU FUNCTION ....................................................37 CONTACTS .....................................................................................................38 NEW CONTACT.....................................................................................................38 CONTACT LIST......................................................................................................39 GROUPS ................................................................................................................40 ADD NEW GROUP .............................................................................................40 ASSIGN PHONE NUMBER TO GROUP..............................................................40 CHANGE GROUP NAME ....................................................................................41 SEND TXT MSG. GROUP ...................................................................................41 ERASE GROUP...................................................................................................42 SPEED DIALS.........................................................................................................43 RECENT CALLS ..............................................................................................44 MISSED..................................................................................................................44 RECEIVED ..............................................................................................................45 DIALED...................................................................................................................46 ALL .........................................................................................................................47 SETTINGS .......................................................................................................48 SOUNDS................................................................................................................48 MASTER VOUME ...............................................................................................48 CALL SOUND .....................................................................................................49 ALERT SOUNDS.................................................................................................50 KEYPAD VOUME ................................................................................................52 EARPIECE VOUME.............................................................................................52 SERVICE ALERTS ...............................................................................................53 POWER ON/OFF.................................................................................................54 ALARM SOUNDS ...............................................................................................55 DISPLAYS ..............................................................................................................56 BANNER .............................................................................................................56 BACKLIGHT ........................................................................................................57 CONTRAST .........................................................................................................58 WALLPAPER.......................................................................................................58 SCREENSAVER...................................................................................................59 DISPLAY THEMES..............................................................................................59 FONTS ................................................................................................................59 POWER ON/OFF ANIMATIONS .........................................................................60 SYSTEM.................................................................................................................61 SYSTEM SELECT................................................................................................61 NAM SELECTION ...............................................................................................62 DEVICE INFO......................................................................................................63 LOCATION..........................................................................................................64 SECURITY...........................................................................................................65 LANGUAGE.........................................................................................................68 SHORT CUT KEY ................................................................................................69 CALL SETTINGS....................................................................................................70 ANSWER OPTIONS............................................................................................70 AUTO RETRY......................................................................................................71 TTY MODE..........................................................................................................71 ONE TOUCH DIAL..............................................................................................72 VOICE PRIVACY..................................................................................................72 DATA SETTING...................................................................................................72 VOICE SERVICES................................................................................................73 DTMF TONES .....................................................................................................76 CLOCK FORMAT ...................................................................................................77 MAIN CLOCK......................................................................................................77 FRONT CLOCK ...................................................................................................77 RINGER ID..............................................................................................................78 PICTURE ID............................................................................................................78 Chapter 4 TOOLS.............................................................................................................79 CALENDAR ............................................................................................................79 ADD NEW...........................................................................................................79 VIEW PLAN LIST.................................................................................................80 ALARM CLOCK......................................................................................................81 WORLD CLOCK .....................................................................................................82 NOTEPAD ..............................................................................................................83 ADD MEMO........................................................................................................83 VIEW MEMO ......................................................................................................83 CALCULATOR........................................................................................................84 STOP WATCH........................................................................................................85 CHAPTER 5. VOICE MAIL, TXT MESSAGING..............................87 WHEN A NEW MESSAGE ARRIVES .............................................................88 VOICE MAIL ....................................................................................................88 NEW TXT MSG .........................................................................................................89 INBOX........................................................................................................................90 FORWARD..........................................................................................................90 ERASE.................................................................................................................91 REPLY WITH COPY ............................................................................................91 SAVE GRAPHICS ................................................................................................91 SAVE SOUND .....................................................................................................91 ADD TO CONTACTS...........................................................................................91 LOCK/UNLOCK ...................................................................................................92 SAVE QUICK TEXT..............................................................................................92 SENT..........................................................................................................................93 FORWARD..........................................................................................................93 RESEND..............................................................................................................93 ERASE.................................................................................................................94 ADD TO CONTACTS...........................................................................................94 LOCK/UNLOCK ...................................................................................................94 SAVE QUICK TEXT..............................................................................................94 MESSAGE INFO .................................................................................................94 DRAFTS .....................................................................................................................95 SEND ..................................................................................................................95 ADD TO CONTACTS...........................................................................................95 LOCK/UNLOCK ...................................................................................................95 SAVE QUICK TEXT..............................................................................................95 E- MAIL ......................................................................................................................96 ERASE ALL ................................................................................................................97 SETTINGS..................................................................................................................98 AUTO SAVE...........................................................................................................98 AUTO ERASE.........................................................................................................98 AUTO VIEW TXT ...................................................................................................99 AUTO RECEIVE......................................................................................................99 SIGNATURE.........................................................................................................100 CALLBACK#.........................................................................................................100 VOICE MAIL#.......................................................................................................101 BLOCK/UNBLOCK ...............................................................................................101 ENTRY MODE......................................................................................................102 QUICK TEXT ........................................................................................................102 FONT SIZE ...........................................................................................................103 Chapter 5 2 3 TABLE OF CONTENT CHAPTER 6. GET IT NOW & MOBILE WEB 2.0..........................105 GET IT NOW .................................................................................................106 GET TUNES & TONES........................................................................................106 DOWNLOADING NEW TUNES & TONES ........................................................106 TO RECORDING NEW TONES .........................................................................106 USING DOWNLOADED TUNES & TONES.......................................................107 GET FUN & GAMES............................................................................................108 DOWNLOADING NEW FUN & GAMES ...........................................................108 PLAYING DOWNLOADED FUN & GAMES ......................................................108 GALLERY .............................................................................................................109 STARTING INTERNET BROWSER...............................................................110 ACCESS THE INTERNET.....................................................................................110 BROWSER MENU.........................................................................................110 VZW HOME..........................................................................................................110 BACK....................................................................................................................110 FORWARD ...........................................................................................................110 REFRESH..............................................................................................................111 HISTORY..............................................................................................................111 ADDRESS.............................................................................................................111 CLEAR MEMORY.................................................................................................111 SETTINGS............................................................................................................112 ADVANCED..........................................................................................................112 EXIT......................................................................................................................112 Chapter 6 Chapter 7 CHAPTER 7. SAFETY AND WARRANTY ....................................113 SAFETY INFORMATION FOR WIRELESS HANDHELD PHONES ..............114 DRIVING SAFETY................................................................................................115 ELECTRONIC DEVICES .......................................................................................116 OTHER SAFETY GUIDELINES............................................................................117 PRECAUTIONS....................................................................................................118 SAFETY INFORMATION FOR FCC RF EXPOSURE ....................................119 CAUTIONS...........................................................................................................119 SAR INFORMATION.....................................................................................120 FDA CONSUMER UPDATE ..........................................................................122 PROTECT YOUR WARRANTY .....................................................................126 12 MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY...............................................................127 C H
. 1 Chapter 1 BEFORE USING YOUR PHONE This chapter provides important information about using the TX-210 including:
INSIDE THE PACKAGE HANDSET DESCRIPTION BATTERY USAGE BATTERY HANDLING INFORMATION Licensed by QUALCOMM Incorporated under one or more of the following Patents : U.S.Patent No. 4,901,307 U.S.Patent No. 5,056,109 U.S.Patent No. 5,099,204 U.S. Patent No. 5,101,501 U.S. Patent No. 5,103,459 U.S. Patent No. 5,107,225 U.S.Patent No. 5,109,390. 4 5 INSIDE THE PACKAGE HANDSET DESCRIPTION C H 1 This package should include all items pictured below. If any are missing or different, immediately contact the retailer where you purchased the phone. The TX-210 weighs 3.7oz. The dimensions are 1.83 x 4.48 x 0.97. C H 1 Antenna Earjack Volume Key AC Travel Charger Navigation Key Standard Battery Send Key Handset User Manual Handstrap 6 7 Earpiece LCD Screen Function Keys END/
Power Key Microphone HANDSET DESCRIPTION HANDSET DESCRIPTION C H 1 Display Indicators See page 9 for a list of icons. Text & Graphic area Soft Key Indicators Shows the functions currently assigned to each soft key and displays some icons. Message Contacts Menu THE FUNCTION KEYS Web Browser Get Pix & Flix Get It Now Short Cut Key In Idle Mode
- Press Up to access the Web Browser, Down to access the Short Cut Key, Right for Get It Now and Left for Get Pix &Flix. Inside the menu
- Within a menu, use to scroll through menu options, or to select a function displayed on the screen. Press to make or receive a call. Press to turn the phone on/off, to terminate a call or to return to the initial page.
(Left Soft Key) Press to access the message menu or function displayed on bottom line.
(Right Soft Key) Press to access contacts menu or function displayed on bottom line. Press to clear a digit from the display or to return to the previous page. Press and hold to enable speaker phone mode. Press and hold to enter etiquette mode. Press and hold to enter lock mode. 8 C H 1 DISPLAY INDICATORS Signal Strength - Current signal strength: the more lines, the stronger the signal. Roaming Phone is out of home area. 1X Phone is in the 1x service area. Digital mode Phone is operating in digital mode. Voice Privacy Indicates Voice Privacy mode. SLI Dormant Indicates your phone is in a dormant state during a data call. Your phone goes to Dormant mode when you have no had any activity on a page for some time - your connection is still active and now you can make and receive calls. No Service Indicates the phone cannot receive a signal from the system. Voice Data Active TTY Indicates your phone is in TTY mode is active. GPS Icon Indicates the Location Service of your phone is disabled/enabled. Locked Indicates your phone is locked. Battery Battery charging level the more blocks, the stronger the charge. 9 HANDSET DESCRIPTION BATTERY USAGE C H 1 Alarm Only Phone will Alarm Only when call is received. Vibrte On Phone will vibrate when call is received. All Sound Indicates the ringer volume is set to off. Missed Call Voice Mail indicates you have voicemail messages. New Message New TXT or voice message. Calendar Appointment Indicates Event Alarm is active. Data Only Receives an async. call as a voice call. Speaker Phone Phone is in speaker phone mode. Auto Answer Phone is in answering machine mode. BATTERY INSTALLATION 1 u Place the battery on the back of the handset and slide into place. v Push the battery down until it locks into place. C H 1 BATTERY REMOVAL 1 u Pull down the release latch, lift up the battery and v remove the battery from the handset. If the battery is not correctly placed in the compartment, the handset will not turn on and/or the battery may detach during use. 10 11 BATTERY USAGE BATTERY USAGE C H 1 BATTERY CHARGING POWER CONNECTION 1 Plug the AC Charger into a standard outlet. 2 Plug the other end of the AC Charger into the bottom of your phone. The battery must be installed onto the phone. When you charge the battery with the phone power off, you will see a charging status screen. You cannot operate the phone until it is powered on. The battery is not charged at the time of purchase. Fully charge the battery before use. It is more efficient to charge the battery with the handset powered off. The battery must be connected to the phone in order to charge it. Battery operating time gradually decreases over time. If the battery fails to perform normally, you may need to replace the battery. PCS AND 1X BATTERY TIMES The operating time is subject to your handset usage and configuration. C H 1 Battery Capacity DCS PCS STD 1000 mAh Up to 162 m Up to 160 m EXT 1700 mAh Up to 282m Up to 270 m BATTERY LIFE (FOR NEW BATTERY) The operating time is subject to your handset usage and configuration. Battery Capacity DCS PCS STD 1000 mAh 190 Hours 172 Hours EXT 1700 mAh 326 Hours 293 Hours These times are for a new battery. Usage and Standby time may decrease over time. 12 13 BATTERY HANDLING INFORMATION C H 1 DOs l Only use the battery and charger approved by the manufacturer. l Only use the battery for its original purpose. l Try to keep batteries in a temperature between 41F (5C ) and 95F (35C). l If the battery is stored in temperatures above or below the recommended range, give it time to warm up or cool down before using. l Completely drain the battery before recharging. It may take one to four days to completely drain. l Store the discharged battery in a cool, dark, and dry place. l Purchase a new battery when its operating time gradually decreases after fully charging. l Properly dispose of the battery according to local laws. DONTs l Dont attempt to disassemble the battery it is a sealed unit with no serviceable parts. l Dont accidentally short circuit the battery by carrying it in your pocket or purse with other metallic objects such as coins, clips and pens. This may critically damage the battery. l Dont leave the battery in hot or cold temps. Otherwise, it could significantly reduce the capacity and lifetime of the battery. l Dont dispose of the battery into a fire. Chapter 2 BASIC OPERATION C H 2 This chapter addresses and explains the basic features of your phone including:
TURNING THE PHONE ON / OFF ACCESSING THE MENU MENU SUMMARY BASIC FUNCTIONS DURING A CALL MAKING AN EMERGENCY CALL 14 15 TURNING THE PHONE ON / OFF ACCESSING THE MENU C H 2 TURNING THE PHONE ON 1 Press and hold until your Power On logo appears and the tone sounds. To select a logo, refer to page 58 for more details.
(Settings & Tools>Displays>Wallpaper) for more detail. If Password appears on the display enter your 4-digit password to unlock your phone. The default password is the last 4 digit of your phone number. TURNING THE PHONE OFF 1 Press and hold until your Power Off logo appears. Immediately change or recharge the battery when LOW BATTERY!! PHONE IS TURNING OFF! appears on the display. Memory may possibly be damaged if the phone turns off due to the battery completely draining. Turn the phone off before removing or replacing the battery. If the phone is on, unsaved data may be lost. Your phone can be customized via the menu. Each function can be accessed by scrolling with the Navigation Key or by pressing the number that corresponds with the menu item. Get It Now Messaging Contacts Recent Calls Settings & Tools C H 2 1 To access the menu in the idle mode, press [MENU]. 2 Use the Navigation Key to scroll through the menu. l To search through the menu in numerical order, press the Navigation Key. 3 To return to the previous page, press . To exit the current menu and return to the idle mode, press . 4 Press the Navigation Key to enter a function when its main page is displayed or press its assigned number to have direct access to the function. Hotkey In idle mode, move the Navigation Key as follows to access these functions:
Upward movement : Web Browser Downward movement : Short Cut Key Rightward movement : Get It Now Leftward movement : Get Pix & Flix 16 17 MENU SUMMARY MENU SUMMARY C H 2 1. Power On Animation 2. Power Off Animation 1. Auto NAM 2. Change NAM 1. My Number 2. SW Version 3. Icon Glossary 1. Common Code 2. Lock Mode 3. Edit Code 4. Special #s 5. Erase All 6. Reset Phone 1. Voice Dials 2. Voice Setting 3. Voice Memo 4. Train Words 8. Power On/Off Animations 1. System Select 2. NAM Selection 3. Device Info 4. Location 5. Security 6. Language 7. Short Cut Key 1. Answer Options 2. Auto Retry 3. TTY Mode 4. One Touch Dial 5. Voice Privacy 6. Data Settings 7. Voice Services 8. DTMF Tones 1. Main Clock 2. Front Clock 4. System 5. Call Settings 6. Clock Format 7. Ringer ID 8. Picture ID 1. Get New 2. Record New C H 2 Get It Now Messaging Contacts Recent Calls 1. Get Tunes &
Tones 2. Get Fun &
Games 3. Gallery 1. New Txt Msg 2. Inbox 3. Sent 4. Drafts 5. Voice Mail 6. E-mail 1. New Contact 2. Contact List 3. Groups 4. Speed Dials 1. Missed 2. Received 3. Dialed 4. All Settings & Tools 1. Tools 2. Sounds 3. Displays 1. Alarm 1 2. Alarm 2 3. Alarm 3 1. Call Ringtone 2. Call Vibrate 1. ERI Tones 2. Txt Message 3. Pix Message 4. Voice Message 1. Service Change 2. Minute Beep 3. Call Connect 1. Power On 2. Power Off 1. Alarm Tone 2. Alarm Vibrate 1. Personal 2. ERI Banner 1. LCD 2. Keypad 1. Calendar 2. Alarm Clock 3. World Clock 4. Notepad 5. Calculator 6. Stop Watch 1. Master Volume 2. Call Sound 3. Alert Sounds 4. Keypad Volume 5. Earpiece Volume 6. Service Alerts 7. Power On/Off 8. Alarm Sounds 1. Banner 2. Backlight 3. Contrast 4. Wallpaper 5. Screensaver 6. Display Themes 7. Fonts 18 19 BASIC FUNCTIONS BASIC FUNCTIONS MAKING A CALL 1 Enter a phone number. C H 2 To modify the phone number you have entered :
To erase one digit at a time press . To erase the entire number, press and hold . To find the phone number with your contact list :
To enter a part of the phone number, then press
[Options], select Search. Phone number display in contact list If contacts name field empty, then highest priority phone number displayed. If any phone number and name is not exist then email address diaplay. Referece Contact display order. All matching entries will be displayed. To call the selected number, press . To send the txt with phone number :
To enter a part of the phone number, then press
[Options], select Send Txt Msg . Please refer to page 89 for more details on Send TXT Msg. 2 Press . The indicator, , appears on the display. If CALL FAILED appears on the display or the line is busy, press or . If you activate the AUTO RETRY function, the phone will automatically retry for the number of times you have selected. (refer to page 71). When you place or receive a call from stored phone numbers, both the name and phone number will be displayed. There is another way to make a call through the VR mode, which is called VAD (Voice Activated Dialing). Please refer to page 73 (Voice Service) for more details. If Enter Lock Code appears on the display enter your 4-digit password to unlock your phone. ANSWERING CALLS 1 When your phone rings or vibrates, press to answer the incoming call.
(Depending on your phones settings, you may also answer incoming calls by opening the phone or by pressing any digit key.) C H 2 To ignore incoming calls, press [Ignore]. 2 To end a call, press . SPEAKER PHONE The speaker phone feature lets you hear audio through the speaker and talk without holding the phone. 1 To activate the speaker phone in idle, answering or calling modes, press and hold . 2 The phone returns to normal (Speaker Phone Off) after ending a call or when the phone is turned off and back on. 3 To end a call, press . 20 21 BASIC FUNCTIONS BASIC FUNCTIONS WAIT/PAUSE FEATURE 3-WAY CALLING C H 2 Pauses are used for automated systems (i.e., voice mail, calling cards). Insert a pause after a phone number then enter another group of numbers. The second set of numbers is dialed automatically after the pause. This feature is useful for dialing into systems that require a code. 1 To insert a wait/pause, enter a phone number then press [OPTIONS]. Select either a Hard Pause (P appears) or a Wait (W appears). 2 Press to dial or to save. Please refer to page 30 for more details about storing a phone number. ANSWERING A CALL 1 To answer a call, press any key except , ,
, or . l By pressing [MENU] tnen select Settings & Tools menu, press , you can select either Flip Open, Any Key or Send Only to answer a call. lf Send Only is selected, the phone can only be answered by pressing . See page 71 for more information. 2 To end the call, press . In Auto Answer Mode a call is automatically answered after a preset number of ring tones. See page 70 for more details. With Three-Way Calling, you can talk to two people at the same time. When using this feature, the normal airtime rates will be applied for each of the two calls. 1 Enter a number you wish to call then press . 2 Once you have established the connection, enter the second number you wish to call then press . 3 When youre connected to the second party, press again to begin your three-way call. If one of the people you called hangs up during your call, you and the remaining caller stay connected. If you initiated the call and are the first to hang up, all three callers are disconnected. C H 2 CALLER ID FUNCTION Identifies caller by displaying their phone number. If the callers name and number are already stored in your phone book, they both will appear. The caller ID is stored in the call history. 22 23 BASIC FUNCTIONS BASIC FUNCTIONS ENTER LOCK MODE 1 To lock the phone, press and hold . 2 To unlock the phone, press or [UNLOCK], then input your password, then press [OK]. C H 2 l The lock feature will deactivate when the phone is powered off. Upon next power up, you will need to press to lock phone again. CALL WAITING FUNCTION Notifies you of an incoming call when you are already on a call by sounding a beep tone and displaying the callers phone number. C H 2 1 To answer another call while on the phone, press . This places the first call on hold. To switch back to the first caller, press again. Call Waiting is a system dependent feature. Please contact your service provider for details. ADJUSTING VOLUME Adjusts the volume of the ringer, key beep and speaker. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press then select one of the following. l l l Master Volume : Controls the ringer volume. Keypad Volume : Controls the keypad volume. Earpiece Volume : Controls the earpiece volume. 2 Adjust volume then press [OK] to save it. To adjust earpiece volume during a call, press the Navigation Key up or down. To adjust master volume, press short side up/ down key. In Idel Mode:
Side Volume Up key Long Press: Volume key shall bring device Side Volume Down key Long Press: Switch between on/off out of silence. sound including alarm but except speaker. 24 25 DURING A CALL DURING A CALL VOICE PRIVACY Increases security during a call. 1 Press [OPTIONS] . LOCATION Enables the network to locate your current location through Global Positioning System (GPS). (Refer to page 66 for more details.) 1 Press [OPTIONS] . C H 2 To display menu options during a call, press [Options]. MUTE (UNMUTE) The caller cannot hear you or any sounds from your side but you can still hear them. 1 Press [Mute]. l l To deactivate, press [UNMUTE]. The phone will automatically un-mute in Emergency Call or Callback mode. C H 2 SEND TXT MSG Enables you to send a TXT message (SMS) during a call. 1 Press [OPTIONS] . CONTACTS To select the phone number in your internal Contact List. 1 Press [OPTIONS] . RECENT CALLS To select the phone number in your recent calls List. 1 Press [OPTIONS] . SEND DTMF Automatically transmits your phone number to a pager during a call.
(Dependent on pager service) 1 Press [OPTIONS] . 26 27 MAKING AN EMERGENCY CALL The 911 feature puts the phone in the Emergency Call Mode when you dial the preprogrammed emergency number, 911. It also operates in the lock mode and out of the service area. 911 IN LOCK MODE The 911 call service is available even in the lock mode. 1 Enter 911 then press . C H 2 2 The call connects. 3 The phone exits the Lock Mode for 5 minutes. l When the call ends, the phone returns to the Lock Mode. 911 USING ANY AVAILABLE SYSTEM 1 Enter 911 then press . 2 The call connects. 3 The phone maintains the Emergency Mode for 5 minutes. l l The phone returns to the Lock Mode. While the phone is in the emergency mode for 5 minutes, the phone can receive an incoming call from any available system. However, it cant make a call. The 911 call is not recorded in the recent call list. Chapter 3 MEMORY FUNCTION C H 3 This chapter addresses memory functions including:
STORING A PHONE NUMBER ENTERING LETTERS, NUMBERS & SYMBOLS MAKING A CALL THROUGH THE PHONE BOOK 28 29 STORING A PHONE NUMBER ENTERING LETTERS, NUMBERS & SYMBOLS C H
. 3 The phone book stores up to 500 entries. 1 Enter phone # then press [SAVE] then choose Create New or Update Existing. Press [OK] to select. 2 If Create New is selected, the phone number will appear above a list. Press the Navigation Key up or down to choose the type of number youre adding, as indicated by the icon. Press [OK] to select. If Update Existing is selected, your contact list is displayed. Choose the entry to add the phone number to, then press [OK]. You will then see the phone number listed about a list. Press [OK] to select. 3 Enter a name. Please refer to page 31 for more details on entering letters, numbers & symbols. To change the input mode, press [Abc]. Press the Navigation Key down to select other options (Mobile1.2, E-mail1.2, etc...). If entered phone number, press [OPTIONS]
to select one of the following options:
l Set Speed Dial l Set Voice Dial l Set As Default l Add Pause 4 To store the entry, press [SAVE]. CONTACT SAVED will be displayed. The input mode (Alpha editor) will automatically be activated when necessary to enter letters and numbers. As shown below, there are 4 available modes ; Standard input mode (Abc), T9 input mode
(T9Word), Numeric mode (123), and Symbol mode (Symbols). The input mode indicator appears on the upper right of the display when letters and numbers are entered. To select the desired input mode among the 4 modes below, press [MODE], then enter letters and numbers. C H 3 Input mode indicator T9Word : T9 mode Abc : Abc mode ABC : ABC mode 123 : Number mode Symbols : Symbol mode The following illustrates the function assigned to each key in the Alpha Editor. KEY FUNCTION Mode Next Space Caps Lock Clear Send Press to change mode.
[T9Word][Abc][ABC][123][Symbols]
Press to view the next matching word if the highlighted word is not the word you intended. Press to accept a word and add a space. Press to select a letter case of the standard text input or T9 text input mode.
[Abc], [ABC] and [abc] indicate the standard text input.
[T9Word], [T9WORD] and [T9word]
indicate the predictive text input. Press to delete a character to the left of the cursor. Send the letters and numbers you enter. 30 31 ENTERING LETTERS, NUMBERS & SYMBOLS ENTERING LETTERS, NUMBERS & SYMBOLS STANDARD INPUT MODE Use the digit keys to enter letters, numbers and characters. 1 Enter letters using the key pad as follows:
Key Pad 1 Time Repetitions Repetitions Repetitions Repetitions 2 times 3 times 4 times 5 times C H 3 1 2ABC 3DEF 4GHI
9WXYZ
. A D G
W
B E H
X
C F I
Y
2 3 4
Z
A D G
9 To change the input mode, press [Abc]. 2 To enter a space, press . The cursor will automatically move to the next column. 3 Repeat until letters are entered. There is a 16-letter limit. 4 To delete one digit, press . To delete the entire entry, press and hold . 5 To change from lowercase to uppercase, press . Select Abc mode by pressing [Abc]. When you select this mode, the Abc icon appears as a visual confirmation.
- Find the key that corresponds to the letter you want to enter.
- Press it as many times as needed for the letter to appear on the screen.
- To enter the name John:
Press [ ]
Press [ ]
Press [ ]
Press [ ]
J o h n T9 INPUT MODE The T9 input mode incorporates a built-in-dictionary to determine a word based on the entered characters. A word can be entered more quickly by pressing a key once per character. 1 Select the T9Word mode by pressing [Abc]. 2 Press a digit key once to enter the character you want then enter all the characters to input the word you want. 3 To view the next matching word, press . C H 3 4 To accept the matching word then enter a space, press . To enter a compound word:
Enter the first part of the word then press to accept it. Enter the last part of the word then press to enter the word. To enter Fun fare in the T9 input mode.
- After you enter the 1st letter, press [Abc] to select T9 mode and to choose the lower case (T9Word).
- Press and you will see Fun highlighted. Press to select it.
- Press and until you see ease highlighted. Press to select the next matching word, you will see fare then enter a space. 32 33 ENTERING LETTERS, NUMBERS & SYMBOLS MAKING A CALL THROUGH THE PHONE BOOK NUMERIC MODE Allows you to enter numbers. ONE-TOUCH/TWO-TOUCH DIALING Ideal for frequently dialed numbers, this feature allows phone book entries to be dialed via the keypad with only one or two key presses. 1 Press [Abc] and scroll to the input mode to changes to NUM (Numeric mode). ONE-TOUCH DIALING:
2 To enter a number, press a digit key. C H 3 SYMBOL MODE Allows you to enter symbols. 1 Press [Abc] and scroll to the input mode to changes to Symbols (Symbol mode). 2 Select symbol you want to enter with the Navigation Key. 1-9 : Press and hold the corresponding memory number for more than 1 second. TWO-TOUCH DIALING:
10-22/97-99 : Press the first digit and second digits of the memory number short and long respectively. C H 3 If no phone number is stored in the location entered, Unssigned location will appear on the screen. l Use the Navigation Key to view a different line of symbols. Press [ ], or Press [ ]. 34 35 MEMO C H 3 Chapter 4 MENU FUNCTION C H 4 This chapter addresses accessing the menu and using its functions and features to customize your phone. CONTACTS RECENT CALLS SETTINGS TOOLS 36 37 CONTACTS CONTACTS Stores up to 500 entries, each of which can be assigned to a group. Entries can be retrieved by name or group. CONTACT LIST C H 4 NEW CONTACT Adds a new entry. 1 2 Press [MENU], then select Contacts menu, then press New Contact. To enter a name or number, use the Navigation Key to select the phone book field. l l PHONE BOOK FIELDS :
Name/Mobile1/Home/Work/E-Mail1/Group/Ringtone/
Mobile2/Fax/E-Mail2. Under Mobile 1 or Mobile 2, input the phone number, then by press [OPTIONS], you can choose from the following:
1. Set Speed Dial 2. Set Voice Dial 3. Set As Default 4. Add Pause Please refer to page 31 for more details on entering letters, numbers & symbols. 3 3.1 To save the entry, press [SAVE]. 3.2 To return to the previous page, press . If user not input at least one field among number, e-mail then display Please insert at least one of phone number or E-mail in dialogue box. If name field is empty in edit contact but one of phone number field inserted then saved so display phone number in contacts list. Retrieves an entry by name and calls by simply pressing . You can review all the entries stored in your phone book list or quickly find an entry by entering a name or its character string. 1 2 3 4 5 Press [MENU], then select Contacts menu, then press Contact List or press [CONTACTS]. The list of names in your phone book is displayed alphabetically. Enter a name or its character string or scroll through the list with the Navigation Key. Please refer to page 31 for more details on entering letters, numbers & symbols. C H 4 To edit the entry, press [EDIT]. To show detail the entry, press [VIEW]. Press [OPTIONS] to 1. New Contact, 2. Erase, 3. Send Txt Msg or 4. Call. To call the selected number, press [OPTIONS]
then select Call or press . 38 39 CONTACTS CONTACTS GROUPS Allows you to classify phone entries into groups. Existing groups include FAMILY, WORK. A maximum of 30 groups is allowed. Predefined group that cant rename or Erase. User can add group max 28 group. Allows the user to add group up to 10 phone number. The user can add, change, and erase Group. ADD NEW GROUP 1 Press [MENU], then select Contacts menu, then press Groups. 2 To select New, press [NEW]. C H 4 3 Input a new group name. 4 To save it, press [SAVE]. ASSIGN PHONE NUMBER TO GROUP 1 To assign phone numbers to a Group, select Add, press [OPTION]. 2 unassigned locations appear. Select a location and press [OK]. Your phone book entries will be displayed in alphabetical order. 3 Select the contact for the group then press [DONE]. Contact Added to (Group Name) will be displayed. Repeat for each location for the Group. CHANGE GROUP NAME 1 Press [MENU], then select Contacts menu, then press Groups. 2 Select an existing group name that you have added with the Navigation Key. 3 To select Rename, press [OPTIONS]. 4 Input a new group name. 5 To save it, press [SAVE]. SEND TXT MSG. GROUP C H 4 1 Press [MENU], then select Contacts menu, then press Groups. 2 Select an existing group name with the Navigation Key. 3 To select Send Txt Msg., press [OPTIONS]. 4 Input a Message, press [OPTION] to select Save as Drafts, Call Back # and Priority Level. 5 5.1. To send the text message, press [SEND]. 5.2. To save the text message, press
[OPTIONS], then select Save as Drafts, then press [OK]. 40 41 CONTACTS CONTACTS ERASE GROUP 1 Press [MENU], then select Contacts menu, then press Groups. 2 Select an existing group name with the Navigation Key. 3 To select Erase, press [OPTIONS]. 4 Select Yes to erase it, press [OK]. C H 4 SPEED DIALS In idle mode, calls can be placed to numbers stored in speed dial by pressing & holding the location number on the key pad. For a 2-digit location number, press the first number, then press and hold the second number. 1 Press [MENU], then select Contacts menu, then press Speed Dials. 2 To assign a phone number to a location, select the location then press [SET]. 3 Select the contact with the Navigation Key then press [OK]. Unassigned appears if the location is available. To call an assigned number, press & hold the last digit of the speed dial #. 4 SPEED DIAL SET will be displayed. C H 4 42 43 RECENT CALLS RECENT CALLS MISSED RECEIVED Displays information about the 20 most recently missed calls. Place a call to a missed call number by simply pressing . Displays information about the 20 most recently answered calls. Place a call to a received call by simply pressing . 1 To see a list of the 20 most recently missed calls, press [MENU], then select Recent Calls menu, press Missed. If the number is already stored in your phone book, only the name appears. If the number is not stored, only the phone number appears. 1 To see a list of the 20 most recently answered calls, press [MENU], then select Recent Calls menu, press Received. If the number is already stored in your phone book, only the name appears. If the number is not stored, only the phone number appears. 2 To view missed call details, press [OPEN]. 2 To view incoming call details, press [OPEN]. Call details include date, time and phone number. Call details include date, time and phone number. 3 Press [OPTIONS] and select SAVE to save it or select Erase to delete it. l l l l l l Save : To store the phone number in your phone book. Details : To view the callers information. Erase : To erase a missed calls list. Lock/Unlock : To lock or unlock missed calls list. Erase All : To erase all missed calls list. View Timers : To display usage time. 3 Press [OPTIONS] and select SAVE to save it or select Erase to delete it. l l l l l l Save : To store the phone number in your phone book. Details : To view the callers information. Erase : To erase a received calls list. Lock/Unlock : To lock or unlock received calls list. Erase All : To erase all received calls list. View Timers : To display usage time. After 20 missed calls, the oldest call will automatically be erased from the history. Press [MESSAGE], to send the Txt message. After 20 received calls, the oldest call will automatically be erased from the history. Press [MESSAGE], to send the Txt message. C H 4 C H 4 44 45 RECENT CALLS RECENT CALLS DIALED ALL Displays information about the 20 most recently dialed numbers. Place a call to a dialed call by simply pressing . Displays information about the most recent incoming, outgoing and missed calls. 1 To see a list of the 20 most recently dialed numbers, press [MENU], then select Recent Calls menu, press Dialed. If the number is already stored in your phone book, only the name appears. If the number is not stored, only the phone number appears. 2 To view dialed call details, press [OPEN]. C H 4 Call details include type of call, date, time and phone number. 3 Press [OPTIONS] and select SAVE to save it or select Erase to delete it. l l l l l l Save : To store the phone number in your phone book. Details : To view the callers information. Erase : To erase a dialed calls list. Lock/Unlock : To lock or unlock dialed calls list. Erase All : To erase all dialed calls list. View Timers : To display usage time. 1 To see a list of the 60 most recent incoming, outgoing and missed calls, press [MENU], then select Recent Calls menu, press All. If the number is already stored in your phone book, only the name appears. If the number is not stored, only the phone number appears. 2 3 To view details, press [OPEN]. Call details include type of call, date, time and phone number. Press [OPTIONS] and select SAVE to save it or select Erase to delete it. l l l l l l Save : To store the phone number in your phone book. Details : To view the callers information. Erase : To erase a recent calls list. Lock/Unlock : To lock or unlock recent calls list. Erase All : To erase all recent calls list. View Timers : To display usage time. C H 4 After 20 dialed calls, the oldest call will automatically be erased from the history. Press [MESSAGE], to send the Txt message. After the 20 received, dialed or missed calls, the oldest call will automatically be erased from the history. Press [MESSAGE], to send the message. 46 47 SETTINGS Customizes your phone and optimizes performance through a variety of settings. SOUNDS MASTER VOUME Controls the Ringer volume and alerts you to incoming calls in the modes listed in the gray box below. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Master Volume. 2 Select one of the following options by pressing the Navigation Key to the right. C H 4 All Off Alarm Only Vibrate Only Low, Med Low, Med, Med High, High. Press to play sound. 3 Select one of the available ring types. To confirm, press [OK]. SETTINGS CALL SOUND To select a ringer type for incoming calls:
CALL RINGTONE 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Call Sound, press Call Ringtone. 2 Select your desired ringer type. Up or Down key : Select Ringer. Press Play/Pause to Play/Pause the ringer. 3 Select one of the available ring types. To confirm, press [OK]. CALL VIBRATE 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Call Sound, press Call Vibrate. 2 Select On or Off with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. C H 4 48 49 SETTINGS SETTINGS ALERT SOUNDS When selected, this setting alerts you to the following handset changes:
ERI TONES 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Alert Sounds, press ERI Tones. 2 Select Beep, Voice or Off with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. TXT MESSAGE C H 4 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Alert Sounds, press TXT Message. 2 Select Tone, Vibrate or Reminder with the Navigation Key then select one of the following options by pressing the Navigation Key. Tone : Select your desired ringer type. Vibrate : Select On or Off. Reminder : Select Once, Every 2 Minutes, Every 15 Minutes or Off. 3 To save, press [OK]. PIX MESSAGE 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Alert Sounds, press Pix Message. 2 Select Tone, Vibrate or Reminder with the Navigation Key then select one of the following options by pressing the Navigation Key. Tone : Select your desired ringer type. Vibrate : Select On or Off. Reminder : Select Once, Every 2 Minutes, Every 15 Minutes or Off. 3 To save, press [OK]. VOICE MESSAGE C H 4 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Alert Sounds, press Voice Message. 2 Select Tone, Vibrate or Reminder with the Navigation Key then select one of the following options by pressing the Navigation Key. Tone : Select your desired ringer type. Vibrate : Select On or Off. Reminder : Select Once, Every 2 Minutes, Every 15 Minutes or Off. 3 To save, press [OK]. 50 50 51 SETTINGS SETTINGS KEYPAD VOLUME To adjust key pad tone:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Keypad Volume. 2 Select one of the following options by pressing the Navigation Key to the right. Off Low, Med Low, Med, Med High, High SERVICE ALERTS SERVICE CHANGE Sounds an alert when leaving a service area and entering a roaming service area. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Service Alerts, press Service Change. 2 Select On or Off with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. 3 Select one of the available ring types. To confirm, press [OK]. MINUTE BEEP Sounds an alert every minute during a call. EARPIECE VOLUME To adjust earpiece volume:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Earpiece Volume. 2 Select one of the following options by pressing the Navigation Key to the right. Low Med Low, Med, Med High, High 3 Select one of the available ring types. To confirm, press [OK]. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Service Alerts, press Minute Beep. 2 Select On or Off with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. CALL CONNECT Notifies you that a call has been successfully placed. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Service Alerts, press Call Connect. 2 Select On or Off with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. C H 4 C H 4 52 52 53 SETTINGS SETTINGS POWER ON/OFF POWER ON Allows you to activate/deactivate the power on tones. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Power On/Off, press Power On. 2 Select On or Off with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. C H 4 POWER OFF Allows you to activate/deactivate the power off tones. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Power On/Off, press Power Off. 2 Select On or Off with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. ALARM SOUNDS To select a ringer type for alarm sound:
ALARM TONE 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Alarm Sounds, press Alarm Tone. 2 Select your desired ringer type. Up or Down key : Select Ringer. Press Play/Pause to Play/Pause the ringer. 3 Select one of the available ring types. To confirm, press [OK]. ALARM VIBRATE 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Alarm Sounds, press Alarm Vibrate. 2 Select On or Off with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. C H 4 54 55 SETTINGS SETTINGS DISPLAYS Allows you to customize the display. BANNER To input a personal/ERI banner greeting:
PERSONAL The text greeting can be up to 16 characters and is displayed on your phones screen in standby mode. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Displays then select Banner, press Personal. 2 Enter a new personal greeting. To change the input mode, press [Abc]. To return to the previous page, press
[CANCEL]. C H 4 3 Press [OK] to save it. ERI BANNER 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Displays then select Banner, press ERI Banner. 2 Select On or Off with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. BACKLIGHT Backlights the display and key pad and activates dimming for easy viewing in dark places. LCD 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Displays then select Backlight, press LCD. 2 Select one of the following options with the Navigation Key. Always On, Always Off, 5 Seconds, 15 Seconds, 30 Seconds. 3 Press [OK] to save it. KEYPAD C H 4 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Displays then select Backlight, press Keypad. 2 Select one of the following options with the Navigation Key. Always On, Always Off, 5 Seconds, 15 Seconds, 30 Seconds. 3 Press [OK] to save it. 56 57 SETTINGS SETTINGS CONTRAST To adjust the display contrast:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Displays then select Contrast. 2 Select one of the following options with the Navigation Key. Leve 1 ~ Leve 5 3 Press [OK] to save it. C H 4 WALLPAPER 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Displays then select Wallpaper. 2 Select Default to choose a pre-installed display, Downloads or Pix # to choose a display you have downloaded to your phone. To launch BREW, press [GET NEW]. To expand selected image, press [VIEW]. 3 Select a display from the Animation and the Graphic list using the Navigation Key and press [SET] to save it. SCREENSAVER 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Displays then select Screensaver. 2 Select Default to choose a pre-installed display, Downloads or Pix # to choose a display you have downloaded to your phone. To launch BREW, press [GET NEW]. To expand selected image, press [VIEW]. 3 Select a display from the Animation and the Graphic list using the Navigation Key and press [SET] to save it. DISPLAY THEMES 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Displays then select Display Themes. 2 Select one of the following options with the C H 4 Navigation Key. Theme 1 ~ Theme 4 3 Press [OK] to save it. FONTS 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Displays then select Fonts. 2 Select Normal or Large with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. 58 59 SETTINGS SYSTEM SYSTEM SELECT Selects the Preferred System. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select System Select. 2 Select one of the following options with the Navigation Key. Automatic B Automatic A Home Only 3 Press [OK] to save it. C H 4 SETTINGS POWER ON/OFF ANIMATIONS POWER ON ANIMATION Allows you to the power on animation. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Displays then select Power On/Off Animations, press Power On Animation. 2 Select one of the following options with the Navigation Key. Animation 1 Animation 2 C H 4 3 Press [OK] to save it. POWER OFF ANIMATION Allows you to the power off animation. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Displays then select Power On/Off Animations, press Power Off Animation. 2 Select one of the following options with the Navigation Key. Animation 1 Animation 2 3 Press [OK] to save it. 60 61 SETTINGS NAM SELECTION Enables Auto NAM (Number Assignment Modules) or manually selects a NAM. AUTO NAM Automatically switches phone to proper NAM when you have multiple NAM registrations. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select NAM Selection, press Auto NAM. 2 Select Yes or No with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. C H 4 CHANGE NAM Changes the NAM used by the phone when you have multiple registrations. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select NAM Selection, press Change NAM. 2 Select one of the following options with the Navigation Key. NAM 1 - VERIZON NAM 2 - VERIZON 3 Press [OK] to save it. SETTINGS DEVICE INFO Displays the information of your phone:
MY NUMBER Displays the your phone number (MDN/MIN number and provider) :
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select Device Info, press My Number. 2 You are to see the MDN/MIN number and provider name. 3 To return to the previous page, press [OK]. SW VERSION Displays the (Software/PRL/ERI/Browser/Get It Now) version. C H 4 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select Device Info, press SW Version. 2 You are to see the version of software, hardware and others. 3 To return to the previous page, press [OK]. ICON GLOSSARY Displays the Indicator Icons of your cellular telephone. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select Device Info, press Icon Glossary. 2 You are to see the Indicator Icons of your cellular telephone. 3 To return to the previous page, press [OK]. 62 63 SETTINGS SETTINGS LOCATION To determine whether or not the network system can detect your position:
SECURITY Prevents unauthorized use of your phone. The following settings can be restricted:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select Location. 2 Select one of the following options with the Navigation Key. Location On E911 Only 3 Press [OK] to save it. C H 4 64 COMMON CODE 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select Security, then enter your password, press [OK]. The default password is the last 4 digit of your phone number. 2 Select Common Code. 3 Select On or Off with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. C H 4 LOCK MODE Prevents the phone from being used without entering the password first. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select Security, then enter your password, press [OK]. The default password is the last 4 digit of your phone number. 2 Select Lock Mode. 3 Select Device or Location then select one of the following options with the Navigation Key. Device : Lock, Unlock, On Power Up Location : Lock, Unlock 4 Press [OK] to save it. 65 SETTINGS SETTINGS EDIT CODE Changes your Device/Location 4-digit password. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select Security, then enter your password, press [OK]. SPECIAL #S Stores 3 phone numbers that can be called even in the lock mode. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select Security, then enter your password, press [OK]. The default password is the last 4 digit of your phone number. The default password is the last 4 digit of your phone number. 2 Select Edit Code. 2 Select Special #s. C H 4 3 Select Device or Location then select one of the following options with the Navigation Key. 4 Enter a New Lock Code then press [OK]. 3 Select a location (1~3) with the Navigation Key. 4 Press [SET] and input a phone number, press [OK] again to save. C H 4 5 Enter a Confirm Lock Code then press [OK]
to save it. ERASE ALL Clears all contact, downloads entries and pix gallery from your phone. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select Security, then enter your password, press [OK]. The default password is the last 4 digit of your phone number. 2 Select Erase All. 3 Press [OK] to check Contacts, Downloads or Pix Gallery then press [DONE] to erase all the items in those categories, then select Yes, press [OK]. 66 67 SETTINGS SETTINGS SHORT CUT KEY Your phone offers you the option of assigning a short-cut key
(Down Navigation Key) to a favorite or often-used function. To assign a shortcut to the key:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select Short Cut Key. 2 Select your desired menu option then press
[OK]. Calendar/Tunes & Tones/Gallery/Fun & Games/News & Info/
Inbox/Sent/Email/Chat/IM/Settings & Tools/
Tools-Alarm Clock, Calculator 3 The Shortcut can now be accessed by pressing the Down Navigation Key. C H 4 RESET PHONE Resets phone to default settings. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select Security, then enter your password, press [OK]. The default password is the last 4 digit of your phone number. 2 Select Reset Phone. C H 4 3 Select Yes or No with the Navigation Key. Press [OK]. When you select Yes and [OK], you will see This will be reset to default settings. Reset Phone ? on the display. 4 To reset the phone, press [OK]. LANGUAGE Selects the language in which letters are displayed on the screen. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select Language. 2 Select English or Spanish with the Navigation Key. 3 Press [OK] to save it. 68 69 SETTINGS SETTINGS CALL SETTINGS ANSWER OPTIONS To select an answer mode:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Call Settings then select Answer Options. 2 Select one of the following with the Navigation Key. Flip Open Any Key Send Only Auto Answer Headset Auto Answer Handsfree Auto Answer Handset C H 4 3 To save, press [OK]. AUTO RETRY Automatically redials a call up to 5 times after a set time interval. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Call Settings then select Auto Retry. 2 3 Retry time to field is shown. Press the Navigation Key left or right to choose the amount of time.
(Off, 3 Seconds, 5 Seconds, 7 Seconds or 10 Seconds) When a time is chosen for retry time, the repeat field is shown. Press the Navigation Key down to highlight the repeat field. Press the Navigation Key left or right to choose the number of repeats. (1 Time, 3 Times or 5 Times). C H 4 4 To save, press [OK]. TTY MODE Your phone is able to operate with a TTY (Teletypewriter) device in both analog and digital modes. This feature is system dependent and may not be available in all areas. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Call Settings then select TTY Mode. 2 Select one of the following with the Navigation Key. l TTY Off/TTY+ TALK/TTY + HEAR/TTY Full 3 To save, press [OK]. 70 71 SETTINGS SETTINGS ONE TOUCH DIAL VOICE SERVICES 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Call Settings then select One Touch Dial. 2 Select On or Off with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. VOICE DIALS Voice Dial allows you to call a person by simply saying their name. To access Voice Dial:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Call Settings then select Voice Services, press Voice Dials. VOICE PRIVACY Enhances voice privacy and avoids tapping during a call. C H 4 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Call Settings then select Voice Privacy. 2 Select Standard or Enhanced with the Navigation Key, then press [OK] to save it. l Enhanced : Makes it more difficult to wire tap. DATA SETTING Choose the connection mode for the usage of your phone. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Call Settings then select Data Setting. 2 Select one of the following connection modes with the Navigation Key. l l Voice Call : To receive a voice call. Data Only : To receive data when connected to PC. 3 To save, press [OK]. 72 2 3 4 5 6 7 2.1. Press [NEW]. The phone book list will be displayed alphabetically. Select a name then press [OK]. Instructions (Please OK and say name) will be displayed and [OK]. You will hear Name Please. 2.2. Say the name for the voice tag and repeat the name when prompted. You will hear Added. C H 4 To play a voice dial. Highlight the voice tag you want to play then press [PLAY]. To detail a voice dial. Highlight the voice tag you want to detail view then press [OPTIONS] then select Detail. To re-record a voice dial. Highlight the voice tag you want to re-record then press [OPTIONS] then select Re-record. To play speaker a voice dial. Highlight the voice tag you want to play speaker then press [OPTIONS] then select Play Speaker. To erase or erase all voice dial. Highlight the voice tag you want to erase or erase all then press [OPTIONS] then select Erase or Erase All. 73 SETTINGS SETTINGS C H 4 VOICE SETTING After turning on Set Active, open the flip to go on to VR mode. After turning on HFK mode, put Hands-free kit and say wake up to go on to VR mode. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Call Settings then select Voice Services, press Voice Setting. 2 Under Set Active, select a option Off, Active Flip or Send Key. 3 Under HFK Mode, select a option On or Off. 4 To save, press [OK]. VOICE MEMO Voice Memo allows you to record a reminder message that can be up to 60 seconds. To record a memo:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Call Settings then select Voice Services, press Voice Memo. 2 To record a voice memo, select Record New, press [OK]. 3 To start recording a voice memo, press [OK]. 4 To stop recording a voice memo, press
[STOP]. To saved into voice memo list automatically. Voice memo order by date and recent file is uppermost. 5 To play voice memo, select the message you want to play then press [PLAY]. To send voice memo, select the message you want to send then press
[SEND] to access the New Txt Msg see New Txt Msg on page 89. If saved voice memo, press [OPTIONS] to select one of the following options:
l Set As Ringtone l Set As Ringer ID l Rename l Erase l Erase All TRAIN WORDS Train allows you to use Control words to make a call without using the keypad. Use to train or untrain the Voice Recognition with the control word, Yes, No or Wake-Up. C H 4 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Call Settings then select Voice Services, press Train Words. 2 Under Yes, No, Wake-Up. Please listen closely to hear instructions will be displayed and you will hear Now training control words. Please say the word. Say word. You will hear Again. Say word again. You will hear Training word successful. To undo voice recognition, select a word you want to undo then press [UNDO]. 3 Under Undo Train All. Undo voice recognition for all procedures?
will be displayed. Press [OK] to undo all trained words. 74 75 SETTINGS SETTINGS DTMF TONES To adjust tone length:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Call Settings then select DTMF Tones. 2 Select one of the following with the Navigation Key. l l l Normal Long Off 3 To save, press [OK]. C H 4 CLOCK FORMAT MAIN CLOCK To change the main clocks appearance on the standby screen:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Clock Format then select Main Clock. 2 Select one of the following with the Navigation Key. l l l Digital Analog Off 3 To save, press [OK]. FRONT CLOCK C H 4 To change the front clocks appearance on the standby screen:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Clock Format then select Front Clock. 2 Select one of the following with the Navigation Key. l l l Digital Analog Off 3 To save, press [OK]. 76 77 SETTINGS TOOLS RINGER ID CALENDAR Sets an event and reminds you of that event. Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Ringer ID. ADD NEW 1 2 Select On or Off with the Navigation Key, then press [OK] to save it. PICTURE ID 1 2 C H 4 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Picture ID. Select On or Off with the Navigation Key, then press [OK] to save it. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Tools then select Calendar. 2 3 Move the Navigation Key left, right, up or down to choose a date in the calendar then press [OK]. Press [OPTIONS] to 1. Monthly View, 2. Weekly View, 3. New, 4. Go To Date, 5. Erase, 6. Erase Today or 7. Erase Passed. The date field is highlighted. Press the Navigation Key down to set the alarm options. C H 4 APPOINTMENT Use the keypad to entering a appointment of your schedule. START TIME Use the keypad to set a start time and to select AM or PM. END TIME Use the keypad to set a end time and to select AM or PM. START DATE Use the keypad to change or enter the start date. TIME ZONE Use the Navigation Key to select a time zone.
(OFF, EST, EDT, CST, CDT, MST, PST, PDT, AKST, AKDT, HAST, HADT or GMT/UTC). 78 79 C H 4 TOOLS RECURRENCY Use the Navigation Key to select a setting for the repeat repeating the calendar. (Daily, Weekly, Monthly or Yearly). END DATE Use the keypad to change or enter the end date. ALERT Use the keypad to select the alert tone you wish to set. VIBRATE Use the Navigation Key to select vibrate on/off. REMINDER Use the Navigation Key to select an alert time interval option (0, 5 Minutes, 10 Minutes, 15Minutes before the appointment time). 4 Press [SAVE] to save it or [CLR] to return to the calendar. 5 The date of the event will be marked on your calendar. VIEW PLAN LIST 1 To view the Calendar List. 2 Move the Navigation Key to choose an event then press [VIEW]. Press [OPTIONS] and select SAVE to save it or select Erase, then select Yes, press . TOOLS ALARM CLOCK 1 2 3 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Tools then select Alarm Clock. Select one of the entries using the Navigation Key. To set a new alarm, choose alarm 1, 2 or 3. To edit an existing alarm, select that alarm. Press [OK]. Press [OPTIONS] to 1. Off, 2. Reset, 3. Reset All. The setting field will be highlighted. Press the Navigation Key down to select alarm options. ALARM Use the Navigation Key to select alarm On/Off. TIME Use the keypad to set a time for the alarm and to select AM or PM. C H 4 FREQUENCY Use the Navigation Key to select a setting for the alarm (Once, Daily, Monday through Friday, Weekends). RINGER Use the keypad to select the alert tone you wish to set. 4 To save an alarm setting press [SAVE]. 80 81 TOOLS TOOLS WORLD CLOCK To display the time and date in pre-programmed cities:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Tools then select World Clock. 2 Select a city with the [CITIES]. 3 The world map appears with the city, its date and time. If user press [DST], then all DST supporting cities DST turn on/off. 4 To return to the previous page, press [OK]. C H 4 82 NOTEPAD Your phone includes an internal notepad that can be used to compose and store reminders and notes. ADD MEMO To compose a memo (there is an 80-letter limit):
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Tools then select Notepad. 2 To add a new memo, press [NEW]. Input a new text memo.
(Please refer to page 31 for more details on entering letters, numbers & symbols.) 3 To save memo, press [SAVE]. C H 4 VIEW MEMO To view a saved memo:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Tools then select Notepad. 2 The list of all memos, in saved order, is displayed. Select a memo then press [VIEW]. 3 3.1. The selected memo will appear. To edit it, press [EDIT] and input a new text memo, then press [SAVE] to save it. 3.2. To add a new memo, press [NEW]. 3.3. To erase a memos, press [OPTIONS]
Erase. 3.4. To erase all memos, press [OPTIONS]
Erase All. 83 TOOLS TOOLS CALCULATOR To access the calculator:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Tools then select Calculator. 2 Follow the instructions below to calculate 8*64-2.5= 9.5 Input 8. Move the Navigation Key rightward. Input 6 then press the Navigation Key. Move it leftward. Input 4 then press the Navigation Key. Move it downward. Input 2 then press the to input (.). Press 5. Then press and you will see the answer. C H 4
: X, : -, : /, : +, : ., : Clear, : =. 3 To reset, press [CLEAR]. To change the displayed number from positive (+) to negative (-) and vice versa, press []. If user press [OPERATOR], to use multi parenthesis support and parenthesis rules [(,)] or power [^]. STOP WATCH Simultaneously times up to six different events. To operate the stop watch:
1 2 3 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Tools then select Stop Watch. To measure a time period. 1. To start the stop watch, press [START]. 2. To pause it, press [STOP]. 3. To resume it, press [START]. To reset it, press [RESET]. To time up to six events at once:
1. To start, press [START]. 2. To stop a time period and continue measuring another one, press [CONT]. 3. To stop the second and continue measuring a third one, press [CONT]. 4. To measure up to six time periods, repeat the above steps. 5. To stop the stop watch, press [STOP]. 6. To review the results, press [VIEW]. 7. To return to the stop watch, press [OK]. 8. To reset it, press [RESET]. C H 4 84 85 MEMO C H 4 Chapter 5 VOICE MAIL, TXT MESSAGING This chapter addresses Voice Mail, TXT Messaging functions including:
WHEN A NEW MESSAGE ARRIVES C H 5 VOICE MAIL NEW TXT MSG INBOX SENT DRAFTS E- MAIL ERASE ALL SETTINGS 86 87 87 WHEN A NEW MESSAGE ARRIVES NEW TXT MSG 1 The following display appears when a new message arrives. 2 To display the message, select View Now, then press [OK]. C H 5 VOICE MAIL Displays the number of voice mails and accesses them by pressing . 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press Voice Mail or press
[MESSAGES], press Voice Mail. FIRST TIME USER 1 Dial *86 then press [SEND]. 2 At the recording, press . 3 To set up your account follow the voice tutorial. EXISTING USER 1 Dial *86 then press [SEND]. 2 At the recording, enter your 4 digit password, then press . 3 To listen to new messages, press . To send a new txt message:
1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press New TXT Msg or press
[MESSAGE], press New TXT Msg. 2 Under To, input the phone number and press [OK]. By pressing [ADD], you can choose from the following:
1. Contacts : Search the phone number which is stored in the contacts list. 2. Recent Calls : Search the phone number which is stored in the recent calls list. To field support max 10 contacts. When user input phone number, user can insert international prefix (+) by press and hold . 3 Under Message, input a new TXT message then press [OK].
(Please refer to page 31 for more details on entering letters, numbers and symbols.) By pressing [OPTIONS], then select ADD. You can choose from the following:
1. Graphics : Inserts simple graphic image in TXT Msg. 2. Sounds : Inserts EMS sound in TXT Msg. 3. Quick Text : Inserts already written sentences in TXT Msg. C H 5 If one of field is inserted in txt msg field, message save at draft box. 4 To save the TXT message, press [OPTIONS], then select Save as Drafts. Press [OPTIONS], then select Priority Level, select High or Normal, then press [OK]. Press [OPTIONS], then select Call Back #, select On or Off, then press [OK]. 5 To send the TXT message, press [SEND]. 88 89 INBOX INBOX The Inbox manages received TXT/Web Alert messages. To access:
ERASE 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press Inbox or press
[MESSAGE], press Inbox.
: Urgent New Msg (not read)
: Urgent Read Msg
: New Msg (not read)
: Old Msg (already read)
: Lock (already read and locked)
: Web Alert Read
: Web Alert Unread C H 5 2 Select a message, then press [OPEN]. The message is displayed. To delete a message, press [ERASE], press [OK]. If you select web alert message, press [GET], to Browser launching. 3 Press [OPTIONS]. FORWARD 1 To forward the TXT message. 2 Input the phone number of the person you are sending the message, then press [OK]. 3 Input any text message to go along with the forwarded message, then press [OK]. 1 2 To erase this message, select Erase. Erase This Message? will be displayed. Press [YES] or [NO]. REPLY WITH COPY 1 2 3 To reply to a received message and include the received message into the message. The default call back number is automatically included into the Default CB# field. You can scroll to the number and edit it. To send the TXT message, press [SEND]. SAVE GRAPHICS 1 To save a picture to the Save Graphics folder. C H 5 SAVE SOUND 1 To save a sound to the Save Sound folder. ADD TO CONTACTS 1 Select to save number to contacts. Save Graphics", Save Sound" menu appears only when you receive EMS message. 90 91 INBOX SENT LOCK/UNLOCK Manages sent TXT messages waiting to be sent. 1 To lock or unlock the TXT or PIX message. 2 Select Lock to lock the message or Unlock to unlock the message, then press . SAVE QUICK TEXT 1 Select to save received text msg to Quick Text. Place a call to a received message number by simply pressing . C H 5 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press Sent or press [MESSAGE], press Sent.
: Auto resend
: Delivered
: Fail
: Not Sent
: Read
: Sent 2 Select a message then press [OPEN]. The message is displayed. To delete a message, press [ERASE], press [OK]. 3 Press [OPTIONS]. C H 5 FORWARD 1 To forward the TXT message. 2 Input the phone number of the person you are sending the message, then press [OK]. 3 Input any text message to go along with the forwarded message, then press [OK]. RESEND 1 To resend a TXT message. 92 93 SENT DRAFTS ERASE 1 2 To erase this message, select Erase. Erase This Message? will be displayed. Press [YES] or [NO]. ADD TO CONTACTS 1 Select to save number to contacts. LOCK/UNLOCK 1 To lock or unlock the TXT message. 2 Select Lock to lock the message or Unlock to unlock the message, then press . Draft Folder contains any draft messages or saved mes-sages. If message composition is interrupted by a voice call or other interrupting event, the text of the current composition is automatically saved in the drafts folder. 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press Drafts or press
[MESSAGE], press Drafts. 2 Select a message then press [EDIT]. The message is displayed. To delete a message, press [ERASE], press [OK]. 3 Press [OPTIONS]. SEND 1 To send a selected message. C H 5 SAVE QUICK TEXT ADD TO CONTACTS 1 Select to save received text msg to Quick Text. 1 Select to save number to contacts. C H 5 MESSAGE INFO LOCK/UNLOCK 1 To show received message information. 1 To lock or unlock the TXT message. Message Info menu appears only when you receive EMS Place a call to a received message number by simply message. pressing . 2 Select Lock to lock the message or Unlock to unlock the message, then press . SAVE QUICK TEXT 1 Select to save received text msg to Quick Text. 94 95 E- MAIL ERASE ALL 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press E-mail or press
[MESSAGE], press E-mail. 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press [OPTIONS] or press
[MESSAGE], press [OPTIONS]. 2 Browser launching. 2 2.1. To erase all the inbox messages, press [ERASE INBOX]. 2.2. To erase all the drafts messages, press [ERASE DRAFTS]. 2.3. To erase the sent messages, press [ERASE SENT]. 3 Select Yes, then press . C H 5 C H 5 96 97 SETTINGS SETTINGS Manages messaging features through various features. AUTO VIEW TXT AUTO SAVE 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press [SETTINGS] or press
[MESSAGE], press [SETTINGS]. 2 Press [AUTO SAVE]. Select On, Off or Prompt with the Navigation Key. On : All sent messages saved in the Sent box. Off : All sent messages not saved in the Sent box Prompt : Yes, No dialogue box displayed after sent message. C H 5 3 Press [OK]. AUTO ERASE Automatically erases inbox/sent messages when new messages arrive. 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press [SETTINGS] or press
[MESSAGE], press [SETTINGS]. 2 Press [AUTO ERASE]. Select On or Off with the Navigation Key. On : Oldest message erased frm inbox automatically when message is full. Off : Oldest message not erased frm inbox automatically when message is full. 3 Press [OK]. If the Auto View Txt is set to on, the user will be able to view the message by pressing the read key. If the Auto View Txt is set to off, the user can view the message by entering SMS Menu-> Inbox. 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press [SETTINGS] or press
[MESSAGE], press [SETTINGS]. 2 Press [AUTO VIEW TXT]. Select On or Off with the Navigation Key. On : Text message be displayed automatically. Off : User able to tetrieve the message from the inbox or based on user input from interactive notification. 3 Press [OK]. AUTO RECEIVE 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press [SETTINGS] or press
[MESSAGE], press [SETTINGS]. 2 Press [AUTO RECEIVE]. Select On or Off with the Navigation Key. On : Pix msg downloaded autoamatically. Off : User able to tetrieve the message from the inbox or based on user input from interactive notification. 3 Press [OK]. C H 5 98 99 SETTINGS SETTINGS SIGNATURE VOICE MAIL#
Create a signature that can be automatically inserted at the end of a message. 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press [SETTINGS] or press
[MESSAGE], press [SETTINGS]. 2 Press [SIGNATURE]. To activate Signature function, put the cursor on Insert Signature then select Custom by using right or left direction keys. To deactivate Signature function, select None. 3 To input Signature, put the cursor on Edit Signature then enter Signature Edit window by using right or left direction keys. C H 5 4 Press [OK]. CALLBACK#
Edits a default callback number so that the recipient can callback or reply. 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press [SETTINGS] or press
[MESSAGE], press [SETTINGS]. 2 3 Press [CALLBACK#]. Select On or Off with the Navigation Key. Select On, then input a callback number, press [OK]. 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press [SETTINGS] or press
[MESSAGE], press [SETTINGS]. 2 Press [VOICE MAIL#]. Input a new voice call back number or edit voice call back number. 3 Press [OK]. BLOCK/UNBLOCK 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press [SETTINGS] or press
[MESSAGE], press [SETTINGS]. 2 Press [BLOCK/UNBLOCK]. Select Block, Unblock or View List of Blocked Addresses with the Navigation Key. C H 5 BLOCK : Enter the address to block. UNBLOCK : Enter the address to remove from block. VIEW LIST OF BLOCKED ADDRESSES : Display the blocked list on LCD. 3 Press [OK]. 100 101 SETTINGS SETTINGS FONT SIZE 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press [SETTINGS] or press
[MESSAGES], press [SETTINGS]. 2 Press [FONT SIZE]. Select Small, Large or Normal with the Navigation Key. 3 Press [OK]. C H 5 ENTRY MODE Sets an Entry Mode as a default. For example, if T9 Mode is the default, its icon will appear. 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press [SETTINGS] or press
[MESSAGE], press [SETTINGS]. 2 Press [ENTRY MODE]. Select T9Word, Abc, ABC or 123 with the Navigation Key. 3 Press [OK]. QUICK TEXT To edit the Quick Text message you have saved:
1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press [SETTINGS] or press
[MESSAGE], press [SETTINGS]. 2 Press [QUICK TEXT]. 2.1. Select a message from the list. Press [OK]. 2.2. To add a new Quick Text message, press [OPTIONS] to select Add New. To edit the Quick Text message you have selected, press [OPTIONS] to select Edit, then enter text, press [SAVE]. 3 To erase the saved Quick Text message, press [ERASE]. Pre-defined quick text as below. 1. Whats up?/2. Lets meet/3. Check this out!/4. Whacha doin?/
5. Thanks/6. What do you think?/7. Youve gotta be here to enjoy this/8. Would you like to join me for a date tonight?/
9. On my way/10. Yes/11. Youre the best!/12. Call me C H 5 102 103 MEMO C H 5 Chapter 6 GET IT NOW &
MOBILE WEB 2.0 Your phone provides a unique feature -Get It Now- that enables you to download ringtones, wallpapers, games and more from your network to your phone. Or this chapter addresses Internet services and web browsing. For more detailed information contact your service provider. GET IT NOW STARTING INTERNET BROWSER BROWSER MENU C H 6 104 105 GET IT NOW GET IT NOW USING DOWNLOADED TUNES & TONES 1 Press [MENU], then select Get It now menu or press , then press Get Tunes & Tones. 2 To play downloaded tunes or tones. Select the tunes or tones you want to play, then press [PLAY]. 3 To erase downloaded tunes or tones. Select the tunes or tones you want to erase, then press [EARSE], then select Yes, press . 4 To assign downloaded tunes or tones. Select the tunes or tones you want to assign, then press [OPTIONS]. Select Set As Ringtone or Set As Ringer ID, then select Yes, press . By pressing [OPTIONS], you can choose from the following:
1. Set As Ringtone 2. Set As Ringer ID 3. Rename C H 6 GET TUNES & TONES DOWNLOADING NEW TUNES & TONES 1 Press [MENU], then select Get It now menu or press , then press Get Tunes &
Tones then select Get New the select New Provider, press . (The BREW will launch and take you to the download menu.) 2 Use your navigation key to select a providers browser, press [OK]. 3 Use your navigation key to select a Tunes or Tones you wish to download, press [OK]. 4 To save a downloaded tunes or tones to the Get Tunes & Tones list and to sort file type. By pressing [SOLT], you can choose sort type:
File type / Alphabet / Date (Recent-Old) /
File Size (Large-Small) C H 6 TO RECORDING NEW TONES 1 Press [MENU], then select Get It now menu or press , then press Get Tunes &
Tones then select Record New. 2 To record a voice memo, press [OK]
Instructions will be displayed and you will hear Beep Sound. 3 To stop recording a memo, press [STOP]. 4 To save a downloaded tunes or tones to the Get Tunes & Tones list and to sort file type. 106 107 GET IT NOW GET IT NOW GET FUN & GAMES DOWNLOADING NEW FUN & GAMES 1 Press [MENU], then select Get It now menu or press , then press Get Fun & Games then select Get New. (The BREW will launch and take you to the download menu.) 2 Use your navigation key to select a providers browser, press [OK]. 3 Use your navigation key to select a Fun or Games you wish to download, press [OK]. 4 To save a downloaded fun or games to the Get Fun & Games list and to sort file type. By pressing [SOLT], you can choose sort type:
File type / Alphabet / Date (Recent-Old) /
File Size (Large-Small) PLAYING DOWNLOADED FUN & GAMES C H 6 1 Press [MENU], then select Get It now menu or press , then press Get Fun & Games. 2 To play downloaded fun or games. Select the fun or games you want to play, then press [PLAY]. 3 To launch BREW. GALLERY In Review Mode you can view all the pictures you have taken, store selected images in your phone, send pictures to the Online Album, delete images and access additional picture options. 1 2 Press [MENU], then select Get It now menu or press , then press Gallery then select Get New. (The BREW will launch and take you to the download menu.) In Review Mode, you can view all the pictures you have stored in your phone. 3 Select picture with the Navigation Key, then press [VIEW]. You can see detail picture. In detail view, user can view previous or next picture by pressing left or right navigation key. By pressing [OPTIONS], you can choose from the following:
1. Send: To send a picture message. 2. To Pix Place: To uploading selected picture to pix server. 3. Set As: Assigns the selected pix to display for specific tasks.
(Wallpaper/Screen Saver/Picture ID/
Power On/Power Off.). 4. Rename: To edit the pictures title. 5. Lock/Unlock: To select Lock or Unlock. 6. Erase: Erase the current picture from your phone. 7. Erase All: To erase all the pictures in your phone. 8. Pix Info: Displays information on the selected picture, such as name, date, time, resolution and file size. C H 6 108 109 STARTING INTERNET BROWSER BROWSER MENU LAUNCHING MOBILE WEB 2.0 REFRESH Now you can access news, sports, weather, and e-mail from your phone. Mobile Web 2.0 keeps you updated by providing access to up-to-date information such as news, sports, weather and stock quotes when you subscribe to Internet service with your service provider. Please contact your service provider for a list of available websites and service details. Selecting the refresh item from the browser menu refreshes the current page. 1 To select Refresh. Press , then press
[MENU]
. 1 To start your Internet browser and access websites through your wireless handset press . HISTORY When the history item is selected from the browser menu, the browser is displayed with the browser version and copyright information. The device layer version is also displayed. 1 To select History. Press , then press
[MENU]
. ADDRESS Selecting the Address action displays the URL of the current page. 1 To select Address. Press , then press
[MENU]
CLEAR MEMORY 1 To clear browser memory. Press , then press
[MENU]
C H 6
. BROWSER MENU The browser menu lists the actions necessary to operate the browser. press , then press [MENU] . VZW HOME When the home item is selected from the browser menu, the phone displays the home page. C H 6 1 To display the homepage. Press , then press
[MENU]
BACK 1 To return to the previous page. Press , then press
[MENU]
FORWARD 1 To forward to the next page. Press , then press
[MENU]
. 110 111 BROWSER MENU SETTINGS 1 To select Settings. Press , then press
[MENU]
. Downloads Restart Browser Scroll Mode Send Referrer Key Press Timeout Connection Timeout ADVANCED Selecting the advanced item in the browser menu displays the advanced menu items. 1 To select Advanced. Press , then press
[MENU]
. About... Encryption: 1. Authentication 2. Root Certificate 3. Current Certificate C H 6 EXIT 1 To exit browser. Press , then press
[MENU]
. Chapter 7 SAFETY AND WARRANTY This chapter addresses the safety guidelines and precautions to follow when operating your phone. Before operating your phone, please be aware of all the safety details. This chapter contains the terms and conditions of services and the warranty for your phone. Please review them thoroughly. SAFETY INFORMATION FOR WIRELESS HANDHELD PHONES SAFETY INFORMATION FOR FCC RF EXPOSURE SAR INFORMATION FDA CONSUMER UPDATE PROTECT YOUR WARRANTY 12 MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY C H 7 112 113 SAFETY INFORMATION FOR WIRELESS HANDHELD PHONES SAFETY INFORMATION FOR WIRELESS HANDHELD PHONES Read This Information Before Using Your Handheld Portable Cellular Telephone 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 Commissions (FCC) adopted RF exposure guidelines with safety levels for handheld wireless phones. Those guidelines are consistent with the safety standards previously set by both U.S. and international standards bodies:
ANSI C95.1 (1992) *
NCRP Report 86 (1986) *
ICNIRP (1996) *
Those standards were based on comprehensive and periodic evaluations of the relevant scientific 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 (C951). The design of your phone complies with the FCC guidelines (and those standards). ANTENNA CARE Use only the supplied or an approved replacement antenna. Unauthorized antennas, modifications, or attachments could damage the phone and may violate FCC regulations. DRIVING SAFETY Talking on the phone while driving is extremely dangerous and is illegal in some states. Remember, safety comes first. Check the laws and regulations on the use of phones in the areas where you drive. Always obey them. Also, if using your phone while driving, please:
l l l Give full attention to driving. Driving safely is your first responsibility. Use hands-free operation, if available. Pull off the road and park before making or answering a call, if driving conditions so require. If you must use the phone while driving, please use one-touch, speed dialing, and auto answer modes. An airbag inflates with great force. DO NOT place objects, including both installed or portable wireless equipment, in the area over the airbag or in the air bag deployment area. If in-vehicle wireless equipment is improperly installed and the air bag inflates, serious injury could result. WARNING: Failure to follow these instructions may lead to serious personal injury and possible property damage. C H 7 C H 7 1* : American National Standards Institute. 2* : National Council on Radiation protection and measurements. 3* : International Commission on Nonionizing Radiation Protection. 114 115 SAFETY INFORMATION FOR WIRELESS HANDHELD PHONES SAFETY INFORMATION FOR WIRELESS HANDHELD PHONES ELECTRONIC DEVICES Most modern electronic equipment is shielded from RF energy. However, certain electronic equipment may not be shielded against the RF signals from your wireless phone. PACEMAKERS The Health Industry Manufacturers Association recommends that a minimum separation of six (6) inches 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 :
l l l l ALWAYS keep the phone more than six inches from your pacemaker when the phone is turned on. Do not carry the phone in a breast pocket. Use the ear opposite the pacemaker to minimize the potential for interference. If you have any reason to suspect that interference is taking place, turn your phone OFF immediately. OTHER MEDICAL DEVICES If you use any other personal medical device, consult the manufacturer of your device to determine if they are adequately shielded from external RF energy. Your physician may be able to assist you in obtaining this information. Turn your phone OFF in healthcare facilities when any regulations posted in these areas instruct you to do so. Hospitals or healthcare facilities may be using equipment that could be sensitive to external RF energy. C H 7 POSTED FACILITIES Turn your phone OFF where posted notices so require. OTHER SAFETY GUIDELINES AIRCRAFT FCC and Transport Canada Regulations prohibit using your phone while in the air. Turn your phone OFF before boarding an aircraft. 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 when in any area with a potentially explosive atmosphere and obey all signs and instructions. Sparks in such areas could cause an explosion or fire 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 gas stations; below deck on boats; fuel or chemical transfer or storage facilities; vehicles using liquefied petroleum gas (such as propane or butane); areas where the air contains chemicals or particles, such as grain, dust, or metal powders; and any other area where you would normally be advised to turn off your vehicles engine. C H 7 116 117 SAFETY INFORMATION FOR WIRELESS HANDHELD PHONES SAFETY INFORMATION FOR FCC RF EXPOSURE PRECAUTIONS WARNING! Read this Information before using Your Handheld Portable Telephone is a high quality piece of equipment. Before operating, read all instructions and cautionary markings on (1) AC Adaptor (2) Battery and (3) Product Using Battery. CAUTIONS DO NOT use this equipment in an extreme environment where high temperature or high humidity exists. DO NOT abuse the equipment. Avoid striking, shaking or shocking. When not using, lay down the unit to avoid possible damage due to instability. DO NOT expose this equipment to rain or spilled beverages. DO NOT use unauthorized accessories. DO NOT disassemble the phone or its accessories. If service or repair is required, return unit to an authorized Audiovox cellular service center. If unit is disassembled, the risk of electric shock or fire may result. DO NOT short-circuit the battery terminals with metal items etc. C H 7 In August 1996 the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) of the United States with its action in Report and Order FCC 96-326 adopted an updated safety standard for human exposure to radio frequency electromagnetic energy emitted by FCC regulated transmitters. Those guidelines are consistent with the safety standard previously set by both U.S. and international standards bodies. The design of this phone complies with the FCC guidelines and these international standards. Use only the supplied or an approved antenna. Unauthorized antennas, modifications, or attachments could impair call quality, damage the phone, or result in violation of FCC regulations. Do not use the phone with a damaged antenna. If a damaged antenna comes into contact with the skin, a minor burn may result. Please contact your local dealer for replacement antenna. BODY-WORN OPERATION This device was tested for typical body-worn operations with the back of the phone kept 2.0 cm. from the body. To maintain compliance with FCC RF exposure requirements, use only belt-clips, holsters or similar accessories that maintain a 2.0 cm. separation distance between the users body and the back of the phone, including the antenna. The use of belt-clips, holsters and similar accessories should not contain metallic components in its assembly. The use of accessories that do not satisfy these requirements may not comply with FCC RF exposure requirements, and should be avoided. For more information about RF exposure, please visit the FCC website at www.fcc.gov. C H 7 118 119 SAR INFORMATION SAR INFORMATION THIS MODEL PHONE MEETS THE GOVERNMENTS REQUIREMENTS FOR EXPOSURE TO RADIO WAVES. Your wireless phone is a radio transmitter and receiver. It is designed and manufactured not to exceed the emission limits for exposure to radiofrequency (RF) energy set by the Federal Communications Commission of the U.S. Government. These limits are part of comprehensive guidelines and establish permitted levels of RF energy for the general population. The guidelines are based on standards that were developed by independent scientific organizations through periodic and thorough evaluation of scientific studies. The standards include a substantial safety margin designed to assure the safety of all persons, regardless of age and health. The exposure standard for wireless mobile phones employs a unit of measurement known as the Specific Absorption Rate, or SAR. The SAR limit set by the FCC is 1.6 W/kg. * Tests for SAR are conducted with the phone transmitting at its highest certified power level in all tested frequency bands. Although the SAR is determined at the highest certified power level, the actual SAR level of the phone while operating can be well below the maximum value. This is because the phone is designed to operate at multiple power levels so as to use only the power required to reach the network. In general, the closer you are to a wireless base station antenna, the lower the power output. Before a phone model is available for sale to the public, it must be tested and certified to the FCC that it does not exceed the limit established by the government adopted requirement for safe exposure. The tests are performed in positions and locations (e.g., at the ear and worn on the body) as required by the FCC for each model. The highest SAR value for this model phone when tested for use at the ear is 1.35 W/Kg and when worn on the body, as described in this user guide, is 1.05W/Kg. (Body-worn measurements differ among phone models, depending upon available accessories and FCC requirements). While there may be differences between the SAR levels of various phones and at various positions, they all meet the government requirement for safe exposure. The FCC has granted an Equipment Authorization for this model phone with all reported SAR levels evaluated as in compliance with the FCC RF exposure guidelines. SAR information on this model phone is on file with the FCC and can be found under the Display Grant section of http://www.fcc.gov/ oet/fccid after searching on PP4TX-210. C H 7 Additional information on Specific Absorption Rates (SAR) can be found on the Cellular Telecommunications Industry Asso-ciation (CTIA) web-
site at http://www.wow-com.com.
* In the United States and Canada, the SAR limit for mobile phones used by the public is 1.6 watts/kg (W/kg) averaged over one gram of tissue. The standard incorporates a sub-stantial margin of safety to give additional protection for the public and to account for any variations in measurements. C H 7 120 121 FDA CONSUMER UPDATE FDA CONSUMER UPDATE U.S. Food and Drug Administration -Center for Devices and Radiological Health Consumer Update on Wireless Phones 1. Do wireless phones pose a health hazard?
The available scientific evidence does not show that any health problems are associated with using wireless phones. There is no proof, however, that wireless phones are absolutely safe. Wireless phones emit low levels of radiofrequency energy (RF) in the microwave range while being used. They also emit very low levels of RF when in the stand-by mode. Whereas high levels of RF can produce health effects (by heating tissue), exposure to low level RF that does not produce heating ef-fects causes no known adverse health effects. Many studies of low level RF exposures have not found any biological ef-fects. Some studies have suggested that some biological ef-fects may occur, but such findings have not been confirmed by additional research. In some cases, other researchers have had difficulty in reproducing those studies, or in determining the reasons for inconsistent results. 2. What is FDAs role concerning the safety of wireless phones?
Under the law, FDA does not review the safety of radiation-emitting consumer products such as wireless phones before they can be sold, as it does with new drugs or medical de-vices. However, the agency has authority to take action if wire-less phones are shown to emit radiofrequency energy (RF) at a level that is hazardous to the user. In such a case, FDA could require the manufacturers of wireless phones to notify users of the health hazard and to repair, replace or recall the phones so that the hazard no longer exists. Although the existing scientific data do not justify FDA regula-tory actions, FDA has urged the wireless phone industry to take a number of steps, including the following:
Support needed research into possible biological effects of RF of the type emitted by wireless phones;
Design wireless phones in a way that minimizes any RF ex-posure to the user that is not necessary for device function;
and Cooperate in providing users of wireless phones with the best possible information on possible effects of wireless phone use on human health. FDA belongs to an interagency working group of the federal agencies that have responsibility for different aspects of RF safety to ensure coordinated efforts at the federal level. The following agencies belong to this working group:
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health Environmental Protection Agency Federal Communications Commission Occupational Safety and Health Administration National Telecommunications and Information Administration The National Institutes of Health participates in some inter-agency working group activities, as well. FDA shares regulatory responsibilities for wireless phones with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). All phones that are sold in the United States must comply with FCC safety guidelines that limit RF exposure. FCC relies on FDA and other health agencies for safety questions about wireless phones. FCC also regulates the base stations that the wireless phone networks rely upon. While these base stations operate at higher power than do the wireless phones themselves, the RF expo-sures that people get from these base stations are typically thousands of times lower than those they can get from wire-less phones. Base stations are thus not the subject of the safety questions discussed in this document. 3. What kinds of phones are the subject of this update?
The term wireless phone refers here to hand-held wireless phones with built-in antennas, often called cell, mobile, or PCS phones. C H 7 These types of wireless phones can expose the user to measurable radiofrequency energy (RF) because of the short distance between the phone and the users head. These RF exposures are limited by Federal Communications Commission safety guidelines that were developed with the advice of FDA and other federal health and safety agencies. When the phone is located at greater distances from the user, the exposure to RF is drastically lower because a persons RF exposure decreases rapidly with increasing distance from the source. The so-called cordless phones, which have a base unit connected to the telephone wiring in a house, typically operate at far lower power levels, and thus produce RF expo-sures far below the FCC safety limits. 4. What are the results of the research done already?
The research done thus far has produced conflicting results, and many studies have suffered from flaws in their research methods. Animal experiments investigating the effects of radiofrequency energy (RF) exposures characteristic of wire-less phones have yielded conflicting results that often cannot be repeated in other laboratories. A few animal studies, how-ever, have suggested that low levels of RF could accelerate the development of cancer in laboratory animals. However, many of the studies that showed increased tumor develop-ment used animals that had been genetically engineered or treated with cancer-causing chemicals so as to be pre-dis-posed to develop cancer in the absence of RF exposure. Other studies exposed the animals to RF for up to 22 hours per day. These conditions are not similar to the conditions under which people use wireless phones, so we dont know with certainty what the results of such studies mean for human health. Three large epidemiology studies have been published since December 2000. Between them, the studies investigated any possible association between the use of wireless phones and primary brain cancer, glioma, meningioma, or acoustic neu-
roma, tumors of the brain or salivary gland, leukemia, or other cancers. None of the studies demonstrated the existence of any harmful health effects from wireless phone RF exposures. However, none of the studies can answer questions about long-term exposures, since the average period of phone use in these studies was around three years. 5. What research is needed to decide whether RF expo-sure from wireless phones poses a health risk?
A combination of laboratory studies and epidemiological stud-ies of people actually using wireless phones would provide some of the data that are needed. Lifetime animal exposure studies could be completed in a few years. However, very large numbers of animals would be needed to provide reliable proof of a cancer promoting effect if one exists. Epidemiological stud-ies can provide data that is directly applicable to human popu-lations, but 10 or more years follow-up may be needed to pro-vide answers about some health effects, such as cancer. This is because the interval between the time of exposure to a can-cer- causing agent and the time tumors develop - if they do -may be many, many years. The interpretation of epidemiologi-cal studies is hampered by difficulties in measuring actual RF exposure during day-to-day use of wireless phones. Many fac-tors affect this measurement, such as the angle at which the phone is held, or which model of phone is used. 6. What is FDA doing to find out more about the possible health effects of wireless phone RF?
FDA is working with the U.S. National Toxicology Program and with groups of investigators around the world to ensure that high priority animal studies are conducted to address impor-tant questions about the effects of exposure to radiofrequency energy (RF). FDA has been a leading participant in the World Health Orga-nization International Electromagnetic Fields (EMF) Project since its inception in 1996. An influential result of this work has been the development of a detailed agenda of research needs that has driven the establishment of new research pro-
grams around the world. C H 7 122 123 FDA CONSUMER UPDATE FDA CONSUMER UPDATE The Project has also helped develop a series of public information documents on EMF issues. FDA and the Cellular Telecommunications & Internet Asso-ciation
(CTIA) have a formal Cooperative Research and De-velopment Agreement
(CRADA) to do research on wireless phone safety. FDA provides the scientific oversight, obtaining input from experts in government, industry, and academic or-
ganizations. CTIA-funded research is conducted through con-tracts to independent investigators. The initial research will include both laboratory studies and studies of wireless phone users. The CRADA will also include a broad assessment of additional research needs in the context of the latest research developments around the world. 7. How can I find out how much radiofrequency energy exposure I can get by using my wireless phone?
All phones sold in the United States must comply with Federal Communications Commission (FCC) guidelines that limit radiofrequency energy (RF) exposures. FCC established these guidelines in consultation with FDA and the other federal health and safety agencies. The FCC limit for RF exposure from wire-less telephones is set at a Specific Absorption Rate (SAR) of 1.6 watts per kilogram (1.6 W/kg). The FCC limit is consistent with the safety standards developed by the Institute of Electri-cal and Electronic Engineering (IEEE) and the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurement. The exposure limit takes into consideration the bodys ability to remove heat from the tissues that absorb energy from the wireless phone and is set well below levels known to have effects. Manufacturers of wireless phones must report the RF expo-sure level for each model of phone to the FCC. The FCC website (http://www.fcc.gov/oet/rfsafety) gives directions for locating the FCC identification number on your phone so you can find your phones RF exposure level in the online listing. 8. What has FDA done to measure the radiofrequency en-ergy coming from wireless phones ?
The Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE) is developing a technical standard for measuring the radiofrequency energy (RF) exposure from wireless phones and other wireless handsets with the participation and leader-ship of FDA scientists and engineers. The standard, Recom-mended Practice for Determining the Spatial-Peak Specific Absorption Rate (SAR) in the Human Body Due to Wireless Communications Devices: Experimental Techniques, sets forth the first consistent test methodology for measuring the rate at which RF is deposited in the heads of wireless phone users. The test method uses a tissue-simulating model of the human head. Standardized SAR test methodology is expected to greatly improve the consistency of measurements made at different laboratories on the same phone. SAR is the mea-surement of the amount of energy absorbed in tissue, either by the whole body or a small part of the body. It is measured in watts/kg (or milliwatts/g) of matter. This measurement is used to determine whether a wireless phone complies with safety guidelines. 9. What steps can I take to reduce my exposure to radiofrequency energy from my wireless phone?
If there is a risk from these productsand at this point we do not know that there isit is probably very small. But if you are concerned about avoiding even potential risks, you can take a few simple steps to minimize your exposure to radiofrequency energy (RF). Since time is a key factor in how much exposure a person receives, reducing the amount of time spent using a wireless phone will reduce RF exposure. If you must conduct extended conversations by wireless phone every day, you could place more distance between your body and the source of the RF, since the exposure level drops off dramatically with distance. For example, you could use a headset and carry the wireless phone away from your body or use a wireless phone connected to a remote an-tenna. C H 7 Again, the scientific data do not demonstrate that wireless phones are harmful. But if you are concerned about the RF exposure from these products, you can use measures like those described above to reduce your RF exposure from wire-less phone use. 10.What about children using wireless phones?
The scientific evidence does not show a danger to users of wireless phones, including children and teenagers. If you want to take steps to lower exposure to radiofrequency energy (RF), the measures described above would apply to children and teenagers using wireless phones. Reducing the time of wire-less phone use and increasing the distance between the user and the RF source will reduce RF exposure. Some groups sponsored by other national governments have advised that children be discouraged from using wireless phones at all. For example, the government in the United King-dom distributed leaflets containing such a recommendation in December 2000. They noted that no evidence exists that us-
ing a wireless phone causes brain tumors or other ill effects. Their recommendation to limit wireless phone use by children was strictly precautionary;
it was not based on scientific evi-dence that any health hazard exists. 11.What about wireless phone interference with medical equipment?
Radiofrequency energy (RF) from wireless phones can inter-act with some electronic devices. For this reason, FDA helped develop a detailed test method to measure electromagnetic interference (EMI) of implanted cardiac pacemakers and defibrillators from wireless telephones. This test method is now part of a standard sponsored by the Association for the Ad-vancement of Medical instrumentation
(AAMI). The final draft, a joint effort by FDA, medical device manufacturers, and many other groups, was completed in late 2000. This standard will allow manufacturers to ensure that cardiac pacemakers and defibrillators are safe from wireless phone EMI. FDA has tested hearing aids for interference from handheld wireless phones and helped develop a voluntary standard sponsored by the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engi-neers (IEEE). This standard specifies test methods and per-formance requirements for hearing aids and wireless phones so that that no interference occurs when a person uses a com-patible phone and a compatible hearing aid at the same time. This standard was approved by the IEEE in 2000. FDA continues to monitor the use of wireless phones for pos-sible interactions with other medical devices. Should harmful interference be found to occur, FDA will conduct testing to assess the interference and work to resolve the problem. 12.Where can I find additional information?
For additional information, please refer to the following re-sources:
FDA web page on wireless phones (http://www.fda.gov/cdrh/ phones/index.html) Federal Communications Commission (FCC) RF Safety Pro-gram
(http://www.fcc.gov/oet/rfsafety) International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protec-tion
(http://www.icnirp.de) World Health Organization (WHO) International EMF Project
(http://www.who.int/emf) National Radiological Protection Board (UK) (http://www.nrpb.org.uk/) C H 7 124 125 PROTECT YOUR WARRANTY 12 MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY Read your Warranty carefully, with the special consideration to paragraph seven of the Limited Warranty for your unit. Warranty does not apply to... or to any product or part thereof which has suffered through alteration... mishandling misuse, neglect or accident. Many companies are making look alike accessories and in some cases, promoting that their product is equal to or better than the Audiovox product. Be careful. Some of these products may not be compatible to use with your Audiovox product and may damage the unit or cause it to malfunction. If service is required on your unit and it is determined that a non-Audiovox accessory has created the problem with your unit, the Warranty will not apply. In addition, if the unit has already suffered irreversible damage by reason of a non-compatible accessory, the Warranty will be voided. To protect your Warranty, use only compatible accessories which cannot damage or interfere with the functioning of your Audiovox product. UTSTARCOM/AUDIOVOX COMMUNICATIONS 555 Wireless Blvd., Hauppauge, New York 11788, 800-229-1235 16808 Marquardt Avenue, Cerritos, California 90703, 562-802-5100 UTStarcom Canada Company 5155 Spectrum Way, Unit #5, Mississauga, Ontario Canada L4W 5A1, 800-465-9672 C H 7 UTStarcom/Audiovox Communications (the Company) warrants to the original retail purchaser of this Audiovox handheld portable cellular telephone, that should this product or any part thereof during normal consumer usage and conditions, be proven defective in material or workmanship that results in product failure within the first twelve (12) months period from the date of purchase, such defect(s) will be repaired or replaced (with new or rebuilt parts) at the Companys option, without charge for parts or labor directly related to the defect(s). The antenna, key pad, display, rechargeable battery and battery charger, if included, are similarly warranted for twelve (12) months from date of purchase. This Warranty extends only to consumers who purchase the product in the United States or Canada and it is not transferable or assignable. This Warranty does not apply to:
(a) Product subjected to abnormal use or conditions, accident, mishandling, neglect, unauthorized alteration, misuse, improper installation or repair or improper storage;
(b) Product whose mechanical serial number or electronic serial number has been removed, altered or defaced.
(c) Damage from exposure to moisture, humidity, excessive temperatures or extreme environmental conditions;
(d) Damage resulting from connection to, or use of any accessory or other product not approved or authorized by the Company;
(e) Defects in appearance, cosmetic, decorative or structural items such as framing and non-operative parts;
(f) Product damaged from external causes such as fire, flooding, dirt, sand, weather conditions, battery leakage, blown fuse, theft or improper usage of any electrical source. The Company disclaims liability for removal or reinstallation of the product, for geographic coverage, for inadequate signal reception by the antenna or for communications range or operation of the cellular system as a whole. To obtain repairs or replacement within the terms of this Warranty, the product should be delivered with proof of Warranty coverage (e.g. dated bill of sale), the consumers return address, daytime phone number and/or fax number and complete description of the problem, transportation prepaid, to the Company at the address shown below or to the place of purchase for repair or replacement processing. C H 7 126 127 12 MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY In addition, for reference to an authorized Warranty station in your area, you may telephone in the United States (800) 229-1235, and in Canada
(800) 465-9672 (in Ontario call 905-712-9299). THE EXTENT OF THE COMPANYS LIABILITY UNDER THIS WARRANTY IS LIMITED TO THE REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT PROVIDED ABOVE AND, IN NO EVENT, SHALL THE COMPANYS LAIBILITY EXCEED THE PURCHASE PRICE PAID BY PURCHASER FOR THE PRODUCT. ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING ANY IMPLIED WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, SHALL BE LIMITED TO THE DURATION OF THIS WRITTEN WARRANTY. ANY ACTION FOR BREACH OF ANY WARRANTY MUST BE BROUGHT WITHIN A PERIOD OF 18 MONTHS FROM DATE OF ORIGINAL PURCHASE. IN NO CASE SHALL THE COMPANY BE LIABLE FOR AN SPECIAL CONSEQUENTIAL OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES FOR BREACH OF THIS OR ANY OTHER WARRANTY, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, WHATSOEVER. THE COMPANY SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR THE DELAY IN RENDERING SERVICE UNDER THIS WARRANTY OR LOSS OF USE DURING THE TIME THE PRODUCT IS BEING REPAIRED OR REPLACED. No person or representative is authorized to assume for the Company any liability other than expressed herein in connection with the sale of this product. Some states or provinces do not allow limitations on how long an implied warranty lasts or the exclusion or limitation of incidental or consequential damage so the above limitation or exclusions may not apply to you. This Warranty gives you specific legal rights, and you may also have other rights which vary from state to state or province to province. IN USA : UTStarcom/Audiovox Communications 555 Wireless Blvd. Hauppauge, NY 11788
(800) 229-1235 C H 7 IN CANADA : UTStarcom Canada Company 5155 Spectrum Way, Unit #5 Mississauga, Ontario L4W 5A1
(800) 465-9672 128
1 2 3 | Users Manual | Users Manual | 2.61 MiB | December 07 2005 |
WELCOME TABLE OF CONTENTS Thank you for choosing the up-to-date CDM-210, our new model, developed by top researchers to support the CDMA2000 1X system through Qualcomm-manufactured MSM6050 chips and CDMA technologies. This product allows for high speed communication services, such as web browsing, data services, and a GUI animation menu. T9 input mode makes it much easier to enter text, while VR
(Voice Recognition) makes the CDM-210 more user friendly. Other proven technologies include:
Full graphic display of 9 text input lines and 1 icon line with variable font size. Easy to dial through the VR feature. Easy to enter letters through the T9 text input mode. Enhanced for web browsing & data services (i.e.; wireless internet access, UP browser) GUI & Animation display compliant with CDMA2000 1X. Full graphic - Main LCD : TFT260K color wide LCD/
Sub LCD : CSTN 65K color LCD Navigation Key and 21 keys aligned for more convenience. Sophisticated features of speaker phone and voice recognition. Additional services of text messaging and Web browsing on top of authentication, call forwarding, call transfer, call waiting. IMPORTANT INFORMATION This CDM-210 user guide contains very important information about how to handle and use the product. Please read this manual thoroughly, pay attention to the warranty on the back page and be alert to the exclusions and limitations of your warranty, which are related with the unauthorized use of components. CHAPTER 1. BEFORE USING YOUR PHONE .................................5 INSIDE THE PACKAGE .....................................................................................6 HANDSET DESCRIPTION.................................................................................7 THE FUNCTION KEYS.............................................................................................8 DISPLAY INDICATORS ...........................................................................................9 BATTERY USAGE...........................................................................................11 BATTERY INSTALLATION....................................................................................11 BATTERY REMOVAL.............................................................................................11 BATTERY CHARGING...........................................................................................12 POWER CONNECTION ......................................................................................12 PCS AND 1X BATTERY TIMES ...........................................................................13 BATTERY LIFE (FOR NEW BATTERY)................................................................13 BATTERY HANDLING INFORMATION..........................................................14 DOs.........................................................................................................................14 DONTs...................................................................................................................14 Chapter 1 Chapter 2 CHAPTER 2. BASIC OPERATION ..................................................15 TURNING THE PHONE ON / OFF ..................................................................16 TURNING THE PHONE ON...................................................................................16 TURNING THE PHONE OFF..................................................................................16 ACCESSING THE MENU................................................................................17 MENU SUMMARY .........................................................................................18 BASIC FUNCTIONS ........................................................................................20 MAKING A CALL ...................................................................................................20 ANSWERING CALLS.............................................................................................21 SPEAKER PHONE..................................................................................................21 WAIT/PAUSE FEATURE........................................................................................22 ANSWERING A CALL............................................................................................22 3-WAY CALLING ...................................................................................................23 CALLER ID FUNCTION..........................................................................................23 CALL WAITING FUNCTION..................................................................................24 ADJUSTING VOLUME..........................................................................................24 ENTER LOCK MODE .............................................................................................25 DURING A CALL .............................................................................................26 MUTE (UNMUTE)..................................................................................................26 SEND TXT MSG ....................................................................................................26 CONTACTS............................................................................................................26 RECENT CALLS .....................................................................................................26 SEND DTMF...........................................................................................................26 VOICE PRIVACY.....................................................................................................27 LOCATION .............................................................................................................27 MAKING AN EMERGENCY CALL..................................................................28 911 IN LOCK MODE ..............................................................................................28 911 USING ANY AVAILABLE SYSTEM ...............................................................28 CHAPTER 3. MEMORY FUNCTION...............................................29 STORING A PHONE NUMBER ......................................................................30 ENTERING LETTERS, NUMBERS & SYMBOLS ...........................................31 STANDARD INPUT MODE....................................................................................32 T9 INPUT MODE....................................................................................................33 NUMERIC MODE...................................................................................................34 SYMBOL MODE ....................................................................................................34 MAKING A CALL THROUGH THE PHONE BOOK ........................................35 ONE-TOUCH/TWO-TOUCH DIALING...................................................................35 ONE-TOUCH DIALING:.......................................................................................35 TWO-TOUCH DIALING: ......................................................................................35 Chapter 3 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter 4 CHAPTER 4. MENU FUNCTION ....................................................37 CONTACTS .....................................................................................................38 NEW CONTACT.....................................................................................................38 CONTACT LIST......................................................................................................39 GROUPS ................................................................................................................40 ADD NEW GROUP .............................................................................................40 ASSIGN PHONE NUMBER TO GROUP..............................................................40 CHANGE GROUP NAME ....................................................................................41 SEND TXT MSG. GROUP ...................................................................................41 ERASE GROUP...................................................................................................42 SPEED DIALS.........................................................................................................43 RECENT CALLS ..............................................................................................44 MISSED..................................................................................................................44 RECEIVED ..............................................................................................................45 DIALED...................................................................................................................46 ALL .........................................................................................................................47 SETTINGS .......................................................................................................48 SOUNDS................................................................................................................48 MASTER VOUME ...............................................................................................48 CALL SOUND .....................................................................................................49 ALERT SOUNDS.................................................................................................50 KEYPAD VOUME ................................................................................................52 EARPIECE VOUME.............................................................................................52 SERVICE ALERTS ...............................................................................................53 POWER ON/OFF.................................................................................................54 ALARM SOUNDS ...............................................................................................55 DISPLAYS ..............................................................................................................56 BANNER .............................................................................................................56 BACKLIGHT ........................................................................................................57 CONTRAST .........................................................................................................58 WALLPAPER.......................................................................................................58 SCREENSAVER...................................................................................................59 DISPLAY THEMES..............................................................................................59 FONTS ................................................................................................................59 POWER ON/OFF ANIMATIONS .........................................................................60 SYSTEM.................................................................................................................61 SYSTEM SELECT................................................................................................61 NAM SELECTION ...............................................................................................62 DEVICE INFO......................................................................................................63 LOCATION..........................................................................................................64 SECURITY...........................................................................................................65 LANGUAGE.........................................................................................................68 SHORT CUT KEY ................................................................................................69 CALL SETTINGS....................................................................................................70 ANSWER OPTIONS............................................................................................70 AUTO RETRY......................................................................................................71 TTY MODE..........................................................................................................71 ONE TOUCH DIAL..............................................................................................72 VOICE PRIVACY..................................................................................................72 DATA SETTING...................................................................................................72 VOICE SERVICES................................................................................................73 DTMF TONES .....................................................................................................76 CLOCK FORMAT ...................................................................................................77 MAIN CLOCK......................................................................................................77 FRONT CLOCK ...................................................................................................77 RINGER ID..............................................................................................................78 PICTURE ID............................................................................................................78 Chapter 4 TOOLS.............................................................................................................79 CALENDAR ............................................................................................................79 ADD NEW...........................................................................................................79 VIEW PLAN LIST.................................................................................................80 ALARM CLOCK......................................................................................................81 WORLD CLOCK .....................................................................................................82 NOTEPAD ..............................................................................................................83 ADD MEMO........................................................................................................83 VIEW MEMO ......................................................................................................83 CALCULATOR........................................................................................................84 STOP WATCH........................................................................................................85 CHAPTER 5. VOICE MAIL, TXT MESSAGING..............................87 WHEN A NEW MESSAGE ARRIVES .............................................................88 VOICE MAIL ....................................................................................................88 NEW TXT MSG .........................................................................................................89 INBOX........................................................................................................................90 FORWARD..........................................................................................................90 ERASE.................................................................................................................91 REPLY WITH COPY ............................................................................................91 SAVE GRAPHICS ................................................................................................91 SAVE SOUND .....................................................................................................91 ADD TO CONTACTS...........................................................................................91 LOCK/UNLOCK ...................................................................................................92 SAVE QUICK TEXT..............................................................................................92 SENT..........................................................................................................................93 FORWARD..........................................................................................................93 RESEND..............................................................................................................93 ERASE.................................................................................................................94 ADD TO CONTACTS...........................................................................................94 LOCK/UNLOCK ...................................................................................................94 SAVE QUICK TEXT..............................................................................................94 MESSAGE INFO .................................................................................................94 DRAFTS .....................................................................................................................95 SEND ..................................................................................................................95 ADD TO CONTACTS...........................................................................................95 LOCK/UNLOCK ...................................................................................................95 SAVE QUICK TEXT..............................................................................................95 E- MAIL ......................................................................................................................96 ERASE ALL ................................................................................................................97 SETTINGS..................................................................................................................98 AUTO SAVE...........................................................................................................98 AUTO ERASE.........................................................................................................98 AUTO VIEW TXT ...................................................................................................99 AUTO RECEIVE......................................................................................................99 SIGNATURE.........................................................................................................100 CALLBACK#.........................................................................................................100 VOICE MAIL#.......................................................................................................101 BLOCK/UNBLOCK ...............................................................................................101 ENTRY MODE......................................................................................................102 QUICK TEXT ........................................................................................................102 FONT SIZE ...........................................................................................................103 Chapter 5 2 3 TABLE OF CONTENT CHAPTER 6. GET IT NOW & MOBILE WEB 2.0..........................105 GET IT NOW .................................................................................................106 GET TUNES & TONES........................................................................................106 DOWNLOADING NEW TUNES & TONES ........................................................106 TO RECORDING NEW TONES .........................................................................106 USING DOWNLOADED TUNES & TONES.......................................................107 GET FUN & GAMES............................................................................................108 DOWNLOADING NEW FUN & GAMES ...........................................................108 PLAYING DOWNLOADED FUN & GAMES ......................................................108 GALLERY .............................................................................................................109 STARTING INTERNET BROWSER...............................................................110 ACCESS THE INTERNET.....................................................................................110 BROWSER MENU.........................................................................................110 VZW HOME..........................................................................................................110 BACK....................................................................................................................110 FORWARD ...........................................................................................................110 REFRESH..............................................................................................................111 HISTORY..............................................................................................................111 ADDRESS.............................................................................................................111 CLEAR MEMORY.................................................................................................111 SETTINGS............................................................................................................112 ADVANCED..........................................................................................................112 EXIT......................................................................................................................112 Chapter 6 CHAPTER 7. SAFETY AND WARRANTY ....................................113 SAFETY INFORMATION FOR WIRELESS HANDHELD PHONES ..............114 DRIVING SAFETY................................................................................................115 ELECTRONIC DEVICES .......................................................................................116 OTHER SAFETY GUIDELINES............................................................................117 PRECAUTIONS....................................................................................................118 SAFETY INFORMATION FOR FCC RF EXPOSURE ....................................119 CAUTIONS...........................................................................................................119 SAR INFORMATION.....................................................................................120 FCC HEARING-AID COMPATIBILITY (HAC) REGULATIONS FOR WIRELESS DEVICES.....................................................................................122 FDA CONSUMER UPDATE ..........................................................................124 PROTECT YOUR WARRANTY .....................................................................128 12 MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY...............................................................129 Chapter 7 C H
. 1 Chapter 1 BEFORE USING YOUR PHONE This chapter provides important information about using the CDM-210 including:
INSIDE THE PACKAGE HANDSET DESCRIPTION BATTERY USAGE BATTERY HANDLING INFORMATION Licensed by QUALCOMM Incorporated under one or more of the following Patents : U.S.Patent No. 4,901,307 U.S.Patent No. 5,056,109 U.S.Patent No. 5,099,204 U.S. Patent No. 5,101,501 U.S. Patent No. 5,103,459 U.S. Patent No. 5,107,225 U.S.Patent No. 5,109,390. 4 5 INSIDE THE PACKAGE HANDSET DESCRIPTION C H 1 This package should include all items pictured below. If any are missing or different, immediately contact the retailer where you purchased the phone. The CDM-210 weighs 3.7oz. The dimensions are 1.83 x 4.48 x 0.97. C H 1 Antenna Earjack Volume Key AC Travel Charger Navigation Key Standard Battery Send Key Handset User Manual Handstrap 6 7 Earpiece LCD Screen Function Keys END/
Power Key Microphone HANDSET DESCRIPTION HANDSET DESCRIPTION C H 1 Display Indicators See page 9 for a list of icons. Text & Graphic area Soft Key Indicators Shows the functions currently assigned to each soft key and displays some icons. Message Contacts Menu THE FUNCTION KEYS Web Browser Get Pix & Flix Get It Now Short Cut Key In Idle Mode
- Press Up to access the Web Browser, Down to access the Short Cut Key, Right for Get It Now and Left for Get Pix &Flix. Inside the menu
- Within a menu, use to scroll through menu options, or to select a function displayed on the screen. Press to make or receive a call. Press to turn the phone on/off, to terminate a call or to return to the initial page.
(Left Soft Key) Press to access the message menu or function displayed on bottom line.
(Right Soft Key) Press to access contacts menu or function displayed on bottom line. Press to clear a digit from the display or to return to the previous page. Press and hold to enable speaker phone mode. Press and hold to enter etiquette mode. Press and hold to enter lock mode. 8 C H 1 DISPLAY INDICATORS Signal Strength - Current signal strength: the more lines, the stronger the signal. Roaming Phone is out of home area. 1X Phone is in the 1x service area. Digital mode Phone is operating in digital mode. Voice Privacy Indicates Voice Privacy mode. SLI Dormant Indicates your phone is in a dormant state during a data call. Your phone goes to Dormant mode when you have not had any activity on a page for some time - your connection is still active and now you can make and receive calls. No Service Indicates the phone cannot receive a signal from the system. Voice Data Active TTY Indicates your phone is in TTY mode is active. GPS Icon Indicates the Location Service of your phone is disabled/enabled. Locked Indicates your phone is locked. Battery Battery charging level the more blocks, the stronger the charge. 9 HANDSET DESCRIPTION BATTERY USAGE C H 1 Alarm Only Phone will Alarm Only when call is received. Vibrte On Phone will vibrate when call is received. All Sound Indicates the ringer volume is set to off. Missed Call Voice Mail indicates you have voicemail messages. New Message New TXT or voice message. Calendar Appointment Indicates Event Alarm is active. Data Only Receives an async. call as a voice call. Speaker Phone Phone is in speaker phone mode. Auto Answer Phone is in answering machine mode. BATTERY INSTALLATION 1 u Place the battery on the back of the handset and slide into place. v Push the battery down until it locks into place. C H 1 BATTERY REMOVAL 1 u Pull down the release latch, lift up the battery and v remove the battery from the handset. If the battery is not correctly placed in the compartment, the handset will not turn on and/or the battery may detach during use. 10 11 BATTERY USAGE BATTERY USAGE C H 1 BATTERY CHARGING POWER CONNECTION 1 Plug the AC Charger into a standard outlet. 2 Plug the other end of the AC Charger into the bottom of your phone. The battery must be installed onto the phone. When you charge the battery with the phone power off, you will see a charging status screen. You cannot operate the phone until it is powered on. The battery is not charged at the time of purchase. Fully charge the battery before use. It is more efficient to charge the battery with the handset powered off. The battery must be connected to the phone in order to charge it. Battery operating time gradually decreases over time. If the battery fails to perform normally, you may need to replace the battery. PCS AND 1X BATTERY TIMES The operating time is subject to your handset usage and configuration. C H 1 Battery Capacity DCS PCS STD 1000 mAh Up to 162 m Up to 160 m EXT 1700 mAh Up to 282m Up to 270 m BATTERY LIFE (FOR NEW BATTERY) The operating time is subject to your handset usage and configuration. Battery Capacity DCS STD 1000 mAh EXT 1700 mAh 190 Hours 326 Hours PCS 172 Hours 293 Hours These times are for a new battery. Usage and Standby time may decrease over time. 12 13 BATTERY HANDLING INFORMATION C H 1 DOs l Only use the battery and charger approved by the manufacturer. l Only use the battery for its original purpose. l Try to keep batteries in a temperature between 41F (5C ) and 95F (35C). l If the battery is stored in temperatures above or below the recommended range, give it time to warm up or cool down before using. l Completely drain the battery before recharging. It may take one to four days to completely drain. l Store the discharged battery in a cool, dark, and dry place. l Purchase a new battery when its operating time gradually decreases after fully charging. l Properly dispose of the battery according to local laws. DONTs l Dont attempt to disassemble the battery it is a sealed unit with no serviceable parts. l Dont accidentally short circuit the battery by carrying it in your pocket or purse with other metallic objects such as coins, clips and pens. This may critically damage the battery. l Dont leave the battery in hot or cold temps. Otherwise, it could significantly reduce the capacity and lifetime of the battery. l Dont dispose of the battery into a fire. Chapter 2 BASIC OPERATION C H 2 This chapter addresses and explains the basic features of your phone including:
TURNING THE PHONE ON / OFF ACCESSING THE MENU MENU SUMMARY BASIC FUNCTIONS DURING A CALL MAKING AN EMERGENCY CALL 14 15 TURNING THE PHONE ON / OFF ACCESSING THE MENU C H 2 TURNING THE PHONE ON 1 Press and hold until your Power On logo appears and the tone sounds. To select a logo, refer to page 58 for more details.
(Settings & Tools>Displays>Wallpaper) for more detail. If Password appears on the display enter your 4-digit password to unlock your phone. The default password is the last 4 digit of your phone number. TURNING THE PHONE OFF 1 Press and hold until your Power Off logo appears. Immediately change or recharge the battery when LOW BATTERY!! PHONE IS TURNING OFF! appears on the display. Memory may possibly be damaged if the phone turns off due to the battery completely draining. Turn the phone off before removing or replacing the battery. If the phone is on, unsaved data may be lost. Your phone can be customized via the menu. Each function can be accessed by scrolling with the Navigation Key or by pressing the number that corresponds with the menu item. Get It Now Messaging Contacts Recent Calls Settings & Tools C H 2 1 To access the menu in the idle mode, press [MENU]. 2 Use the Navigation Key to scroll through the menu. l To search through the menu in numerical order, press the Navigation Key. 3 To return to the previous page, press . To exit the current menu and return to the idle mode, press . 4 Press the Navigation Key to enter a function when its main page is displayed or press its assigned number to have direct access to the function. Hotkey In idle mode, move the Navigation Key as follows to access these functions:
Upward movement : Web Browser Downward movement : Short Cut Key Rightward movement : Get It Now Leftward movement : Get Pix & Flix 16 17 MENU SUMMARY MENU SUMMARY C H 2 1. Power On Animation 2. Power Off Animation 1. Auto NAM 2. Change NAM 1. My Number 2. SW Version 3. Icon Glossary 1. Common Code 2. Lock Mode 3. Edit Code 4. Special #s 5. Erase All 6. Reset Phone 1. Voice Dials 2. Voice Setting 3. Voice Memo 4. Train Words 8. Power On/Off Animations 1. System Select 2. NAM Selection 3. Device Info 4. Location 5. Security 6. Language 7. Short Cut Key 1. Answer Options 2. Auto Retry 3. TTY Mode 4. One Touch Dial 5. Voice Privacy 6. Data Settings 7. Voice Services 8. DTMF Tones 1. Main Clock 2. Front Clock 4. System 5. Call Settings 6. Clock Format 7. Ringer ID 8. Picture ID 1. Get New 2. Record New C H 2 Get It Now Messaging Contacts Recent Calls 1. Get Tunes &
Tones 2. Get Fun &
Games 3. Gallery 1. New Txt Msg 2. Inbox 3. Sent 4. Drafts 5. Voice Mail 6. E-mail 1. New Contact 2. Contact List 3. Groups 4. Speed Dials 1. Missed 2. Received 3. Dialed 4. All Settings & Tools 1. Tools 2. Sounds 3. Displays 1. Alarm 1 2. Alarm 2 3. Alarm 3 1. Call Ringtone 2. Call Vibrate 1. ERI Tones 2. Txt Message 3. Pix Message 4. Voice Message 1. Service Change 2. Minute Beep 3. Call Connect 1. Power On 2. Power Off 1. Alarm Tone 2. Alarm Vibrate 1. Personal 2. ERI Banner 1. LCD 2. Keypad 1. Calendar 2. Alarm Clock 3. World Clock 4. Notepad 5. Calculator 6. Stop Watch 1. Master Volume 2. Call Sound 3. Alert Sounds 4. Keypad Volume 5. Earpiece Volume 6. Service Alerts 7. Power On/Off 8. Alarm Sounds 1. Banner 2. Backlight 3. Contrast 4. Wallpaper 5. Screensaver 6. Display Themes 7. Fonts 18 19 BASIC FUNCTIONS BASIC FUNCTIONS MAKING A CALL 1 Enter a phone number. C H 2 To modify the phone number you have entered :
To erase one digit at a time press . To erase the entire number, press and hold . To find the phone number with your contact list :
To enter a part of the phone number, then press
[Options], select Search. Phone number display in contact list If contacts name field empty, then highest priority phone number displayed. If any phone number and name is not exist then email address diaplay. Referece Contact display order. All matching entries will be displayed. To call the selected number, press . To send the txt with phone number :
To enter a part of the phone number, then press
[Options], select Send Txt Msg . Please refer to page 89 for more details on Send TXT Msg. 2 Press . The indicator, , appears on the display. If CALL FAILED appears on the display or the line is busy, press or . If you activate the AUTO RETRY function, the phone will automatically retry for the number of times you have selected. (refer to page 71). When you place or receive a call from stored phone numbers, both the name and phone number will be displayed. There is another way to make a call through the VR mode, which is called VAD (Voice Activated Dialing). Please refer to page 73 (Voice Service) for more details. If Enter Lock Code appears on the display enter your 4-digit password to unlock your phone. ANSWERING CALLS 1 When your phone rings or vibrates, press to answer the incoming call.
(Depending on your phones settings, you may also answer incoming calls by opening the phone or by pressing any digit key.) C H 2 To ignore incoming calls, press [Ignore]. 2 To end a call, press . SPEAKER PHONE The speaker phone feature lets you hear audio through the speaker and talk without holding the phone. 1 To activate the speaker phone in idle, answering or calling modes, press and hold . 2 The phone returns to normal (Speaker Phone Off) after ending a call or when the phone is turned off and back on. 3 To end a call, press . 20 21 BASIC FUNCTIONS BASIC FUNCTIONS WAIT/PAUSE FEATURE 3-WAY CALLING C H 2 Pauses are used for automated systems (i.e., voice mail, calling cards). Insert a pause after a phone number then enter another group of numbers. The second set of numbers is dialed automatically after the pause. This feature is useful for dialing into systems that require a code. 1 To insert a wait/pause, enter a phone number then press [OPTIONS]. Select either a Hard Pause (P appears) or a Wait (W appears). 2 Press to dial or to save. Please refer to page 30 for more details about storing a phone number. ANSWERING A CALL 1 To answer a call, press any key except , ,
, or . l By pressing [MENU] tnen select Settings & Tools menu, press , you can select either Flip Open, Any Key or Send Only to answer a call. lf Send Only is selected, the phone can only be answered by pressing . See page 71 for more information. 2 To end the call, press . In Auto Answer Mode a call is automatically answered after a preset number of ring tones. See page 70 for more details. With Three-Way Calling, you can talk to two people at the same time. When using this feature, the normal airtime rates will be applied for each of the two calls. 1 Enter a number you wish to call then press . 2 Once you have established the connection, enter the second number you wish to call then press . 3 When youre connected to the second party, press again to begin your three-way call. If one of the people you called hangs up during your call, you and the remaining caller stay connected. If you initiated the call and are the first to hang up, all three callers are disconnected. C H 2 CALLER ID FUNCTION Identifies caller by displaying their phone number. If the callers name and number are already stored in your phone book, they both will appear. The caller ID is stored in the call history. 22 23 BASIC FUNCTIONS BASIC FUNCTIONS ENTER LOCK MODE 1 To lock the phone, press and hold . 2 To unlock the phone, press or [UNLOCK], then input your password, then press [OK]. C H 2 l The lock feature will deactivate when the phone is powered off. Upon next power up, you will need to press to lock phone again. CALL WAITING FUNCTION Notifies you of an incoming call when you are already on a call by sounding a beep tone and displaying the callers phone number. C H 2 1 To answer another call while on the phone, press . This places the first call on hold. To switch back to the first caller, press again. Call Waiting is a system dependent feature. Please contact your service provider for details. ADJUSTING VOLUME Adjusts the volume of the ringer, key beep and speaker. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press then select one of the following. l l l Master Volume : Controls the ringer volume. Keypad Volume : Controls the keypad volume. Earpiece Volume : Controls the earpiece volume. 2 Adjust volume then press [OK] to save it. To adjust earpiece volume during a call, press the Navigation Key up or down. To adjust master volume, press short side up/ down key. In Idel Mode:
Side Volume Up key Long Press: Volume key shall bring device Side Volume Down key Long Press: Switch between on/off out of silence. sound including alarm but except speaker. 24 25 DURING A CALL DURING A CALL VOICE PRIVACY Increases security during a call. 1 Press [OPTIONS] . LOCATION Enables the network to locate your current location through Global Positioning System (GPS). (Refer to page 66 for more details.) 1 Press [OPTIONS] . C H 2 To display menu options during a call, press [Options]. MUTE (UNMUTE) The caller cannot hear you or any sounds from your side but you can still hear them. 1 Press [Mute]. l l To deactivate, press [UNMUTE]. The phone will automatically un-mute in Emergency Call or Callback mode. C H 2 SEND TXT MSG Enables you to send a TXT message (SMS) during a call. 1 Press [OPTIONS] . CONTACTS To select the phone number in your internal Contact List. 1 Press [OPTIONS] . RECENT CALLS To select the phone number in your recent calls List. 1 Press [OPTIONS] . SEND DTMF Automatically transmits your phone number to a pager during a call.
(Dependent on pager service) 1 Press [OPTIONS] . 26 27 MAKING AN EMERGENCY CALL The 911 feature puts the phone in the Emergency Call Mode when you dial the preprogrammed emergency number, 911. It also operates in the lock mode and out of the service area. 911 IN LOCK MODE The 911 call service is available even in the lock mode. 1 Enter 911 then press . C H 2 2 The call connects. 3 The phone exits the Lock Mode for 5 minutes. l When the call ends, the phone returns to the Lock Mode. 911 USING ANY AVAILABLE SYSTEM 1 Enter 911 then press . 2 The call connects. 3 The phone maintains the Emergency Mode for 5 minutes. l l The phone returns to the Lock Mode. While the phone is in the emergency mode for 5 minutes, the phone can receive an incoming call from any available system. However, it cant make a call. The 911 call is not recorded in the recent call list. Chapter 3 MEMORY FUNCTION C H 3 This chapter addresses memory functions including:
STORING A PHONE NUMBER ENTERING LETTERS, NUMBERS & SYMBOLS MAKING A CALL THROUGH THE PHONE BOOK 28 29 STORING A PHONE NUMBER ENTERING LETTERS, NUMBERS & SYMBOLS C H
. 3 The phone book stores up to 500 entries. 1 Enter phone # then press [SAVE] then choose Create New or Update Existing. Press [OK] to select. 2 If Create New is selected, the phone number will appear above a list. Press the Navigation Key up or down to choose the type of number youre adding, as indicated by the icon. Press [OK] to select. If Update Existing is selected, your contact list is displayed. Choose the entry to add the phone number to, then press [OK]. You will then see the phone number listed about a list. Press [OK] to select. 3 Enter a name. Please refer to page 31 for more details on entering letters, numbers & symbols. To change the input mode, press [Abc]. Press the Navigation Key down to select other options (Mobile1.2, E-mail1.2, etc...). If entered phone number, press [OPTIONS]
to select one of the following options:
l Set Speed Dial l Set Voice Dial l Set As Default l Add Pause 4 To store the entry, press [SAVE]. CONTACT SAVED will be displayed. The input mode (Alpha editor) will automatically be activated when necessary to enter letters and numbers. As shown below, there are 4 available modes ; Standard input mode (Abc), T9 input mode
(T9Word), Numeric mode (123), and Symbol mode (Symbols). The input mode indicator appears on the upper right of the display when letters and numbers are entered. To select the desired input mode among the 5 modes below, press [MODE], then enter letters and numbers. C H 3 Input mode indicator T9Word : T9 mode Abc : Abc mode ABC : ABC mode 123 : Number mode Symbols : Symbol mode The following illustrates the function assigned to each key in the Alpha Editor. KEY FUNCTION Mode Next Space Caps Lock Clear Send Press to change mode.
[T9Word][Abc][ABC][123][Symbols]
Press to view the next matching word if the highlighted word is not the word you intended. Press to accept a word and add a space. Press to select a letter case of the standard text input or T9 text input mode.
[Abc], [ABC] and [abc] indicate the standard text input.
[T9Word], [T9WORD] and [T9word]
indicate the predictive text input. Press to delete a character to the left of the cursor. Send the letters and numbers you enter. 30 31 ENTERING LETTERS, NUMBERS & SYMBOLS ENTERING LETTERS, NUMBERS & SYMBOLS STANDARD INPUT MODE Use the digit keys to enter letters, numbers and characters. 1 Enter letters using the key pad as follows:
Key Pad 1 Time Repetitions Repetitions Repetitions Repetitions 2 times 3 times 4 times 5 times C H 3 1 2ABC 3DEF 4GHI
9WXYZ
. A D G
W
B E H
X
C F I
Y
2 3 4
Z
A D G
9 To change the input mode, press [Abc]. 2 To enter a space, press . The cursor will automatically move to the next column. 3 Repeat until letters are entered. There is a 16-letter limit. 4 To delete one digit, press . To delete the entire entry, press and hold . 5 To change from lowercase to uppercase, press . Select Abc mode by pressing [Abc]. When you select this mode, the Abc icon appears as a visual confirmation.
- Find the key that corresponds to the letter you want to enter.
- Press it as many times as needed for the letter to appear on the screen.
- To enter the name John:
Press [ ]
Press [ ]
Press [ ]
Press [ ]
J o h n T9 INPUT MODE The T9 input mode incorporates a built-in-dictionary to determine a word based on the entered characters. A word can be entered more quickly by pressing a key once per character. 1 Select the T9Word mode by pressing [Abc]. 2 Press a digit key once to enter the character you want then enter all the characters to input the word you want. 3 To view the next matching word, press . C H 3 4 To accept the matching word then enter a space, press . To enter a compound word:
Enter the first part of the word then press to accept it. Enter the last part of the word then press to enter the word. To enter Fun fare in the T9 input mode.
- After you enter the 1st letter, press [Abc] to select T9 mode and to choose the lower case (T9Word).
- Press and you will see Fun highlighted. Press to select it.
- Press and until you see ease highlighted. Press to select the next matching word, you will see fare then enter a space. 32 33 ENTERING LETTERS, NUMBERS & SYMBOLS MAKING A CALL THROUGH THE PHONE BOOK NUMERIC MODE Allows you to enter numbers. ONE-TOUCH/TWO-TOUCH DIALING Ideal for frequently dialed numbers, this feature allows phone book entries to be dialed via the keypad with only one or two key presses. 1 Press [Abc] and scroll to the input mode to changes to 123 (Numeric mode). ONE-TOUCH DIALING:
2 To enter a number, press a digit key. C H 3 SYMBOL MODE Allows you to enter symbols. 1 Press [Abc] and scroll to the input mode to changes to Symbols (Symbol mode). 2 Select symbol you want to enter with the Navigation Key. 1-9 : Press and hold the corresponding memory number for more than 1 second. TWO-TOUCH DIALING:
10-22/97-99 : Press the first digit and second digits of the memory number short and long respectively. C H 3 If no phone number is stored in the location entered, Unssigned location will appear on the screen. l Use the Navigation Key to view a different line of symbols. Press [ ], or Press [ ]. 34 35 MEMO C H 3 Chapter 4 MENU FUNCTION C H 4 This chapter addresses accessing the menu and using its functions and features to customize your phone. CONTACTS RECENT CALLS SETTINGS TOOLS 36 37 CONTACTS CONTACTS Stores up to 500 entries, each of which can be assigned to a group. Entries can be retrieved by name or group. CONTACT LIST C H 4 NEW CONTACT Adds a new entry. 1 2 Press [MENU], then select Contacts menu, then press New Contact. To enter a name or number, use the Navigation Key to select the phone book field. l l PHONE BOOK FIELDS :
Name/Mobile1/Home/Work/E-Mail1/Group/Ringtone/
Mobile2/Fax/E-Mail2. Under Mobile 1 or Mobile 2, input the phone number, then by press [OPTIONS], you can choose from the following:
1. Set Speed Dial 2. Set Voice Dial 3. Set As Default 4. Add Pause Please refer to page 31 for more details on entering letters, numbers & symbols. 3 3.1 To save the entry, press [SAVE]. 3.2 To return to the previous page, press . If user not input at least one field among number, e-mail then display Please insert at least one of phone number or E-mail in dialogue box. If name field is empty in edit contact but one of phone number field inserted then saved so display phone number in contacts list. Retrieves an entry by name and calls by simply pressing . You can review all the entries stored in your phone book list or quickly find an entry by entering a name or its character string. 1 2 3 4 5 Press [MENU], then select Contacts menu, then press Contact List or press [CONTACTS]. The list of names in your phone book is displayed alphabetically. Enter a name or its character string or scroll through the list with the Navigation Key. Please refer to page 31 for more details on entering letters, numbers & symbols. C H 4 To edit the entry, press [EDIT]. To show detail the entry, press [VIEW]. Press [OPTIONS] to 1. New Contact, 2. Erase, 3. Send Txt Msg or 4. Call. To call the selected number, press [OPTIONS]
then select Call or press . 38 39 CONTACTS CONTACTS GROUPS Allows you to classify phone entries into groups. Existing groups include FAMILY, WORK. A maximum of 30 groups is allowed. Predefined group that cant rename or Erase. User can add group max 28 group. Allows the user to add group up to 10 phone number. The user can add, change, and erase Group. ADD NEW GROUP 1 Press [MENU], then select Contacts menu, then press Groups. 2 To select New, press [NEW]. C H 4 3 Input a new group name. 4 To save it, press [SAVE]. ASSIGN PHONE NUMBER TO GROUP 1 To assign phone numbers to a Group, select Add, press [OPTION]. 2 unassigned locations appear. Select a location and press [OK]. Your phone book entries will be displayed in alphabetical order. 3 Select the contact for the group then press [DONE]. Contact Added to (Group Name) will be displayed. Repeat for each location for the Group. CHANGE GROUP NAME 1 Press [MENU], then select Contacts menu, then press Groups. 2 Select an existing group name that you have added with the Navigation Key. 3 To select Rename, press [OPTIONS]. 4 Input a new group name. 5 To save it, press [SAVE]. SEND TXT MSG. GROUP C H 4 1 Press [MENU], then select Contacts menu, then press Groups. 2 Select an existing group name with the Navigation Key. 3 To select Send Txt Msg., press [OPTIONS]. 4 Input a Message, press [OPTION] to select Save as Drafts, Call Back # and Priority Level. 5 5.1. To send the text message, press [SEND]. 5.2. To save the text message, press
[OPTIONS], then select Save as Drafts, then press [OK]. 40 41 CONTACTS CONTACTS ERASE GROUP 1 Press [MENU], then select Contacts menu, then press Groups. 2 Select an existing group name with the Navigation Key. 3 To select Erase, press [OPTIONS]. 4 Select Yes to erase it, press [OK]. C H 4 SPEED DIALS In idle mode, calls can be placed to numbers stored in speed dial by pressing & holding the location number on the key pad. For a 2-digit location number, press the first number, then press and hold the second number. 1 Press [MENU], then select Contacts menu, then press Speed Dials. 2 To assign a phone number to a location, select the location then press [SET]. 3 Select the contact with the Navigation Key then press [OK]. Unassigned appears if the location is available. To call an assigned number, press & hold the last digit of the speed dial #. 4 SPEED DIAL SET will be displayed. C H 4 42 43 RECENT CALLS RECENT CALLS MISSED RECEIVED Displays information about the 20 most recently missed calls. Place a call to a missed call number by simply pressing . Displays information about the 20 most recently answered calls. Place a call to a received call by simply pressing . 1 To see a list of the 20 most recently missed calls, press [MENU], then select Recent Calls menu, press Missed. If the number is already stored in your phone book, only the name appears. If the number is not stored, only the phone number appears. 1 To see a list of the 20 most recently answered calls, press [MENU], then select Recent Calls menu, press Received. If the number is already stored in your phone book, only the name appears. If the number is not stored, only the phone number appears. 2 To view missed call details, press [OPEN]. 2 To view incoming call details, press [OPEN]. Call details include date, time and phone number. Call details include date, time and phone number. 3 Press [OPTIONS] and select SAVE to save it or select Erase to delete it. l l l l l l Save : To store the phone number in your phone book. Details : To view the callers information. Erase : To erase a missed calls list. Lock/Unlock : To lock or unlock missed calls list. Erase All : To erase all missed calls list. View Timers : To display usage time. 3 Press [OPTIONS] and select SAVE to save it or select Erase to delete it. l l l l l l Save : To store the phone number in your phone book. Details : To view the callers information. Erase : To erase a received calls list. Lock/Unlock : To lock or unlock received calls list. Erase All : To erase all received calls list. View Timers : To display usage time. After 20 missed calls, the oldest call will automatically be erased from the history. Press [MESSAGE], to send the Txt message. After 20 received calls, the oldest call will automatically be erased from the history. Press [MESSAGE], to send the Txt message. C H 4 C H 4 44 45 RECENT CALLS RECENT CALLS DIALED ALL Displays information about the 20 most recently dialed numbers. Place a call to a dialed call by simply pressing . Displays information about the most recent incoming, outgoing and missed calls. 1 To see a list of the 20 most recently dialed numbers, press [MENU], then select Recent Calls menu, press Dialed. If the number is already stored in your phone book, only the name appears. If the number is not stored, only the phone number appears. 2 To view dialed call details, press [OPEN]. C H 4 Call details include type of call, date, time and phone number. 3 Press [OPTIONS] and select SAVE to save it or select Erase to delete it. l l l l l l Save : To store the phone number in your phone book. Details : To view the callers information. Erase : To erase a dialed calls list. Lock/Unlock : To lock or unlock dialed calls list. Erase All : To erase all dialed calls list. View Timers : To display usage time. 1 To see a list of the 60 most recent incoming, outgoing and missed calls, press [MENU], then select Recent Calls menu, press All. If the number is already stored in your phone book, only the name appears. If the number is not stored, only the phone number appears. 2 3 To view details, press [OPEN]. Call details include type of call, date, time and phone number. Press [OPTIONS] and select SAVE to save it or select Erase to delete it. l l l l l l Save : To store the phone number in your phone book. Details : To view the callers information. Erase : To erase a recent calls list. Lock/Unlock : To lock or unlock recent calls list. Erase All : To erase all recent calls list. View Timers : To display usage time. C H 4 After 20 dialed calls, the oldest call will automatically be erased from the history. Press [MESSAGE], to send the Txt message. After the 20 received, dialed or missed calls, the oldest call will automatically be erased from the history. Press [MESSAGE], to send the message. 46 47 SETTINGS Customizes your phone and optimizes performance through a variety of settings. SOUNDS MASTER VOUME Controls the Ringer volume and alerts you to incoming calls in the modes listed in the gray box below. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Master Volume. 2 Select one of the following options by pressing the Navigation Key to the right. C H 4 All Off Alarm Only Vibrate Only Low, Med Low, Med, Med High, High. Press to play sound. 3 Select one of the available ring types. To confirm, press [OK]. SETTINGS CALL SOUND To select a ringer type for incoming calls:
CALL RINGTONE 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Call Sound, press Call Ringtone. 2 Select your desired ringer type. Up or Down key : Select Ringer. Press Play/Pause to Play/Pause the ringer. 3 Select one of the available ring types. To confirm, press [OK]. CALL VIBRATE 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Call Sound, press Call Vibrate. 2 Select On or Off with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. C H 4 48 49 SETTINGS SETTINGS ALERT SOUNDS When selected, this setting alerts you to the following handset changes:
ERI TONES 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Alert Sounds, press ERI Tones. 2 Select Beep, Voice or Off with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. TXT MESSAGE C H 4 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Alert Sounds, press TXT Message. 2 Select Tone, Vibrate or Reminder with the Navigation Key then select one of the following options by pressing the Navigation Key. Tone : Select your desired ringer type. Vibrate : Select On or Off. Reminder : Select Once, Every 2 Minutes, Every 15 Minutes or Off. 3 To save, press [OK]. PIX MESSAGE 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Alert Sounds, press Pix Message. 2 Select Tone, Vibrate or Reminder with the Navigation Key then select one of the following options by pressing the Navigation Key. Tone : Select your desired ringer type. Vibrate : Select On or Off. Reminder : Select Once, Every 2 Minutes, Every 15 Minutes or Off. 3 To save, press [OK]. VOICE MESSAGE C H 4 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Alert Sounds, press Voice Message. 2 Select Tone, Vibrate or Reminder with the Navigation Key then select one of the following options by pressing the Navigation Key. Tone : Select your desired ringer type. Vibrate : Select On or Off. Reminder : Select Once, Every 2 Minutes, Every 15 Minutes or Off. 3 To save, press [OK]. 50 50 51 SETTINGS SETTINGS KEYPAD VOLUME To adjust key pad tone:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Keypad Volume. 2 Select one of the following options by pressing the Navigation Key to the right. Off Low, Med Low, Med, Med High, High SERVICE ALERTS SERVICE CHANGE Sounds an alert when leaving a service area and entering a roaming service area. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Service Alerts, press Service Change. 2 Select On or Off with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. 3 Select one of the available ring types. To confirm, press [OK]. MINUTE BEEP Sounds an alert every minute during a call. EARPIECE VOLUME To adjust earpiece volume:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Earpiece Volume. 2 Select one of the following options by pressing the Navigation Key to the right. Low Med Low, Med, Med High, High 3 Select one of the available ring types. To confirm, press [OK]. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Service Alerts, press Minute Beep. 2 Select On or Off with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. CALL CONNECT Notifies you that a call has been successfully placed. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Service Alerts, press Call Connect. 2 Select On or Off with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. C H 4 C H 4 52 52 53 SETTINGS SETTINGS POWER ON/OFF POWER ON Allows you to activate/deactivate the power on tones. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Power On/Off, press Power On. 2 Select On or Off with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. C H 4 POWER OFF Allows you to activate/deactivate the power off tones. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Power On/Off, press Power Off. 2 Select On or Off with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. ALARM SOUNDS To select a ringer type for alarm sound:
ALARM TONE 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Alarm Sounds, press Alarm Tone. 2 Select your desired ringer type. Up or Down key : Select Ringer. Press Play/Pause to Play/Pause the ringer. 3 Select one of the available ring types. To confirm, press [OK]. ALARM VIBRATE 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Sounds then select Alarm Sounds, press Alarm Vibrate. 2 Select On or Off with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. C H 4 54 55 SETTINGS SETTINGS DISPLAYS Allows you to customize the display. BANNER To input a personal/ERI banner greeting:
PERSONAL The text greeting can be up to 16 characters and is displayed on your phones screen in standby mode. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Displays then select Banner, press Personal. 2 Enter a new personal greeting. To change the input mode, press [Abc]. To return to the previous page, press
[CANCEL]. C H 4 3 Press [OK] to save it. ERI BANNER 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Displays then select Banner, press ERI Banner. 2 Select On or Off with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. BACKLIGHT Backlights the display and key pad and activates dimming for easy viewing in dark places. LCD 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Displays then select Backlight, press LCD. 2 Select one of the following options with the Navigation Key. Always On, Always Off, 5 Seconds, 15 Seconds, 30 Seconds. 3 Press [OK] to save it. KEYPAD C H 4 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Displays then select Backlight, press Keypad. 2 Select one of the following options with the Navigation Key. Always On, Always Off, 5 Seconds, 15 Seconds, 30 Seconds. 3 Press [OK] to save it. 56 57 SETTINGS SETTINGS CONTRAST To adjust the display contrast:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Displays then select Contrast. 2 Select one of the following options with the Navigation Key. Leve 1 ~ Leve 5 3 Press [OK] to save it. C H 4 WALLPAPER 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Displays then select Wallpaper. 2 Select Default to choose a pre-installed display, Downloads or Pix # to choose a display you have downloaded to your phone. To launch BREW, press [GET NEW]. To expand selected image, press [VIEW]. 3 Select a display from the Animation and the Graphic list using the Navigation Key and press [SET] to save it. SCREENSAVER 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Displays then select Screensaver. 2 Select Default to choose a pre-installed display, Downloads or Pix # to choose a display you have downloaded to your phone. To launch BREW, press [GET NEW]. To expand selected image, press [VIEW]. 3 Select a display from the Animation and the Graphic list using the Navigation Key and press [SET] to save it. DISPLAY THEMES 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Displays then select Display Themes. 2 Select one of the following options with the C H 4 Navigation Key. Theme 1 ~ Theme 4 3 Press [OK] to save it. FONTS 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Displays then select Fonts. 2 Select Normal or Large with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. 58 59 SETTINGS SYSTEM SYSTEM SELECT Selects the Preferred System. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select System Select. 2 Select one of the following options with the Navigation Key. Automatic B Automatic A Home Only 3 Press [OK] to save it. C H 4 SETTINGS POWER ON/OFF ANIMATIONS POWER ON ANIMATION Allows you to the power on animation. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Displays then select Power On/Off Animations, press Power On Animation. 2 Select one of the following options with the Navigation Key. Animation 1 Animation 2 C H 4 3 Press [OK] to save it. POWER OFF ANIMATION Allows you to the power off animation. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Displays then select Power On/Off Animations, press Power Off Animation. 2 Select one of the following options with the Navigation Key. Animation 1 Animation 2 3 Press [OK] to save it. 60 61 SETTINGS NAM SELECTION Enables Auto NAM (Number Assignment Modules) or manually selects a NAM. AUTO NAM Automatically switches phone to proper NAM when you have multiple NAM registrations. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select NAM Selection, press Auto NAM. 2 Select Yes or No with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. C H 4 CHANGE NAM Changes the NAM used by the phone when you have multiple registrations. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select NAM Selection, press Change NAM. 2 Select one of the following options with the Navigation Key. NAM 1 - VERIZON NAM 2 - VERIZON 3 Press [OK] to save it. SETTINGS DEVICE INFO Displays the information of your phone:
MY NUMBER Displays the your phone number (MDN/MIN number and provider) :
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select Device Info, press My Number. 2 You are to see the MDN/MIN number and provider name. 3 To return to the previous page, press [OK]. SW VERSION Displays the (Software/PRL/ERI/Browser/Get It Now) version. C H 4 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select Device Info, press SW Version. 2 You are to see the version of software, hardware and others. 3 To return to the previous page, press [OK]. ICON GLOSSARY Displays the Indicator Icons of your cellular telephone. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select Device Info, press Icon Glossary. 2 You are to see the Indicator Icons of your cellular telephone. 3 To return to the previous page, press [OK]. 62 63 SETTINGS SETTINGS LOCATION To determine whether or not the network system can detect your position:
SECURITY Prevents unauthorized use of your phone. The following settings can be restricted:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select Location. 2 Select one of the following options with the Navigation Key. Location On E911 Only 3 Press [OK] to save it. C H 4 64 COMMON CODE 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select Security, then enter your password, press [OK]. The default password is the last 4 digit of your phone number. 2 Select Common Code. 3 Select On or Off with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. C H 4 LOCK MODE Prevents the phone from being used without entering the password first. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select Security, then enter your password, press [OK]. The default password is the last 4 digit of your phone number. 2 Select Lock Mode. 3 Select Device or Location then select one of the following options with the Navigation Key. Device : Lock, Unlock, On Power Up Location : Lock, Unlock 4 Press [OK] to save it. 65 SETTINGS SETTINGS EDIT CODE Changes your Device/Location 4-digit password. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select Security, then enter your password, press [OK]. SPECIAL #S Stores 3 phone numbers that can be called even in the lock mode. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select Security, then enter your password, press [OK]. The default password is the last 4 digit of your phone number. The default password is the last 4 digit of your phone number. 2 Select Edit Code. 2 Select Special #s. C H 4 3 Select Device or Location then select one of the following options with the Navigation Key. 4 Enter a New Lock Code then press [OK]. 3 Select a location (1~3) with the Navigation Key. 4 Press [SET] and input a phone number, press [OK] again to save. C H 4 5 Enter a Confirm Lock Code then press [OK]
to save it. ERASE ALL Clears all contact, downloads entries and pix gallery from your phone. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select Security, then enter your password, press [OK]. The default password is the last 4 digit of your phone number. 2 Select Erase All. 3 Press [OK] to check Contacts, Downloads or Pix Gallery then press [DONE] to erase all the items in those categories, then select Yes, press [OK]. 66 67 SETTINGS SETTINGS SHORT CUT KEY Your phone offers you the option of assigning a short-cut key
(Down Navigation Key) to a favorite or often-used function. To assign a shortcut to the key:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select Short Cut Key. 2 Select your desired menu option then press
[OK]. Calendar/Tunes & Tones/Gallery/Fun & Games/News & Info/
Inbox/Sent/Email/Chat/IM/Settings & Tools/
Tools-Alarm Clock, Calculator 3 The Shortcut can now be accessed by pressing the Down Navigation Key. C H 4 RESET PHONE Resets phone to default settings. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select Security, then enter your password, press [OK]. The default password is the last 4 digit of your phone number. 2 Select Reset Phone. C H 4 3 Select Yes or No with the Navigation Key. Press [OK]. When you select Yes and [OK], you will see This will be reset to default settings. Reset Phone ? on the display. 4 To reset the phone, press [OK]. LANGUAGE Selects the language in which letters are displayed on the screen. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press System then select Language. 2 Select English or Spanish with the Navigation Key. 3 Press [OK] to save it. 68 69 SETTINGS SETTINGS CALL SETTINGS ANSWER OPTIONS To select an answer mode:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Call Settings then select Answer Options. 2 Select one of the following with the Navigation Key. Flip Open Any Key Send Only Auto Answer Headset Auto Answer Handsfree Auto Answer Handset C H 4 3 To save, press [OK]. AUTO RETRY Automatically redials a call up to 5 times after a set time interval. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Call Settings then select Auto Retry. 2 3 Retry time to field is shown. Press the Navigation Key left or right to choose the amount of time.
(Off, 3 Seconds, 5 Seconds, 7 Seconds or 10 Seconds) When a time is chosen for retry time, the repeat field is shown. Press the Navigation Key down to highlight the repeat field. Press the Navigation Key left or right to choose the number of repeats. (1 Time, 3 Times or 5 Times). C H 4 4 To save, press [OK]. TTY MODE Your phone is able to operate with a TTY (Teletypewriter) device in both analog and digital modes. This feature is system dependent and may not be available in all areas. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Call Settings then select TTY Mode. 2 Select one of the following with the Navigation Key. l TTY Off/TTY+ TALK/TTY + HEAR/TTY Full 3 To save, press [OK]. 70 71 SETTINGS SETTINGS ONE TOUCH DIAL VOICE SERVICES 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Call Settings then select One Touch Dial. 2 Select On or Off with the Navigation Key then press [OK] to save it. VOICE DIALS Voice Dial allows you to call a person by simply saying their name. To access Voice Dial:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Call Settings then select Voice Services, press Voice Dials. VOICE PRIVACY Enhances voice privacy and avoids tapping during a call. C H 4 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Call Settings then select Voice Privacy. 2 Select Standard or Enhanced with the Navigation Key, then press [OK] to save it. l Enhanced : Makes it more difficult to wire tap. DATA SETTING Choose the connection mode for the usage of your phone. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Call Settings then select Data Setting. 2 Select one of the following connection modes with the Navigation Key. l l Voice Call : To receive a voice call. Data Only : To receive data when connected to PC. 3 To save, press [OK]. 72 2 3 4 5 6 7 2.1. Press [NEW]. The phone book list will be displayed alphabetically. Select a name then press [OK]. Instructions (Please OK and say name) will be displayed and [OK]. You will hear Name Please. 2.2. Say the name for the voice tag and repeat the name when prompted. You will hear Added. C H 4 To play a voice dial. Highlight the voice tag you want to play then press [PLAY]. To detail a voice dial. Highlight the voice tag you want to detail view then press [OPTIONS] then select Detail. To re-record a voice dial. Highlight the voice tag you want to re-record then press [OPTIONS] then select Re-record. To play speaker a voice dial. Highlight the voice tag you want to play speaker then press [OPTIONS] then select Play Speaker. To erase or erase all voice dial. Highlight the voice tag you want to erase or erase all then press [OPTIONS] then select Erase or Erase All. 73 SETTINGS SETTINGS C H 4 VOICE SETTING After turning on Set Active, open the flip to go on to VR mode. After turning on HFK mode, put Hands-free kit and say wake up to go on to VR mode. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Call Settings then select Voice Services, press Voice Setting. 2 Under Set Active, select a option Off, Active Flip or Send Key. 3 Under HFK Mode, select a option On or Off. 4 To save, press [OK]. VOICE MEMO Voice Memo allows you to record a reminder message that can be up to 60 seconds. To record a memo:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Call Settings then select Voice Services, press Voice Memo. 2 To record a voice memo, select Record New, press [OK]. 3 To start recording a voice memo, press [OK]. 4 To stop recording a voice memo, press
[STOP]. To saved into voice memo list automatically. Voice memo order by date and recent file is uppermost. 5 To play voice memo, select the message you want to play then press [PLAY]. To send voice memo, select the message you want to send then press
[SEND] to access the New Txt Msg see New Txt Msg on page 89. If saved voice memo, press [OPTIONS] to select one of the following options:
l Set As Ringtone l Set As Ringer ID l Rename l Erase l Erase All TRAIN WORDS Train allows you to use Control words to make a call without using the keypad. Use to train or untrain the Voice Recognition with the control word, Yes, No or Wake-Up. C H 4 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Call Settings then select Voice Services, press Train Words. 2 Under Yes, No, Wake-Up. Please listen closely to hear instructions will be displayed and you will hear Now training control words. Please say the word. Say word. You will hear Again. Say word again. You will hear Training word successful. To undo voice recognition, select a word you want to undo then press [UNDO]. 3 Under Undo Train All. Undo voice recognition for all procedures?
will be displayed. Press [OK] to undo all trained words. 74 75 SETTINGS SETTINGS DTMF TONES To adjust tone length:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Call Settings then select DTMF Tones. 2 Select one of the following with the Navigation Key. l l l Normal Long Off 3 To save, press [OK]. C H 4 CLOCK FORMAT MAIN CLOCK To change the main clocks appearance on the standby screen:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Clock Format then select Main Clock. 2 Select one of the following with the Navigation Key. l l l Digital Analog Off 3 To save, press [OK]. FRONT CLOCK C H 4 To change the front clocks appearance on the standby screen:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Clock Format then select Front Clock. 2 Select one of the following with the Navigation Key. l l l Digital Analog Off 3 To save, press [OK]. 76 77 SETTINGS TOOLS RINGER ID CALENDAR Sets an event and reminds you of that event. Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Ringer ID. ADD NEW 1 2 Select On or Off with the Navigation Key, then press [OK] to save it. PICTURE ID 1 2 C H 4 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Picture ID. Select On or Off with the Navigation Key, then press [OK] to save it. 1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Tools then select Calendar. 2 3 Move the Navigation Key left, right, up or down to choose a date in the calendar then press [OK]. Press [OPTIONS] to 1. Monthly View, 2. Weekly View, 3. New, 4. Go To Date, 5. Erase, 6. Erase Today or 7. Erase Passed. The date field is highlighted. Press the Navigation Key down to set the alarm options. C H 4 APPOINTMENT Use the keypad to entering a appointment of your schedule. START TIME Use the keypad to set a start time and to select AM or PM. END TIME Use the keypad to set a end time and to select AM or PM. START DATE Use the keypad to change or enter the start date. TIME ZONE Use the Navigation Key to select a time zone.
(OFF, EST, EDT, CST, CDT, MST, PST, PDT, AKST, AKDT, HAST, HADT or GMT/UTC). 78 79 C H 4 TOOLS RECURRENCY Use the Navigation Key to select a setting for the repeat repeating the calendar. (Daily, Weekly, Monthly or Yearly). END DATE Use the keypad to change or enter the end date. ALERT Use the keypad to select the alert tone you wish to set. VIBRATE Use the Navigation Key to select vibrate on/off. REMINDER Use the Navigation Key to select an alert time interval option (0, 5 Minutes, 10 Minutes, 15Minutes before the appointment time). 4 Press [SAVE] to save it or [CLR] to return to the calendar. 5 The date of the event will be marked on your calendar. VIEW PLAN LIST 1 To view the Calendar List. 2 Move the Navigation Key to choose an event then press [VIEW]. Press [OPTIONS] and select SAVE to save it or select Erase, then select Yes, press . TOOLS ALARM CLOCK 1 2 3 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Tools then select Alarm Clock. Select one of the entries using the Navigation Key. To set a new alarm, choose alarm 1, 2 or 3. To edit an existing alarm, select that alarm. Press [OK]. Press [OPTIONS] to 1. Off, 2. Reset, 3. Reset All. The setting field will be highlighted. Press the Navigation Key down to select alarm options. ALARM Use the Navigation Key to select alarm On/Off. TIME Use the keypad to set a time for the alarm and to select AM or PM. C H 4 FREQUENCY Use the Navigation Key to select a setting for the alarm (Once, Daily, Monday through Friday, Weekends). RINGER Use the keypad to select the alert tone you wish to set. 4 To save an alarm setting press [SAVE]. 80 81 TOOLS TOOLS WORLD CLOCK To display the time and date in pre-programmed cities:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Tools then select World Clock. 2 Select a city with the [CITIES]. 3 The world map appears with the city, its date and time. If user press [DST], then all DST supporting cities DST turn on/off. 4 To return to the previous page, press [OK]. C H 4 82 NOTEPAD Your phone includes an internal notepad that can be used to compose and store reminders and notes. ADD MEMO To compose a memo (there is an 80-letter limit):
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Tools then select Notepad. 2 To add a new memo, press [NEW]. Input a new text memo.
(Please refer to page 31 for more details on entering letters, numbers & symbols.) 3 To save memo, press [SAVE]. C H 4 VIEW MEMO To view a saved memo:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Tools then select Notepad. 2 The list of all memos, in saved order, is displayed. Select a memo then press [VIEW]. 3 3.1. The selected memo will appear. To edit it, press [EDIT] and input a new text memo, then press [SAVE] to save it. 3.2. To add a new memo, press [NEW]. 3.3. To erase a memos, press [OPTIONS]
Erase. 3.4. To erase all memos, press [OPTIONS]
Erase All. 83 TOOLS TOOLS CALCULATOR To access the calculator:
1 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Tools then select Calculator. 2 Follow the instructions below to calculate 8*64-2.5= 9.5 Input 8. Move the Navigation Key rightward. Input 6 then press the Navigation Key. Move it leftward. Input 4 then press the Navigation Key. Move it downward. Input 2 then press the to input (.). Press 5. Then press and you will see the answer. C H 4
: X, : -, : /, : +, : ., : Clear, : =. 3 To reset, press [CLEAR]. To change the displayed number from positive (+) to negative (-) and vice versa, press []. If user press [OPERATOR], to use multi parenthesis support and parenthesis rules [(,)] or power [^]. STOP WATCH Simultaneously times up to six different events. To operate the stop watch:
1 2 3 Press [MENU], then select Settings & Tools menu, press Tools then select Stop Watch. To measure a time period. 1. To start the stop watch, press [START]. 2. To pause it, press [STOP]. 3. To resume it, press [START]. To reset it, press [RESET]. To time up to six events at once:
1. To start, press [START]. 2. To stop a time period and continue measuring another one, press [CONT]. 3. To stop the second and continue measuring a third one, press [CONT]. 4. To measure up to six time periods, repeat the above steps. 5. To stop the stop watch, press [STOP]. 6. To review the results, press [VIEW]. 7. To return to the stop watch, press [OK]. 8. To reset it, press [RESET]. C H 4 84 85 MEMO C H 4 Chapter 5 VOICE MAIL, TXT MESSAGING This chapter addresses Voice Mail, TXT Messaging functions including:
WHEN A NEW MESSAGE ARRIVES C H 5 VOICE MAIL NEW TXT MSG INBOX SENT DRAFTS E- MAIL ERASE ALL SETTINGS 86 87 87 WHEN A NEW MESSAGE ARRIVES NEW TXT MSG 1 The following display appears when a new message arrives. 2 To display the message, select View Now, then press [OK]. C H 5 VOICE MAIL Displays the number of voice mails and accesses them by pressing . 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press Voice Mail or press
[MESSAGES], press Voice Mail. FIRST TIME USER 1 Dial *86 then press [SEND]. 2 At the recording, press . 3 To set up your account follow the voice tutorial. EXISTING USER 1 Dial *86 then press [SEND]. 2 At the recording, enter your 4 digit password, then press . 3 To listen to new messages, press . To send a new txt message:
1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press New TXT Msg or press
[MESSAGE], press New TXT Msg. 2 Under To, input the phone number and press [OK]. By pressing [ADD], you can choose from the following:
1. Contacts : Search the phone number which is stored in the contacts list. 2. Recent Calls : Search the phone number which is stored in the recent calls list. To field support max 10 contacts. When user input phone number, user can insert international prefix (+) by press and hold . 3 Under Message, input a new TXT message then press [OK].
(Please refer to page 31 for more details on entering letters, numbers and symbols.) By pressing [OPTIONS], then select ADD. You can choose from the following:
1. Graphics : Inserts simple graphic image in TXT Msg. 2. Sounds : Inserts EMS sound in TXT Msg. 3. Quick Text : Inserts already written sentences in TXT Msg. C H 5 If one of field is inserted in txt msg field, message save at draft box. 4 To save the TXT message, press [OPTIONS], then select Save as Drafts. Press [OPTIONS], then select Priority Level, select High or Normal, then press [OK]. Press [OPTIONS], then select Call Back #, select On or Off, then press [OK]. 5 To send the TXT message, press [SEND]. 88 89 INBOX INBOX The Inbox manages received TXT/Web Alert messages. To access:
ERASE 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press Inbox or press
[MESSAGE], press Inbox.
: Urgent New Msg (not read)
: Urgent Read Msg
: New Msg (not read)
: Old Msg (already read)
: Lock (already read and locked)
: Web Alert Read
: Web Alert Unread C H 5 2 Select a message, then press [OPEN]. The message is displayed. To delete a message, press [ERASE], press [OK]. If you select web alert message, press [GET], to Browser launching. 3 Press [OPTIONS]. FORWARD 1 To forward the TXT message. 2 Input the phone number of the person you are sending the message, then press [OK]. 3 Input any text message to go along with the forwarded message, then press [OK]. 1 2 To erase this message, select Erase. Erase This Message? will be displayed. Press [YES] or [NO]. REPLY WITH COPY 1 2 3 To reply to a received message and include the received message into the message. The default call back number is automatically included into the Default CB# field. You can scroll to the number and edit it. To send the TXT message, press [SEND]. SAVE GRAPHICS 1 To save a picture to the Save Graphics folder. C H 5 SAVE SOUND 1 To save a sound to the Save Sound folder. ADD TO CONTACTS 1 Select to save number to contacts. Save Graphics", Save Sound" menu appears only when you receive EMS message. 90 91 INBOX SENT LOCK/UNLOCK Manages sent TXT messages waiting to be sent. 1 To lock or unlock the TXT or PIX message. 2 Select Lock to lock the message or Unlock to unlock the message, then press . SAVE QUICK TEXT 1 Select to save received text msg to Quick Text. Place a call to a received message number by simply pressing . C H 5 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press Sent or press [MESSAGE], press Sent.
: Auto resend
: Delivered
: Fail
: Not Sent
: Read
: Sent 2 Select a message then press [OPEN]. The message is displayed. To delete a message, press [ERASE], press [OK]. 3 Press [OPTIONS]. C H 5 FORWARD 1 To forward the TXT message. 2 Input the phone number of the person you are sending the message, then press [OK]. 3 Input any text message to go along with the forwarded message, then press [OK]. RESEND 1 To resend a TXT message. 92 93 SENT DRAFTS ERASE 1 2 To erase this message, select Erase. Erase This Message? will be displayed. Press [YES] or [NO]. ADD TO CONTACTS 1 Select to save number to contacts. LOCK/UNLOCK 1 To lock or unlock the TXT message. 2 Select Lock to lock the message or Unlock to unlock the message, then press . Draft Folder contains any draft messages or saved mes-sages. If message composition is interrupted by a voice call or other interrupting event, the text of the current composition is automatically saved in the drafts folder. 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press Drafts or press
[MESSAGE], press Drafts. 2 Select a message then press [EDIT]. The message is displayed. To delete a message, press [ERASE], press [OK]. 3 Press [OPTIONS]. SEND 1 To send a selected message. C H 5 SAVE QUICK TEXT ADD TO CONTACTS 1 Select to save received text msg to Quick Text. 1 Select to save number to contacts. C H 5 MESSAGE INFO LOCK/UNLOCK 1 To show received message information. 1 To lock or unlock the TXT message. Message Info menu appears only when you receive EMS Place a call to a received message number by simply message. pressing . 2 Select Lock to lock the message or Unlock to unlock the message, then press . SAVE QUICK TEXT 1 Select to save received text msg to Quick Text. 94 95 E- MAIL ERASE ALL 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press E-mail or press
[MESSAGE], press E-mail. 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press [OPTIONS] or press
[MESSAGE], press [OPTIONS]. 2 Browser launching. 2 2.1. To erase all the inbox messages, press [ERASE INBOX]. 2.2. To erase all the drafts messages, press [ERASE DRAFTS]. 2.3. To erase the sent messages, press [ERASE SENT]. 3 Select Yes, then press . C H 5 C H 5 96 97 SETTINGS SETTINGS Manages messaging features through various features. AUTO VIEW TXT AUTO SAVE 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press [SETTINGS] or press
[MESSAGE], press [SETTINGS]. 2 Press [AUTO SAVE]. Select On, Off or Prompt with the Navigation Key. On : All sent messages saved in the Sent box. Off : All sent messages not saved in the Sent box Prompt : Yes, No dialogue box displayed after sent message. C H 5 3 Press [OK]. AUTO ERASE Automatically erases inbox/sent messages when new messages arrive. 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press [SETTINGS] or press
[MESSAGE], press [SETTINGS]. 2 Press [AUTO ERASE]. Select On or Off with the Navigation Key. On : Oldest message erased frm inbox automatically when message is full. Off : Oldest message not erased frm inbox automatically when message is full. 3 Press [OK]. If the Auto View Txt is set to on, the user will be able to view the message by pressing the read key. If the Auto View Txt is set to off, the user can view the message by entering SMS Menu-> Inbox. 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press [SETTINGS] or press
[MESSAGE], press [SETTINGS]. 2 Press [AUTO VIEW TXT]. Select On or Off with the Navigation Key. On : Text message be displayed automatically. Off : User able to tetrieve the message from the inbox or based on user input from interactive notification. 3 Press [OK]. AUTO RECEIVE 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press [SETTINGS] or press
[MESSAGE], press [SETTINGS]. 2 Press [AUTO RECEIVE]. Select On or Off with the Navigation Key. On : Pix msg downloaded autoamatically. Off : User able to tetrieve the message from the inbox or based on user input from interactive notification. 3 Press [OK]. C H 5 98 99 SETTINGS SETTINGS SIGNATURE VOICE MAIL#
Create a signature that can be automatically inserted at the end of a message. 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press [SETTINGS] or press
[MESSAGE], press [SETTINGS]. 2 Press [SIGNATURE]. To activate Signature function, put the cursor on Insert Signature then select Custom by using right or left direction keys. To deactivate Signature function, select None. 3 To input Signature, put the cursor on Edit Signature then enter Signature Edit window by using right or left direction keys. C H 5 4 Press [OK]. CALLBACK#
Edits a default callback number so that the recipient can callback or reply. 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press [SETTINGS] or press
[MESSAGE], press [SETTINGS]. 2 3 Press [CALLBACK#]. Select On or Off with the Navigation Key. Select On, then input a callback number, press [OK]. 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press [SETTINGS] or press
[MESSAGE], press [SETTINGS]. 2 Press [VOICE MAIL#]. Input a new voice call back number or edit voice call back number. 3 Press [OK]. BLOCK/UNBLOCK 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press [SETTINGS] or press
[MESSAGE], press [SETTINGS]. 2 Press [BLOCK/UNBLOCK]. Select Block, Unblock or View List of Blocked Addresses with the Navigation Key. C H 5 BLOCK : Enter the address to block. UNBLOCK : Enter the address to remove from block. VIEW LIST OF BLOCKED ADDRESSES : Display the blocked list on LCD. 3 Press [OK]. 100 101 SETTINGS SETTINGS FONT SIZE 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press [SETTINGS] or press
[MESSAGES], press [SETTINGS]. 2 Press [FONT SIZE]. Select Small, Large or Normal with the Navigation Key. 3 Press [OK]. C H 5 ENTRY MODE Sets an Entry Mode as a default. For example, if T9 Mode is the default, its icon will appear. 1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press [SETTINGS] or press
[MESSAGE], press [SETTINGS]. 2 Press [ENTRY MODE]. Select T9Word, Abc, ABC or 123 with the Navigation Key. 3 Press [OK]. QUICK TEXT To edit the Quick Text message you have saved:
1 Press [MENU], then select Messaging menu, press [SETTINGS] or press
[MESSAGE], press [SETTINGS]. 2 Press [QUICK TEXT]. 2.1. Select a message from the list. Press [OK]. 2.2. To add a new Quick Text message, press [OPTIONS] to select Add New. To edit the Quick Text message you have selected, press [OPTIONS] to select Edit, then enter text, press [SAVE]. 3 To erase the saved Quick Text message, press [ERASE]. Pre-defined quick text as below. 1. Whats up?/2. Lets meet/3. Check this out!/4. Whacha doin?/
5. Thanks/6. What do you think?/7. Youve gotta be here to enjoy this/8. Would you like to join me for a date tonight?/
9. On my way/10. Yes/11. Youre the best!/12. Call me C H 5 102 103 MEMO C H 5 Chapter 6 GET IT NOW &
MOBILE WEB 2.0 Your phone provides a unique feature -Get It Now- that enables you to download ringtones, wallpapers, games and more from your network to your phone. Or this chapter addresses Internet services and web browsing. For more detailed information contact your service provider. GET IT NOW STARTING INTERNET BROWSER BROWSER MENU C H 6 104 105 GET IT NOW GET IT NOW USING DOWNLOADED TUNES & TONES 1 Press [MENU], then select Get It now menu or press , then press Get Tunes & Tones. 2 To play downloaded tunes or tones. Select the tunes or tones you want to play, then press [PLAY]. 3 To erase downloaded tunes or tones. Select the tunes or tones you want to erase, then press [EARSE], then select Yes, press . 4 To assign downloaded tunes or tones. Select the tunes or tones you want to assign, then press [OPTIONS]. Select Set As Ringtone or Set As Ringer ID, then select Yes, press . By pressing [OPTIONS], you can choose from the following:
1. Set As Ringtone 2. Set As Ringer ID 3. Rename C H 6 GET TUNES & TONES DOWNLOADING NEW TUNES & TONES 1 Press [MENU], then select Get It now menu or press , then press Get Tunes &
Tones then select Get New the select New Provider, press . (The BREW will launch and take you to the download menu.) 2 Use your navigation key to select a providers browser, press [OK]. 3 Use your navigation key to select a Tunes or Tones you wish to download, press [OK]. 4 To save a downloaded tunes or tones to the Get Tunes & Tones list and to sort file type. By pressing [SOLT], you can choose sort type:
File type / Alphabet / Date (Recent-Old) /
File Size (Large-Small) C H 6 TO RECORDING NEW TONES 1 Press [MENU], then select Get It now menu or press , then press Get Tunes &
Tones then select Record New. 2 To record a voice memo, press [OK]
Instructions will be displayed and you will hear Beep Sound. 3 To stop recording a memo, press [STOP]. 4 To save a downloaded tunes or tones to the Get Tunes & Tones list and to sort file type. 106 107 GET IT NOW GET IT NOW GET FUN & GAMES DOWNLOADING NEW FUN & GAMES 1 Press [MENU], then select Get It now menu or press , then press Get Fun & Games then select Get New. (The BREW will launch and take you to the download menu.) 2 Use your navigation key to select a providers browser, press [OK]. 3 Use your navigation key to select a Fun or Games you wish to download, press [OK]. 4 To save a downloaded fun or games to the Get Fun & Games list and to sort file type. By pressing [SOLT], you can choose sort type:
File type / Alphabet / Date (Recent-Old) /
File Size (Large-Small) PLAYING DOWNLOADED FUN & GAMES C H 6 1 Press [MENU], then select Get It now menu or press , then press Get Fun & Games. 2 To play downloaded fun or games. Select the fun or games you want to play, then press [PLAY]. 3 To launch BREW. GALLERY In Review Mode you can view all the pictures you have taken, store selected images in your phone, send pictures to the Online Album, delete images and access additional picture options. 1 2 Press [MENU], then select Get It now menu or press , then press Gallery then select Get New. (The BREW will launch and take you to the download menu.) In Review Mode, you can view all the pictures you have stored in your phone. 3 Select picture with the Navigation Key, then press [VIEW]. You can see detail picture. In detail view, user can view previous or next picture by pressing left or right navigation key. By pressing [OPTIONS], you can choose from the following:
1. Send: To send a picture message. 2. To Pix Place: To uploading selected picture to pix server. 3. Set As: Assigns the selected pix to display for specific tasks.
(Wallpaper/Screen Saver/Picture ID/
Power On/Power Off.). 4. Rename: To edit the pictures title. 5. Lock/Unlock: To select Lock or Unlock. 6. Erase: Erase the current picture from your phone. 7. Erase All: To erase all the pictures in your phone. 8. Pix Info: Displays information on the selected picture, such as name, date, time, resolution and file size. C H 6 108 109 STARTING INTERNET BROWSER BROWSER MENU LAUNCHING MOBILE WEB 2.0 REFRESH Now you can access news, sports, weather, and e-mail from your phone. Mobile Web 2.0 keeps you updated by providing access to up-to-date information such as news, sports, weather and stock quotes when you subscribe to Internet service with your service provider. Please contact your service provider for a list of available websites and service details. Selecting the refresh item from the browser menu refreshes the current page. 1 To select Refresh. Press , then press
[MENU]
. 1 To start your Internet browser and access websites through your wireless handset press . HISTORY When the history item is selected from the browser menu, the browser is displayed with the browser version and copyright information. The device layer version is also displayed. 1 To select History. Press , then press
[MENU]
. ADDRESS Selecting the Address action displays the URL of the current page. 1 To select Address. Press , then press
[MENU]
CLEAR MEMORY 1 To clear browser memory. Press , then press
[MENU]
C H 6
. BROWSER MENU The browser menu lists the actions necessary to operate the browser. press , then press [MENU] . VZW HOME When the home item is selected from the browser menu, the phone displays the home page. C H 6 1 To display the homepage. Press , then press
[MENU]
BACK 1 To return to the previous page. Press , then press
[MENU]
FORWARD 1 To forward to the next page. Press , then press
[MENU]
. 110 111 BROWSER MENU SETTINGS 1 To select Settings. Press , then press
[MENU]
. Downloads Restart Browser Scroll Mode Send Referrer Key Press Timeout Connection Timeout ADVANCED Selecting the advanced item in the browser menu displays the advanced menu items. 1 To select Advanced. Press , then press
[MENU]
. About... Encryption: 1. Authentication 2. Root Certificate 3. Current Certificate C H 6 EXIT 1 To exit browser. Press , then press
[MENU]
. Chapter 7 SAFETY AND WARRANTY This chapter addresses the safety guidelines and precautions to follow when operating your phone. Before operating your phone, please be aware of all the safety details. This chapter contains the terms and conditions of services and the warranty for your phone. Please review them thoroughly. SAFETY INFORMATION FOR WIRELESS HANDHELD PHONES SAFETY INFORMATION FOR FCC RF EXPOSURE SAR INFORMATION FCC Hearing-Aid Compatibility (HAC) Regulations for Wireless Devices FDA CONSUMER UPDATE PROTECT YOUR WARRANTY 12 MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY C H 7 112 113 SAFETY INFORMATION FOR WIRELESS HANDHELD PHONES SAFETY INFORMATION FOR WIRELESS HANDHELD PHONES Read This Information Before Using Your Handheld Portable Cellular Telephone 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 Commissions (FCC) adopted RF exposure guidelines with safety levels for handheld wireless phones. Those guidelines are consistent with the safety standards previously set by both U.S. and international standards bodies:
ANSI C95.1 (1992) *
NCRP Report 86 (1986) *
ICNIRP (1996) *
Those standards were based on comprehensive and periodic evaluations of the relevant scientific 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 (C951). The design of your phone complies with the FCC guidelines (and those standards). ANTENNA CARE Use only the supplied or an approved replacement antenna. Unauthorized antennas, modifications, or attachments could damage the phone and may violate FCC regulations. DRIVING SAFETY Talking on the phone while driving is extremely dangerous and is illegal in some states. Remember, safety comes first. Check the laws and regulations on the use of phones in the areas where you drive. Always obey them. Also, if using your phone while driving, please:
l l l Give full attention to driving. Driving safely is your first responsibility. Use hands-free operation, if available. Pull off the road and park before making or answering a call, if driving conditions so require. If you must use the phone while driving, please use one-touch, speed dialing, and auto answer modes. An airbag inflates with great force. DO NOT place objects, including both installed or portable wireless equipment, in the area over the airbag or in the air bag deployment area. If in-vehicle wireless equipment is improperly installed and the air bag inflates, serious injury could result. WARNING: Failure to follow these instructions may lead to serious personal injury and possible property damage. C H 7 C H 7 1* : American National Standards Institute. 2* : National Council on Radiation protection and measurements. 3* : International Commission on Nonionizing Radiation Protection. 114 115 SAFETY INFORMATION FOR WIRELESS HANDHELD PHONES SAFETY INFORMATION FOR WIRELESS HANDHELD PHONES ELECTRONIC DEVICES Most modern electronic equipment is shielded from RF energy. However, certain electronic equipment may not be shielded against the RF signals from your wireless phone. PACEMAKERS The Health Industry Manufacturers Association recommends that a minimum separation of six (6) inches 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 :
l l l l ALWAYS keep the phone more than six inches from your pacemaker when the phone is turned on. Do not carry the phone in a breast pocket. Use the ear opposite the pacemaker to minimize the potential for interference. If you have any reason to suspect that interference is taking place, turn your phone OFF immediately. OTHER MEDICAL DEVICES If you use any other personal medical device, consult the manufacturer of your device to determine if they are adequately shielded from external RF energy. Your physician may be able to assist you in obtaining this information. Turn your phone OFF in healthcare facilities when any regulations posted in these areas instruct you to do so. Hospitals or healthcare facilities may be using equipment that could be sensitive to external RF energy. C H 7 POSTED FACILITIES Turn your phone OFF where posted notices so require. OTHER SAFETY GUIDELINES AIRCRAFT FCC and Transport Canada Regulations prohibit using your phone while in the air. Turn your phone OFF before boarding an aircraft. 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 when in any area with a potentially explosive atmosphere and obey all signs and instructions. Sparks in such areas could cause an explosion or fire 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 gas stations; below deck on boats; fuel or chemical transfer or storage facilities; vehicles using liquefied petroleum gas (such as propane or butane); areas where the air contains chemicals or particles, such as grain, dust, or metal powders; and any other area where you would normally be advised to turn off your vehicles engine. C H 7 116 117 SAFETY INFORMATION FOR WIRELESS HANDHELD PHONES SAFETY INFORMATION FOR FCC RF EXPOSURE PRECAUTIONS WARNING! Read this Information before using Your Handheld Portable Telephone is a high quality piece of equipment. Before operating, read all instructions and cautionary markings on (1) AC Adaptor (2) Battery and (3) Product Using Battery. CAUTIONS DO NOT use this equipment in an extreme environment where high temperature or high humidity exists. DO NOT abuse the equipment. Avoid striking, shaking or shocking. When not using, lay down the unit to avoid possible damage due to instability. DO NOT expose this equipment to rain or spilled beverages. DO NOT use unauthorized accessories. DO NOT disassemble the phone or its accessories. If service or repair is required, return unit to an authorized Audiovox cellular service center. If unit is disassembled, the risk of electric shock or fire may result. DO NOT short-circuit the battery terminals with metal items etc. C H 7 In August 1996 the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) of the United States with its action in Report and Order FCC 96-326 adopted an updated safety standard for human exposure to radio frequency electromagnetic energy emitted by FCC regulated transmitters. Those guidelines are consistent with the safety standard previously set by both U.S. and international standards bodies. The design of this phone complies with the FCC guidelines and these international standards. Use only the supplied or an approved antenna. Unauthorized antennas, modifications, or attachments could impair call quality, damage the phone, or result in violation of FCC regulations. Do not use the phone with a damaged antenna. If a damaged antenna comes into contact with the skin, a minor burn may result. Please contact your local dealer for replacement antenna. BODY-WORN OPERATION This device was tested for typical body-worn operations with the back of the phone kept 2.0 cm. from the body. To maintain compliance with FCC RF exposure requirements, use only belt-clips, holsters or similar accessories that maintain a 2.0 cm. separation distance between the users body and the back of the phone, including the antenna. The use of belt-clips, holsters and similar accessories should not contain metallic components in its assembly. The use of accessories that do not satisfy these requirements may not comply with FCC RF exposure requirements, and should be avoided. For more information about RF exposure, please visit the FCC website at www.fcc.gov. C H 7 118 119 SAR INFORMATION SAR INFORMATION THIS MODEL PHONE MEETS THE GOVERNMENTS REQUIREMENTS FOR EXPOSURE TO RADIO WAVES. Your wireless phone is a radio transmitter and receiver. It is designed and manufactured not to exceed the emission limits for exposure to radiofrequency (RF) energy set by the Federal Communications Commission of the U.S. Government. These limits are part of comprehensive guidelines and establish permitted levels of RF energy for the general population. The guidelines are based on standards that were developed by independent scientific organizations through periodic and thorough evaluation of scientific studies. The standards include a substantial safety margin designed to assure the safety of all persons, regardless of age and health. The exposure standard for wireless mobile phones employs a unit of measurement known as the Specific Absorption Rate, or SAR. The SAR limit set by the FCC is 1.6 W/kg. * Tests for SAR are conducted with the phone transmitting at its highest certified power level in all tested frequency bands. Although the SAR is determined at the highest certified power level, the actual SAR level of the phone while operating can be well below the maximum value. This is because the phone is designed to operate at multiple power levels so as to use only the power required to reach the network. In general, the closer you are to a wireless base station antenna, the lower the power output. Before a phone model is available for sale to the public, it must be tested and certified to the FCC that it does not exceed the limit established by the government adopted requirement for safe exposure. The tests are performed in positions and locations (e.g., at the ear and worn on the body) as required by the FCC for each model. The highest SAR value for this model phone when tested for use at the ear is 1.35 W/Kg and when worn on the body, as described in this user guide, is 1.05W/Kg. (Body-worn measurements differ among phone models, depending upon available accessories and FCC requirements). While there may be differences between the SAR levels of various phones and at various positions, they all meet the government requirement for safe exposure. The FCC has granted an Equipment Authorization for this model phone with all reported SAR levels evaluated as in compliance with the FCC RF exposure guidelines. SAR information on this model phone is on file with the FCC and can be found under the Display Grant section of http://www.fcc.gov/oet/fccid after searching on PP4TX-210. C H 7 Additional information on Specific Absorption Rates (SAR) can be found on the Cellular Telecommunications Industry Asso-ciation (CTIA) web-
site at http://www.wow-com.com.
* In the United States and Canada, the SAR limit for mobile phones used by the public is 1.6 watts/kg (W/kg) averaged over one gram of tissue. The standard incorporates a sub-stantial margin of safety to give additional protection for the public and to account for any variations in measurements. C H 7 120 121 FCC HEARING-AID COMPATIBILITY (HAC) REGULATIONS FOR WIRELESS DEVICES FCC HEARING-AID COMPATIBILITY (HAC) REGULATIONS FOR WIRELESS DEVICES On July 10, 2003, the U.S. Federal Communications Commission
(FCC) Report and Order in WT Docket 01-309 modified the exception of wireless phones under the Hearing Aid Compatibility Act of 1988 (HAC Act) to require digital wireless phones be compatible with hearing-aids. The intent of the HAC Act is to ensure reasonable access to telecommunications services for persons with hearing disabilities. While some wireless phones are used near some hearing devices
(hearing aids and cochlear implants), users may detect a buzzing, humming, or whining noise. Some hearing devices are more immune than others to this interference noise, and phones also vary in the amount of interference they generate. The wireless telephone industry has developed a rating system for wireless phones, to assist hearing device users find phones that may be compatible with their hearing devices. Not all phones have been rated. Phones that are rated have the rating on their box or a label located on the box. The ratings are not guarantees. Results will vary depending on the users hearing device and hearing loss. If your hearing device happens to be vulnerable to interference, you may not be able to use a rated phone successfully. Trying out the phone with your hearing device is the best way to evaluate it for your personal needs. M-Ratings: Phones rated M3 or M4 meet FCC requirements and are likely to generate less interference to hearing devices than phones that are not labeled. M4 is the better/higher of the two ratings. Hearing devices may also be rated. Your hearing device manufacturer or hearing health professional may help you find this rating. Higher ratings mean that the hearing device is relatively immune to interference noise. The hearing aid and wireless phone rating values are then added together. A sum of 5 is considered acceptable for normal use. A sum of 6 is considered for best use. In the above example, if a hearing aid meets the M2 level rating and the wireless phone meets the M3 level rating, the sum of the two values equal M5. This should provide the hearing aid user with normal usage while using their hearing aid with the particular wireless phone. Normal usage in this context is defined as a signal quality that is acceptable for normal operation. The M mark is intended to be synonymous with the U mark. The T mark is intended to be synonymous with the UT mark. The M and T marks are recommended by the Alliance for Telecommunications Industries Solutions (ATIS). The U and UT marks are referenced in Section 20.19 of the FCC Rules. The HAC rating and measurement procedure are described in the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) C63.19 standard. For information about hearing aids and digital wireless phone l l l l Fcc Hearing Aid Compatibility and Volume Control http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/dro/hearing.html Gallaudet University, RERC http://tap.gallaudet.edu/DigWireless.KS/DigWireless.htm Self Help for Hard of Hearing People Inc. [SHHH]
www.hearinglpss.org/hat/TipsWirelessPhone.htm The Hearing Aid Compatibility FCC Order http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/
FCC-03-168A1.pdf C H 7 C H 7 122 123 FDA CONSUMER UPDATE FDA CONSUMER UPDATE U.S. Food and Drug Administration -Center for Devices and Radiological Health Consumer Update on Wireless Phones 1. Do wireless phones pose a health hazard?
The available scientific evidence does not show that any health problems are associated with using wireless phones. There is no proof, however, that wireless phones are absolutely safe. Wireless phones emit low levels of radiofrequency energy (RF) in the microwave range while being used. They also emit very low levels of RF when in the stand-by mode. Whereas high levels of RF can produce health effects (by heating tissue), exposure to low level RF that does not produce heating ef-fects causes no known adverse health effects. Many studies of low level RF exposures have not found any biological ef-fects. Some studies have suggested that some biological ef-fects may occur, but such findings have not been confirmed by additional research. In some cases, other researchers have had difficulty in reproducing those studies, or in determining the reasons for inconsistent results. 2. What is FDAs role concerning the safety of wireless phones?
Under the law, FDA does not review the safety of radiation-emitting consumer products such as wireless phones before they can be sold, as it does with new drugs or medical de-vices. However, the agency has authority to take action if wire-less phones are shown to emit radiofrequency energy (RF) at a level that is hazardous to the user. In such a case, FDA could require the manufacturers of wireless phones to notify users of the health hazard and to repair, replace or recall the phones so that the hazard no longer exists. Although the existing scientific data do not justify FDA regula-tory actions, FDA has urged the wireless phone industry to take a number of steps, including the following:
Support needed research into possible biological effects of RF of the type emitted by wireless phones;
Design wireless phones in a way that minimizes any RF ex-posure to the user that is not necessary for device function;
and Cooperate in providing users of wireless phones with the best possible information on possible effects of wireless phone use on human health. FDA belongs to an interagency working group of the federal agencies that have responsibility for different aspects of RF safety to ensure coordinated efforts at the federal level. The following agencies belong to this working group:
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health Environmental Protection Agency Federal Communications Commission Occupational Safety and Health Administration National Telecommunications and Information Administration The National Institutes of Health participates in some inter-agency working group activities, as well. FDA shares regulatory responsibilities for wireless phones with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). All phones that are sold in the United States must comply with FCC safety guidelines that limit RF exposure. FCC relies on FDA and other health agencies for safety questions about wireless phones. FCC also regulates the base stations that the wireless phone networks rely upon. While these base stations operate at higher power than do the wireless phones themselves, the RF expo-sures that people get from these base stations are typically thousands of times lower than those they can get from wire-less phones. Base stations are thus not the subject of the safety questions discussed in this document. 3. What kinds of phones are the subject of this update?
The term wireless phone refers here to hand-held wireless phones with built-in antennas, often called cell, mobile, or PCS phones. C H 7 These types of wireless phones can expose the user to measurable radiofrequency energy (RF) because of the short distance between the phone and the users head. These RF exposures are limited by Federal Communications Commission safety guidelines that were developed with the advice of FDA and other federal health and safety agencies. When the phone is located at greater distances from the user, the exposure to RF is drastically lower because a persons RF exposure decreases rapidly with increasing distance from the source. The so-called cordless phones, which have a base unit connected to the telephone wiring in a house, typically operate at far lower power levels, and thus produce RF expo-sures far below the FCC safety limits. 4. What are the results of the research done already?
The research done thus far has produced conflicting results, and many studies have suffered from flaws in their research methods. Animal experiments investigating the effects of radiofrequency energy (RF) exposures characteristic of wire-less phones have yielded conflicting results that often cannot be repeated in other laboratories. A few animal studies, how-ever, have suggested that low levels of RF could accelerate the development of cancer in laboratory animals. However, many of the studies that showed increased tumor develop-ment used animals that had been genetically engineered or treated with cancer-causing chemicals so as to be pre-dis-posed to develop cancer in the absence of RF exposure. Other studies exposed the animals to RF for up to 22 hours per day. These conditions are not similar to the conditions under which people use wireless phones, so we dont know with certainty what the results of such studies mean for human health. Three large epidemiology studies have been published since December 2000. Between them, the studies investigated any possible association between the use of wireless phones and primary brain cancer, glioma, meningioma, or acoustic neu-
roma, tumors of the brain or salivary gland, leukemia, or other cancers. None of the studies demonstrated the existence of any harmful health effects from wireless phone RF exposures. However, none of the studies can answer questions about long-term exposures, since the average period of phone use in these studies was around three years. 5. What research is needed to decide whether RF expo-sure from wireless phones poses a health risk?
A combination of laboratory studies and epidemiological stud-ies of people actually using wireless phones would provide some of the data that are needed. Lifetime animal exposure studies could be completed in a few years. However, very large numbers of animals would be needed to provide reliable proof of a cancer promoting effect if one exists. Epidemiological stud-ies can provide data that is directly applicable to human popu-lations, but 10 or more years follow-up may be needed to pro-vide answers about some health effects, such as cancer. This is because the interval between the time of exposure to a can-cer- causing agent and the time tumors develop - if they do -may be many, many years. The interpretation of epidemiologi-cal studies is hampered by difficulties in measuring actual RF exposure during day-to-day use of wireless phones. Many fac-tors affect this measurement, such as the angle at which the phone is held, or which model of phone is used. 6. What is FDA doing to find out more about the possible health effects of wireless phone RF?
FDA is working with the U.S. National Toxicology Program and with groups of investigators around the world to ensure that high priority animal studies are conducted to address impor-tant questions about the effects of exposure to radiofrequency energy (RF). FDA has been a leading participant in the World Health Orga-nization International Electromagnetic Fields (EMF) Project since its inception in 1996. An influential result of this work has been the development of a detailed agenda of research needs that has driven the establishment of new research pro-
grams around the world. C H 7 124 125 FDA CONSUMER UPDATE FDA CONSUMER UPDATE The Project has also helped develop a series of public information documents on EMF issues. FDA and the Cellular Telecommunications & Internet Asso-ciation
(CTIA) have a formal Cooperative Research and De-velopment Agreement
(CRADA) to do research on wireless phone safety. FDA provides the scientific oversight, obtaining input from experts in government, industry, and academic or-
ganizations. CTIA-funded research is conducted through con-tracts to independent investigators. The initial research will include both laboratory studies and studies of wireless phone users. The CRADA will also include a broad assessment of additional research needs in the context of the latest research developments around the world. 7. How can I find out how much radiofrequency energy exposure I can get by using my wireless phone?
All phones sold in the United States must comply with Federal Communications Commission (FCC) guidelines that limit radiofrequency energy (RF) exposures. FCC established these guidelines in consultation with FDA and the other federal health and safety agencies. The FCC limit for RF exposure from wire-less telephones is set at a Specific Absorption Rate (SAR) of 1.6 watts per kilogram (1.6 W/kg). The FCC limit is consistent with the safety standards developed by the Institute of Electri-cal and Electronic Engineering (IEEE) and the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurement. The exposure limit takes into consideration the bodys ability to remove heat from the tissues that absorb energy from the wireless phone and is set well below levels known to have effects. Manufacturers of wireless phones must report the RF expo-sure level for each model of phone to the FCC. The FCC website (http://www.fcc.gov/oet/rfsafety) gives directions for locating the FCC identification number on your phone so you can find your phones RF exposure level in the online listing. 8. What has FDA done to measure the radiofrequency en-ergy coming from wireless phones ?
The Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE) is developing a technical standard for measuring the radiofrequency energy (RF) exposure from wireless phones and other wireless handsets with the participation and leader-ship of FDA scientists and engineers. The standard, Recom-mended Practice for Determining the Spatial-Peak Specific Absorption Rate (SAR) in the Human Body Due to Wireless Communications Devices: Experimental Techniques, sets forth the first consistent test methodology for measuring the rate at which RF is deposited in the heads of wireless phone users. The test method uses a tissue-simulating model of the human head. Standardized SAR test methodology is expected to greatly improve the consistency of measurements made at different laboratories on the same phone. SAR is the mea-surement of the amount of energy absorbed in tissue, either by the whole body or a small part of the body. It is measured in watts/kg (or milliwatts/g) of matter. This measurement is used to determine whether a wireless phone complies with safety guidelines. 9. What steps can I take to reduce my exposure to radiofrequency energy from my wireless phone?
If there is a risk from these productsand at this point we do not know that there isit is probably very small. But if you are concerned about avoiding even potential risks, you can take a few simple steps to minimize your exposure to radiofrequency energy (RF). Since time is a key factor in how much exposure a person receives, reducing the amount of time spent using a wireless phone will reduce RF exposure. If you must conduct extended conversations by wireless phone every day, you could place more distance between your body and the source of the RF, since the exposure level drops off dramatically with distance. For example, you could use a headset and carry the wireless phone away from your body or use a wireless phone connected to a remote an-tenna. C H 7 Again, the scientific data do not demonstrate that wireless phones are harmful. But if you are concerned about the RF exposure from these products, you can use measures like those described above to reduce your RF exposure from wire-less phone use. 10.What about children using wireless phones?
The scientific evidence does not show a danger to users of wireless phones, including children and teenagers. If you want to take steps to lower exposure to radiofrequency energy (RF), the measures described above would apply to children and teenagers using wireless phones. Reducing the time of wire-less phone use and increasing the distance between the user and the RF source will reduce RF exposure. Some groups sponsored by other national governments have advised that children be discouraged from using wireless phones at all. For example, the government in the United King-dom distributed leaflets containing such a recommendation in December 2000. They noted that no evidence exists that us-
ing a wireless phone causes brain tumors or other ill effects. Their recommendation to limit wireless phone use by children was strictly precautionary;
it was not based on scientific evi-dence that any health hazard exists. 11.What about wireless phone interference with medical equipment?
Radiofrequency energy (RF) from wireless phones can inter-act with some electronic devices. For this reason, FDA helped develop a detailed test method to measure electromagnetic interference (EMI) of implanted cardiac pacemakers and defibrillators from wireless telephones. This test method is now part of a standard sponsored by the Association for the Ad-vancement of Medical instrumentation
(AAMI). The final draft, a joint effort by FDA, medical device manufacturers, and many other groups, was completed in late 2000. This standard will allow manufacturers to ensure that cardiac pacemakers and defibrillators are safe from wireless phone EMI. FDA has tested hearing aids for interference from handheld wireless phones and helped develop a voluntary standard sponsored by the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engi-neers (IEEE). This standard specifies test methods and per-formance requirements for hearing aids and wireless phones so that that no interference occurs when a person uses a com-patible phone and a compatible hearing aid at the same time. This standard was approved by the IEEE in 2000. FDA continues to monitor the use of wireless phones for pos-sible interactions with other medical devices. Should harmful interference be found to occur, FDA will conduct testing to assess the interference and work to resolve the problem. 12.Where can I find additional information?
For additional information, please refer to the following re-sources:
FDA web page on wireless phones (http://www.fda.gov/cdrh/ phones/index.html) Federal Communications Commission (FCC) RF Safety Pro-gram
(http://www.fcc.gov/oet/rfsafety) International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protec-tion
(http://www.icnirp.de) World Health Organization (WHO) International EMF Project
(http://www.who.int/emf) National Radiological Protection Board (UK) (http://www.nrpb.org.uk/) C H 7 126 127 PROTECT YOUR WARRANTY 12 MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY Read your Warranty carefully, with the special consideration to paragraph seven of the Limited Warranty for your unit. Warranty does not apply to... or to any product or part thereof which has suffered through alteration... mishandling misuse, neglect or accident. Many companies are making look alike accessories and in some cases, promoting that their product is equal to or better than the Pantech product. Be careful. Some of these products may not be compatible to use with your Pantech product and may damage the unit or cause it to malfunction. If service is required on your unit and it is determined that a non-Pantech accessory has created the problem with your unit, the Warranty will not apply. In addition, if the unit has already suffered irreversible damage by reason of a non-compatible accessory, the Warranty will be voided. To protect your Warranty, use only compatible accessories which cannot damage or interfere with the functioning of your Pantech product. PANTECH COMMUNICATIONS 555 Wireless Blvd., Hauppauge, New York 11788, 800-229-1235 16808 Marquardt Avenue, Cerritos, California 90703, 562-802-5100 Pantech Canada Company 5155 Spectrum Way, Unit #5, Mississauga, Ontario Canada L4W 5A1, 800-465-9672 C H 7 Pantech Communications (the Company) warrants to the original retail purchaser of this Pantech handheld portable cellular telephone, that should this product or any part thereof during normal consumer usage and conditions, be proven defective in material or workmanship that results in product failure within the first twelve (12) months period from the date of purchase, such defect(s) will be repaired or replaced (with new or rebuilt parts) at the Companys option, without charge for parts or labor directly related to the defect(s). The antenna, key pad, display, rechargeable battery and battery charger, if included, are similarly warranted for twelve (12) months from date of purchase. This Warranty extends only to consumers who purchase the product in the United States or Canada and it is not transferable or assignable. This Warranty does not apply to:
(a) Product subjected to abnormal use or conditions, accident, mishandling, neglect, unauthorized alteration, misuse, improper installation or repair or improper storage;
(b) Product whose mechanical serial number or electronic serial number has been removed, altered or defaced.
(c) Damage from exposure to moisture, humidity, excessive temperatures or extreme environmental conditions;
(d) Damage resulting from connection to, or use of any accessory or other product not approved or authorized by the Company;
(e) Defects in appearance, cosmetic, decorative or structural items such as framing and non-operative parts;
(f) Product damaged from external causes such as fire, flooding, dirt, sand, weather conditions, battery leakage, blown fuse, theft or improper usage of any electrical source. The Company disclaims liability for removal or reinstallation of the product, for geographic coverage, for inadequate signal reception by the antenna or for communications range or operation of the cellular system as a whole. To obtain repairs or replacement within the terms of this Warranty, the product should be delivered with proof of Warranty coverage (e.g. dated bill of sale), the consumers return address, daytime phone number and/or fax number and complete description of the problem, transportation prepaid, to the Company at the address shown below or to the place of purchase for repair or replacement processing. C H 7 128 129 12 MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY In addition, for reference to an authorized Warranty station in your area, you may telephone in the United States (800) 229-1235, and in Canada
(800) 465-9672 (in Ontario call 905-712-9299). THE EXTENT OF THE COMPANYS LIABILITY UNDER THIS WARRANTY IS LIMITED TO THE REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT PROVIDED ABOVE AND, IN NO EVENT, SHALL THE COMPANYS LAIBILITY EXCEED THE PURCHASE PRICE PAID BY PURCHASER FOR THE PRODUCT. ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING ANY IMPLIED WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, SHALL BE LIMITED TO THE DURATION OF THIS WRITTEN WARRANTY. ANY ACTION FOR BREACH OF ANY WARRANTY MUST BE BROUGHT WITHIN A PERIOD OF 18 MONTHS FROM DATE OF ORIGINAL PURCHASE. IN NO CASE SHALL THE COMPANY BE LIABLE FOR AN SPECIAL CONSEQUENTIAL OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES FOR BREACH OF THIS OR ANY OTHER WARRANTY, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, WHATSOEVER. THE COMPANY SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR THE DELAY IN RENDERING SERVICE UNDER THIS WARRANTY OR LOSS OF USE DURING THE TIME THE PRODUCT IS BEING REPAIRED OR REPLACED. No person or representative is authorized to assume for the Company any liability other than expressed herein in connection with the sale of this product. Some states or provinces do not allow limitations on how long an implied warranty lasts or the exclusion or limitation of incidental or consequential damage so the above limitation or exclusions may not apply to you. This Warranty gives you specific legal rights, and you may also have other rights which vary from state to state or province to province. IN USA : Pantech Communications 555 Wireless Blvd. Hauppauge, NY 11788
(800) 229-1235 C H 7 IN CANADA : Pantech Canada Company 5155 Spectrum Way, Unit #5 Mississauga, Ontario L4W 5A1
(800) 465-9672 130
frequency | equipment class | purpose | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2005-09-15 | 1851.25 ~ 1908.75 | PCE - PCS Licensed Transmitter held to ear | Class II permissive change or modification of presently authorized equipment |
2 | 2005-07-08 | 1851.25 ~ 1908.75 | PCE - PCS Licensed Transmitter held to ear | |
3 | 2005-03-15 | 1851.25 ~ 1908.75 | PCE - PCS Licensed Transmitter held to ear | Original Equipment |
app s | Applicant Information | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 2 3 | Effective |
2005-09-15
|
||||
1 2 3 |
2005-07-08
|
|||||
1 2 3 |
2005-03-15
|
|||||
1 2 3 | Applicant's complete, legal business name |
Pantech Co., Ltd.
|
||||
1 2 3 | FCC Registration Number (FRN) |
0006278469
|
||||
1 2 3 | Physical Address |
Pantech Building, I-2, DMC, Sangam-dong, Mapo-gu
|
||||
1 2 3 |
Seoul, N/A 121-792
|
|||||
1 2 3 |
South Korea
|
|||||
app s | TCB Information | |||||
1 2 3 | TCB Application Email Address |
m******@ccsemc.com
|
||||
1 2 3 |
r******@pctestlab.com
|
|||||
1 2 3 |
m******@ccsemc.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 |
PP4
|
||||
1 2 3 | Equipment Product Code |
TX-210
|
||||
app s | Person at the applicant's address to receive grant or for contact | |||||
1 2 3 | Name |
K**** S********
|
||||
1 2 3 | Title |
Senior MTS
|
||||
1 2 3 | Telephone Number |
82-2-********
|
||||
1 2 3 | Fax Number |
82-2-********
|
||||
1 2 3 |
k******@pantech.com
|
|||||
app s | Technical Contact | |||||
1 2 3 | Firm Name |
PCTEST Engineering Lab., Inc.
|
||||
1 2 3 | Name |
R**** O********
|
||||
1 2 3 | Physical Address |
6660-B Dobbin Road
|
||||
1 2 3 |
Columbia, Maryland 21045
|
|||||
1 2 3 |
United States
|
|||||
1 2 3 | Telephone Number |
410-2********
|
||||
1 2 3 | Fax Number |
410-2********
|
||||
1 2 3 |
r******@pctestlab.com
|
|||||
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?: | 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 | ||||
1 2 3 | If so, specify the short-term confidentiality release date (MM/DD/YYYY format) | 08/22/2005 | ||||
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 | Description of product as it is marketed: (NOTE: This text will appear below the equipment class on the grant) | Dual Mode (CDMA/PCS-CDMA ) Cellular Phone | ||||
1 2 3 | Tri-Mode Dual-Band Phone (AMPS/ CDMA/ PCS CMDA) | |||||
1 2 3 | Tri-Mode Dual-Band Phone (AMPS/CDMA/ PCS CDMA) | |||||
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 | In this Class II permissive change filing, AMPS mode is disabled via software on the original Tri-Mode ( AMPS/CDMA/PCS-CDMA ) phone granted on 03/15/2005 and 07/08/2005. Power output is ERP for Pt. 22 and EIRP for Pt. 24. SAR compliance for body-worn operating configurations is limited to the specific configurations tested for this filing. Body -worn operations are restricted to accessories that have no metallic component in the assembly and must provide at least 2.0 cm separation between the device, including its antenna whether extended or retracted, and the users body. End -users must be informed of the body-worn operating requirements for satisfying RF exposure compliance. Highest reported SAR values are CDMA Pt 22H head: 1.04 W/kg and body: 0.579 W/kg, and PCS Pt 24E head: 1.30 W/kg and body: 1.05 W/kg. HAC Rating: M3 | ||||
1 2 3 | Class II Permissive Change. Power output is ERP for Pt. 22 and EIRP for Pt. 24. SAR compliance for body-worn operating configurations is limited to the specific configurations tested for this filing. Body -worn operations are restricted to accessories that have no metallic component in the assembly and must provide at least 2.0 cm separation between the device, including its antenna whether extended or retracted, and the users body. End -users must be informed of the body-worn operating requirements for satisfying RF exposure compliance. Highest reported SAR values are AMPS Pt 22 head: 1.35 W/kg and body: 0.634 W/kg, CDMA Pt 22H head: 1.04 W/kg and body: 0.579 W/kg, and PCS Pt 24E head: 1.30 W/kg and body: 1.05 W/kg. HAC Rating: M3 | |||||
1 2 3 | Power output is ERP for Pt. 22 and EIRP for Pt. 24. SAR compliance for body-worn operating configurations is limited to the specific configurations tested for this filing. Body -worn operations are restricted to accessories that have no metallic component in the assembly and must provide at least 2.0 cm separation between the device, including its antenna whether extended or retracted, and the users body. End -users must be informed of the body-worn operating requirements for satisfying RF exposure compliance. Highest reported SAR values are AMPS Pt 22 head: 1.35 W/kg and body: 0.634 W/kg, CDMA Pt 22H head: 1.04 W/kg and body: 0.579 W/kg, and PCS Pt 24E head: 1.30 W/kg and body: 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 |
HCT Co., LTD
|
||||
1 2 3 |
PCTEST Engineering Laboratory, Inc.
|
|||||
1 2 3 | Name |
S******** L********
|
||||
1 2 3 |
R**** O********
|
|||||
1 2 3 | Telephone Number |
82-31********
|
||||
1 2 3 |
41029********
|
|||||
1 2 3 | Fax Number |
82-31********
|
||||
1 2 3 |
41029********
|
|||||
1 2 3 |
s******@HCT.co.kr
|
|||||
1 2 3 |
r******@pctestlab.com
|
|||||
Equipment Specifications | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 1 | 24E | BC HC | 1851.25 | 1908.75 | 0.346 | 2.5 ppm | 1M28F9W | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 2 | 22H | BC HC | 824.7 | 848.31 | 0.333 | 2.5 ppm | 1M28F9W | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2 | 1 | 22H | BC | 824.04 | 848.97 | 0.423 | 2.5 ppm | 40K0F1D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2 | 2 | 22H | BC | 824.04 | 848.97 | 0.423 | 2.5 ppm | 40K0F8W | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2 | 3 | 22H | BC HC | 824.7 | 848.31 | 0.333 | 2.5 ppm | 1M28F9W | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2 | 4 | 24E | BC HC | 1851.25 | 1908.75 | 0.346 | 2.5 ppm | 1M28F9W | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3 | 1 | 24E | BC | 1851.25 | 1908.75 | 0.346 | 2.5 ppm | 1M28F9W | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3 | 2 | 22H | BC | 824.7 | 848.31 | 0.333 | 2.5 ppm | 1M28F9W | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3 | 3 | 22H | BC | 824.04 | 848.97 | 0.423 | 2.5 ppm | 40K0F1D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3 | 4 | 22H | BC | 824.04 | 848.97 | 0.423 | 2.5 ppm | 40K0F8W |
some individual PII (Personally Identifiable Information) available on the public forms may be redacted, original source may include additional details
This product uses the FCC Data API but is not endorsed or certified by the FCC