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Users Manual | Users Manual | 684.37 KiB | December 08 2004 | |||
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1 2 | Test Setup Photos | / October 09 2005 | ||||||
1 2 | Attestation Statements | December 08 2004 | ||||||
1 2 | RF Exposure Info | December 08 2004 | ||||||
1 2 | External Photos | December 08 2004 | ||||||
1 2 | ID Label/Location Info | December 08 2004 | ||||||
1 2 | Internal Photos | December 08 2004 | ||||||
1 2 | RF Exposure Info | December 08 2004 | ||||||
1 2 | RF Exposure Info | December 08 2004 | ||||||
1 2 | RF Exposure Info | December 08 2004 | ||||||
1 2 | RF Exposure Info | December 08 2004 | ||||||
1 2 | Test Report | / December 08 2004 |
1 2 | Users Manual | Users Manual | 684.37 KiB | December 08 2004 |
DIGITAL CELLULAR TELEPHONE SCH-N330 Users Manual ELECTRONICS World Wide Web http://www.samsungmobile.com Printed in Korea Code No. : GH68-00000A English. 2004/06. Rev.1.0 Safety Quick Guide Read these guidelines before using your wireless phone. Failure to comply with these guidelines may be dangerous or illegal. For more detailed safety information, see Health and Safety Information on page 89. Road safety comes first Do not use a hand-held phone while driving; park the vehicle first. Switch off when refuelling Do not use the phone at a refuelling point (service station) or near fuels or chemicals. Switch off on aircraft Wireless phones can cause interference. Using them on aircraft is both illegal and dangerous. Switch off in hospital Switch off your phone near medical equipment. Follow any regulations or rules in force. Interference All wireless phones may get interference which could affect performance. Respect special regulations Follow any special regulations in force in any area and always switch off your phone whenever it is forbidden to use it, or when it may cause interference or danger (in a hospital for example). Please read this manual before operating your phone, and keep it for future reference . Radio frequency exposure information In August 1996, the Federal Communications Commisision (FCC) of the U.S. adopted an updated safety standard for human exposure to radio frequency electromagnetic energy emitted by FCC regulated transmitters. The design of this phone complies with the FCC guidelines and those standards. To maintain compliance with FCC RF exposure guidelines, if you wear a handset on your body, use the Samsung-supplied or approved carrying case, holster, or other body-worn accessory. If you do not use a body-worn accessory, ensure the antenna is at least one inch (2.5cm) from your body when transmitting. Use of non-approved accessories may violate FCC RF exposure guidelines. Use sensibly Use only in the normal position (to ear). Avoid unnessary contact with the antenna when the phone is switched on. Accessories and batteries Use only SAMSUNG-approved accessories and batteries. Use qualified service Only qualified service personnel may install or repair your phone. Table of Contents YOUR PHONE Key Descriptions ................................................................................... 5 Display ................................................................................................ 6 Service light .......................................................................................... 8 GETTING STARTED Charging a Battery .................................................................................9 Low Battery Indicator ..........................................................................10 Switching the Phone On/Off ................................................................ 11 CALL FUNCTIONS Making a Call ......................................................................................12 Answering a Call .................................................................................. 18 In-Use Options .................................................................................... 19 Using Caller ID .................................................................................... 20 Viewing Missed Calls ........................................................................... 21 Three-Way Calling ............................................................................... 22 Call Waiting ........................................................................................ 23 Call Forwarding ....................................................................................23 Adjusting the Volume ........................................................................... 24 Quick Switching to Vibration Mode ....................................................... 24 ENTERING TEXT Changing Text Input Mode ................................................................... 25 T9 Mode .............................................................................................. 26 Alpha Mode ..........................................................................................27 Symbol Mode ...................................................................................... 29 Number Mode ..................................................................................... 29 1 USING THE MENUS Accessing a Menu Functions by Scrolling .............................................. 30 Accessing a Menu Functions by Using its Shortcut.................................. 31 Your Phones Main Menu .................................................................... 32 CALLS Outgoing (MENU 1-1) ................................................................... 34 Incoming (MENU 1-2) ................................................................... 35 Missed (MENU 1-3) ....................................................................... 36 Erase Logs (MENU 1-4) .................................................................. 37 Call Timer (MENU 1-5)................................................................... 37 Data Counter (MENU 1-6) .............................................................. 38 PHONE BOOK Find (MENU 2-1) ........................................................................... 39
.......................................................................... 41 Add (MENU 2-2) Rename Group (MENU 2-3) .......................................................... 43 My Phone # (MENU 2-4) ................................................................ 43 Memory (MENU 2-5) ..................................................................... 43 MESSAGE Send New Msg (MENU 3-1) ........................................................... 44 Voice Mail(MENU 3-2) .................................................................. 45 Inbox (MENU 3-3) ........................................................................ 46 Outbox (MENU 3-4) ....................................................................... 47 Draft (MENU 3-5) .......................................................................... 48 Saved (MENU 3-6) ......................................................................... 48 Wap Push (MENU 3-7) ................................................................... 48 Msg Setting (MENU 3-8) ................................................................. 49 Erase Msg (MENU 3-9) ................................................................... 49 Mobile Web Get In Web (MENU 4-1) ................................................................. 50 PLANNER Today (MENU 5-1) ........................................................................ 51 Scheduler (MENU 5-2) .................................................................. 52 Jump To Date (MENU 5-3) ............................................................ 53 To Do List (MENU 5-4) .................................................................. 54 Memo Pad (MENU 5-5) ................................................................. 55 Countdown (MENU 5-6 )................................................................. 55 Alarm Check(MENU 5-7) ............................................................... 57 World Time (MENU 5-8)....................................................................57 Calculator (MENU 5-9)......................................................................58 DISPLAY Menu Style (MENU 6-1) ................................................................ 59 Animation (MENU 6-2) ................................................................. 59 Banner (MENU 6-3) ...................................................................... 60 Backlight (MENU 6-4) ................................................................... 60 Contrast (MENU 6-5) .................................................................... 60 Auto Hyphen (MENU 6-6) ............................................................. 60 Service LED (MENU 6-7) ............................................................... 60 SOUNDS Volume/Vibrate (MENU 7-1) ......................................................... 61 Ringer Type (MENU 7-2) ............................................................... 61 Key Beep (MENU 7-3) .................................................................. 62 Alerts (MENU 7-4) ........................................................................ 62 Power On/Off (MENU 7-4) ............................................................ 63 Roam Ringer (MENU 7-5) ............................................................. 63 Whisper Mode (MENU 7-6) ............................................................ 63 VOICE KIT Quick Dial (MENU 8-1) ................................................................. 64 Voice Memo (MENU 8-2) ............................................................... 65 2 3 SETUP Location (MENU 9-1) .................................................................... 66 Network (MENU 9-2) ................................................................... 67 Data (MENU 9-3) ....................................................................... 68 Security (MENU 9-4) ..................................................................... 69 Others (MENU 9-5) ....................................................................... 71 Version (MENU 9-6) ...................................................................... 73 HEALTH AND SAFETY INFORMATION Exposure to Radio Frequency Signal...................................................... 74 Precautions When Using Batteries ........................................................ 77 Road Safety ........................................................................................ 79 Operating Environment ........................................................................ 81 Electronic Devices ................................................................................ 81 Potentially Explosive Atmospheres ....................................................... 83 Emergency Calls .................................................................................. 84 Other Important Safety Information ..................................................... 85 Care and Maintenance ......................................................................... 86 Acknowledging Special Precautions and the FCC and Industry Canada Notice ................................................................. 88 GLOSSARY ........................................................................................ 89 Your Phone Key Descriptions Key Functions MENU : Enters the menu facility. Also, scrolls through the menu options. OK : In the menu facility, selects a menu function or stores information that you have entered (such as a name) in the phone memory. In Standby mode, enters the Mail Kit Menu. Navigation : In the menu facility, scroll through the menu tions and phonebook memory. up: searches phonebook by name. down: enters Memo Pad. left: enters Scheduler. right: enters Voice Memo. Makes or answers a call. In Standby mode, redials the last outgoing number when pressed twice. CLR : Deletes characters from the display. In the menu facility, returns to the previous menu level. Ends a call. Also switches the phone on and off when pressed and held. In the menu facility, returns to Standby mode and cancels your input. Volume : During a call, adjusts the voice volume. In Standby mode with the phone open, adjusts the ringer volume. In the menu facility, scrolls through the menu options. 4 5 Your Phone Your Phone Key Descriptions (continue...) Key Speaker On/Off: In Stanby Mode, allow you to hear and talk the other party through phone speaker. Functions Slide On : When push to slide on
* : When held down to access the voice dial function in idle mode.
# : When held down to toggle between the silent mode on and off Display Layout The display comprises two areas; an upper line of fixed icons, and the lower text and graphic area. The following icons display at power-on:
Icons Text and graphic area Icons Signal strength : Shows the received signal strength. The greater the number of bars, the better the signal strength. Service: Appears when a call is in progress. No service indicator: Appears when you are outside a service area. When it appears, you cannot make or receive calls. Wait a little while for a signal or move into an open area. Roaming: Appears When you are out of your home area and have registered with a different network (when travelling in other countries, for example). New Message: Appears when a new text message has been received. Analog mode: Indicates the analog mode. Digital mode: Indicates the digital mode. Vibrator on: Appears when a vibrate mode is on. An incoming call will vibrate the phone rather than ring it. Battery strength: Shows the level of your battery. The more bars you see, the more power you have left. 6 7 Your Phone Backlight The display is illuminated by a backlight. When you press any key, the backlight illuminates. It turns off if no key is pressed within a given period of time. Service Light The service light is at the top right of the phone. It flashes to indicate incoming call or message. Also, the service light flashes for a few seconds when you turn on the phone. 8 Getting Started Charging a Battery Your phone is powered by a rechargeable Li-ion battery. A travel adapter is provided with your phone. Use only approved batteries and chargers. Ask your local SAMSUNG dealer for further details. The phone can be used while the battery is charging. Note: You must fully charge the battery before using your phone for the first time. 1. Connect the lead from the travel adapter to the bottom of the phone. Check that the arrow on the lead connector is facing towards the front of the phone. 2. Connect the adapter to a standard AC wall outlet. The LEDs on the front of the charger indicate the following:
Red indicates that the battery is charging. Green indicates that the battery is fully charged. Yellow indicates that the battery is operating at a temperature that is too high or too low, or that something is not plugged in correctly. Check the charger and battery for proper connections. 9 Getting Started Getting Started 3. When charging is finished, disconnect the adapter from the power outlet. Disconnect the adapter from the phone by pressing the grey tabs on either side of the connector and pulling the connector out. Low Battery Indicator in the You can easily tell if your battery needs to be recharged by checking the battery strength indicator upper-right corner of your phones display. The presence of all three bars indicates a full charge, two bars indicates a smaller charge, and one bar indicates an even smaller charge. No bars (the battery icon is empty) means your battery must be charged. When the battery charge level gets low, the battery sensor blinks an empty battery icon (
), sounds a tone. If the battery level gets too low, the phone will turn off automatically. Unfortunately, if this happens youll lose whatever you are doing, including dropping your call. Watch the battery strength icon and make sure your battery is adequately charged. Switching the Phone On/Off 1. Open the phone. 2. Hold down the key for more than one second to switch the phone on. The service light on the right of the phone flashes, and an alert sounds. When the system locates services, the greeting message displays along with the date and time. If the phone is out of service, the icon appears in the display. In this case, you cannot place and receive calls. You can try again later when service is available. 3. When you wish to switch the phone off, hold down the key for more than two seconds. 10 11 Getting Started Call Functions Redialing the Last Call To redial the last call you made, press twice quickly. Your phone stores the last 10 incoming or outgoing calls. To recall any of these numbers, proceed as follows. 1. If there are any characters on the display, clear the display by holding down CLR for more than one second. 2. Press
. The list of outgoing calls are displayed. 3. Use the navigation key to scroll through the list until you select the required name or number. 4. Press to dial the number displayed. Call Functions Making a Call In Standby mode, key in the area code and phone number and press the key. Correcting the Number To clear ... Then .... The last digit displayed Press the CLR key. The whole display Hold down theCLR key for more than one second. Ending a Call When you have finished your call, briefly press or close the phone. If you press , the call time (length of the call) displays briefly and the phone returns to Standby mode. 12 13 Call FFunctions Three-Touch Dial Memory locations 100 through 169 are special three-
touch locations. Press the first and the second digit briefly, then hold down the third digit of the memory cell. For example: Location no. 123 Press 1 and 2 briefly, then hold down 3. The number (and name) stored is displayed, then dialed. Pause Dialing When you call automated system, like banking services, you are often required to enter a password or account number. Instead of manually entering the numbers each time, you can store the numbers in your Phone Book, separated by special characters called pauses. Your phone has two pause dialing methods:
Pause dialing from the Phone Book Manual pause dialing Call Functions Speed Dialing Once you have stored phone numbers in the phone book memory, you can dial them easily whenever you want. You can dial the stored phone number automatically without pressing the key. See below. One-Touch Dial Memory locations 01 through 09 are special one-touch locations. You can dial the phone numbers stored in the Phone Book memory from 01 through 09 simply by pressing one button. Press and hold the third digit of the memory location containing the number to be dialed. For example: Location no. 009 Press and hold 9. The number (and name) stored is displayed, then dialed. Two-Touch Dial Memory locations 10 through 99 are special two-touch locations. Press the second digit briefly, then hold down the third digit of the memory cell. For example: Location no. 023 Press 2 briefly and hold down 3. The number (and name) stored is displayed, then dialed. 14 15 Call Functions Call Functions Storing Pauses in a Phone Book Entry To store a number in your Phone Book that contains pauses:
1. Enter the phone number you want to store (such as the banks tele-service phone number). 2. Press the MENU key. The letter p displays in the number, meaning that a hard pause will occur at that point in the dialing sequence. Note: The digits before the p dial the tele-service. The p stops the dialing and waits for the tele-
service to prompt you for a number. The number following the p is your account number, PIN, etc. 3. Enter the digits that need to follow the pause (such as your account number). 4. Store the number in your Phone Book as you normally would by pressing the OK key and following the screen prompts. Pause Dialing from a Stored Phone Book Entry 1. Dial the number from the Phone Book. 2. Wait for the appropriate prompt for the number (credit card number, bank account number, etc.). 3. When prompted, press the key to send the DTMF number that follows your hard pause. SENDING DTMF flashed on the display and the transmitted tone sounds. Manual Pause Dialing You can enter pauses manually during the dialing process. 1. Enter the phone number of the service you want to connect to (such as a banks tele-service phone number). 2. Press the MENU key to insert a pause. The phone displays a p meaning a pause. Enter the number to be sent after the pause and then press the key. 3. After connecting, press the key again to transmit the additional number at the prompt from the tele-
service. 16 17 Call Functions Answering a Call When somebody calls you, the phone rings and the phone icon is displayed in the middle of the external display. If the caller can be identified, the callers phone number
(or name if pre-stored in your Phone Book) is displayed. If the caller cannot be identified, only the phone icon appears. 1. To answer a call, open the phone. If the phone is already open, press the key. 2. End the call by closing the phone or pressing the key. Note: You can answer a call while using the phone book or menu features. The current operation will be interrupted. Call Functions In-Use Options Your phone provides a number of functions that you can use during a call. You may not utilize all of these functions at all times. Many of the in-call options are network services. Press the MENU key during a call to access the following in-call options:
Mute/Quit: allows you to switch your phones microphone off, so that the other party cannot hear you. Example: You wish to say something to another person in the room but do not want the other party to hear you. Calls: allows you to access the Calls menu. Phone Book: allows you to access the Phone Book menu. Silent /Quit: does not transmit the key tones. It allows you to press keys without hearing annoying key tones during a call. Note: To communicate with answering machines or computerized telephony systems, the Silent keys option must be disabled. Send Tel #: sends DTMF tones of your number. My Phone #: shows your phone number. Version: allows you to view the software and hardware version of your phone. 18 19 Call Functions Call Functions Send DTMF: sends DTMF tones of the currently displayed number. DTMF (Dual Tone Multi Frequency) tones can be used to control electronic phone services such as bank-by-phone or voicemail. During a call, key in the digits you want to send as DTMF tones, for example, the bank account number and password. Then select this in-call option. Using Caller ID This feature tells you who is calling you by displaying the callers number when the phone rings. If a callers name and number are stored in your Phone Book, the corresponding name is also displayed. If you call someone who has this feature, your phone number will be displayed on the their phone. Note: Contact your service provider to setup the Caller ID service. Viewing Missed Calls Your phone keeps a list of calls that you do not answer when the phone is on and service is available. The phone indicates a missed call by displaying a text notification on the screen. Additionally, if caller information is available, the screen displays the phone number of the most recent missed call. Press to call the displayed number, or the OK key to save the number in Phone Book. Dropped Calls A dropped call can occur during a conversation in response to a signal fade or leaving a service area. In this case, the call ends and Call Dropped displays. Failed Calls A failed call can occur if your phone is out of calling range or the network is temporarily busy. Your phone responds to a failed call by displaying an appropriate message: Call Failed Out of Range or Call Failed Network Busy. 20 21 Call Functions Three-Way Calling This feature enables you to conduct conference calls with two separate parties at the same time. The phone records each party into the Outgoing Calls Log. Also, You are billed airtime for each outgoing call separately. Note: Contact your service provider to activate Three-
Way Calling. To place a Three-Way call:
1. During a conversation, press . The phone places the other party on hold. 2. Enter the phone number for the third party, and then press . The phone dials the third party. 3. When you are connected to the third party, press again to begin your three-way call. If one of the callers (not you) hangs up, you and remaining caller stay connected. If you initiated the call and you hang up first, all three parties are disconnected. Call Functions Call Waiting Call Waiting lets you receive a second call during conversation. Your phone notifies you of a call waiting by beeping an displaying Call Waiting. Your phone provides the option of turning the Call Waiting feature on and off (if you have subscribed to the service). Call Waiting is on by default in the phone. If you choose to have a undisturbed conversation, simply turn off the feature for the current call. Note: Contact your service provider to activate the Call Waiting service. To answer a waiting call:
1. To answer the call, press . The phone connects the calling party, and places the current party on hold. 2. Press again to switch between two parties. Note: If you do not respond to a Call Waiting notification, the phone will forward the call to voicemail or another number that you have set up. Contact your service provider for more information. Call Forwarding This feature provides the option of forwarding incoming calls to another phone number, even while your phone is off. Activating Call Forwarding does not affect outgoing calls made from this phone. Contact your service provider to activate Call Forwarding. 22 23 Call Functions Adjusting the Volume During a call, if you want to adjust the voice volume, use the volume keys on the left side of the phone. In Standby mode, you can adjust the ring volume using the same keys. Quick Switching to Slient Mode You can quickly switch your phone to the silent mode with a touch of # . Press and hold the key. The silent icon appears in the display. Press and hold # again to exit the silent mode. This feature is convenient when you are in a hurry to mute the phone sound such as when in a theater. Entering Text Changing Text Input Mode When using your phone, you will need to enter text at many times. For example, when storing a name in the Phone Book, creating your personal greeting or scheduling events in your calendar. You can enter alphanumeric characters into your phone by using your phones keypad. When you are prompted to enter text, the current text entry method will appear in the bottom of the display as T9, Abc, 123 or SYM. To change the input mode, press MENU and then press the navigation key to scroll to the mode you want and press OK . 24 25 Entering Text T9 Mode The T9 predictive text input mode allows you to enter words easily with a minimum of key presses. As you press each key, the phone selects a letter that makes up the word that it thinks you are typing, based on a built-
in dictionary. As a new letter is added, the word changes based on the key that you have pressed. 1. When you are in the T9 predictive text input mode, start entering a word by pressing keys 2 to 9. Press each key only once for one letter. The word that you are typing appears in the display. It may change with each key that you press. 2. Enter the whole word before editing or deleting any keystrokes. 3. If the word is correct, start entering the next word. Otherwise, press 0 repeatedly to display alternate word choices for the keys that you have pressed. 4. Complete each word with a space by pressing the #
key. To type words not found in the T9 mode, change the text input mode to the ABC mode. To delete letters, press CLR. Press and hold down CLR to erase entire words. Entering Text Alpha Mode When typing in Alpha mode, you should press key labeled with the required letter:
-Once for the first letter
-Twice for the second letter
-And so on. For example, you press 2 three times quickly to display the letter C , 5 two times quickly to display the letter K. So, this method is called Multi-tap typing. Refer to the table on next page for the list of characters assigned on each key. List of characters available:
Key Characters in the Order Displayed 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 . @ ? ! & : & #
C F I L O R V Y 2 3 4 5 6 S 8 Z 7 9 B A E D H G J K M N Q P T U W X 0 26
(Caps Lock mode) 27 Entering Text Entering Text To shift the case of the next letter(s) that you type, press
* one or more times. There are three shift states: Lower Case is indicated by abc in the right corner of the display, Initial Capital is Abc, and Capitals Lock is ABC. The cursor moves to the right when you press a different key. When entering the same letter twice (or a different letter on the same key), just wait for a few seconds for the cursor to move right automatically, and then select the next letter. If you enter a specific word in this mode the first time, the word is automatically added to your phones database, and offers the new word as an option for its keystroke sequence when you are in the T9(English) mode. Press # to insert a space. To move the cursor left or right through your text message, press the navigation key. Press CLR one or more times to clear letters to the left. Symbol Mode Symbol mode enables you enter symbols into a text message. Symbol 123456789
Press the navigation key to display more symbols up to Set 6. Press keys corresponding to the desired mark, then the phone automatically switches back to the text entry mode used just prior to selecting the Symbol mode. Number Mode Number mode enables you to enter numbers into a text message. Press keys corresponding to the desired digits, and manually switch back to text entry mode of choice. 28 29 Using tthe Menus Accessing a Menu Functions by Using its Shortcut The menu items (menu, submenus and setting options) are numbered and can be accessed quickly by using their shortcut number. 1. In Standby mode, press the MENU key to access the main menu. 2. Within three seconds, key in the first digit of the shortcut number. Repeat this for each digit of the shortcut number. 3. Find the setting of your choice pressing the navigation key and then press the OK key. Note: The numbers assigned to each menu function are indicated on the list on the next page. Using the Menus The phone offers a range of functions that allows you to tailor the phone to your needs. These functions are arranged in menus and submenus. The menus and submenus can be accessed by scrolling or by using the shortcuts. Accessing a Menu Functions by Scrolling 1. In Standby mode, press the MENU key to access the menu facility. Scroll with the navigation key to reach the desired main menu. Press the OK key. 2. If the menu contains any submenus,find the one you want by scrolling with the navigation key. Press the OK key to enter the submenu. If the menu you have selected contains submenus, repeat this step. 3. Scroll with the navigation key to find the setting of your choice. Press the OK key to confirm the chosen setting. Notes:
You can return the previous menu level by pressing the CLR key. You can exit the menu without changing the menu settings by pressing . 30 31 Using the Menus Using the Menus Main menu 7. Sounds 8. Voice Kit 9. Setup Main menu 1 1. Volume/Vibrate 2. Ringer Type 3. Key Beep 4. Alerts 5. Power On/Off 6. Roam Ringer 7. Whisper Mode 1. Quick Dial 2. Voice Memo 1. Location 2. Network 3. Data 4. Security 5. Others 6. Version Your Phones Main Menu Main menu 1. Calls Main menu 1 1. Outgoing 2. Incoming 3. Missed 4. Erase Log 5. Call Timer 6. Data Counter 2. Phone Book 3. Message 4. Mobile Web 5. Planner 6. Display 1. Find 2. Add 3. Rename Group 4. My Phone #
5. Memory 1. Send New Msg 2. Voice Mail 3. Inbox 4. Outbox 5. Draft 6. Saved 7. Wap Push 8. Msg Setting 9. Msg Setup 1. Get in Web 1. Today 2. Scheduler 3. Jump To Date 4. To Do List 5. Memo Pad 6. Countdown 7. Alarm Clock 8. World Time 9. Caldulator 1. Menu Style 2. Animation 3. Banner. 4. Backlight 5. Contrast 6. Auto Hyphen 7. Service LED 32 33 Calls You can use the Calls menu to:
View and dial the last outgoing or incoming numbers. Erase the numbers in the Call Log memory. View the duration of calls. Outgoing Menu 1-1 The phone stores up to 10 outgoing calls you dialed. When you access this menu, the list of outgoing calls is displayed. To ... Press ... Select an entry Dial the selected entry View the details up or down naviagiton key OK When you press the OK key, you can view the date/time stamp for the selected entry. If there is a Phone Book match, the name and the label display. Press the MENU key to access Options. The following options are available:
Talk: dials the selected number. Save (or Store if the phone number is not currently stored in the Phone Book): shows the phone book entry or stores the number in the Phone Book. Prepend: allows to add an area code or feature code to the number before calling the number. 34 Incoming Calls Menu 1-2 This option lets you view the last 10 calls received. (if you are subscribed to the caller ID service). When you access this menu, the last incoming calls are displayed. To... Press ... Select entry up or down navigation key Dial the selected entry View the details OK When you press the OK key, you can view the date/time stamp for the selected entry. If there is a Phone Book match, the name and the label display. Press MENU to access Options. The following options are available:
Talk: dials the selected number. Save (or Store if the phone number is not currently stored in the Phone Book): shows the phone book entry (or stores the number) in the Phone Book. Prepend: allows to add an area code or feature code to the number before calling the number. 35 Calls Missed Menu 1-3 Erase Logs Calls Menu 1-4 This option lets you view the last 10 calls missed. (if you are subscribed to the caller ID service). When you access this menu, the last missed calls are displayed. To... Press ... Select entry up or down navigation key Dial the selected entry View the details OK When you press the OK key, you can view the date/time stamp for the selected entry. If there is a Phone Book match, the name and the label display. Press MENU to access Options. The following options are available:
Talk: dials the selected number. Save (or Store if the phone number is not currently stored in the Phone Book): shows the phone book entry (or stores the number) in the Phone Book. Prepend: allows to add an area code or feature code to the number before calling the number. You can erase the numbers stored in the Call Log memory. Outgoing: The numbers you called are erased. Incoming: The numbers you received are erased. Missed: The numbers you missed are erased. All Calls: All calls you dialed and received are erased. Call Timer Menu 1-5 Using this option, you can view the call time of the last call, as well as total air time for all calls since you last reset the timer. Last Call: the date, time, and length of your last call. Total: the total number of calls and total airtime. You can reset the total airtime by Erase Total option. LifeTime: the total air time for your phone since it was purchased. This airtime log is kept for historical and maintenance reasons, and cannot be erased. Erase Total: resets the call timers. The counter is reset to zero and begins counting the next time you make or receive a call. 36 37 Calls Data Counter Menu 1-6 Phone Book Use Data Counter to view the amount of data that has been sent or received (or a total of both) using the data services that your phone supports. These are services such as Verizon Mobile Web and Get It Now. The Data Counter can be a helpful tool for monitoring data usage, especially if your service agreement has specified limits. The Phone book allows you to store frequently used phone numbers and the associated names in your personal directory to make it easy for you to make a call without having to remember or enter the phone number. You can store up to 169 numbers. Transmit: View the amount of data that your phone has transmitted since last being reset. Received: View the amount of data (in kilobytes) that Find Menu 2-1 your phone has received since last being reset. Total: View the amount of data (in kilobytes) that your phone has transmitted and received since last being reset. Erase Total: Erase (reset) the Transmit, Received, and Total data counters. There are several ways to display your phonebook entries. By Name: the list of names is displayed in alphabetical order. Enter the first of the persons name you want to find. Use the navigation key to scroll through the list of possible matches. Additional letters may be entered to narrow the name matches. By Entry: the list of names is displayed in numerical order of the Speed Dial number. By Group: the list of group is displayed. Use the navigation key to scroll through the desire group. Then, press OK to display the entries of the selected group. When the desired entry displays, press SEND to place a call. 38 39 Phone Book If you press MENU , you can access the following options:
Edit: allows you to edit phone number, name, or entry number. Set Secret option prevents the number from being displayed on the screen. Set Speed Dial option allows you to designate the number to be dialed as a speed-dial number. Erase: erases the number. Add Phone Book Menu 2-2 This menu allows you to store a number with a name in your Phone Book. Using this feature, you can keep someones information together. It also helps you to find numbers easily in the Phone Book. Creating a New Entry 1. Press the digit keys to enter the phone number up to Add New: allows you to add a new number. 32 digits. 2. Press OK to save the number. 3. If the New Entry option is highlighted, press the OK key to enter information of the number in the phone book. If not, skip to step 7. 4. You can have seven items. To edit each items proceed as follows. To ... Then press the... scroll through the items navigation key edit or enter each item MENU key save each item OK key go to the previous screen CLR key 40 41 Phone Book Phone Book Name: enter a name up to 12 characters. Phone Number: enter your new telephone number. Location: enter a desired memory location or press the navigation key to assign the available memory location. Category: select one among Voice Dial, Speed Dial, Home, Office, Mobile, Pager or Fax and No Label using the navigation key. Relation: select one among No group,Family,Friend, Office,No Name1. Inactive: select the desired ring type. Secret: select secret On or Off. 4. Press the OK key to save the new phone number. Rename Group Menu 2-3 This option allows you to edit the name of group. No Group, Family, Friend, Office and No Name1 are available. My Phone #
Menu 2-4 This option displays the telephone number of the phone. Memory Menu 2-5 This option shows the memory information for the phone book and the voice dial. 42 43 Message Your phone can receive voicemail notification, text messages, and pages. Also, your phone can send text messages and pages if your system supplier provides this service. When the phone receives a message, an alert sound, a text notification display and the name and phone number of the caller if available. The New Message icon remains on the screen until you read the new text, numeric page or WebBrowser message, or until you listen to the new voicemail messages. Incoming messages are received even when your phone is in Lock mode. However, the screen will not display information about the message. To access a message, or to return a call other than an emergency or priority number, unlock the phone to proceed. If you are on a conversation, and you receive an incoming message, your phone automatically mutes the ringer (this is to avoid ringing in your ear while you are trying to converse). Send New Msg Menu 3-1 You can create short text messages, and numeric pages, to send to other mobile numbers. Note: Transmitting message is only supported in digital networks, and if service is provided by your service provider. 44 Messages 1. Enter the Send-To phone number using the numeric keys and press OK . 2. Enter the message contents, or a numeric page. For further details on how to enter text, see page 25. Note: A total of 160 characters, including e-mail address character length if send-to destination is an e-mail address, can be entered for each message, can be entered for each message. 3. When entering is finished, press OK . 4. If you wish to edit the following available options before transmitting the message. Voice Mail Menu 3-2 When the voicemail notification displays, press OK or to scroll to the desired voice mail and press to review and re-review the message. If multiple new voicemails are received but not reviewed, then only the last received voicemail information will be displayed. The display information will include time / date stamp, number of new voicemails, and callback number. While reviewing the message, press MENU to access the following options. Listen: allows you to listen to voicemail message. The phone will automatically dial your voicemail box. Reset: resets the message icon and the counter for new voicemail messages, if desired. (The system resets the counter automatically after you listen to all new messages.) 45 Messages Inbox Menu 3-3 Outbox Messages Menu 3-4 Your phone can store up to 100 pages and text messages, depending on the length of the message. If the message memory is full, a message is displayed and the phone rejects additional messages until you erase the stored messages. Press up or down navigation key to scroll to the desired one of the messages in the list and press OK. The phone displays the message contents. If necessary, press up or down navigation key to scan through the contents. While viewing a message, press MENU to access the following options. Reply: allows you to send a reply message to the sender. Forward: allows you to send the message to the other person. Delete: deletes the message. Save addr: allows you to save the senders phone number into your Phonebook. For further information on storing a number, see page 52. Save cb#: allows you to save the call back number of the message. Your phone can store up up to 95 transmitted messages until the total length of the message exceeds 16 kbytes. You can review or resend the messages stored in Outbox, if needed. When you enter the Outbox menu, you can see the message list. The marker ! next to the message means that it is urgent. Press up or down navigation to scroll to the desired message and press OK to review the message. The display shows the date and time when the message is created, the designated number (and name if saved in Phonebook) and message contents. If necessary, press up or down navigation to scan through the contents. While reviewing a message, press MENU to access the following options. Re-send: allows you to resend the message. For further information on sending a message, see page 94. Delete: deletes the message from Outbox. 46 47 Messages Draft Menu 3-5 Msg Setting Messages Menu 3-8 Via this menu, you can preset several options for new message transmission and delete all messages. Erase Msg Menu 3-9 Using this menu option, you can erase all messages in each of three message boxes; Voice mail box, Inbox and Outbox. You can also erase all of the messages at one time. Messages in the Draft Box are those that have been composed but never sent. You can return to the Draft Box at any time to view, edit, or send a draft message. Saved Menu 3-6 Once you view messages in your Inbox folder, you can then save the message to the Saved Box. Wap Push Menu 3-7 Occasionally, Verizon Wireless may send notifications to your phone in the form of Web Alerts. These alerts may contain information regarding new services or updates. When you receive an alert, you will receive a text notification and hear an audible tone. 48 49 Mobile Web Planner Your phoen comes equipped with Wireless Web Internet acess through a Browser. The Browser displays immediate information through your phoen. You can view specially designed versions of popular sites which include sprots, weather, news, stock quotes, etc. Browsing the Web through your phone is not the same as using your PC since site providers have only selected certain aspects of the available sites to present to the wireless phone users and have removed most graphics. Each time you launch the Browser, the phone will connect tot he Internet. Rates and pricing vary according to your service option. For further information contact your service provider. Note: The phone mnust be in a digital network to use the Browser. Get In Web Menu 4-1 This menu allows you to launch the Browser. You can also launch the Browser by pressing the internet hot key in idle mode. Once connected, the Home page (or the last page visited), will be displayed. To exit the Browser press the END key or close the phones flip cover. The Scheduler feature enables you to:
Keep track of important dates and events Create a list of things to do Check the time in another part of the world Use the phone as a calculator Today Menu 5-1 Schedule up to nine events for the current day by indicating each events start and end time. Set alarms for events so that you can be alerted before an event takes place. Events scheduled for future dates automatically appear on your Today events schedule for the present day. Add a New Event 1. Enter your event information. You can enter up to 32 characters. 2. Press OK to accept your entry. 3. Enter the Start Time and Date, and press OK. Note: Press the navigation left, right key to toggle between AM and PM. 4. Enter the End Time and Date, and press OK. 50 51 51 Planner Planner 5. Select an alarm to notify your of your event by pressing the navigation key. The available alarm options are: 10 minutes Before, 30 minutes Before, 1 hour Before, No Alarm and On time. 6. Press OK to save your event. Adding, Editing, or Erasing an Event If you already scheduled events when you select the Today menu option, the events are displayed. Press the navigation key to select the event you want to view. If necessary, press OK to display more contents in the selected to do item. The following options are available when you press MENU. Add new: allows you to add a new event. Edit : allows you to edit a scheduled event. Erase : allows you to erase a selected event. Erase All: allows you to erase all events. After you select an option, press OK. Then follow the screen prompt. Scheduler Menu 5-2 This option allows you to view in calendar format the current month, or a past of future month. In this option, the current date is highlighted on the calendar. Days with the scheduled events are underlined. Creating a New Event Scroll to the desired date in the calendar using the navigation keys and volume keys and then press to confirm the selected date. And schedule a new event referring Today. Adding, Editing, or Erasing a Event When a stored memo is displayed, press MENU to access the Options. For further details on Options, refer Today. Jump To Date Menu 5-3 This feature allows you to specify the calendar date you want to view. Once at your desired date you can enter, edit and delete events in your calendar. 1. Enter the date using the numeric keys, and press OK. 2. The calendar screen displays the newly entered highlighted date. 3. Pressing the MENU key displays the options Vew and Add new. 4. Scroll to view and press the OK key. To create, edit or erase the events, refer to Today. 52 53 Planner The following options available when you press OK . New Event allows you to add a new task. Edit Event allows you to edit a saved task. Erase Event allows you to erase the selected task. Exit: exits the Options menu. After you select an option, press OK . Then follow the screen prompt. Memo Pad Menu 5-5 This menu help you know how much time it takes you to do something. Count down Menu 5-6 This menu help you know how much time it takes you to do something, or how many months, days, hours and minutes until a specific day. You can create up to 5 Count down timers using this menu. Planner To Do List Menu 5-4 This feature allows you to draw up a list of tasks to be done and assign a priority and deadline to each task. Creating the To Do List Item 1. Enter the first task. Note: You can enter up to 32 characters. For further details on how to enter characters, see page 36. 2. Press OK to confirm. 3. Enter your deadline using the numeric keys. Note: Press the volume key on the left side of the phone to toggle between AM and PM. 4. Select high or low priority using the navigation key and then press OK. 5. Your phone saves your input. Adding, Editing and Erasing an To Do Item If tasks are already defined in the To Do List when you select the To Do List menu option (4.5), the current contents are displayed with the deadline and the associated priority (! for High or - for Low). Scroll to the desired item by pressing the navigation key. If necessary, press OK to display more contents in the selected to do item. 54 55 Planner Creating a Count down Timer 1. Enter a name for your new Count down item and press OK . 2. Enter the date and time that you want to count down to or from. Notes:
Press the volume key on the left side of the phone to toggle between AM and PM. You can enter the years between 1980 and 2099 for dates. 3. Press OK to save the item. Alarm Clock Planner Menu 5-7 Your phone has an alarm clock function with three separate alarms.Each alarm can be set to go off once, or daily at a set programmed time. Once you set an alarm, it is easy to change its time or to turn it off. 1. Select the alarm you want to set by pressing the navigation key. Your choices are Once, Daily, or Off. 2. Press the OK to select the desired alarm. 3. Follow the prompts to save the alarm setting of choice. Adding, Editing and Erasing a Countdown Timer 4. Press the CLR to return to the previous menu. If a Countdown timer is already defined when you select the Countdown menu option (4.5), the defined Countdown timer is displayed. If there are more than one items defined in the menu, scroll to the desired item by pressing the navigation key, and press OK . The following options are available when you press OK . New Event: allows you to create a new item. Edit Event: allows you to edit the item. Erase Event: allows you to delete the item. Exit: exits the Options menu. After you select an option, press OK . Then follow the screen prompt. 56 World Time Menu 5-8 This menu allows you to check the current time for Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) and 24 major cities around the world:
Select the city corresponding to your time zone by pressing the navigation keys one or more times. The local date and time are displayed. 57 Planner Calculator Menu 5-9 Display Using this feature, you can use the phone as a calculator. The calculator provides the basic arithmetic functions: addition, subtraction, multiplication and division. Using the Calculator 1. Enter the first number using the numeric keys. 2. Press the navigation key to set the operator for your calculation until the required arithmetic symbol appears: + (add), - (subtract), x (multiply), / (divide). 3. Enter the second number. 4. To calculate the result, press OK . 5. Repeat steps 1 to 4 as many times as required. Each time you change the operator, the previous calculation is performed and the result is displayed as the top number in the display. Notes:
To erase any mistakes and clear the display, press CLR. Use * to enter a decimal point and # to change the sign of a number to a negative (-). You can set the menu style, standby mode animation, customize backlight settings, and more in the Display sub menu. Menu Style Menu 6-1 Choose how main menus appear in the display when the left soft key () Menu is pressed. Select Icon to display main menus as graphics. Select Nature to display main menus in a list (text) format. Animation Menu 6-2 Your phone displays graphics images when it is turned on or off. This setting is just for fun and grins so have fun with it. You have a few graphics to select from for these power on and off images. The following options are available:
Opening: You can select an image to be displayed when you switch the phone on. Closing: You can select an image to be displayed when you switch the phone off. Wall Paper: You can select an image to be displayed in idle mode. 58 59 Display Sounds Banner Sounds Menu 6-3 Create your own personalized greeting that appears in the display when your phone is in standby mode. The Sounds menu provides a variety of options to customize audio properties for such things as ringers, keypad tones,alerts, shut down sounds, and more. Backlight Menu 6-4 Volume/Vibrate Menu 7-1 Set backlight options for the LCD and keypad. Contrast Menu 6-5 Sets the LCD contrast. Press the navigation keys or the volume keys on the left side of the phone) to adjust the contrast. The more the bars, the darker. Auto Hyphen Menu 6-6 When you dial a number, hypernation is performed automatically by the phone. Service LED Menu 6-7 Turn the Service LED on or off. Use the Volume/Vibrate sub menu to set the default volume for incoming calls and alarms. Ringer Type Menu 7-2 This option allows you to set a unique ring for voice calls, messages, data/fax, alarm, and schedule. Select a unique ring tone from each melodies. As you change it, it sounds for a few seconds. Calls: allows you to set a unique ring for incoming calls. Messages: allows you to have distinctive rings for voicemail notifications, text messages, and browser messages respectively. Alarm: allows you to have a distinctive ring for an alarm. Data: allows you to be alerted with a distinctive ring tone when you are faxed or received a data through the phone (dependent on the network ). Planner: allows you to have a distinctive ring for an Planner alarm. 60 61 Sounds Key Beep Menu 7-3 Power On/Off Sounds Menu 7-5 This option allows you to adjust the tone volume that the keypad generates when you press a key. Set your phone to play a sound whenever you turn the phone on and off. Press the navigation keys up or down to adjust the volume. The more the bars, the louder the volume, and no bar means the the ringer is turned off. Alerts Menu 7-4 Minute Beep: With this menu option set to ON, the phone sounds an alert 10 seconds before each elapsed minute to remind you of the length of the current call. Service : With this menu option set to ON, the phone beeps when you exit service area or when you return to a service area. Connect: You can set your phone to sound the connect tone when your call is connected to the system. Disconnect: You can set your phone to sound the connect tone when a call is disconnected or dropped. Fade: You can set your phone to sound when its fade. Roam: You can set your phone to sound when its roaming. Privacy: You can set your phone to sound when privacy mode. 62 Roam Ringer Menu 7-6 Set your phone to sound a unique tone when a call is received outside a network service area. This feature is set to Off by default. Whisper Mode Menu 7-7 This feature allows you to talk in a low volume during a phone conversation and still be heard by the party. 63 Voice Memo Voice KKit Menu 8-2 You can use your phone to record voice memos for later playback. You can also record the caller on the other end of the line during a phone conversation. There is limited space for the number and length of recordings. The maximum number of voice memos is 10. The maximum length for a single voice memo is 60 seconds. Voice Kit In this menu, you can use the phones voice features such as:
Quick dial voice memo Voice Dial Menu 8-1 Quick Dial lets you dial a person by saying the name youve recorded for that person. Before you can use Quick Dial, youll need to record the names you wish to use. Tips for recording Quick Dial names Record names in a quiet area. Choose a name that is not too long or short. Speak clearly and distinctly when you record. Avoid recording names that sound alike. 64 65 Setup Many different features of your phone can be customized to suit your preferences. Location Menu 9-1 With this option, emergency calls allow rescue personnel to find you when they otherwise might not know your location, provided that you are in a service area and service is available. This feature can also be turned off to ensure your privacy. For a stronger location signal, make sure the antenna is fully extended. Setting The settings allow you to turn the Location On or 911 Only. 66 Network Set NAM Setup Menu 9-2 Your Samsung phone can store two NAMs (NAM stands for numerical assignment module - essentially your telephone number). This means you can have two phone numbers on your phone, and you can quickly and easily switch your service back and forth between the two numbers. Press up or down navigation key to select NAM 1 or NAM 2. If you change the NAM, the phone will reboot and acquire service using the new NAM setting. Roam Option The system selection feature of your phone enables you to choose how your phone will roam. Roaming is a feature which is only relevant in areas where there are usually at least two cellular service providers which are referred to as A and B and have valid roaming agreements. Your service provider will provide you information about this service or the best roaming methods for you. Home Only: With this setting, you cannot roam. If your home system is not available then your call will not be connected and the No Service indicator is displayed. In some service areas an operator may come on line asking you how you would like to pay for the call. 67 Setup Automatic: With this setting, your phone will always try your calls using the Preferred Roaming List loaded into your phone first, but if your phone cannot find any preferred systems, then it will attempt to acquire any digital or analog system. Data Menu 9-3 Use the Data sub menu to set the Auto Detect feature for when you receive data and to set the Data Baud Rate. The sub menus listed in the following table appear in the display. Auto Detect Set data auto detect capabilities. Options are data off, data for next call, and data until powered off. Baud Rate Set the baud rate for data connections. Options are Auto, 19200, 38400, 57600, 115200,and 230400. 68 Setup Menu 9-4 Security Lock Phone When the phone is locked, you cannot operate the phone until you enter the lock code. The following options are available:
Never: the phone remains unlocked. On Power up: the phone locks automatically at the next time your phone turned on. Now: the phone locks immediately. To place a call on Lock mode:
To place an emergency call, enter the number and then press SEND. The phone recognizes emergency numbers and the seven emergency numbers of menu 0-4. To place normal outgoing calls, press MENU to display the Lock Code screen, and then enter the lock code. When the Standby screen displays, enter the phone number, and then press SEND . To unlock the phone, press MENU and enter the lock code. The phone returns to Standby mode. Change Lock This feature allows you to change your current lock code to a new one. The lock code is preset to 0000 at factory. Enter a new, four-digit lock code, then press OK . 69 Setup Emergency Number Your phone provides the option of storing emergency numbers. All emergency numbers can be manually dialed at any time even when your phone is locked or all default priority numbers are depending on your service provider. Voice Privacy When in an area that supports the voice privacy option and it is enabled, the phone makes an audible beep. Your servic e provider must enable this feature. Contact your service provider verify if this feature is available on their network. Restriction This feature allows you to restrict your calls and phonebook. Erase Memory This menu allows you to erase all the numbers in your Phone Book. When a confirmation message displays, press OK to clear the memory. Setup Reset Phone Resetting the phone erases all of your saved options and returns them to the factory default settings, and erases your Phone Book, Call Logs, and SMS messages. The phone reboots (turns itself off then on), restores the default settings, and then returns to Standby mode. Others Menu 9-5 The Others sub menu allows you to set call options such as Shortcut, Call Answer, Auto Retry, Language, Clock Set.. Shortcut The up navigation key can be customized to launch any one of numerous applications or functions from standby mode. Use the Shortcut sub menu to choose the application that you wish the navigation up key to launch. 70 71 Setup Call Answer With this menu option set to ON, the phone allows you to select a specific answer mode when receiving an incoming call. Your phone can be preset to answer when you do any of the following:
by Send key: You can answer the phone by pressing SEND. by Any Key: You can answer the phone by pressing any key. by flip up: You can answer the phone by opening the phone. Auto Retry With this menu option set to ON, when you place a call and the call does not connect, the phone automatically redials a failed call until it connects. Press OK to toggle between Off, every 10 seconds, every 30 seconds and every 60 seconds. Press the same key to save your option. Language Sets the language of voice prompts, menus and key-
input. Select the desired language by pressing up or down navigation key. The available languages are English and Spanish. Note: This setting does not affect the Web Browser. 72 Setup Clock Set This option allows you to set the current date and time. To set the date and time, proceed as follows:
1. Enter the current time and date using the numeric keys. The month, day, hour and minute must be entered with 2 digits. The year requires all four digits. And you must enter the hour in 24-hour format. 3. When entering is completed, press OK to save the time and date. If you enter a wrong time, the phone displays Invalid time and prompts you to enter again. Version Menu 9-6 This option allows you to view the software and hardware versions of your phone. This feature is helpful if you have to call customer care. 73 Health and Safety Information Exposure to Radio Frequency (RF) Signals Your wireless phone is a radio transmitter and receiver. It is designed and manufactured not to exceed the emission limits for exposure to radio frequency (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 the safety standards previously set by both U.S. and international standards bodies:
American National Standards Institute (ANSI) IEEE. C95.1-1992 National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurement (NCRP). Report 86. 1986 International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection (ICNIRP) 1996 Ministry of Health (Canada), Safety Code 6. The standards include a substantial safety margind 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 1.6W/kg *.
*In the U.S. 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 substantial margin of safety to give additional protection for the public and to account for any variations in measurements. 74 Health and Safety Information Health and Safety Information Tests for SAR are conducted using standard operating positions specified by the FCC 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 operation 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. (Body-worn measurements may 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. For body worn operation, to maintain compliance with FCC RF exposure guidelines, use only Samsung-
approved accessories. When carrying the phone while it is on, use the specific Samsung-supplied or approved carrying case, holster, or other body-worn accessory. Use of non-Samsung-approved accessories may violate FCC RF exposure guidelines and should be avoided. 75 For additional information concerning exposure to radio frequency signals, see the following websites:
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) RF Safety program (select Information on Human Exposure to RF Fields from Cellular and PCS Radio Transmitters):
http://www.fcc.gov/oet/rfsafety Cellular Telecommunications Industry Association (CTIA): http://www.wow-com.com World Health Organization (WHO) International Commission on Non-lonizing Radiation Protection (select Qs & As):
http://www.who.int/emf United Kingdom, National Radiological Protection Board: http://www.nrpb.org.uk U.S.Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Center for Devices and Radiological Health:
http://www.fda.gov/cdrh/consumer/
76 Health and Safety Information Health and Safety Information Precautions When Using Batteries Your phone is powered by a rechargeable Li-ion standard battery. Never use any charger or battery that is damaged in any way. Use the battery only for its intended purpose. If you use the phone near the networks base station, it uses less power; talk and standby time are greatly affected by the signal strength on the cellular network and the parameters set by the network operator. Battery charging time depends on the remaining battery charge and the type of battery and charger used. The battery can be charged and discharged hundreds of times, but it will gradually wear out. When the operation time (talk time and standby time) is noticeably shorter than normal, it is time to buy a new battery. If left unused, a fully charged battery will discharge itself over time. Use only Samsung-approved batteries and recharge your battery only with Samsung-approved chargers. When a charger is not in use, disconnect it from the power source. Do not leave the battery connected to a charger for more than a week, since overcharging may shorten its life. Extreme temperatures will affect the charging capacity of your battery: it may require cooling or warming first. Do not leave the battery in hot or cold places, such as in a car in summer or winter conditions, as you will reduce the capacity and life-time of the battery. Always try to keep the battery at room temperature. A phone with a hot or cold battery may temporarily not work, even when the battery is fully charged. Li-ion batteries are particularly affected by temperatures below 0 C (32 F). Do not short-circuit the battery. Accidental short circuiting can occur when a metallic object (coin, clip or pen) causes a direct connection between the + and - terminals of the battery (metal strips on the back of the battery), for example when you carry a spare battery in a pocket or bag. Short-circuiting the terminals may damage the battery or the object causing the short-circuit. Dispose of used batteries in accordance with local regulations. Always recycle. Do not dispose of batteries in a fire. 77 78 Health and Safety Information Health and Safety Information Road Safety Your wireless phone gives you the powerful ability to communicate by voice - almost anywhere, anytime. But an important responsibility accompanies the benefits of wireless phones, on that every user must uphold. When driving a car, driving is your first responsibility. When using your wireless phone behind the wheel of a car, practice good common sense and remember the following tips:
1. Get to know your wireless phone and its features such as speed dial and redial. If available, these features help you to place your call without taking your attention off the road. 2. When available, use a hands free device. If possible, add an additional layer of convenience and safety to your wireless phone with one of the many hands free accessories available today. 3. Position your wireless phone within easy reach. Be able to access your wireless phone without removing your eyes from the road. If you get an incoming call at an inconvenient time, if possible, let your voice mail answer it for you. 4. Let the person you are speaking with know you are driving; if necessary, suspend the call in heavy traffic or hazardous weather conditions. Rain, sleet, snow, ice, and even heavy traffic can be hazardous. 5. Do not take notes or look up phone numbers while driving. Jotting down a to do list or flipping through your address book takes attention away from your primary responsibility, driving safely. 6. Dial sensibly and assess the traffic; if possible, place calls when you are not moving or before pulling into traffic. Try to plan calls when your car will be stationary. If you need to make a call while moving, dial only a few numbers, check the road and your mirrors, then continue. 7. Do not engage in stressful or emotional conversations that may be distracting. Make people you are talking with aware you are driving and suspend conversations that have the potential to divert your attention from the road. 8. Use your wireless phone to call for help. Dial 9-1-1 or other local emergency number in the case of fire, traffic accident or medical emergencies. Remember, it is a free call on your wireless phone!
9. Use your wireless phone to help others in emergencies. If you see an auto accident, crime in progress or other serious emergency where lives are in danger, call 9-1-1 or other local emergency number, as you would want others to do for you. 10. Call roadside assistance or a special non-
emergency wireless assistance number when necessary. If you see a broken-down vehicle posing no serious hazard, a broken traffic signal, a minor traffic accident where no one appears injured, or a vehicle you know to be stolen, call roadside assistance or other special non-emergency wireless number. 79 80 Health and Safety Information Health and Safety Information Operating Environment Remember to follow any special regulations in force in any area and always switch off your phone whenever it is forbidden to use it, or when it may cause interference of danger. When connecting the phone or any accessory to another device, read its users guide for detailed safety instructions. Do not connect incompatible products. As with other mobile radio transmitting equipment, users are advised that for the satisfactory operation of the equipment and for the safety of personnel, it is recommended that the equipment should only be used in the normal operating position (held to your ear with the antenna pointing over your shoulder). Electronic Devices Most modern electronic equipment is shielded from radio frequency (RF) signals. However, certain electronic equipment may not be shielded against the RF signals from your wireless phone. consult the manufacturer to discuss alternatives. Pacemakers Pacemaker manufacturers recommend that a minimum separation of 6 inches (15 cm) be maintained between a wireless phone and a pacemaker to avoid potential interference with the pacemaker. These recommendations are consistent 81 with the independent research by and recommen-
dations of Wireless Technology Research. Persons with pacemakers:
Should always keep the phone more than 6 inches (15cm) from their pacemaker when the phone is switched on;
Should not carry the phone in a breast pocket;
Should use the ear opposite the pacemaker to minimize the potential for interference. If you have any reason to suspect that interference is taking place, switch off your phone immediately. Hearing Aids Some digital wireless phones may interfere with some hearing aids. In the event of such interference, you may want to consult your hearing aid manufacturer to discuss alternatives. Other Medical Devices If you use any other personal medical devices, 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. Switch off your phone in health care facilities when any regulations posted in these areas instruct you to do so.Hospitals or health care facilities may be using equipment that could be sensitive to external RF energy. Vehicles RF signals may affect improperly installed or inadequately shielded electronic systems in motor vehicles. Check with the manufacturer or its representative regarding your vehicle. 82 Health and Safety Information Health and Safety Information You should also consult the manufacturer of any equipment that has been added to your vehicle. Posted Facilities Switch off your phone in any facility where posted notices so require. Potentially Explosive Atmospheres Switch off your phone when in any area with a potentially explosive atmosphere and obey all signs and instrutions. Sparks in such areas could cause an explosion or fire resulting in bodily injury or even death. Users are advised to switch off the phone while at a refueling point (service station). Users are reminded of the need to observe restrictions on the use of radio equipment in fuel depots (fuel storage and distribution areas), chemical plants or where blasting operations are in progress. Areas with a potentially explosive atmosphere are often but not always clearly marked. They include below deck on boats; 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 vehicle engine. Emergency Calls This phone, like any wireless phone, operates using radio signals, wireless and landline networks as well as user-programmed functions which cannot guarantee connection in all conditions. Therefore, you should never rely solely upon any wireless phone for essential communications (for example, medical emergencies). Remember, to make or receive any calls the phone must be switched on and in a service area with adequate signal strength. Emergency calls may not be possible on all wireless phone networks or when certain network services and/or phone features are in use. Check with local service providers. To make an emergency call:
1. If the phone is not on, switch it on. 2. Key in the emergency number for your present location (for example, 911 or other official emergency number). Emergency numbers vary by location. 3. Press the <SEND> key. If certain features are in use (keyguard, restrict calls, etc.), you may first need to turn those features off before you can make an emergency call. Consult this document and your local cellular service provider. When making an emergency call, remember to give all the necessary information as accurately as possible. Remember that your phone may be the only means of communication at the scene of an accident - do not cut off the call until given permission to do so. 83 84 Reference Information Health and Safety Information Health and Safety Information Other Important Safety Information Care and Maintenance Only qualified personnel should service the phone, or install the phone in a vehicle. Faulty installation or service may be dangerous and may invalidate any warranty which may apply to the unit. Check regularly that all wireless phone equipment in your vehicle is mounted and operating properly. Do not store or carry flammable liquids, gases or explosive materials in the same compartment as the phone, its parts or accessories. For vehicles equipped with an air bag, remember that an air bag inflates with great force. Do not place objects, including both installed or portable wireless equipment in the area over the air bag or in the air bag deployment area. If in vehicle wireless equipment is improperly installed and the air bag inflates, serious injury could result. Switch off your phone before boarding an aircraft. The use of wireless phones in aircraft may be dangerous to the operation of the aircraft, and may be illegal. Failure to observe these instructions may lead to the suspension or denial of telephone services to the offender, or legal action, or both. Your phone is a product of superior design and craftsmanship and should be treated with care. The suggestions below will help you to fulfill any warranty obligations and allow you to enjoy this product for many years. When using your phone, battery, charger, or any accessory:
Keep it and all its parts and accessories out of small childrens reach. Keep it dry. Precipitation, humidity and liquids contain minerals that will corrode electronic circuits. Do not use or store it in dusty, dirty areas as its moving parts can be damaged. Do not store it in hot areas. High temperatures can shorten the life of electronic devices, damage batteries, and warp or melt certain plastics. Do not store it in cold areas. When the phone warms up (to its nomal operating temperature), moisture can form inside the phone, which may damage the phones electronic circuit boards. Do not drop, knock or shake it. Rough handling can break internal circuit boards. 85 86 Health and Safety Information Health and Safety Information Do not use harsh chemicals, cleaning solvents, or strong detergents to clean it. Wipe it with a soft cloth slightly dampened in a mild soap-and-water solution. Do not paint it. Paint can clog the devices moving parts and prevent proper operation. Use only the supplied or an approved replacement antenna. Unauthorized antennas, modifications of attachments could damage the phone and may violate regulations governing radio devices. If the phone, battery, charger, or any accessory is not working properly, take it to your nearest qualified service facility. The personnel there will assist you, and if neccessary, arrange for service. 87 Acknowledging Special Precautions and the FCC and Industry Canada Notice Cautions Modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void the user's authority to operate the equipment. Information to User This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures:
Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna. Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver. Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected. Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/ TV technician for help. 88 Glossary Airtime - Actual time spent talking on the wireless phone. Most carriers bill customers based on how many minutes of airtime they use each month. Antenna - A device for transmitting or receiving signals. The size and shape of antennas is determined, in part, by the frequency of the signal they receive. Wireless phones and the base station must have antennas. Base Station - The fixed radio transmitter/receiver that maintains communications with mobile radio telephones within a given area.
(Typically called a cell or cell site) CDMA - (Code Division Multiple Access) A spread-
spectrum approach to digital transmission. With CDMA, each conversion is digitized and then tagged with a code. The mobile phone deciphers only a particular code to pick the right conversation off the air. The transmitted signal is just above noise level across the available bandwidth. Channel - Communications signals transmit along paths called channels. Codec - Compression & Decompression. Deactivation - The process of rendering a wireless phone inactive. 89 Glossary Glossary DTMF - (Dual-tone Modulated Frequency ) You send DTMF signals when you enter numbers by pressing the digit keys. EVRC - (Enhanced Variable Rate Codec) EVRC is a new global standard for compressing and decompressing voice signals. EVRC uses a lower bit rate (the number of bits sent per second) than existing CDMA vocoders, while providing significant improvements in voice quality. This technology enables your phone to provide superb voice quality while benefiting from the ability to process more cellular voice calls using less bandwidth than the voice codecs in CDMA networks today. Frequency - A measure based on time, as one or more waves per second, in an electrical or light wave information signal. A signals frequency is stated in cycles-per-second or Hertz (Hz). Hands-Free - A feature that permits a driver to use a wireless phone without lifting or holding the handset - an important safety feature for automobiles, tractors and most other motorized vehicles. LCD - (Liquid Crystal Display) Commonly used to refer to the screen display on the wireless phone. LED - (Light Emitting Diode) Commonly used to refer to a small light on the wireless phone or on the Desktop Charger. The LED lights on the phone to indicate an incoming call. The lights on the charger indicate that battery charging is taking place. Prepend - The addition of a prefix, such as an area code, to a phone number. RF - Radio Frequency Roaming - The ability to use a wireless phone to make and receive calls in places outside of the home service area. Service Charge - The amount paid each month to receive wireless service. Standby Time - The amount of time a fully charged wireless portable or transportable phone can be on and idle without being in use. (See Talk Time) Talk Time - The length of time a person can talk on a portable or transportable wireless phone without recharging the battery. Vocoder - Voice Coder. A device used to convert speech into digital signals. Wireless - Radio-based Systems that allow transmission of telephone or data signals through the air without a physical connection, such as a metal wire (copper) or fiber optic cable. 90 91 safety-end-NorthA 1/27/03 2:05 PM Page 125 Health and Safety Information Exposure to Radio Frequency (RF) Signals Your wireless phone is a radio transmitter and receiver. It is designed and manufactured not to exceed the emission limits for exposure to radio frequency (RF) energy set by the Federal Communications Commission
(FCC) 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 the safety standards that were developed by independent scientific organizations through periodic and through 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 phones employs a unit of measurement known as Specific Absorption Rate (SAR). The SAR limit set by the FCC is 1.6W/kg *.
*In the U.S. 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 substantial margin of safety to give additional protection for the public and to account for any variations in measurements. 125 safety-end-NorthA 1/27/03 2:05 PM Page 126 HHeeaalltthh aanndd SSaaffeettyy IInnffoorrmmaattiioonn HHeeaalltthh aanndd SSaaffeettyy IInnffoorrmmaattiioonn SAR tests are conducted using standard operating positions specified by the FCC 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 of the phone. Before a new model phone 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. While there may be differences between the SAR levels of various phones and at various positions, they all meet the government requirement. 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 FCC ID printed in the label on the phone. FCC certification information for this model phone is attached separation paper. For Body Operation To maintain compliance with FCC RF exposure requirements, use only belt-clips, holsters or similar accessories that maintain a 1.5 cm. separation distance between the user's 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 concerning exposure to radio frequency signals, see the following websites:
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) http://www.fcc.gov/rfsafety Cellular Telecommunications Industry Association (CTIA):
http://www.wow-com.com U.S.Food and Drug Administration (FDA) http://www.fda.gov/cdrh/consumer World Health Organization (WHO) http://www.who.int/peh-emf/en 126 127 safety-end-NorthA 1/27/03 2:05 PM Page 128 HHeeaalltthh aanndd SSaaffeettyy IInnffoorrmmaattiioonn HHeeaalltthh aanndd SSaaffeettyy IInnffoorrmmaattiioonn Precautions When Using Batteries Never use any charger or battery that is damaged in any way. Use the battery only for its intended purpose. If you use the phone near the networks base station, it uses less power; talk and standby time are greatly affected by the signal strength on the cellular network and the parameters set by the network operator. Battery charging time depends on the remaining battery charge and the type of battery and charger used. The battery can be charged and discharged hundreds of times, but it will gradually wear out. When the operation time (talk time and standby time) is noticeably shorter than normal, it is time to buy a new battery. Do not leave the battery in hot or cold places, such as in a car in summer or winter conditions, as you will reduce the capacity and lifetime of the battery. Always try to keep the battery at room temperature. A phone with a hot or cold battery may temporarily not work, even when the battery is fully charged. Li-ion batteries are particularly affected by temperatures below 0 C (32 F). Do not short-circuit the battery. Accidental short-
circuiting can occur when a metallic object (coin, clip or pen) causes a direct connection between the + and terminals of the battery (metal strips on the battery), for example when you carry a spare battery in a pocket or bag. Short-circuiting the terminals may damage the battery or the object causing the short-circuiting. Dispose of used batteries in accordance with local regulations. Always recycle. Do not dispose of batteries in a fire. If left unused, a fully charged battery will discharge itself over time. Road Safety Use only Samsung-approved batteries and recharge your battery only with Samsung-approved chargers. When a charger is not in use, disconnect it from the power source. Do not leave the battery connected to a charger for more than a week, since overcharging may shorten its life. Extreme temperatures will affect the charging capacity of your battery: it may require cooling or warming first. Your wireless phone gives you the powerful ability to communicate by voice, almost anywhere, anytime. But an important responsibility accompanies the benefits of wireless phones, one that every user must uphold. When driving a car, driving is your first responsibility. When using your wireless phone behind the wheel of a car, practice good common sense and remember the following tips. 128 129 safety-end-NorthA 1/27/03 2:05 PM Page 130 HHeeaalltthh aanndd SSaaffeettyy IInnffoorrmmaattiioonn HHeeaalltthh aanndd SSaaffeettyy IInnffoorrmmaattiioonn 1. Get to know your wireless phone and its features, such as speed dial and redial. If available, these features help you to place your call without taking your attention off the road. 2. When available, use a hands-free device. If possible, add an extra layer of convenience and safety to your wireless phone with one of the many hands-free accessories available today. 3. Position your wireless phone within easy reach. Be able to access your wireless phone without removing your eyes from the road. If you get an incoming call at an inconvenient time, let your voice mail answer it for you. 4. Let the person you are speaking with know you are driving; if necessary, suspend the call in heavy traffic or hazardous weather conditions. Rain, sleet, snow, ice and even heavy traffic can be hazardous. 5. Do not take notes or look up phone numbers while driving. Jotting down a To Do list or flipping through your phonebook takes your attention away from your primary responsibility, driving safely. 7. Do not engage in stressful or emotional conversations that may be distracting. Make the people with whom you are talking aware that you are driving and suspend conversations that have the potential to divert your attention from the road. 8. Use your wireless phone to call for help. Dial the emergency number in the case of fire, traffic accident or medical emergencies. Remember, it is a free call on your wireless phone!
9. Use your wireless phone to help others in emergencies. If you see a car accident, crime in progress or other serious emergency where lives are in danger, call the emergency number, as you would want others to do for you. 10. Call roadside assistance or a special non-
emergency wireless assistance number when necessary. If you see a broken-down vehicle posing no serious hazard, a broken traffic signal, a minor traffic accident where no one appears injured, or a vehicle you know to be stolen, call roadside assistance or any other special non-
emergency wireless number. 6. Dial sensibly and assess the traffic; if possible, place calls when you are not moving or before pulling into traffic. Try to plan calls when your car will be stationary. If you need to make a call while moving, dial only a few numbers, check the road and your mirrors, then continue. 130 131 safety-end-NorthA 1/27/03 2:05 PM Page 132 HHeeaalltthh aanndd SSaaffeettyy IInnffoorrmmaattiioonn HHeeaalltthh aanndd SSaaffeettyy IInnffoorrmmaattiioonn Operating Environment Wireless Technology Research. Remember to follow any special regulations in force in any area and always switch off your phone whenever it is forbidden to use it, or when it may cause interference or danger. When connecting the phone or any accessory to another device, read its users guide for detailed safety instructions. Do not connect incompatible products. As with other mobile radio transmitting equipment, users are advised that for the satisfactory operation of the equipment and for the safety of personnel, it is recommended that the equipment should only be used in the normal operating position (held to your ear with the antenna pointing over your shoulder). Electronic Devices Most modern electronic equipment is shielded from radio frequency (RF) signals. However, certain electronic equipment may not be shielded against the RF signals from your wireless phone. Consult the manufacturer to discuss alternatives. Pacemakers Pacemaker manufacturers recommend that a minimum distance of 15 cm (6 inches) be maintained between a wireless phone and a pacemaker to avoid potential interference with the pacemaker. These recommendations are consistent with the independent research and recommendations of Persons with pacemakers:
Should always keep the phone more than 15 cm (6 inches) from their pacemaker when the phone is switched on Should not carry the phone in a breast pocket Should use the ear opposite the pacemaker to minimize potential interference If you have any reason to suspect that interference is taking place, switch off your phone immediately. Hearing Aids Some digital wireless phones may interfere with some hearing aids. In the event of such interference, you may wish to consult your hearing aid manufacturer to discuss alternatives. Other Medical Devices If you use any other personal medical devices, consult the manufacturer of your device to determine if it is adequately shielded from external RF energy. Your physician may be able to assist you in obtaining this information. Switch off your phone in health care facilities when any regulations posted in these areas instruct you to do so. Hospitals or health care facilities may be using equipment that could be sensitive to external RF energy. Vehicles RF signals may affect improperly installed or inadequately shielded electronic systems in motor vehicles. Check with the manufacturer or its 132 133 safety-end-NorthA 1/27/03 2:05 PM Page 134 HHeeaalltthh aanndd SSaaffeettyy IInnffoorrmmaattiioonn HHeeaalltthh aanndd SSaaffeettyy IInnffoorrmmaattiioonn representative regarding your vehicle. You should also consult the manufacturer of any equipment that has been added to your vehicle. Posted Facilities Switch off your phone in any facility where posted notices require you to do so. Potentially Explosive Atmospheres Switch off your phone 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. Users are advised to switch off the phone while at a refueling point (service station). Users are reminded of the need to observe restrictions on the use of radio equipment in fuel depots (fuel storage and distribution areas), chemical plants or where blasting operations are in progress. Areas with a potentially explosive atmosphere are often but not always clearly marked. They include below deck on boats, 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 vehicle engine. Emergency Calls This phone, like any wireless phone, operates using radio signals, wireless and landline networks as well as user-programmed functions, which cannot guarantee connection in all conditions. Therefore, you should never rely solely on any wireless phone for essential communications (medical emergencies, for example). Remember, to make or receive any calls the phone must be switched on and in a service area with adequate signal strength. Emergency calls may not be possible on all wireless phone networks or when certain network services and/or phone features are in use. Check with local service providers. To make an emergency call, proceed as follows. 1. If the phone is not on, switch it on. 2. Key in the emergency number for your present location. Emergency numbers vary by location. 3. Press the <SEND> key. If certain features are in use (call barring, for example), you may first need to deactivate those features before you can make an emergency call. Consult this document and your local cellular service provider. When making an emergency call, remember to give all the necessary information as accurately as possible. Remember that your phone may be the only means of communication at the scene of an accident; do not cut off the call until given permission to do so. 134 135 safety-end-NorthA 1/27/03 2:05 PM Page 136 HHeeaalltthh aanndd SSaaffeettyy IInnffoorrmmaattiioonn HHeeaalltthh aanndd SSaaffeettyy IInnffoorrmmaattiioonn Other Important Safety Information Care and Maintenance Only qualified personnel should service the phone or install the phone in a vehicle. Faulty installation or service may be dangerous and may invalidate any warranty applicable to the device. Check regularly that all wireless phone equipment in your vehicle is mounted and operating properly. Do not store or carry flammable liquids, gases or explosive materials in the same compartment as the phone, its parts or accessories. For vehicles equipped with an air bag, remember that an air bag inflates with great force. Do not place objects, including both installed or portable wireless equipment in the area over the air bag or in the air bag deployment area. If wireless equipment is improperly installed and the air bag inflates, serious injury could result. Switch off your phone before boarding an aircraft. The use of wireless phones in aircraft may be dangerous to the operation of the aircraft, and is illegal. Failure to observe these instructions may lead to the suspension or denial of telephone services to the offender, or legal action, or both. Your phone is a product of superior design and craftsmanship and should be treated with care. The suggestions below will help you fulfill any warranty obligations and allow you to enjoy this product for many years. Keep the phone and all its parts and accessories out of the reach of small childrens. Keep the phone dry. Precipitation, humidity and liquids contain minerals that will corrode electronic circuits. Do not touch the phone with a wet hand while it is charging. Doing so may cause an electric shock to you or damage to the phone. Do not use or store the phone in dusty, dirty areas, as its moving parts may be damaged. Do not store the phone in hot areas. High temperatures can shorten the life of electronic devices, damage batteries, and warp or melt certain plastics. Do not store the phone in cold areas. When the phone warms up to its normal operating temperature, moisture can form inside the phone, which may damage the phones electronic circuit boards. 136 137 safety-end-NorthA 1/27/03 2:05 PM Page 138 HHeeaalltthh aanndd SSaaffeettyy IInnffoorrmmaattiioonn HHeeaalltthh aanndd SSaaffeettyy IInnffoorrmmaattiioonn Do not drop, knock or shake the phone. Rough handling can break internal circuit boards. Do not use harsh chemicals, cleaning solvents or strong detergents to clean the phone. Wipe it with a soft cloth slightly dampened in a mild soap-and-water solution. Do not paint it. Paint can clog the devices moving parts and prevent proper operation. Do not put the phone in or on heating devices, such as a microwave oven, a stove or a radiator. The phone may explode when overheated. Use only the supplied or an approved replacement antenna. Unauthorized antennas or modified accessories may damage the phone and violate regulations governing radio devices. If the phone, battery, charger or any accessory is not working properly, take it to your nearest qualified service facility. The personnel there will assist you, and if necessary, arrange for service. Acknowledging Special Precautions and the FCC and Industry Canada Notice Cautions Modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void the user's authority to operate the equipment. FCC Compliance Information This device complies with Part 15 of FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions:
(1) This device may not cause harmful interference, and
(2) This device must accept any interference received. Including interference that may cause undesired operation. Information to User This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures:
138 139 safety-end-NorthA 1/27/03 2:05 PM Page 140 HHeeaalltthh aanndd SSaaffeettyy IInnffoorrmmaattiioonn AAppppeennddiixx Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna. Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver. Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected. Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/ TV technician for help. Appendix A: CERTIFICATION INFORMATION (SAR) 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 radio frequency(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 safety 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(SAR). The SAR limit set by the FCC is 1.6 W/kg. SAR Tests are conducted using standard operating positions accepted by the FCC 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. 140 141 safety-end-NorthA 1/27/03 2:05 PM Page 142 AAppppeennddiixx AAppppeennddiixx Before a new model phone 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 CDMA SAR values for this model phone as reported to the FCC are Head: 1.26W/Kg, Body-worn: 1.31W/Kg. Body-worn operations are restricted to Samsung-
supplied, approved. The highest PCS SAR values for this model phone as reported to the FCC are Head : 0.52W/Kg, Body-worn : 0.93W/Kg. None compliance to the above restrictions may violate FCC RF exposure guidelines 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 FCC ID A3LSCHN330. In the United States and Canada, the SAR limit for mobile phones used by the public is 1.6 watts/kilogram(W/kg) averaged over one gram of tissue. The standard incorporates a substantial margin of safety to give additional protection for the public and to account for any variations in measurements. 142 Appendix B: Guide to Safe and Responsible Wireless Phone Use Cellular Telecommunications & Internet Association Safety is the most important call you will ever make. A Guide to Safe and Responsible Wireless Phone Use TENS OF MILLIONS OF PEOPLE IN THE U.S. TODAY TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE UNIQUE COMBINATION OF CONVENIENCE, SAFETY AND VALUE DELIVERED BY THE WIRELESS TELEPHONE. QUITE SIMPLY, THE WIRELESS PHONE GIVES PEOPLE THE POWERFUL ABILITY TO COMMUNICATE BY VOICE-ALMOST ANYWHERE, ANYTIME-WITH THE BOSS, WITH A CLIENT, WITH THE KIDS, WITH EMERGENCY PERSONNEL OR EVEN WITH THE POLICE. EACH YEAR, AMERICANS MAKE BILLIONS OF CALLS FROM THEIR WIRELESS PHONES, AND THE NUMBERS ARE RAPIDLY GROWING. But an important responsibility accompanies those benefits, one that every wireless phone user must uphold. When driving a car, driving is your first responsibility. A wireless phone can be an invaluable tool, but good judgment must be exercised at all times while driving a motor vehicle-whether on the phone or not. The basic lessons are ones we all learned as teenagers. Driving requires alertness, caution and courtesy. It requires a heavy dose of basic common sense-keep your head up, keep your eyes on the road, check your mirrors frequently and watch out for other drivers. It requires obeying all traffic signs and signals and staying within the speed limit. It means using seatbelts and requiring other passengers to do the same. 143 safety-end-NorthA 1/27/03 2:05 PM Page 144 AAppppeennddiixx AAppppeennddiixx But with wireless phone use, driving safely means a little more. This brochure is a call to wireless phone users everywhere to make safety their first priority when behind the wheel of a car. Wireless telecommunications is keeping us in touch, simplifying our lives, protecting us in emergencies and providing opportunities to help others in need. When it comes to the use of wireless phones, safety is your most important call. Wireless Phone Safety Tips Below are safety tips to follow while driving and using a wireless phone which should be easy to remember. 1. Get to know your wireless phone and its features such as speed dial and redial. Carefully read your instruction manual and learn to take advantage of valuable features most phones offer, including automatic redial and memory. Also, work to memorize the phone keypad so you can use the speed dial function without taking your attention off the road. 2. When available, use a hands free device. A number of hands free wireless phone accessories are readily available today. Whether you choose an installed mounted device for your wireless phone or a speaker phone accessory, take advantage of these devices if available to you. 3. Position your wireless phone within easy reach. Make sure you place your wireless phone within easy reach and where you can grab it without removing your eyes from the road. If you get an incoming call at an inconvenient time, if possible, let your voice mail answer it for you. 144 4. Suspend conversations during hazardous driving conditions or situations. Let the person you are speaking with know you are driving; if necessary, suspend the call in heavy traffic or hazardous weather conditions. Rain, sleet, snow and ice can be hazardous, but so is heavy traffic. As a driver, your first responsibility is to pay attention to the road. 5. Do not take notes or look up phone numbers while driving. If you are reading an address book or business card, or writing a to do list while driving a car, you are not watching where you are going. Its common sense. Dont get caught in a dangerous situation because you are reading or writing and not paying attention to the road or nearby vehicles. 6. Dial sensibly and assess the traffic; if possible, place calls when you are not moving or before pulling into traffic. Try to plan your calls before you begin your trip or attempt to coincide your calls with times you may be stopped at a stop sign, red light or otherwise stationary. But if you need to dial while driving, follow this simple tip-dial only a few numbers, check the road and your mirrors, then continue. 7. Do not engage in stressful or emotional conversations that may be distracting. Stressful or emotional conversations and driving do not mix-they are distracting and even dangerous when you are behind the wheel of a car. Make people you are talking with aware you are driving and if necessary, suspend conversations which have the potential to divert your attention from the road. 145 safety-end-NorthA 1/27/03 2:05 PM Page 146 AAppppeennddiixx AAppppeennddiixx their responsibilities as safe drivers and good citizens. As we approach a new century, more and more of us will take advantage of the benefits of wireless telephones. And, as we take to the roads, we all have a responsibility to drive safely. The wireless industry reminds you to use your phone safely when driving. Cellular Telecommunications & Internet Association For more information, please call 1-888-901-SAFE. For updates: http://www.wow-
com.com/consumer/issues/driving/articles.cfm?ID=85 8. Use your wireless phone to call for help. Your wireless phone is one of the greatest tools you can own to protect yourself and your family in dangerous situations-
with your phone at your side, help is only three numbers away. Dial 9-1-1 or other local emergency number in the case of fire, traffic accident, road hazard or medical emergency. Remember, it is a free call on your wireless phone!
9. Use your wireless phone to help others in emergencies. Your wireless phone provides you a perfect opportunity to be a Good Samaritan in your community. If you see an auto accident, crime in progress or other serious emergency where lives are in danger, call 9-1-1 or other local emergency number, as you would want others to do for you. 10. Call roadside assistance or a special wireless non-
emergency assistance number when necessary. Certain situations you encounter while driving may require attention, but are not urgent enough to merit a call for emergency services. But you still can use your wireless phone to lend a hand. If you see a broken-down vehicle posing no serious hazard, a broken traffic signal, a minor traffic accident where no one appears injured or a vehicle you know to be stolen, call roadside assistance or other special non-emergency wireless number. Careless, distracted individuals and people driving irresponsibly represent a hazard to everyone on the road. Since 1984, the Cellular Telecommunications Industry Association and the wireless industry have conducted educational outreach to inform wireless phone users of 146 147 safety-end-NorthA 1/27/03 2:05 PM Page 148 AAppppeennddiixx AAppppeennddiixx Appendix C: Consumer Update on Wireless Phones U.S. Food and Drug Administration 1. 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. These types of wireless phones can expose the user to measurable radiofrequency energy (RF) because of the short distance between the phone and the user s 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 exposures well within the FCCs compliance limits. 2. 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 148 low level RF that does not produce heating effects causes no known adverse health effects. Many studies of low level RF exposures have not found any biological effects. Some studies have suggested that some biological effects 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. 3. 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 devices. However, the agency has authority to take action if wireless 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 regulatory 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 exposure to the user that is not necessary for device function; and Cooperate in providing users of wireless phones with the 149 safety-end-NorthA 1/27/03 2:05 PM Page 150 AAppppeennddiixx AAppppeennddiixx best possible information on possible effects of wireless phone use on human health 4. What is FDA doing to find out more about the possible health effects of wireless phone RF?
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 interagency 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 exposures that people get from these base stations are typically thousands of times lower than those they can get from wireless phones. Base stations are thus not the primary subject of the safety questions discussed in this document. 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 important questions about the effects of exposure to radiofrequency energy (RF). FDA has been a leading participant in the World Health Organization 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 programs around the world. The Project has also helped develop a series of public information documents on EMF issues. FDA and the Cellular Telecommunications & Internet Association (CTIA) have a formal Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA) to do research on wireless phone safety. FDA provides the scientific oversight, obtaining input from experts in government, industry, and academic organizations. CTIA-funded research is conducted through contracts 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. 5. What steps can I take to reduce my exposure to radiofrequency energy from my wireless phone?
150 151 safety-end-NorthA 1/27/03 2:05 PM Page 152 AAppppeennddiixx AAppppeennddiixx 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 antenna 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 wireless phone use. 6. 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 wireless 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 Kingdom distributed leaflets containing such a recommendation in December 2000. They noted that no evidence exists that using 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 evidence that any health hazard exists. 7. Do hands-free kits for wireless phones reduce risks from exposure to RF emissions?
Since there are no known risks from exposure to RF emissions from wireless phones, there is no reason to believe that hands-free kits reduce risks. Hands-free kits can be used with wireless phones for convenience and comfort. These systems reduce the absorption of RF energy in the head because the phone, which is the source of the RF emissions, will not be placed against the head. On the other hand, if the phone is mounted against the waist or other part of the body during use, then that part of the body will absorb more RF energy. Wireless phones marketed in the U.S. are required to meet safety requirements regardless of whether they are used against the head or against the body. Either configuration should result in compliance with the safety limit. 8. Do wireless phone accessories that claim to shield the head from RF radiation work?
152 153 safety-end-NorthA 1/27/03 2:05 PM Page 154 AAppppeennddiixx AAppppeennddiixx Since there are no known risks from exposure to RF emissions from wireless phones, there is no reason to believe that accessories that claim to shield the head from those emissions reduce risks. Some products that claim to shield the user from RF absorption use special phone cases, while others involve nothing more than a metallic accessory attached to the phone. Studies have shown that these products generally do not work as advertised. Unlike hand-free kits, these so-called shields may interfere with proper operation of the phone. The phone may be forced to boost its power to compensate, leading to an increase in RF absorption. In February 2002, the Federal trade Commission (FTC) charged two companies that sold devices that claimed to protect wireless phone users from radiation with making false and unsubstantiated claims. According to FTC, these defendants lacked a reasonable basis to substantiate their claim. 9. What about wireless phone interference with medical equipment?
Radiofrequency energy (RF) from wireless phones can interact 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 Advancement 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. 154 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 Engineers (IEEE). This standard specifies test methods and performance requirements for hearing aids and wireless phones so that that no interference occurs when a person uses a compatible 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 possible 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. 10. 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 wireless phones have yielded conflicting results that often cannot be repeated in other laboratories. A few animal studies, however, 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 development used animals that had been genetically engineered or treated with cancer-causing chemicals so as to be pre-disposed 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 don t know with certainty what 155 safety-end-NorthA 1/27/03 2:05 PM Page 156 AAppppeennddiixx AAppppeennddiixx 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 neuroma, 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. 11. What research is needed to decide whether RF exposure from wireless phones poses a health risk?
A combination of laboratory studies and epidemiological studies 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 studies can provide data that is directly applicable to human populations, but 10 or more years follow-up may be needed to provide answers about some health effects, such as cancer. This is because the interval between the time of exposure to a cancer-causing agent and the time tumors develop - if they do - may be many, many years. The interpretation of epidemiological studies is hampered by difficulties in measuring actual RF exposure during day-to-day use of wireless phones. Many factors affect this measurement, such as the angle at which the phone is held, or which model of phone is used. 156 12. Which other federal agencies have responsibilities related to potential RF health effects?
Additional information on the safety of RF exposures from various sources can be obtained from the following organizations. FCC RF Safety Program:
http://www.fcc.gov/oet/rfsafety/
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA):
http://www.epa.gov/radiation/
Occupational Safety and Health Administrations (OSHA):
http://www.osha-
slc.gov/SLTC/radiofrequencyradiation/index.html National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health
(NIOSH):
http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/emfpg.html World health Organization (WHO):
http://www.who.int/peh-emf/
International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection:
http://www.icnirp.de National Radiation Protection Board (UK):
http://www.nrpb.org.uk Updated 4/3/2002: US Food and Drug Administration http://www.fda.gov/cellphones 157 Licensed by QUALCOMM Incorporated under one or more of the following Patents. U.S Patent No. 4,901,307 5,056,109 5,099,204 5,101,501 5,103,459 5,107,225 5,109,390
1 2 | Users Manual 1 | Users Manual | 2.34 MiB | / October 09 2005 |
VerizonN330.book Page 1 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM SCH-n330 Series A l l D i g i t a l M o b i l e P h o n e User Guide Please read this guide before operating your phone, and keep it for future reference. XK03.04_CB_n330_07-07-05_F8 VerizonN330.book Page 2 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Intellectual Property All Intellectual Property, as defined below, owned by or which is otherwise the property of Samsung or its respective suppliers relating to the SAMSUNG Phone, including but not limited to, accessories, parts, or software relating thereto (the Phone System), is proprietary to Samsung and protected under federal laws, state laws, and international treaty provisions. Intellectual Property includes, but is not limited to, inventions (patentable or unpatentable), patents, trade secrets, copyrights, software, computer programs, and related documentation and other works of authorship. You may not infringe or otherwise violate the rights secured by the Intellectual Property. Moreover, you agree that you will not (and will not attempt to) modify, prepare derivative works of, reverse engineer, decompile, disassemble, or otherwise attempt to create source code from the software. No title to or ownership in the Intellectual Property is transferred to you. All applicable rights of the Intellectual Property shall remain with SAMSUNG and its suppliers. Samsung Telecommunications America (STA), Inc. Headquarters 1301 East Lookout Dr. Richardson, TX 75082 Tel: 972.761.7000 Fax: 972.761.7001 Customer Care Center 1601 E. Plano Parkway, Suite 150 Plano, TX 75074 Toll Free Tel: 1.888.987.HELP (4357) Fax: 972.761.7001 and 972.761.7501 Internet Address: http://www.samsungusa.com 2005 Samsung Telecommunications America. Samsung is a registered trademark of Samsung Electronics America, Inc. and its related entities. Licensed by Qualcomm Incorporated under one or more of the following patents: U.S. Patent No. 4, 901, 307; 5, 056, 109; 5, 099, 204; 5, 101, 501; 5, 103, 459; 5, 107, 225; 5, 109, 390. Printed in South Korea Revised July 7, 2005 GH68-05300A VerizonN330.book Page 3 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Openwave is a registered trademark of Openwave, Inc. VibeTonz is a trademark of Immersion Corporation. RSA is a registered trademark RSA Security, Inc. Disclaimer of Warranties;
Exclusion of Liability EXCEPT AS SET FORTH IN THE EXPRESS WARRANTY CONTAINED ON THE WARRANTY PAGE ENCLOSED WITH THE PRODUCT, THE PURCHASER TAKES THE PRODUCT "AS IS", AND SAMSUNG MAKES NO EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTY OF ANY KIND WHATSOEVER WITH RESPECT TO THE PRODUCT, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE MERCHANTABILITY OF THE PRODUCT OR ITS FITNESS FOR ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR USE; THE DESIGN, CONDITION OR QUALITY OF THE PRODUCT; THE PERFORMANCE OF THE PRODUCT; THE WORKMANSHIP OF THE PRODUCT OR THE COMPONENTS CONTAINED THEREIN;
OR COMPLIANCE OF THE PRODUCT WITH THE REQUIREMENTS OF ANY LAW, RULE, SPECIFICATION OR CONTRACT PERTAINING THERETO. NOTHING CONTAINED IN THE INSTRUCTION MANUAL SHALL BE CONSTRUED TO CREATE AN EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTY OF ANY KIND WHATSOEVER WITH RESPECT TO THE PRODUCT. IN ADDITION, SAMSUNG SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR ANY DAMAGES OF ANY KIND RESULTING FROM THE PURCHASE OR USE OF THE PRODUCT OR ARISING FROM THE BREACH OF THE EXPRESS WARRANTY, INCLUDING INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES, OR LOSS OF ANTICIPATED PROFITS OR BENEFITS. VerizonN330.book Page 4 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM VerizonN330.book Page i Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Contents SCH-n330 closed view.......................................................................1 SCH-n330 open view..........................................................................2 Quick reference..................................................................................3 Introduction ........................................................................................5 Key features of the SCH-n330............................................... 5 Install the battery ................................................................... 6 Remove the battery ............................................................... 6 Charge the battery................................................................. 7 Pop-up display....................................................................... 8 Understand your phone.....................................................................9 Intenna................................................................................... 9 Backlight features .................................................................. 9 Alpha-numeric keypad........................................................... 9 Left soft key ......................................................................... 10 Right soft key....................................................................... 10 End key................................................................................ 10 Clear key ............................................................................. 11 Microphone.......................................................................... 11 Headset connector .............................................................. 11 Speaker ............................................................................... 11 Volume key.......................................................................... 12 Send key.............................................................................. 12 Navigation key .................................................................... 12 Your phones display ........................................................... 13 Your phones modes .......................................................................15 Call answer mode................................................................ 15 Input mode........................................................................... 15 Lock mode........................................................................... 15 Standby mode ..................................................................... 16 Talk mode............................................................................ 16 Silent mode.......................................................................... 17 Vibrate mode ....................................................................... 17 Power save mode................................................................ 18 Ringer setting ...................................................................... 18 Getting started .................................................................................19 Obtaining service................................................................. 19 Make and answer calls ........................................................ 20 i VerizonN330.book Page ii Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Voicemail............................................................................. 22 Menus and sub menus .................................................................... 24 Menu navigation .............................................................................. 27 Navigate using keys ............................................................ 27 Navigate using a shortcut.................................................... 27 In-use menu ........................................................................ 29 Calls .................................................................................................. 30 Outgoing.............................................................................. 30 Incoming.............................................................................. 31 Missed................................................................................. 32 Erase logs ........................................................................... 33 Call timer ............................................................................. 33 Call waiting.......................................................................... 34 Caller ID .............................................................................. 35 Three-way calling ................................................................ 35 Contacts ........................................................................................... 36 Open contacts ..................................................................... 36 Find contacts ....................................................................... 37 Add contacts........................................................................ 39 Store numbers after a call ................................................... 43 Store numbers from call logs............................................... 45 Assign speed dial numbers ................................................. 45 Speed dialing....................................................................... 46 Remove contacts................................................................. 47 Rename groups................................................................... 48 My phone number ............................................................... 48 Memory ............................................................................... 49 Messages.......................................................................................... 50 Text entry modes................................................................. 50 Send TXT messages........................................................... 54 Receive TXT messages ...................................................... 57 Message folders .................................................................. 58 Get It Now ......................................................................................... 64 Settings ............................................................................... 65 Help ..................................................................................... 65 Mobile Web....................................................................................... 68 Stored web content ............................................................. 68 Launch Mobile Web............................................................. 68 Exit Mobile Web .................................................................. 69 Navigate the web................................................................. 69 ii VerizonN330.book Page iii Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Mobile Web soft keys .......................................................... 69 Using links ........................................................................... 69 How Mobile Web keys work ................................................ 70 Planner..............................................................................................71 Open the planner................................................................. 71 Today................................................................................... 71 Scheduler ............................................................................ 73 Jump to date........................................................................ 74 To do list.............................................................................. 74 Memo pad............................................................................ 76 Count down ......................................................................... 77 Alarm clock .......................................................................... 79 World time ........................................................................... 80 Calculator ............................................................................ 81 Display ..............................................................................................82 Menu style ........................................................................... 83 Animation............................................................................. 83 Banner ................................................................................. 84 Backlight.............................................................................. 84 Contrast............................................................................... 85 Auto hyphen ........................................................................ 86 Service LED......................................................................... 86 Sounds..............................................................................................87 Vol./VibeTonz................................................................... 87 Ringer type .......................................................................... 88 Key beep ............................................................................. 89 Alerts ................................................................................... 90 Power on/off ........................................................................ 91 Roam ringer......................................................................... 91 Voice Kit............................................................................................92 Voice kit commands ............................................................ 92 Voice memo......................................................................... 99 Voice setup........................................................................ 102 Setup ...............................................................................................103 Location............................................................................. 103 Network ............................................................................. 103 Data ................................................................................... 104 Security.............................................................................. 105 Others................................................................................ 110 Version .............................................................................. 113 iii VerizonN330.book Page iv Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM TTY/TDD ........................................................................... 114 Usage guidelines: all about performance and safety................. 115 Getting the most out of your reception .............................. 115 Maintaining safe use and access to your phone ............... 117 Caring for the battery......................................................... 121 Special precautions and FCC notices ............................... 123 FDA consumer update ...................................................... 126 Owner's record .................................................................. 140 User guide proprietary notice ............................................ 141 Limited warranty ............................................................................ 142 Index 149 iv VerizonN330.book Page 1 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM SCH-n330 closed view Service LED Pop-up Display Button Pop-up Display Button Speaker Charger/Accessory Connector SCH-n330 closed view 1 VerizonN330.book Page 2 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM SCH-n330 open view Earpiece Navigation Key Right Soft Key Get It Now Shortcut Key END Key CLR Key Space/Silent Mode Key Microphone Status Icons OK Key Speaker Phone Button Left Soft Key Volume Up/Down Mobile Web Shortcut SEND Key Message Shortcut Key Speaker 2 VerizonN330.book Page 3 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Quick reference Cut out and use this page as a handy quick reference for several useful features in your phone. 1) CALLS 4) MOBILE WEB 7) SOUNDS 1) Outgoing 2) Incoming 3) Missed 4) Erase Logs 5) Call Timer 6) Data Counter 2) CONTACTS 1) Find 2) Add 3) Rename Group 4) My Phone #
5) Memory 3) MESSAGES 1) Send New Msg 2) Voice Mail 3) Inbox 4) Outbox 5) Draft 6) Saved 7) Wap Push 8) Msg Setting 9) Erase Msg 1) Get In Web 5) PLANNER 1) Today 2) Scheduler 3) Jump To Date 4) To Do List 5) Memo Pad 6) Count Down 7) Alarm Clock 8) World Time 9) Calculator 6) DISPLAY 1) Menu Style 2) Animation 3) Banner 4) Backlight 5) Contrast 6) Auto Hyphen 7) Service LED 1) Vol./VibeTonz 2) Ringer Type 3) Key Beep 4) Alerts 5) Power On/Off 6) Roam Ringer 8) VOICE KIT 1) Voice Memo 2) Voice Setup 9) SETUP 1) Location 2) Network 3) Data 4) Security 5) Others 6) Version Navigation shortcuts (in standby mode) Quick reference 3 VerizonN330.book Page 4 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Quick reference Turn the phone on and off Press and hold Enter/Exit Silent Mode In standby mode, press and hold to turn the phone on or off. To exit, press and hold
. Standby mode is the state of your phone once it has found service and is in the idle state. Set call ringer volume 1) In standby mode, press the volume key on the left side of the phone. 2) Press the volume key up or down to set call ringer volume as desired. View recent calls In standby mode, press Change the wallpaper 1) In standby mode, press the left soft key (
. Your recent calls appear in the display.
) Menu, then press
. 2) Select Preloaded from the pop-up menu. 3) Use the left or right navigation keys to select your choice of wallpaper. Save a number (quickly) 1) In standby mode, enter the number to save using the keypad. 2) Press 3) Select the number type using the navigation keys, the press 4) Enter a name for the entry using the keypad, then press View software and hardware information for your phone In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press
. With New Entry highlighted, press
) Menu, then again.
. 4 VerizonN330.book Page 5 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM TXT Messaging 128 x 160 pixel Liquid Crystal Display Introduction Congratulations on your purchase of the Samsung SCH-n330 mobile phone. The features listed below are a sample of what SCH-n330 has to offer. We ask that you read this guide to understand the many features that this phone supports and keep it handy for reference. Key features of the SCH-n330 High speed data (CDMA 2000 1X Technology) Global Positioning Technology (GPS) PIM functions (Scheduler, To Do List, etc.) Enhanced Messaging Service (EMS) Voice Dial Speaker phone 32 Polyphonic Ringtones VibeTonz Technology How to use this guide The chapters of this guide generally follow the same order as the menus and sub menus in your phone. A robust index for quick reference to most features begins on page 149. Also included is important safety information that you should know before using your phone. Most of this information is near the back of the guide, beginning on page 115. If you still have questions, well be happy to answer them. Just call our Samsung Customer Care Center toll-free at 1.888.987.HELP (4357). Introduction 5 VerizonN330.book Page 6 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Install the battery Your phone comes packaged with a partially charged rechargeable standard Li-Ion battery and travel adapter. Important! The phone can be used while the battery is charging; however, it must be fully charged the first time you use your phone, otherwise you could damage the battery. 1. Place the battery so it rests in the slot in your phone just below the battery release latch. 2. Gently slide the battery up until it snaps into place. Remove the battery to 1. Press and hold turn off the phone (if on). 2. Move the battery release latch toward the top end of the phone and hold. 3. Slide the battery down and lift it away from your phone. 6 VerizonN330.book Page 7 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Charge the battery Your phone is powered by a rechargeable standard Li-Ion battery. Only use Samsung-approved charging devices and batteries. Samsung accessories are designed to maximize battery life. Using other accessories may invalidate your warranty and may cause damage. Use the travel adapter The travel adapter is a convenient, light-weight charger that rapidly charges your phone from any 120/
220 VAC outlet. 1. Plug the large end of the travel adapter into a standard 120 or 220 VAC wall outlet. 2. Insert the smaller end of the adapter into the charger/
accessory connector at the bottom end of the phone. Low battery indicator The battery indicator (
) in the upper-right corner of the display screen indicates the battery power level. Three bars indicate a full charge, while an empty battery icon indicates your battery is almost empty. Two to three minutes before the battery charge level becomes too low to operate your phone, a blinking, empty battery icon (
sounds. If you continue to operate your phone without charging the battery, it will shut off. Be sure to monitor the battery strength icon and ensure your battery is adequately charged.
) displays and a tone Introduction 7 VerizonN330.book Page 8 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Pop-up display The unique pop-up display is designed to provide maximum visual space in a compact phone, as well as, restrict unwanted dialed calls. To use your new n330 handset, follow the steps listed below:
1. Hold you phone in an upright position and simultaneously press both pop-up display buttons located on each side of the phone to extend the display. 2. Once the phone is on, you can make calls using the key pad and access the menu options of your phone to personalize it to fit your needs. 3. To retract the display, gently push the top of the display down until it locks in place. 8 VerizonN330.book Page 9 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Understand your phone Intenna Avoid touching the intenna while the phone is powered up. Contact with the antenna affects the quality of your calls and may cause the phone to operate at a higher power level than necessary. Backlight features You can choose the amount of time that the display and backlight remain illuminated after a period of inactivity. Keep in mind that increasing these settings reduces battery life. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
) Menu. 2. Press
, for Backlight. The following backlight options appear in the display. 1 Lcd 2 Keypad 3 Power save 3. Use the navigation key to highlight Keypad or Power Save, then press
. 4. Use the navigation key to highlight the amount of time that you want the keypad or display to remain illuminated after a period of inactivity, then press
. Alpha-numeric keypad Use the alpha-numeric keypad to enter text, numbers, and special characters. Understand your phone 9 VerizonN330.book Page 10 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Left soft key Functions for the left soft key (
appears above it in the display. Some functions of the left soft key are as follows. Press the left soft key (
) are defined by what
) Menu to enter the Main menu. Press the left soft key (
some features. Press the left soft key (
) Option to view options in
) to acknowledge browser charges and other functions. Right soft key Functions for the right soft key (
appears above it in the display. Some functions of the right soft key are as follows:
Press the right soft key (
) are defined by what
) Back to return to the standby mode from any main menu. Press the right soft key (
) Back to return to the previous menu from a sub menu. In standby mode, press the right soft key (
to enter the Contacts list.
) Contacts End key Press and hold Press to turn off and turn on your phone. once to disconnect a call, return to standby mode, or cancel any input. 10 VerizonN330.book Page 11 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM to return to a previous
) is used to erase or clear numbers from Clear key The CLR key (
the display. You can also use menu or to return to standby mode from any menu. If you enter an incorrect character, briefly press backspace and delete. To erase all digits or characters from the display screen, press and hold To back up one menu level, briefly press To return to standby mode from any menu, press and hold until you return to standby mode. to
. Microphone on the keypad, is used Microphone The microphone, located just beneath for conversation, voice setup, and recording voice memos. Headset connector The headset connector is the input jack for the optional hands-free headset. The headset includes an earbud and microphone in a convenient, lightweight unit so you can talk without using your hands. Before connecting the headset, gently pry open the input jack cover to expose the connector inside. Speaker The speaker, located on the front of your phone, plays audible sounds such as ring tones and alerts. Speaker Understand your phone 11 VerizonN330.book Page 12 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM
) is used to answer calls, dial calls, and to Volume key The volume key is located on the left side of the phone. Use the volume key to set the call ringer volume in standby mode or earpiece volume while in a call. You can also use the volume key to scroll through menus, sub menus, and lists. Send key The Send key (
recall the last number (or list of numbers) dialed. Press Enter a number and press Press once to answer calls. once to connect a call. once in standby mode to display the recent calls list, which includes the last 20 outgoing, 20 incoming, and 20 missed calls. Press twice in standby mode to call the most recently dialed number. Navigation key Use any of the four directional keys on the navigation key to browse menus, sub menus, and lists. Each of the four keys also acts as a shortcut to launch specific applications, and the Up navigation key is user definable. Use the center (
key to select a highlighted feature, confirm prompts, or to jump to highlighted links on the web.
) 12 VerizonN330.book Page 13 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Your phones display The top of your phones display contains icons that indicate network status, battery power, signal strength, connection type, and more. The following list contains icons that may appear in your display. Display screen icons Signal strength: Always displays when your phone is on and indicates the current signal strength. The more lines displayed, the higher the received signal strength. Ringer Silent: The ringer has been set to Silent using the volume key on the side of the phone. Service indicator: Indicates a call in progress. When dialing a number, this icon flashes until the call connects. No service indicator: Indicates your phone cannot find a signal because youre outside a service area. You cannot make or receive calls. Wait for a signal or move into an open area. This indicator displays when your phone is turned on but turns off when a service signal is located. Roam: Extended roaming indicator. Roaming occurs when you use your phone outside your home area. While roaming, a wireless provider's system other than Verizon Wireless handles your call, so the service rate for the call may be higher than those made within your home area. Please refer to information from Verizon Wireless on roaming rates. Text message: Indicates that youve received a new text message. Youre also notified by a visual, audible, and VibeTonz alert according to your assigned preferences. Understand your phone 13 VerizonN330.book Page 14 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Voicemail message: Indicates that youve received a new voice message. Youre also notified by a visual, audible, and VibeTonz alert according to your assigned preferences. WAP push & voicemail message: Indicates that youve received voice and WAP push messages. Youre also notified by a visual, audible, and VibeTonz alert according to your assigned preferences. WAP push, TXT & voicemail message: Indicates that youve received text, voice, and WAP push messages. Youre also notified by a visual, audible, and VibeTonz alert according to your assigned preferences. 1X Protocol: Indicates your phone is using the 1X protocol. Battery strength: Indicates the battery charge level. The more black bars, the greater the charge. When the battery becomes very low, a flashing empty battery icon displays and the phone sounds an audible alert, which indicates your phone is about to shut down. Alarm clock: The alarm clock is set. GPS (911 only): This icon represents Global Positioning Service (GPS) for 911. GPS: Indicates GPS is on for location. Silent mode: Indicates your phone is in silent mode. Ringer is silenced for all alerts, incoming calls, and incoming messages. The phone alerts you of incoming calls, alerts, and messages by vibration and a flashing Service LED. Vibrate mode: Your phone is in vibrate mode. When you receive a call, the phone plays VibeTonz touch sensations instead of ringing. Speakerphone on: Your phone is in speakerphone mode. You can talk and listen to your call without holding your phone next to your ear. 14 VerizonN330.book Page 15 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Your phones modes Call answer mode You can select the method for answering your phone when you receive a call. 1.
) Menu, then In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press options appear in the display.
. The following call answer Send Key Send or Slide Up Slide Up Any Key 2. Use the navigation key to highlight an option. to select the method for answering calls. 3. Press Input mode Use input mode (ABC, Symbol, 123, or T9 Word) to enter text, numbers or symbols into messages, events, and other functions. The input mode is indicated in the right lower part of the display. For more information about changing the input mode, see Change text entry modes on page 51. Lock mode When you lock your phone using Lock Mode, (Menu
), restrictions are placed on phone use. You can receive messages and calls, but you cannot make outgoing calls (except for emergency numbers) until you unlock the phone. Lock Mode also restricts access to menus and the volume key. The default code used to unlock your phone is the last four digits of your phone number.
, Your phones modes 15 VerizonN330.book Page 16 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Standby mode Standby mode is the state of your phone once it has found service and is in the idle state. Your phone goes into standby mode:
When you press When in standby mode, you will see the time, day, and date as well as all other active icons. 1. While in standby mode, enter a phone number, and After you power it on. after a call. press to place a call. 2. Press to return to standby mode. Receive messages in standby mode You can receive messages while in standby mode. An alert tone sounds and a notification message displays when a new message arrives. 1. Extend the slide on your phone, if closed, by pressing both pop-up display buttons at the same time. 2. To view the message, press the right soft key (
or press the left soft key (
later.
) View,
) Ignore to view the message Talk mode You can only place and receive calls when your phone is on. While in a call your phone is in talk mode. Press the left soft key (
) to display a list of In-Use menu options. See In-use menu on page 29 for more information. 16 VerizonN330.book Page 17 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Silent mode With a single press of the key you can silence the call ringer and tones that your keypad makes whenever you press a key. When you receive a call, the phone vibrates instead of ringing. Enter Silent mode
In standby mode, press and hold Mode briefly displays and your phone returns to standby mode. The appears in the display. Entering Silent Exit silent mode
In standby mode, press and hold
. Exit Silent Mode briefly displays and your phone returns to standby mode. Vibrate mode You can set your phone to vibrate while in Standby mode by either using your volume key or selecting VibeTonz from the Volume menu.
) In standby mode, repeatedly press the volume key (
down until VibeTonz appears in the display. For more information about VibeTonz touch sensations see page 87. or In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press
) Menu, then 1. 2. Use the navigation key until VibeTonz appears in the display, then press
. Your phones modes 17 VerizonN330.book Page 18 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Power save mode Unless the backlight setting for the LCD has been changed, the backlight dims after a minute of inactivity, and then turns off. With Power save enabled, the backlight for the LCD is always dim. After approximately one minute of inactivity, Power save turns the backlight off. To enable or disable Power save:
1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
) Menu. 2. Press
, for Backlight. The following backlight options appear in the display. 1 Lcd 2 Keypad 3 Power save 3. Use the navigation key to highlight Power save, then press
. Off and On appear in the display. 4. Use the navigation key to highlight On or Off, then press
. Ringer setting 1. In standby mode, repeatedly press the volume key (
on the left side of the phone up or down. Options are:
Silent 1 Beep VibeTonz Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Level 4 Level 5 Vib+Ring Vib&Ring
2. Press once youre satisfied with the setting. The phone returns to standby mode. 18 VerizonN330.book Page 19 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Getting started Obtaining service Contact Verizon Wireless and follow their instructions for obtaining service, if necessary. We suggest that you read this user guide to fully understand the services that your phone supports. Turn your phone on 1. Extend the slide on your phone by pressing both pop-up display buttons on your phone at the same time. 2. Press and hold for two or more seconds. As with any other radio-transmitting device, do not touch the antenna as it affects call quality and can cause the phone to operate at a higher power level than is necessary. 3. Verizon momentarily appears in the display and your phone begins searching for a network signal. 4. Once your phone finds a signal, the time, date, and day appear in the bottom of the display. 5. Youre now ready to place and receive calls. If the phone is outside of your carriers coverage or roaming area, the cannot place or receive calls, try later when service is available. icon appears in the top of the display. If you Getting started 19 VerizonN330.book Page 20 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Turn your phone off
Press and hold powers off. for two or more seconds. Your phone If your phone is on and you press second, the phone will not power off. This feature prevents your phone from being turned off accidentally. for less than one Make and answer calls Outgoing 1. With the phone on and the slide up, enter the number you want to call using the keypad. 2. Press to place the call. Incoming When you receive a call, the phone displays one of the following:
If the caller can be identified, the callers number (or name if theyre in Contacts) displays. If the caller cant be identified, Call from unavailable #, Call from restricted #, or no number will display. Incoming, outgoing, and missed calls are automatically stored in call logs. The last 20 calls you answered, made, or missed are stored in their respective logs.
20 VerizonN330.book Page 21 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Call notification features Your phone notifies you of a call in a variety of ways.
10 ring volume settings including Silent, 1- beep, VibeTonz, Vib+Ring or Vib&Ring. For information on changing the ringer notification, see Ringer setting on page 18. For more about the VibeTonz touch sensations see page 87. Different ring types to distinguish callers. Name display with Caller ID. (If the callers name is programmed into your Contacts).
You answer the call. The calling party ends the call. The call is sent to voicemail. Your phone continues to alert you to an incoming call until one of the following occurs:
Call answer You can select from three methods for answering your calls. You can change this option in the Setup menu. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press
, the display.
) Menu, then
. The following options appear in
, Send Key Send or Slide Up Slide Up Any Key 2. Use the navigation key to highlight the call answer option of your choice. 3. Press to select the highlighted option. Getting started 21 VerizonN330.book Page 22 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM LCD backlight setting To extend the charge of your battery, the display goes blank when the screen is idle for a period of time. The amount of idle time allowed can be adjusted in the Backlight menu. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press
, the display.
) Menu, then
. The following options appear in
, 5 Seconds (default setting) 10 Seconds 15 Seconds Slide Up With Slide Up selected, the backlight remains on as long as the LCD display is in the up position. This can discharge your battery significantly. 2. Use the navigation key to highlight an option. 3. Press to select the highlighted option. Silence an incoming ringer
Press the up or down volume key or press phone rings for an incoming call to silence the ringer. when your Ignore an incoming call When you ignore an incoming call, the call is immediately forwarded to your voice mail.
During an incoming call, press the left soft key (
Ignore. The call is forwarded to your voice mail.
) Voicemail When you receive a new voicemail, a notification icon appears in the top of your screen. 22 VerizonN330.book Page 23 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Set up voicemail All unanswered calls to your phone are sent to voicemail, even if your phone is turned off. Therefore, youll want to set up your voicemail and personal greeting as soon as you activate your service. Your service provider has assigned your voicemail number to the 1. Press and hold to dial your voicemail. You will see key. Voice Mail and *86 in the display. 2. 3. If prompted, enter your password and press
. Follow the system prompts to set up your voicemail. You can also press voicemail.
, then to dial Check voicemail 1. Press and hold system. Your phone dials the voicemail 2. When youre connected to the voicemail system, enter your password and press
. 3. Follow the recorded prompts to listen to your voicemail. Getting started 23 VerizonN330.book Page 24 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Menus and sub menus 3) COLLEAGUE 4) VIP 5) NO NAME 4) My Phone#
5) Memory 3) MESSAGES 1) Send New Msg 2) Voice Mail 3) Inbox 4) Outbox 5) Draft 6) Saved 7) Wap Push 8) Msg Setting 9) Erase Msg 1) VOICE Yes No 2) INBOX Yes No 3) OUTBOX Yes No 4) DRAFT Yes No 5) SAVED Yes No 6) ALL MESSAGES Yes No 4) MOBILE WEB 1) Get In Web 1) CALLS 1) Outgoing 2) Incoming 3) Missed 4) Erase Logs 1) OUTGOING Yes No 2) INCOMING Yes No 3) MISSED Yes No 4) ALL CALLS Yes No 5) Call Timer 1) LAST CALL 2) TOTAL 3) LIFETIME 4) ERASE TOTAL Yes No 6) Data Counter 1) TRANSMIT 2) RECEIVED 3) TOTAL 4) ERASE TOTAL 2) CONTACTS 1) Find BY NAME BY ENTRY BY GROUP 2) Add NUMBER E-MAIL 3) Rename Group 1) FRIEND 2) FAMILY 24 5) PLANNER 1) Today 2) Scheduler 3) Jump To Date 4) To Do List 5) Memo Pad 6) Count Down 7) Alarm Clock Once Daily Off 8) World Time 9) Calculator 6) DISPLAY 1) Menu Style 1) ICON STYLE 2) TEXT STYLE 2) Animation 1) OPENING 1) Preloaded Glass Cube 2) My Image 2) CLOSING 1) Preloaded Glass Cube 2) My Image 3) WALLPAPER 1) Preloaded Animal Sports Etc. Digital Clock World Time Scheduler 2) My Image 3) Banner 4) Backlight 1) LCD 5 Seconds 10 Seconds 15 Seconds Slide Up VerizonN330.book Page 25 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 2) KEYPAD 5 Seconds 10 Seconds 15 Seconds Slide Up 3) POWER SAVE Off On 5) Contrast 6) Auto Hyphen No Yes 7) Service LED Off On 7) SOUNDS 1) Vol./VibeTonz 1) CALLS Silent 1 Beep VibeTonz Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Level 4 Level 5 Vib+Ring Vib&Ring 2) ALARM Silent 1 Beep VibeTonz Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Level 4 Level 5 Vib+Ring Vib&Ring 2) Ringer Type 1) CALLS 1) Preloaded Bell 1 Bell 2 Bell 3 Bell 4 Bell 5 Melody 1 Melody 2 Melody 3 Melody 4 Melody 5 Melody 6 Melody 7 Melody 8 Melody 9 Melody 10 2) My Melody 2) ALARM 1) Preloaded 2) My Melody 3) DATA 1) Preloaded Bell 1 Bell 2 Bell 3 Bell 4 Bell 5 Melody 1 Melody 2 Melody 3 Melody 4 Melody 5 Melody 6 Melody 7 Melody 8 Melody 9 Melody 10 Bell 1 Bell 2 Bell 3 Bell 4 Bell 5 Melody 1 Melody 2 Melody 3 Melody 4 Melody 5 Melody 6 Melody 7 Melody 8 Melody 9 Melody 10 Bell 1 Bell 2 Bell 3 Bell 4 Bell 5 Melody 1 Melody 2 Melody 3 Melody 4 Melody 5 Melody 6 Melody 7 Melody 8 Melody 9 Melody 10 2) My Melody 2) My Melody 4) PLANNER 1) Preloaded 3) Key Beep 1) VOLUME Silent Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Level 4 Level 5 2) TONE LENGTH Long Normal 3) VIBETONZ On Off 4) Alerts 1) MINUTE BEEP On Off 2) SERVICE On Off 3) CONNECT Off Sound Only VibeTonz Only Sound+VibeTonz 4) DISCONNECT Off Sound Only VibeTonz Only Sound+VibeTonz 5) FADE On Off 6) ROAM On Off 7) PRIVACY On Off 5) Power On/Off Off Sound Only VibeTonz Only Sound+VibeTonz 6) Roam Ringer On Off Menus and sub menus 25 VerizonN330.book Page 26 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 3) EMERGENCY #
1) 911 2) #911 3) *911 4) VOICE PRIVACY Standard Enhanced 5) RESTRICTION 1) Outgoing 2) Incoming 3) Contacts No Yes No Yes No Yes 6) ERASE MEMORY Yes No 7) RESET PHONE Yes No 5) Others 1) SHORTCUT Scheduler Voice Memo Animation Ringer Type Alarm Calculator Memo Pad 2) CALL ANSWER Send Key Send or Slide Up Slide Up Any Key 3) CALL END End Key Only Slide Down 4) AUTO RETRY Off Every 10 sec Every 30 sec Every 60 sec 5) LANGUAGE English Spanish 6) CLOCK SET 6) Version 8) VOICE KIT 1) Voice Memo 1) RECORD 2) REVIEW 3) ERASE ALL Yes No 2) Voice Setup 1) SET ACTIVE
[*] Only
[*]/Slide Up
[*]/EarMic 2) SET DIGITS Adapt Digits Reset Digits 9) SETUP 1) Location Location On 911 Only 2) Network 1) SET NAM NAM 1 NAM 2 2) ROAM OPTION Home only Automatic-A Automatic-B 3) Data 1) AUTO DETECT data off data for next call data until powered off 2) BAUD RATE Auto 19200 38400 57600 115200 230400 4) Security 1) LOCK PHONE Never On Power up Now 2) CHANGE LOCK New code 26 VerizonN330.book Page 27 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Menu navigation Access the menus and sub menus in your phone using the navigation key (
shortcut. Navigate using keys 1. In standby mode press the left soft key (
main menus display.
) and soft keys (
), or use a
) Menu. The 2. Use the navigation key to browse through the menus in your phone. 3. Press to enter the menu or sub menu that is highlighted in the display. Return to a previous menu There are two methods for exiting a menu or list.
Press the right soft key (
menu.
) Back to return to a previous
When Back does not appear in the display, press to return to a previous menu. Navigate using a shortcut You can also access the menus and sub menus in your phone using menu numbers. Use the left soft key (
) Menu to select the main menus, then enter the numbers associated with each menu to access the sub menus directly. Before you can navigate using a shortcut, youll need to know the menu or sub menu number of the feature that you want to access. Menu navigation 27 VerizonN330.book Page 28 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Tip: Use the list of menus and sub menus, which begins on page 24, to navigate using shortcuts. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key Menu (
). 2. Press the number of the menu, sub menu, and so on for the feature that you want to access. Example: Press the left soft key (
) for Menu, then press
. This takes you to the Planner (Menu 5), and then to the To Do List (sub menu 4). Navigation key shortcuts Some applications can be launched by pressing one of the four navigation keys (see the illustration) while in standby mode. The up key, which is initially set to Voice Memo, can be customized in the Shortcut sub menu by selecting Menu,
, and then choosing the option you want to be associated with this key. 28 VerizonN330.book Page 29 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM In-use menu Your phone includes both a standby menu and an In-Use Menu. The In-Use Menu applies to when you are in a call. 1. Press the left soft key (
) Menu while in a call to display the options listed in the following table. In-Use Menu Calls Contacts Silent/Quit Send Tel#
Send DTMF Voice Privacy Location Version Function Allows you to access the Calls menu. You can also erase your call logs from this menu. Accesses Contacts menu options. Activates or deactivates Silent Mode. In Silent Mode, your phones ringer is silent and key-
pad tones are muted. This feature should not be used when you access automated ser-
vices that require you to select options, or enter numbers (such as your voice mail pass-
word). Sends your phone number to the other party of the call. Send your phone number as tones (if youre the recipient of the call). Send the recipients phone number as tones (if youre the origina-
tor of the call). Set Voice Privacy to enhanced or standard mode. Voice Privacy prevents the receiving party from seeing your number when you call. Enable the GPS setting for emergency calls only, or fully enable GPS (always on). View the software and hardware versions for your phone. 2. Use the navigation keys to highlight an option. Press to select the In-Use Menu of your choice. Menu navigation 29 VerizonN330.book Page 30 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Calls The calls menu retains information about Outgoing, Incoming, and Missed Calls. You can also view times for your last call and the total of all calls. In cases where a Contact matches a call log entry, the name associated with the number appears instead of the number. Outgoing Your phone retains information about the last 20 outgoing calls and stores them in the Outgoing call log. You can review the Outgoing call log for the time and date of the call, as well as other information. Tip: To quickly view your most recent outgoing calls, briefly press in standby mode. The recent calls lists displays the last 20 incoming, 20 outgoing, and 20 missed calls. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press
, the display. Your list of outgoing calls appears in
) Menu, then 2. Use the navigation key to highlight a call, then press to view further information about the call. Once your selection is highlighted you can do the following:
Press Press to dial the number. to review all available call information (name and phone number [if available] and time/date stamp). 30 VerizonN330.book Page 31 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Press
, then press the left soft key (
) Option to display the options below. Option Talk Save Prepend Erase Function Call the selected number. Save the number to your Contacts. Add a prefix to the number. Erase the selected call from your Outgoing call list. Incoming Your phone retains information about the last 20 Incoming calls and stores them in the Incoming call log. You can review the Incoming call log for the time and date of the call, as well as other information. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
, press the display.
) Menu, then
. Your list of Incoming calls appears in 2. Use the navigation key to highlight a call, then press to view further information about the call. Once your selection is highlighted you can do the following:
Press Press to dial the number. to review all available call information (name and phone number [if available] and time/date stamp). Press
, then press the left soft key (
) Option to display the options below. Option Talk Save Prepend Function Call the selected number. Save the number to your Contacts. Add a prefix to the number. Calls 31 VerizonN330.book Page 32 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Option Erase Function Erase the selected call from your Incoming call list. Missed Your phone retains information about the last 20 missed calls
(calls that were never picked up) and stores them in the Missed call log. You can review the Missed call log for the time and date of the call, as well as other information. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press display.
) Menu, then
. Your list of missed calls appears in the
, 2. Use the navigation key to highlight a call, then press to view further information about the call. Once your selection is highlighted you can do the following:
Press Press to dial the number. to review all available call information (name and phone number [if available] and time/date stamp). Press
, then press the left soft key (
) Option to display the options below. Option Talk Save Prepend Erase Function Call the selected number. Save the number to your Contacts. Add a prefix to the number. Erase the selected call from your Missed call list. 32 VerizonN330.book Page 33 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Erase logs You can erase the Outgoing, Incoming or Missed call log, or you can erase All Calls. Erase a call log 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press
) Menu, then 2. Use the navigation key to highlight the log you want to clear calls from, and the press message displays. A confirmation 3. Use the navigation key to highlight Yes, then press
, or select No to exit without clearing the call log. Erase all calls 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press display as well as the options Yes and No.
. Erase All Calls? appears in the
) Menu, then 2. Use the navigation key to highlight Yes, then press
, or select No to exit without erasing call logs. Call timer View the duration of your last call, total calls, and calls made during the life of your phone using the Call timer feature. The Call timer is not for billing purposes. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press
) Menu, then Calls 33 VerizonN330.book Page 34 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 2. The options listed in the following table appear in the display. Option Last Call Total LifeTime Erase Total Function View the duration of your last call. View the duration of the total calls, incoming and outgoing, made on your phone since the last erasure. View the duration of all calls on your phone since activation (LifeTime tim-
ers cannot be erased). Erases the counters for the Total call timer.
Press the number of the option you want or use the navigation key to highlight the option, then press
Press to exit the Option menu. Although Total call timers can be erased, the LifeTime call timer can never be erased. Call waiting If youre on a call, your phone beeps when you receive another call. Contact Verizon Wireless for availability of this feature. 1. Press to connect and ask the calling party to remain on the line. 2. Press again and the second caller is placed on hold, and youre returned to the original caller. 3. Use the key to alternate between calls. 34 VerizonN330.book Page 35 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Caller ID Caller ID allows you to see who is calling by displaying the callers number when your phone rings. If the callers name and number are stored in your Contacts, the name also appears in the display. Caller ID block You can block your number from being displayed on another phone by enabling the call block feature.
, In standby mode, press 1.
. 2. Enter the phone number and press Three-way calling Call two other numbers and connect them to your call using Three-way calling. 1. In standby mode, dial the number for the first party in your call and press
. 2. When connected, ask the other party to remain on the line. Press to place them on hold. 3. Dial the second partys phone number and press
. 4. When the second party answers, press to connect all three parties. Calls 35 VerizonN330.book Page 36 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Contacts Your Contacts can store up to 500 numbers, with each contact having up to five associated phone numbers, an e-
mail address, and a picture ID. Each phone number can be up to 32 digits in length, including hard pauses, and associated names can be up to 22 characters in length. The memory location for each entry can be specified. For more information about Contacts restrictions, see Restriction on page 108. Tip: One-Touch, Two-Touch, and Three-Touch Dialing allows you to call numbers stored in your Contacts faster. Open contacts 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press menus and options appear in the display:
) Menu, then for the Contacts. The following Contacts sub Menu Find Add Rename Group My Phone#
Memory Function Find a phone number By Name, By Entry, or By Group. Add a number or e-mail to your Contacts. Rename one of your five groups. View the 10-digit number assigned to your phone by Verizon Wireless. Display available memory for dial entries. 2. Use the navigation key to highlight the Contacts menu of your choice, and press
. Tip: You can also press the number on your alpha-numeric keypad that corresponds to the Contacts menu number. 36 VerizonN330.book Page 37 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Find contacts If youve stored a name entry in your Contacts, Find allows you to find it quickly. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for Find.
) Menu, then 2. Use the navigation key to select the method by which to find the entry. The options listed in the following table are available. Find By Name By Entry By Group Function Search the Contacts alphabetically by name. Search the Contacts by entry number. Search the Contacts by selecting from one of the five available groups. Find by name 1. Enter the name of the person as they are entered in your Contacts. For example, if you saved the name as Amy Smith, begin the search pressing
. As you enter letters, the entry number and names of the closest matches appear in the display. 2. When the desired entry appears in the display, highlight the number using the navigation key (if necessary). 3. Press to dial the number associated with the name. 4. Press the left soft key (
) Option to display the options listed in the following table. Option Edit Erase Add New Description Edit details of the highlighted name. Erase the name and associated information. Add a new entry to a contact. Contacts 37 VerizonN330.book Page 38 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 5. Press to view information about the entry. 6. Use the navigation key to highlight an option, then press to enter the options sub menu. Find by entry This option allows you to find a stored entry by location number. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for Find.
) Menu, then 2. Use the navigation key to highlight By Entry. 3. Enter the number for your Contact, then use the navigation key to highlight the entry you want. 4. Press to display information about the entry. 5. Press the left soft key (
) Option to display the options listed in the following table. Option Talk Edit Erase Description Dial the first number stored for your contact or dial a number you have highlighted. Edit details of the highlighted name. Erase the name and associated information. 6. Use the navigation key to highlight an option, then press to enter the options sub menu. Find by group This option allows you to find a stored entry in a related group. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for Find.
) Menu, then 2. Use the navigation key to highlight By Group. 38 VerizonN330.book Page 39 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 3. Press the navigation key briefly to highlight the group field. 4. Use the navigation key to display the group that you want. As each group displays, entries assigned to the group are listed on your phones screen. 5. Use the navigation key to highlight the desired entry. to display information about the entry. 6. Press Add contacts You can add an entirely new entry or add information to an existing entry. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press following options appears in the display.
, for Add. A pop-up menu with the
) Menu, then Number E-mail 2. Use the navigation key to highlight the desired option and press
. 3. Enter the information for the entry, then press
. 4. With New Entry highlighted, press
. The following
(number type) icons appear in the display. Home Pager Office Mobile Fax 5. Use the navigation key to highlight the type that matches your new entry and press
. 6. Enter a name to associate with the type using the keypad, then press to save the entry. Contacts 39 VerizonN330.book Page 40 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Edit contact numbers Once a contact has been saved, it can be easily changed or modified. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for Find.
) Menu, then 2. Use the navigation key to display the search method that you want to use (By Name, By Group, or By Entry). 3. Enter information to find the entry, or use the navigation key to highlight the entry containing the number that you want to edit. 4. Once the entry is highlighted, press
. 5. Use the navigation key to highlight the number within the entry that you want to edit, then press the left soft key
) Option. A pop-up menu displays. 6. Use the navigation key to highlight Edit, then press
to backspace and delete numbers. to clear all numbers in the Press Press and hold highlighted field. 7. When youre finished editing the number, press
. Your changes are saved and a confirmation message appears in the display. Edit an e-mail address 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for Find.
) Menu, then 2. Use the navigation key to display the search method that you want to use (By Name, By Group, or By Entry). 40 VerizonN330.book Page 41 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 3. Enter information to find the entry, or use the navigation key to highlight the entry that you want. 4. Once the entry is highlighted, press the left soft key (
) Option. A pop-up menu appears in the display with Edit highlighted. Press
. 5. Use the keypad to edit the e-mail address. To insert the
@ symbol, press the left soft key (
) Option. 6. Use the navigation key to select Symbol, and then press
. 7. Press
(@ symbol) and enter the remainder of the e-mail address using the keypad. 8. Press the left soft key (
) Option. 9. Use the navigation key to highlight .com, then use the navigation key to display the desired domain type
(.com,.edu, .net), then press
. If the domain is different you must enter it using your keypad. 10. Press to save your changes. Add pauses to contacts When you call automated systems (like banking services), you are often required to enter a password or account number. Instead of manually entering the numbers each time, you can store the numbers in your Contacts along with special characters called pauses. Contacts 41 VerizonN330.book Page 42 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM P pause: A hard pause stops the calling sequence until you enter additional numbers. T pause: A two-second pause stops the calling sequence and then automatically sends the remaining digits. You can enter multiple two-second pauses to extend the length of a pause. For example, two consecutive two-second pauses cause a total pause time of four seconds. Keep in mind pauses count as digits towards the 32-digit maximum. To store a pause in a contact, follow these steps:
1. In standby mode, enter the number you want to save as a contact (such as your banks teleservice number). 2. Press the left soft key (
) Option. The following pause menu options appear in the display. P pause T pause P pause is a hard pause (awaits input from you) and a T pause is a two-second pause. 3. Use the navigation key to highlight the pause option of your choice. 4. Press to enter the highlighted pause into your number sequence. 5. When youre finished entering the number and pauses,
) Save to store the number in press the right soft key (
your Contacts. 42 VerizonN330.book Page 43 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM PAUSE DIALING WITH CONTACTS 1. If you stored the number using (two-second) T pause(s), simply recall the number from the Contacts. 2. If you stored the number using (hard) P pause(s), recall the number from the Contacts and wait for the appropriate prompt from the number you are calling
(credit card number, bank account number, etc.). 3. Press to dial the remaining part of the saved number. Store numbers after a call Once youve finished a call, you can store the number of the caller to your Contacts. If the call was incoming and Caller ID information was unavailable, then the store option is also unavailable. 1. After you press to end your call, the call time, length of call, phone number, and name of the party (if available) appears in the display. 2. Press the right soft key (
) Save. Youre prompted to confirm this as a New Entry, or Find a name in your Contacts with which to associate the number. 3. Follow the instructions in the upcoming sections depending on if the number is a new entry or is one you want to add to an existing contact. Contacts 43 VerizonN330.book Page 44 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Add a new entry 1. With New Entry highlighted, press number types appear in the display. The following Home Pager Office Mobile Fax 2. Use the navigation key to choose the number type, then press
. 3. Enter a name for the new entry and press
. The new entry is saved to your Contacts. Add to an existing entry 1. Use the navigation key to highlight Find, then press
. 2. Use the navigation key to display the search method that you want to use (By Name, By Group, or By Entry). 3. Enter information to find the entry, or use the navigation key to highlight the desired entry and press following number types appear in the display. The Home Pager Office Mobile Fax 4. Use the navigation key to highlight the number type that matches the number you are adding, then press
. 5. Press again at the Contacts menu. The number is added to the existing entry. 44 VerizonN330.book Page 45 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Shortcuts to storing phone numbers You can store a phone number by entering the number, and pressing the right soft key (
prompts to designate other information. You can also save a number after an incoming or outgoing call. Store numbers from call logs Store numbers from call history log s to your Contacts.
) Save. Follow the screen 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for Calls.
) Menu, then 2. Press the corresponding number on the keypad to view call logs for the following call types. for Outgoing
3. Use the navigation key to highlight the number you want for Incoming for Missed to store in the Contacts, then press
. 4. Press the left soft key (
) Option, then use the navigation key to highlight Save. 5. Add the number as a New Entry, or Find a number in your Contacts with which to add the number. Follow the prompts to store the number to the Contacts. 6. Assign speed dial numbers Each entry in Contacts is assigned a number from 2 to 500, since the first entry is reserved for your voice mail. The entry number for each contact corresponds with a same speed dial location, so, for example, Contact entry 10 is also Speed dial location 10. Since a contact can have up to 5 different phone numbers stored in it, you must select what phone number is dialed when speed dialing is used. Contacts 45 VerizonN330.book Page 46 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM The first number entered when you create a contact is used for speed dialing unless you change it. To change the number dialed when you use speed dialing, follow these steps:
1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for Find.
) Menu, then 2. Use the navigation key to select the find method (By Name, By Group, or By Entry). 3. Enter information to find the entry, or use the navigation key to highlight the desired entry, then press
. 4. Use the navigation key to highlight SpeedDial. 5. With SpeedDial highlighted, press the left soft key
) Edit. 6. Use the navigation key to select the icon associated with the number you want dialed when Speed dial is used. to save your changes. 7. Press Speed dialing Once you have stored phone numbers in Contacts, you can dial them quickly using one of the Speed dialing options. One-touch dialing Memory locations 001 through 009 are special One-Touch dialing locations. You can call the phone numbers stored in the Contacts memory from 001 through 009 by pressing and holding a single key. For example, for location number 001, press and hold display and the number is dialed. until the name and number appear in the 46 VerizonN330.book Page 47 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Two-touch dialing Memory locations 010 through 099 are special Two-Touch dialing locations. For example, for location number 013, briefly press number appear in the display and the number is dialed.
, then hold down until the name and
, Three-touch dialing Memory locations 100 through 500 are special Three-Touch dialing locations. For example, to dial location number 113, press until the name and number appear in the display and the number is dialed. Remove contacts 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for Find.
, then hold
) Menu, then
, 2. Use the navigation key to display the search method that you want to use (By Name, By Group, or By Entry). 3. Enter information to find the entry, or use the navigation key to highlight the entry that you want to erase. 4. Once the entry is highlighted, press the left soft key (
) Option. A pop-up with the following items displays:
Edit Erase Add New 5. Use the navigation key to highlight Erase. 6. Press
. The phone prompts you to confirm the erasure. 7. Use the navigation key to highlight Yes or No, then press
. Contacts 47 VerizonN330.book Page 48 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Rename groups Use this option to rename a group in your Contacts. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for Rename Group.
) Menu, then 2. Use the navigation key to highlight the group that you want to rename, then press
. The current name of the group appears in the display with a flashing cursor at the end of the name. 3. Press the left soft key (
) Option to display a pop up with the following text entry modes. 1 T9 word 2 ABC 3 Symbol 4 123 4. Press the corresponding number on the keypad for the method of entry that you prefer. 5. Press to delete characters individually, or press and hold to clear all characters in the display. 6. Enter a new group name using the keypad, then press
. My phone number My Phone# displays the ten-digit number assigned to your phone by Verizon Wireless.
In standby mode, press the left soft key (
for My Phone#. The phone number press assigned by Verizon Wireless appears in the display.
) Menu, then 48 VerizonN330.book Page 49 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Memory Use the Memory menu to view the amount of memory used for the contacts you have stored, as well as the remaining memory available for other entries.
) Menu, then In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press remaining for Contacts is displayed.
. The amount of memory used and Contacts 49 VerizonN330.book Page 50 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Messages Your phone is able to send and receive text messages to compatible phones and other devices. If a text message exceeds 160 characters, it is broken up and delivered in separate messages, which will incur additional cost. There are various text entry modes available when using your phone, and each is described below. Available memory is shared between all messages. You can store up to 100 incoming and 100 outgoing messages. The exact number that you can store is dependent upon message length. Text entry modes You can compose text messages composed of alphabetical characters, symbols, and numbers. Each method of character entry (symbol, number, etc.) is called a text entry mode. There are four such entry modes as indicated in the following table:
Text Entry Mode Function Alphabetical text entry mode. Options are:
ABC - All uppercase Abc - Initial caps abc - All lower case Symbol entry mode. Enter symbols into your message by pressing the corresponding number that appears above it in the display. Number entry mode. Enter numbers by pressing the corresponding key on the keypad. Predictive text mode. Press each key only once to enter the letter of the word that youre spelling. ABC Symbol 123 T9 Word 50 VerizonN330.book Page 51 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Your current mode of text entry (ABC, Symbol, 123, or T9 Word) is indicated in the lower part of the display when composing a text message. Change text entry modes 1. While composing a text message, press the left soft key
) Option to display a pop-up menu containing the
following options ABC Text Format Add Media Quick Text 2. ABC is highlighted. Use the left or right navigation key to choose display the text entry mode you want to use. 3. Press
. The mode is changed. ABC mode
for h. Enter characters while in ABC mode by pressing the key with the letter you want, such as Press the key repeatedly until the desired character appears in the display. Pause briefly and the displayed character is accepted and inserted into your message. Press to enter a space.
T9 Word text entry The T9 predictive text input mode allows you to enter words easily with a minimum of key presses. As you press each key, the phone selects a letter that makes up the word it thinks you are typing, based on a built-in dictionary. As a new letter is added, the word changes based on the key you pressed. Messages 51 VerizonN330.book Page 52 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 1. When you are in the T9 predictive text input mode, start entering a word by pressing keys 2 to 9. Press each key only once for each letter. As you type, a word will display; however, it changes with each key you press. 2. Enter the whole word before editing or deleting any keystrokes. 3. If the word is correct, start entering the next word. Otherwise, press word choices for the keys that you have pressed. 4. Complete each word with a space by pressing the repeatedly to display alternate key. To type words not found in the T9 mode, use the ABC text entry mode. For example, to enter a word using T9 predictive text, follow these steps:
1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press to compose a new text message.
) Menu, then 2. Enter the phone number of the recipient, then press
. 3. Press the left soft key (
) Option to display a pop-up menu containing the following options:
ABC Text Format Add Media Quick Text 52
1 2 | Users Manual 2 | Users Manual | 2.38 MiB | / October 09 2005 |
VerizonN330.book Page 53 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 4. ABC is highlighted. Use the navigation key to display T9 Word, then press
Now, enter the word Samsung into your message by pressing each of the following keys only once:
S A M S U N G T9 Word recognizes the most commonly used word for the numeric sequence is Samsung. If more than one word shares the same numeric sequence, use the key to scroll through other available words. 123 mode Enter numbers into a text message using 123 mode. See Change text entry modes on page 51 for instructions on changing text entry modes.
In 123 mode, press the key that contains the number you want to insert in your message. Symbol mode Symbol mode enables you to enter symbols, such as @ or %, into a text message. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press to compose a new text message.
) Menu, then
, 2. Enter the phone number of the recipient, then press
. 3. Press the left soft key (
) Option to display a pop-up menu containing the following options ABC Text Format Add Media Quick Text Messages 53 VerizonN330.book Page 54 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 4. ABC is highlighted. Use the navigation key to display Symbol, then press symbols appear in the display. The first of four screens of 5. Use the left and right navigation keys to page through the other symbols, if necessary. 6. Press the key that corresponds with the symbol that you want to enter. For example, press exclamation point (!). etc. for an 7. Repeat steps 3 through 6 to insert as many symbols into your message as needed. Send TXT messages 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press
) Menu, then 2. Enter the phone number of the recipient, then press
. 3. Enter the text for your message using the keypad. 4. At any point while composing a message, press the left soft key (
following table.
) Option to display the options listed in the Option ABC Text Format Add Media Quick Text Function The entry mode for your message. Other modes, which are hidden, are Symbol, 123, and T9 Word. Use the navigation key to display each of the text entry modes. Choose the size, alignment, bold, italic, and other options for formatting your text. Add a picture, animation, or melody to your message. Insert a pre-composed message into the body of your current message. 54 VerizonN330.book Page 55 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 5. Once youre finished entering your message, press
. The New Message options listed in the following table appear in the display. Option Edit Send To Edit Text Send Options Save in Draft Save Text Function Edit the recipients Send To number. Edit the content of your message. Choose the Priority, Validity, Privacy, whether you want to have a Delivery Acknowledge-
ment, Insert a Signature or Call Back #, and whether you want to Defer Delivery of the message. See Message send options in the following section for more information on these settings. Save the message to your Draft folder. Save the text in your message as a quick text. Quick Text messages are pre-composed messages that can be inserted into any mes-
sage you choose. 6. To send your message, press the left soft key (
) Send. Message send options You can set priority, validity, privacy, and other options before you send a message. 1. After youve composed a message and pressed
, youre returned to the New Message menu. 2. Use the navigation key to highlight Send Options, then press appear in the display. The Send Options listed in the following table Menu Item Priority Send Options Function Normal Urgent Assign a priority to your mes-
sage. Messages 55 VerizonN330.book Page 56 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Menu Item Validity Privacy Delivery Ack Insert Sign. Callback #
Def. Deliv-
ery Send Options Function None 30 Min 1 Hour 2 Hours 12 Hours 1 Day 2 Days 3 Days 5 Days Not Restricted Restricted Confidential Off On Off On Yes No Edit Immediate Set Time Select the period of time that you want the message to be available to the recipient. After the set period of time, your message is recalled. Choose the desired level of pri-
vacy for your message. Request confirmation for when your message is received. Insert your pre-composed sig-
nature into the message. Insert a number into your mes-
sage for the recipient to call you back. Choose when you want your message to be sent. 3. Use the navigation key to display the various Send Options for each menu item. 4. When the send option you want is highlighted, press to confirm the selection or to enter the options sub menu. 56 VerizonN330.book Page 57 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Receive TXT messages When your phone receives a message in standby mode, a ringer sounds (unless turned off), and New Message appears in the display along with the closed envelope icon (
). The date and time of the message also appear in the display.
Press the left soft key (
standby mode. The message is saved to your inbox where you can view it later. Press the right soft key (
and then press the right soft key (
message composer and respond to the message.
) View to open the message,
) Reply to open the
) Ignore to return your phone to OR Press the left soft key (
Save Text, Save Msg, Save Contact, or Block Sender.
) Option, to Forward, Erase,
Receive messages during a call When your phone receives a message during a call, New Message appears in the display along with the closed envelope icon (
disconnecting your call. 1. Press the left soft key (
). You can view the message without
) Ignore to ignore the message. The message is saved to your inbox where you can view it later. 2. Press the right soft key (
) View to open the message, your call remains connected. Messages and lock mode Your phone still receives messages while in Lock Mode. The time and date of the message appear in the display, but you cannot access the message until you enter the lock code. Messages 57 VerizonN330.book Page 58 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Message folders Your messages are stored in one of six folders. These folders are discussed in more details in the following sections. Voice mail folder Messages in your Voice Mail box are logged in the Voice folder of the Message menu. Open the voice folder to view the Callback # (if available), Urgency, and other details of the voice mail message. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press
) Menu, then 2. Use the navigation key to highlight Voice Mail, then press message appear in the display. Details of your most recent voice mail 3. Press the left soft key (
) SEND:Listen to call your voice mailbox and listen to the message. You can also press and hold if not changed. to dial your voice mailbox, Inbox folder Received TXT messages are stored in the Inbox folder. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
to open the Inbox folder. press
) Menu, then Tip: Press the right soft key (
a new message.
) View while in a call to view 2. Use the navigation key to highlight the message that you want to view. 58 VerizonN330.book Page 59 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 3. Press to view contents of the highlighted message. 4. While viewing your message, press the left soft key (
) Option to display the options listed in the following table. Option Forward Erase Save Text Save Msg Save Contact Block Sender Function Forward the message to another recipient. Delete the message and its contents. Save only the text in the message. Save the message to the Saved message folder. Save the number of the sender to your Contacts as a new entry or add to an existing entry. Block future messages from the phone number of the sender. 5. Use the navigation key to highlight the option you want, then press to select the option. Outbox folder Your phone stores TXT messages in the Outbox, regardless of whether the message was successfully transmitted. You can also verify if a message or e-mail was successfully transmitted, and at what date and time by enabling the Delivery Ack feature. See Message send options on page 55 for more information on delivery acknowledgements. REVIEW MESSAGES IN THE OUTBOX 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press in the display.
) Menu, then for Outbox. Any sent messages appear
, 2. Use the navigation key to highlight the message you want to review, then press
. Messages 59 VerizonN330.book Page 60 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 3. Press the left soft key (
) Option to display the options listed in the following table. Option Re-send Save Msg Erase Function Re-send the message. Save the message to the Saved Msg folder. Delete the message. 4. Use the navigation key to highlight the option you want, then press to select the option. Draft folder Draft messages have been composed but havent been sent yet. You can return to the Draft folder at any time to view, edit, or send a draft message. CREATE A DRAFT TXT MESSAGE 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for Send New Msg.
) Menu, then 2. Enter the phone number of the recipient, then press
. 3. Compose your message using the keypad, then press
. 4. Use the navigation key to highlight Save in Draft, then press
. A confirmation message appears in the display and your message is saved to the Draft box. VIEW AND EDIT DRAFT MESSAGES 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press
. Your draft messages are displayed.
) Menu, then
, 2. Use the navigation key to highlight the message that you want to view and press
. 60 VerizonN330.book Page 61 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 3. Press the left soft key (
) Option. A pop-up menu appears in the display with Edit highlighted. 4. Press
. The options listed in the following table appear in the display. Option Edit Send To Edit Text Send Options Save in Draft Save Text Function Edit the phone number of the recipient. Edit the draft message text. You also have options to format the text, add media, or add quick text to your message. Select the priority, validity, privacy, delivery acknowledgement, signature, callback #, deferred delivery options. Continue to save the message to the Draft folder. Save only the text in the message, if media or other content is contained within the message. 5. Use the navigation key to highlight the option you want, then press to select the option. Saved folder Saved messages are sent to the Saved folder. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press display. 1.
. Any saved messages appear in the
) Menu, then 2. Use the navigation key to highlight the message you want to view, then press
. 3. Press the left soft key (
) Option to display the message options Edit and Erase. 4. Use the navigation key to highlight the option you want, then press to select the option. Messages 61 VerizonN330.book Page 62 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Wap push folder Occasionally, Verizon Wireless may send notifications to your phone in the form of Wap Push alerts. These alerts may contain information on new services or updates. When you receive an alert, youll also receive a text notification and hear a tone. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press appear in the display.
. Any received Wap Push messages
) Menu, then Contact Verizon Wireless for availability. Message setting folder The Msg Setting folder allows you to define numerous message settings such as ringer types and save options. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press following table appear in the display. The Msg Setting sub menus in the
) Menu, then Sub Menu 1 Send Setting 2 Msg. Alert 3 Auto Play 4 Auto View 5 Auto Erase 6 Block/Unblock Function Options to Save in Outbox, Insert signa-
ture, and request a delivery acknowledge-
ment. Set Ringer types and Reminders for when you receive messages. Select Auto Play or Manual for multimedia content. Select Off or On for direct view. Auto Delete messages after they are read. Block messages from a web address or phone number. 62 VerizonN330.book Page 63 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Sub Menu 7 Quick Text 8 Signature 9 Voice Mail #
Function Edit any of your pre-composed messages, which can then be inserted into any new message that you choose. Create a signature, which appears at the bottom of all outgoing messages. Edit your voice mail number. 2. Use the navigation key to highlight the message setting menu you want. 3. Press
, then select and change the available settings. Erase message folder Use Erase Msg to erase all of the messages in a particular folder, or use the All Messages options to erase the contents of all your message folders at once. Erase Msg erases all of the messages in the selected folder. To delete a single message, use the Option menu (left soft key) while viewing the content of a message. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press display.
) Menu, then
. The Erase Msgs menu appears in the
, 2. Use the navigation key to highlight the folder containing messages that you want to delete. 3. Press to open the highlighted folder. Youre prompted to confirm the erasure of all messages in the folder. 4. Use the navigation key to highlight Yes or No, then press
. Messages 63 VerizonN330.book Page 64 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Get It Now With Get It Now, you can download full featured applications over the air including games, personalized ring tones, pictures, and more. Send and receive instant messages and email, or browse the web to catch up on all the latest news. 1. In standby mode, press the right navigation key to display the Get It Now menu. The Shopping cart icon is highlighted. 2. Press
. A connection message displays, then the options in the following appear in the display. Option Whats New Get Fun &
Games Get Tones Get Going Get Pix Get Messaging Search Function Provides updates on the latest games, infor-
mation services, etc. Select from several fun and interesting appli-
cations or a broad category of games that you can play on your phone. Download your favorite ring tones. Download applications that keep you in touch with the world, keep you organized, and help you find the coolest spots. View, share your own pictures and even save them as your phone's wallpaper or screen-
saver. Check e-mail on some of the most popular cli-
ents on the Internet. Enter a keyword and search the Get It Now catalogue. 3. Use the navigation key to highlight the category you want, then press
. 4. Select the application you want to download and follow the online directions. 64 VerizonN330.book Page 65 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Settings Use the Settings menu within Get It Now to manage, move, order applications and much more. 1. In standby mode, press the right navigation key to launch Get It Now. 2. At the Get It Now menu, press the right navigation key
. The once to highlight options listed in the following table appear in the display.
(Settings), then press Move Apps Option Order Apps Function Download applications over the network. Move previously downloaded applications between available folders. Manage Apps View used and available memory. Main Menu Select whether you want to view the main Get It View Now menu in a list or icon format. Screen Savers View downloaded screensavers. View Log View the Get It Now log, which displays informa-
tion about recent activity using Get It Now. 3. Use the navigation key to highlight an option. 4. Press to enter the options sub menu and view or change settings. Help The Help menu within Get It Now is a short tutorial on several Get It Now features. View information about charges, cancelling subscriptions, buying apps, disabling apps, and more. 1. At the Get It Now menu, press the right navigation key until the question mark (
) icon is highlighted. Get It Now 65 VerizonN330.book Page 66 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 2. Press
. The Help subjects listed in the following sections appear in the display. Buying new apps To buy new and exciting apps, visit the Get It Now Shop. This feature provides you with a variety of applications you can choose from. What do I pay?
When you buy an app you are charged for the purchase cost of the app and the network connections to download it. Charges will also apply when you use apps that require network connections, such as downloading information and sending TXT messages. Charges Charges will apply for network connections. A network connection is used when you are browsing the Get It Now Shop, downloading and restoring apps, or cancelling subscription apps. Charges will also apply when you use apps that require network connections, such as downloading information and sending TXT messages. Cancelling subscription 1. To cancel a subscription to an app, choose Settings, then Manage apps. 2. Select the app subscription you want to cancel. Demo apps A Demo app is free and is designed to demonstrate the apps main features. It usually expires after a certain period of time or a number of uses and often has limited functions. 66 VerizonN330.book Page 67 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Removing apps You may remove apps that are no longer needed. If you remove an app, you cannot use it unless you purchase it again. 1. To remove an app, choose Settings, then Manage Apps. 2. Select the app you want to remove. Disabled and expired apps You can install new apps if the memory of your phone is full by partially removing (disabling) apps you havent used recently. When you need to use a disabled app, you can restore it at no additional purchase cost. An Expired App is an application purchased for a certain number of uses. To purchase additional uses visit the Get It Now Shop. Restoring apps Disabled apps can be quickly restored at no additional purchase cost. To restore an app, run the application you want to restore from the Main Menu. You will be guided through the restoration process. Get It Now 67 VerizonN330.book Page 68 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Mobile Web Your SCH-n330 utilizes Mobile Web 2.0, allowing you to conveniently surf the web using your phone.
Each time you launch Mobile Web, your phone connects to the Internet and the service indicator icon (
appears in the display.
) Stored web content Mobile Web ends an Internet connection after a certain period of inactivity; however, some information from your session remains stored in the phone (if you leave your phone turned on). You can access this information without reconnecting to the Internet, but when you are view stored information and select a link that was not accessed in the last session, you automatically re-connect to the Internet. Launch Mobile Web The first time you use Mobile Web, you are prompted to go through a setup process that takes approximately three to five minutes. 1. In standby mode, press the left navigation key. If this is the initial launch of Mobile Web, youre prompted to enable security before proceeding. 2. Press the left soft key (
) Yes to proceed. 3. A list of categories, each representing one or more web sites, appears in the display. 4. Use the navigation key to browse the categories. 5. Once the desired category is highlighted, press the left soft key (
) to enter the category list. 68 VerizonN330.book Page 69 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM key. Text or numeric input Links (embedded in content) Exit Mobile Web To exit Mobile Web, press the Navigate the web When you use Mobile Web, some of the keys operate differently than during a normal phone call. Mobile Web presents on-screen items in any of the following ways:
Numbered options (some may not be numbered) Simple text You can act upon options or links by using the soft keys. Mobile Web soft keys At the bottom of the Mobile Web display is a bar that contains browser commands. The left (
) soft keys on the keypad are used to execute the command that appears above them in the display. These are called soft keys because their function changes depending on the application. Using links Links have several purposes, such as jumping to a different page, to a different site, or even initiating a phone call. Links are shown inside of brackets ([
]). You can normally use the left soft key (
) to select a link when it is highlighted.
) and right (
Mobile Web 69 VerizonN330.book Page 70 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM How Mobile Web keys work The following table lists Mobile Web keys and their functions. Key Name Function Navigation Key Use to browse lists and options. CLR Key Asterisk/
Shift Key 0/Next Key Pound/Space Key Numbers 1 thru 9 End Key A browser back-up key. Press once to back up one page. Press and hold to display your home page. Press to clear the last number, letter, or symbol entered. Press and hold to com-
pletely clear the display. Press before entering text to enable upper case characters (in Abc mode). Press to enter a zero (0), or to display another word in the dictionary when in T9 Word entry mode. Press to insert a space when entering text. Use the number keys to select items in a menu if they are numbered. Press to exit the Mobile Web and return the phone to standby mode. Left Soft Key Press to activate the command that appears above it in the display. Press to activate the command that appears above it in the display. Right Soft Key Send Key Press to dial a highlighted number. 70 VerizonN330.book Page 71 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Planner Your phone has a suite of PDA applications such as a Calendar, To Do List, and Memo Pad. You can schedule events, set reminders, create a to do list, perform calculations, and more with the digital assistant functionality included in this useful feature. Open the planner 1.
) Menu, then
. The Planner menu opens with the following In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press sub menus. Today Scheduler Jump To Date To Do List Memo Pad Count Down Alarm Clock World Time Calculator 2. Use the navigation key to highlight an application, and then press to display the applications sub menu. The following sections provide a description of each function included with your Planner. Today You can schedule up to nine events for the current day by indicating each events start time and advance notification time. Set alarms for events so that you can be alerted before an event takes place. Events scheduled for future dates automatically appear on your Today events schedule for the present day. Planner 71 VerizonN330.book Page 72 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Add a new event 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press New Event.
, for Today. Youre prompted to enter a
) Menu, then 2. Enter details of the event using the keypad (Up to 32 characters). 3. Press the left soft key (
) Option to display a pop-up menu containing the following text entry mode options. T9 Word ABC Symbol 123 The current mode of text entry is indicated in the lower right of the display. 4. Use the navigation key to highlight the entry mode you want, or press to exit the pop-up menu. 5. When youre finished entering details for the event, press
. Youre prompted to enter the time and date for the event. 6. Enter the time and date for the event using the keypad.
7. When youre finished entering the time and date, use the for A.M. when P is highlighted. for P.M. when A is highlighted. Press Press navigation key to highlight the Notification field. 8. Use the navigation key to select the amount of time that you want to be notified by an alert before the event occurs. 72 VerizonN330.book Page 73 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 9. Press to store the event in your calendar. An alert will notify you prior to the event, if you set the notification alert. Scheduler Scheduler allows you to view the current, past, or future month in a monthly calendar layout. While viewing the calendar, the current date is highlighted and days with scheduled events are surrounded by a box. View an event 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for Scheduler.
) Menu, then 2. A calendar appears in the display with the current date highlighted. The month and year also appear. 3. Use the navigation key to move around in the calendar.
Press the volume up key to view previous months.
Press the volume down key to view future months.
Press
Press the left soft key (
to open a date that is highlighted.
) Option while viewing the calendar to display the following options. Option View Add new Function View events for any date surrounded by a box. Add a new event for the date. 4. Use the navigation key to highlight an option. 5. Press to select the option. Planner 73 VerizonN330.book Page 74 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Jump to date You can to go directly to any date that you specify in the Jump to Date entry screen. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press entry screen appears in the display with the current month highlighted. for Jump To Date. The Jump To Date
) Menu, then 2. Enter the desired Jump to date and press
. The calendar month for the date that you specified appears in the display with the current date highlighted. To do list The To Do List allows you to create a task list. You can store, prioritize and manage up to twenty To Do List tasks. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press appears in the display.
, for To Do List. The Add To Do screen
) Menu, then 2. Enter details of the task using the keypad. Press the left
) Option to display a pop-up menu containing soft key (
the following text entry mode options. T9 Word ABC Symbol 123 3. Use the navigation key to highlight the entry mode that to exit the pop-up menu. you want to use, or press 4. When youre finished entering details for the task, press
. Youre prompted to enter the priority for the task. 5. Use the navigation key to select High or Low priority. 74 VerizonN330.book Page 75 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 6. Use the navigation down key to highlight the Enter Date field. 7. Enter a time and date for the task using the keypad.
Press
Press 8. Press for P.M when A is highlighted. for A.M when P is highlighted. to save the task. Add, edit, or erase tasks 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for To Do List.
) Menu, then 2. Use the navigation key to browse tasks in your To Do List. Events are presented in order of priority. 3. Press the left soft key (
) Option while viewing your To Do List. A pop-up menu with the options listed in the following table appears in the display. Option Add new Edit Erase Erase All Function Add a new task to the To Do List. Edit the task currently appearing in the display. Erase the task currently appearing in the display. Erase all tasks from your To Do List. 4. Use the navigation key to highlight an option. 5. Press to select the option. Planner 75 VerizonN330.book Page 76 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Memo pad You can create notes and store them in Memo Pad. You cant prioritize or set an alert for stored notes. Return to Memo Pad anytime you want to review and edit your notes. 1. 2. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for Memo Pad.
) Menu, then If you have any stored memos, they appear as a list in the display. If this is your first time in Memo Pad, youre prompted to add a new memo. 3. Enter a memo using the keypad. 4. Press the left soft key (
) Option to display a pop-up menu containing the following text entry mode options. T9 Word ABC Symbol 123 5. Use the navigation key to highlight the entry mode that to exit the pop-up menu. you want to use, or press 6. When youre finished entering details for the memo, press
. The memo is stored. Review, add, edit, or erase memos 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press memos appears in the display.
, for Memo Pad. Your list of stored
) Menu, then 2. Use the navigation key to browse memos. 3. Press to open a highlighted memo. 76 VerizonN330.book Page 77 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 4. Press the left soft key (
) Option while viewing your memos. A pop-up menu with the options listed in the following table appears in the display. Option Add new Edit Erase Erase All Function Add a new memo to Memo Pad. Edit the memo currently highlighted or appearing in the display. Erase the memo currently highlighted or appearing in the display. Erase all memos from Memo Pad. 5. Use the navigation key to highlight the option you want. to select the option. 6. Press Count down Count Down allows you to view the amount of time between the current date and any event that you want to schedule. You can create up to twenty Count Down events. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for Count Down.
) Menu, then If you have multiple count down timers, the event that is scheduled closest to the current date appears in the display. Use the navigation key to browse timers. 2. Enter details for the Count Down event using the keypad. 3. Press the left soft key (
) Option to display a pop-up menu containing the following text entry mode options. T9 Word ABC Symbol 123 Planner 77 VerizonN330.book Page 78 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 4. Use the navigation key to highlight the entry mode that to exit the pop-up menu. you want to use, or press 5. Once youve finished entering details for the Count Down event, press date for the scheduled event. Youre prompted to enter a time and 6. Enter the time and date using the keypad.
Press
Press 7. Press for P.M when A is highlighted. for A.M when P is highlighted. to store the event. Review, add, edit, and erase count down events Review scheduled Count Down events to determine how much time remains between the current time/date and any event that youve scheduled. You can also add another event, edit, or erase previously scheduled events. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for Count Down.
) Menu, then 2. Any stored Count Down events appear in the display. The event scheduled closest to the current date appears first in the display. Event details, including the days, hours, and minutes left until the scheduled event occurs also displays. The day, date, and time of the scheduled event appear in the bottom of the display. 78 VerizonN330.book Page 79 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 3. Press the left soft key (
) Option while viewing your memos. A pop-up menu with the options listed in the following table appears in the display. Option Add new Edit Erase Erase All Function Add a new event to Count Down. Edit the event currently appearing in the display. Erase the event currently appearing in the display. Erase all scheduled events from Count Down. 4. Use the navigation key to highlight the option you want. to select the option. 5. Press Alarm clock Your phone has an alarm clock that can be set to go off once, or daily at a specified time. Once set, the alarm clock is easy to change or turn off completely. The alarm doesnt function when the phone is turned off. If the time for an alarm that was set for Once has elapsed and the phone is off, the alarm occurs at the same time on the following day. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press appear in the display.
) Menu, then for Alarm Clock. The following options
, Once Daily Off 2. Use the navigation key to highlight the frequency that you want the alarm to occur, then press
. Planner 79 VerizonN330.book Page 80 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 3. Enter the time for the alarm using the keypad.
Press
Press 4. Press for P.M if A is highlighted. for A.M if P is highlighted. when youre finished entering the time for the
) appears alarm. The alarm is set and the alarm icon (
in the display. When an alarm sounds An animated alarm clock appears in the display and an alert sounds when the specified time for the alarm arrives.
Press If the alarm was set as a Daily alarm, the alarm icon remains in the top of the display. If the alarm was set as a Once only alarm, the alarm icon is removed from the top of the display. to silence the alarm.
Turn off the alarm 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press appear in the display.
) Menu, then for Alarm Clock. The following options
, Once Daily Off 2. Use the navigation key to highlight Off, then press
. All alarms are turned off. World time World Time allows you to view the time of day or night in another part of the world. World Time displays time in the 24 different time zones around the world. 80 VerizonN330.book Page 81 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press
, the display.
) Menu, then for World Time. A world map appears in 2. Use the navigation key to display the city and time that you want to view. The following cities are supported. New York Mid Atlantic Paris, Berlin Abu Dhabi Bangkok,Jakarta Guam,Sydney Samoa,Midway San Francisco Caracas Cape Verde Athens,Helsinki Tashkent Hong Kong,Beijing Okhotsk Honolulu,Hawaii Denver,Arizona Brasilia London Moscow Alma-ata Seoul,Tokyo Wellington Alaska Chicago,Mexico Calculator You can perform calculations, including addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division using your phone. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press
, the display.
) Menu, then for Calculator. The Calculator appears in 1. 2. Enter the first number in your equation using the keypad
(numbers can be up to nine digits long). Press change the sign for a number to a negative. to enter a decimal point, or press to 3. Use the navigation key to set the type of calculation you want to perform. 4. Press to perform the calculation and view the result. Planner 81 VerizonN330.book Page 82 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Display Set the menu style, standby mode animation, customize backlight settings, and more using the Display menu. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press the following table appear in the display.
) Menu, then for Display. The Display sub menus listed in Sub Menu Menu Style Animation Banner Backlight Contrast Auto Hyphen Service LED Function Choose how main menus appear in the display. Choose the media that displays on your phone when you turn it on, turn if off, and while in standby mode. Create your own personalized greeting that appears in the display when your phone is in standby mode. Set backlight options for the LCD and keypad. Set the display contrast. With Auto Hyphen enabled, your phone auto-
matically hyphenates phone numbers as they are entered. Turn the service LED on or off. 2. Use the navigation key to highlight the sub menu you want. 3. Press to select the menu. The following sections describe the menus above. 82 VerizonN330.book Page 83 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Menu style Menu Style allows you to choose how main menus appear in your display when the left soft key (
) Menu is pressed. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for Menu Style.
) Menu, then 2. Select Icon to display main menus as graphics, or select Nature to display main menus in a list format. Animation Animation allows you to choose the graphic images your phone displays when it is turned on or off, or while it is in standby mode (wallpaper). 1. 2. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for Animation.
) Menu, then The options listed in the following table appear in the display. Sub Menu Opening Closing Wallpaper Function Choose the animation that appears in your display when you turn on your phone. Choose the animation that appears in your display when you turn off your phone. Choose the graphic or animation that appears in your display when the phone is in standby mode. 3. Use the navigation key to highlight the menu you want,
. A pop-up menu containing the following then press options displays:
Preloaded My Image Display 83 VerizonN330.book Page 84 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 4. Choose Preloaded to view images included with your phone, or choose My Image to view images or wallpaper you have downloaded and saved. 5. Use the navigation key to highlight the image or wallpaper you want, then press to select it. Banner Create your own personalized greeting that appears in the display while your phone is in standby mode. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for Banner. 1.
) Menu, then Press and hold necessary. to erase an existing banner, if 2. Enter a word or short phrase that will appear in your phones display while it is in standby mode (Up to 12 characters). to save the new banner. 3. Press Backlight You can set the backlight for your display or keypad to remain on for a specified period of time or remain on as long as the slide is up. Prolonged backlight use drains your battery faster. 84 VerizonN330.book Page 85 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press appear in the display.
) Menu, then for Backlight. The following sub menus
, Option LCD Keypad Power save Function Sets the amount of time the backlight for the LCD remains on after a period of inactivity. Optional settings are 5, 10, and 15 seconds as well as Slide Up. Sets the amount of time the backlight for the key-
pad remains on after a period of inactivity. Optional settings are 5, 10, and 15 seconds as well as Slide Up. Unless the backlight setting for the LCD has been changed, the backlight dims after a minute of inactivity, and then turns off. With Power save enabled, the backlight for the LCD is always dim. After approximately one minute of inactivity, Power save turns the backlight off. 2. Use the navigation key to highlight the menu you want, then press to select it. Contrast Set the display contrast to your preference. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for Contrast.
) Menu, then 2. Use the left or right navigation keys to adjust the contrast for the display. 3. Press to exit. Display 85 VerizonN330.book Page 86 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Auto hyphen Auto Hyphen automatically hyphenates phone numbers as they are entered. For example: 580-437-0000. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press
, are available:
) Menu, then for Auto Hyphen. The following options 1. No Yes 2. Use the navigation key to highlight the setting you want. to select the setting. 3. Press Service LED The Service LED, located near the antenna, serves the following functions:
Flashes red to indicate an incoming call or message. Lights briefly when you power the phone on. Flashes red when the phone is in need of a charge.
Turn the service LED off/on 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press,
. The following options are available:
) Menu, then
, Off On 2. Use the navigation key to highlight your preference, then press
. 86 VerizonN330.book Page 87 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Sounds The Sounds menu provides a variety of options to customize audio properties for such things as ringers, keypad tones, alerts, shut down sounds, and more. Vol./VibeTonz The VibeTonz system brings the powerful sensation and realism of touch to your SCH-n330 handset, dramatically enhancing the quality of your communication experience. By providing the VT technology high fidelity touch sensations, the VibeTonz system allows you to interact with your phone in a way that fits your personal taste and lifestyle. Ringers enhanced by VibeTonz technology include a track of touch sensations synchronized to the music, making them more fun and identifiable. Use the Vol./VibeTonz sub menu to set the default volume for incoming calls and alarms, or to set your phone to vibrate. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for the Vol./VibeTonz sub menu.
) Menu, then 2. Use the navigation key to highlight Calls or Alarm, then press
. Sounds 87 VerizonN330.book Page 88 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 3. Use the up and down volume keys to select the volume level (or vibrate mode) for the selected setting. Silent - No sound or vibration. 1 Beep - Plays a single beep without vibration. VibeTonz - Plays only VibeTonz touch sensations without audio. Vib+Ring - Plays VibeTonz touch sensations first, then follows with audio. Vib&Ring - Plays VibeTonz touch sensations synchronized with audio track. to save the setting. 4. Press Ringer type The Ringer Type menu allows you to set a unique ring for voice calls, messages, data/fax, alarms, and schedule. As you change a ringer type, it plays so you can preview it. 1.
) Menu, then
, In standby mode, press the left soft key (
for the Ringer Type sub menu. press The following ringer types appear in the display. Calls Alarm Data Planner 2. Use the navigation key to highlight a ringer type, then
. A pop-up menu displays with the following press option:
Preloaded My Melody 3. Choose Preloaded to preview sounds included with your phone, or choose My Melody to preview sounds you have downloaded and saved. 88 VerizonN330.book Page 89 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 4. A list of bells and melodies appears in the display, each playing as it is highlighted. Ringers with VibeTonz tracks are highlighted with the logo. 5. Use the navigation key to browse through available ring tones. 6. When the desired ringer type plays, press to save the setting. Key beep Use the Key Beep menu to adjust the tone volume that your keypad generates when you press a key. Key beep volume 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for Key Beep. Volume is highlighted.
) Menu, then
, 2. Press
. 3. Use the volume keys or the navigation key to set the volume level for keypad tones. A tone sounds as you increase or decrease the volume setting. 4. Press when the key beep volume setting you want displays. Youre returned to the Key Beep sub menu. Key beep tone length 1. While in the Key Beep menu, use the navigation key to highlight Tone Length, then press
. 2. Use the navigation key to highlight Long or Normal. 3. Press to save your settings. Sounds 89 VerizonN330.book Page 90 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM VibeTonz This allows you to set your phones keypad to generate a brief touch sensation as each key is pressed. 1. While in the Key Beep menu, use the navigation key to highlight VibeTonz, then press Off displays. A prompt with On and 2. Use the navigation key to highlight Off or On. to save your settings. 3. Press Alerts You can set your phone to sound an alert whenever you enter or leave your service area, connect or disconnect a call, as well as other options. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for Alerts.
) Menu, then The Alerts sub menus in the following table appear in the display. Sub Menu Function Sound an alert ten seconds before each elapsed minute of a call. Sound an alert when you go into and out of your coverage areas. Sound an alert and/or produce a unique VibeTonz touch sensation when you connect a call. Sound an alert and/or produce a distinctive VibeTonz touch sensation when a call is dropped. Sound an alert when a dropped call occurs dur-
ing a conversation. Sound an alert when you leave your home ser-
vice area while on a call. Minute Beep Service Connect Disconnect Fade Roam 90 VerizonN330.book Page 91 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Sub Menu Privacy Function Sound a tone whenever you are in enhanced privacy mode. 2. Use the navigation key to highlight the sub menu you want, then press
. 3. Use the left or right navigation key to activate (or deactivate) the selected alert, then press
. Power on/off Set your phone to play a sound and/or VibeTonz touch sensation whenever you turn it on or off. 1.
) Menu, then for Power On/Off. The following options In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press
, are available:
Off Sound Only VibeTonz Only Sound+VibeTonz 2. Use the navigation key to highlight the option you want, then press
. Roam ringer Set your phone to sound a unique tone when a call is received outside your home service area. This feature is set to Off by default. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for Roam Ringer.
) Menu, then
, 2. Use the navigation key to highlight On or Off, then press
. Sounds 91 VerizonN330.book Page 92 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Voice Kit Use your voice in a natural manner to dial numbers, lookup contacts, record a voice memo, and much more. Please read the following content carefully to learn the most about this useful feature. Voice kit commands The Voice Kit menu contains the following commands, which you can activate by pressing and holding
, then speaking the command. Each command listed in the following table is explained in the sections that follow. Command Digit Dial Name Dial Voice Memo Contacts My phone#
Function Dial any seven or ten-digit North American phone number. Dial a name, if stored in your Contacts. Record a voice memo. Display your Contacts entries, if any exist. Display your phone number assigned by Verizon Wireless. Digit dial Digit Dial lets you dial any valid seven-digit or ten-digit phone number by speaking the number naturally, without pausing between digits. DIGIT DIAL TIPS
When pronouncing a number, speak at a normal speed, Digit Dial works best in quieter environments. saying each digit clearly. There is no need to pause between digits. 92 VerizonN330.book Page 93 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM
The phone recognizes the digits one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, zero, and oh (zero). It doesnt recognize numbers such as one eight hundred for 1-
800. Instead, say one eight zero zero, or one eight oh oh. The phone recognizes only valid seven or ten-digit North American phone numbers, optionally preceded by the digit 1. If you are experiencing frequent problems getting Digit Dial to recognize you, try adapting it to your voice, which can greatly improve accuracy. See the following section on Digit Dial Adaptation for more information. USING DIGIT DIAL 1. Press and hold
. Say a Command appears in the display and is announced through the speaker. 2. Say Digit Dial. Youre prompted to say the number. 3. Pronounce the number naturally and clearly. 4. 5. The phone may display one or more numbers on the screen and prompt you for confirmation. If the phone asks Did you say followed by the correct number, say Yes. The phone dials the number. If the phone asks Did you say followed by any incorrect numbers, say No. If there are other choices, the phone prompts you with them next. Voice Kit 93 VerizonN330.book Page 94 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Tip: Choose a number from the list manually. Use the navigation key to highlight the number, then press select. to DIGIT DIAL ADAPTATION Digit Dial works well for most people without special adaptation. However, people with strong accents or unique voice characteristics may obtain better results by adapting the system to better match their voices. You should adapt Digit Dial only if the system is frequently unable to recognize your speech. After you adapt Digit Dial, your phone is customized to your voice, and your voice only. Others will not be able to use it unless they reset the phone to factory defaults. Adapt digits in a quiet place. Adaptation involves recording several digit sequences to adapt the system to the unique properties of your voice. The adaptation process takes about three minutes. Tips for adapting Digit Dial
Make sure you wait for the beep before starting to speak.
Speak clearly, and say each digit distinctly. If you make a mistake while recording a sequence of digits, or if there is an unexpected noise that spoils the recording, re-record that sequence. 94 VerizonN330.book Page 95 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Adapt Digit Dial to your Voice 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
) Menu. 2. Press
, for Setup Digit. 3. Press for Adapt Digits. Your phone displays the first digit sequence and Please say plays through the speaker followed by the four digits appearing in the display. 4. Wait for the beep and repeat the digits using your normal tone of voice. 5. After a moment, the phone plays back the recording and prompts Did the recording sound ok? If the recording was good, say Yes. If you need to re-record, say No.
If you say No, the phone prompts you to pronounce the digits again. Wait for the beep and then re-
record. Repeat this step until youre satisfied with the recording. 6. After confirming that the recording sounds ok, repeat the recording process with the next set of digits. After six sets of digits, the phone asks whether you want to do more adaptation. Answer Yes. 7. Repeat steps 4-6 for another six sets of digits. After the sixth set of digits, the phone indicates that adaptation is complete. Voice Kit 95 VerizonN330.book Page 96 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM RESET DIGIT DIAL ADAPTATION You can erase an adaptation and reset Digit Dial to its original state. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
) Menu. 2. Press
, for Setup Digit. 3. Press for Reset Digits. 4. Use the navigation key to select Yes to reset your digit adaptation, or No to cancel. to save and exit. 5. Press Name dial Name Dial lets you dial any person in your Contacts by pronouncing that persons name. It automatically voice activates every contact in your Contacts without the need to record or train names before using them. PLACE A CALL USING NAME DIAL 1. Press and hold
. Say a Command appears in the display and is announced through the speaker. 2. Say Name Dial. The phone prompts, Name Please. 3. Say the full name of the person you wish to call, exactly as it is entered in your Contacts. 4. If your phone doesnt recognize the name, it prompts you to repeat the name. If your phone cannot find a match, it displays and announces, Sorry No Match Found. 96 VerizonN330.book Page 97 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 5. The phone may display one or more names on the screen and prompt you to confirm the name you want. If this occurs, respond to the prompts with Yes or No as appropriate. Tip: You can also choose a name from the choice list manually. Use the navigation key to highlight the name and then press
. If the name you say has more than one associated number, your phone displays the different locations (such as home or work) and prompts you, At which location? In this case, pronounce the location that you wish to call. The phone dials the number. Record a voice memo Voice Memo allows you to quickly record a voice memo for later playback. RECORD A VOICE MEMO USING VOICE KIT 1. Press and hold
. Say a Command appears in the display and is announced through the speaker. 2. Say Voice Memo. The phone prompts, Please Record After The Beep. 3. Wait for the beep, then start speaking. As it is recording, the phone displays the elapsed time. Voice Kit 97 VerizonN330.book Page 98 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 4. Press the right soft key (
) Stop once youre finished recording. A pop-up menu displays with Save highlighted. 5. Press screen. to save your voice memo and return to the idle For more information about the Voice Memo feature, see Voice memo on page 99. Display a contact To display a contact using voice kit commands, follow these steps. DISPLAY A CONTACT USING VOICE KIT 1. Press and hold
. Say a Command appears in the display and is announced through the speaker. 2. Say Contacts. The phone prompts, Name Please. 3. Say the full name of the person you want exactly as it is entered in your Contacts. 4. If your phone doesnt recognize the name, it prompts you to repeat the name. If your phone cannot find a match, it displays and announces, Sorry No Match Found. 5. When your phone recognizes a match, it repeats the name and displays the information for the contact you requested. 98 VerizonN330.book Page 99 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Display your phone number To display your phone number using voice kit commands, follow these steps. DISPLAY YOUR PHONE NUMBER USING VOICE KIT 1. Press and hold
. Say a Command appears in the display and is pronounced through the speaker. 2. Say My phone number. The phone displays and announces your phone number. to exit. 3. Press Voice memo You can use the Voice kit feature to record a memo, or you can select the Voice Memo menu to record a memo for later playback. For more information on using the Voice kit to record a voice memo, see Record a voice memo on page 97. The maximum number of voice memos is 10. Record a memo using menus 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
) Menu. 2. Press
. The phone prompts, Please record after the beep. 3. Wait for the beep, then start speaking. As it is recording, the phone displays the elapsed time. Voice Kit 99 VerizonN330.book Page 100 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM
To pause the memo, press the left soft key (
When a memo is paused, press the left soft key (
Resume to resume recording.
) Pause.
) 4. Press the right soft key (
) Stop once youre finished recording. A pop-up menu with the following options displays:
Option Save Review Re-record Quit Function Allows you to save the memo in the Review folder under the Voice Memo menu. See Review and erase memos below for more information. Allows you to listen to your memo. Allows you to record the memo again. Cancels the Voice Memo feature and displays the idle screen. 5. Use the navigation key to highlight the option you want,
. If you select Save, the memo is saved to then press the Review folder under Voice Memo and the idle screen displays. Review and erase memos You can review saved memos anytime. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
) Menu. 2. Press
, in the display.
. A list of saved memos appears 3. Use the navigation key to highlight the memo you want to review. 100 VerizonN330.book Page 101 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 4. Press
) Option to display the options listed in the following table. to play the memo, or press left soft key (
Option Re-record Erase Edit Caption Allows you to enter a title for your voice memo. Function Record over the memo that you just recorded. Allows you to erase the memo. Information Display information about your memo, such as its title, length size, and when it was recorded. 5. To erase the memo, use the navigation key to highlight Erase, then press
. 6. Use the navigation key to highlight Yes to erase the memo, or No to cancel. 7. Press to confirm your selection. Erase all memos 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
) Menu. 2. Press
, in the display.
. Erase All Voice Memos? appears 3. Use the navigation key to highlight Yes to erase all recorded memos, or No to cancel. 4. Press to confirm your selection. Voice Kit 101 VerizonN330.book Page 102 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Voice setup To set the key or action that launches your voice kit, follow these steps. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
) Menu. 2. Press
. The Set Active menu displays, and the following options are available.
[*] Only
[*]/Slide Up
[*]/EarMic 3. Use the navigation key to highlight the option you want, then press to save and exit. Your phone is initially set to [*], so that when you press and hold the key, the voice kit commands are activated. If you select one of the other options, such as Slide Up or EarMic, your phone will launch the voice kit commands when you open the slide or when you attach the optional headphone set to your phone, as well as when you press and hold the key. 102 VerizonN330.book Page 103 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Setup Use the Setup menu to customize many of your phones options to suit your preferences. Using this menu, you can set or change security features, shortcuts, language, and more. Location Location identifies your location to the network via GPS. You can fully enable this setting or set GPS to work only in the event that you dial 911. Contact Verizon Wireless to determine if, when, or where location-based services are available. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press listed in the following table appear in the display. for Location. The Location settings
) Menu, then Location setting Function Location On 911 Only GPS location setting is on wherever the feature is available. GPS location setting is on whenever you dial 911 only. 2. Use the navigation key to highlight the option you want. 3. Press to select the desired Location setting. Youre returned to the Setup menu. Network The Network menu allows you to select Roam Option and NAM settings for your phone. You can change your roaming options or store two NAM settings, which are essentially telephone numbers, for your phone. Setup 103 VerizonN330.book Page 104 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press table appear in the display.
) Menu, then
. The sub menus listed in the following
, Sub Menu Set NAM Roam Option Function If your service contract has two phone lines, set the NAM option for NAM 2 to use both lines. Otherwise, set the NAM option to NAM 1. Set your phones roaming options to Home only, Automatic-A, or Automatic-B. 2. Use the navigation key to highlight the sub menu you want, then press
. 3. Use the navigation key and to highlight and select from the available options. Data Use the Data menu to configure data connection speed and auto detect settings. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press table appear in the display.
) Menu, then
. The sub menus listed in the following
, Sub Menu Auto Detect Baud Rate Function Select phone options for receiving data, or set data reception to off. Set the data connection rate. 2. Use the navigation key to highlight the sub menu you want, then press
. 3. Use the navigation key and to highlight and select from the available options. 104 VerizonN330.book Page 105 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Security Use the Security menu to lock your phone, set up emergency numbers, enable or disable voice privacy, set restrictions, and more. Lock phone Locking your phone prevents all outgoing calls, except 911 emergency calls, until you enter the (un)lock code. With the phone in lock mode, you can, however, answer incoming calls. 1.
) Menu, then for Security. Youre prompted to enter In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press the lock code. The default lock code is the last four digits of your telephone number.
, 2. Press for Lock Phone. The options listed in the following table appear in the display. Option Never On power up Now Function The phone remains unlocked. The phone locks automatically the next time your phone is powered on and stays locked until you enter the lock code. The phone locks immediately and stays locked until you enter the lock code. 3. Use the navigation key to highlight the Lock Phone option you want. 4. Press to select the option. Setup 105 VerizonN330.book Page 106 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Change lock The default lock code for your phone is the last four digits of your phone number. It is advisable to change the default lock code to a secret code for security purposes. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press the lock code. The default lock code is the last four digits of your telephone number.
) Menu, then for Security. Youre prompted to enter
, 1. 2. Press for Change Lock. Youre prompted to enter the new lock code. 3. Enter the new lock code. Youre prompted to re-enter the new lock code for verification. 4. Enter the new lock code again. Your changes are stored. Your phone does not allow you to view the lock code for security reasons. If you change the lock code, be sure to write down or memorize the new code. Emergency numbers Your phone provides the option of storing three emergency numbers. Each number can be up to 32 digits in length. All emergency numbers can be dialed manually at any time, even when your phone is in locked or restricted mode. Emergency number 911 is coded into your phone. You can dial this number any time, even when the phone is locked or restricted. If you call 911, an audible tone is heard and an Emergency prompt appears in the display for the duration of the call. 106 VerizonN330.book Page 107 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Important! Because of various transmission methods, network parameters, and user settings necessary to complete a call from your wireless phone, a connection cannot always be guaranteed. Therefore, emergency calling may not be available on all wireless networks at all times. Important! DO NOT depend on this phone as a primary method of calling 911 or for any other essential or emergency communications. Remember to always turn your phone on and check for adequate signal strength before placing a call. STORE EMERGENCY NUMBERS 1.
) Menu, then In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for Security. Youre prompted to enter the lock code. The default lock code is the last four digits of your telephone number.
, 2. Enter the lock code, then press for Emergency #. 3. Press
, or to select one of the three entry options. 4. Enter the emergency number (up to 32 digits in length). 5. Press to save the number that you entered. CALL EMERGENCY NUMBERS IN LOCK MODE 1. In standby mode, enter the emergency number using your keypad. 2. Press to place the call. Setup 107 VerizonN330.book Page 108 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Voice privacy Voice privacy allows you to prevent those you call from seeing your number in their display when receiving your call. Voice privacy options are Standard and Enhanced. 1.
) Menu, then In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press Security. Youre prompted to enter the lock code. The default lock code is the last four digits of your phone number. 2. Press for Voice Privacy. The options listed in the following table appear in the display. Option Standard Enhanced Function Voice privacy is disabled. Voice privacy is enabled. 3. Use the navigation key to highlight the Voice Privacy option you want, then press
. Restriction Restriction allows you to restrict the use of your phone for outgoing calls, incoming calls, and calls placed from your Contacts. 1.
) Menu, then In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press Security. Youre prompted to enter the lock code. The default lock code is the last four digits of your phone number. 2. Press for Restriction. 3. Use the navigation key to highlight and select either Outgoing, Incoming, or calls to anyone in your Contacts. 4. Use the navigation key to highlight Yes or No, then press
. 108 VerizonN330.book Page 109 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Erase memory Erase memory erases your contacts and voice memo recordings. This feature is useful if you want to give your phone to a friend or family member. 1.
) Menu, then In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press Security. Youre prompted to enter the lock code. The default lock code is the last four digits of your telephone number. 2. Press for Erase Memory. A confirmation prompt appears in the display. 3. Use the navigation key to highlight Yes or No, then press
. A confirmation message appears in the display while the memory is erased. Reset phone The Reset Phone feature restores the factory default settings, while erasing your saved options and clearing your call logs. This cannot be undone once the confirmation message is accepted. 1.
) Menu, then In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press Security. Youre prompted to enter the lock code. The default lock code is the last four digits of your telephone number. 2. Press for Reset Phone. A prompt appears in the display asking if you want to restore default settings
(except for the Contacts). 3. Use the navigation key to highlight Yes or No, then press
. Setup 109 VerizonN330.book Page 110 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Others The Others menu contains options for setting Call Answer mode, Language, and other settings. Shortcut The up navigation key can be customized to launch any one of numerous applications or functions while in standby mode. Use the Shortcut menu to choose the application that you want the up navigation key to launch. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press functions appear in the display.
, for Shortcut. The following
) Menu, then Scheduler Voice Memo Animation Ringer Type Alarm Calculator Memo Pad 2. Use the navigation key to highlight the function you want, then press
. You can now press the navigation up key in standby mode to launch the function selected. 110 VerizonN330.book Page 111 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Call answer You can select a specific answer mode when you receive an incoming call. Set your phone to any of the following options. Send Key: Press Send or Slide Up: Press an incoming call. Slide Up: Open the slide to answer an incoming call. or open the slide to answer to answer an incoming call. Any Key: Press any key except to answer an 1. incoming call. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press menu appears in the display with the following options:
) Menu, then for Call Answer. The Call Answer
, Send Key Send or Slide Up Slide Up Any Key 2. Use the navigation key to highlight the option you want to use for answering calls, then press
. Call end Call end allows you to set how you will end a call. Set your phone to one of the following options. 1. End Key Only: Press Slide Down: Close the slide to end a call. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press appears in the display with the following options:
) Menu, then for Call End. The Call End menu to end a call.
, End Key Only Slide Down Setup 111 VerizonN330.book Page 112 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 2. Use the navigation key to highlight the setting you want, then press
. Auto retry Auto Retry automatically re-dials a number if the call does not connect. Depending upon your location, the number of times your phone automatically dials the number may vary. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
for Auto Retry. The Auto Retry press menu appears in the display with the following options.
) Menu, then Off Every 10 sec Every 30 sec Every 60 sec 2. Use the navigation keys to highlight the setting you want, then press
. Language The language option on your phone changes the language of voice prompts, menus, and key-input. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press appears in the display with the following options.
) Menu, then for Language.The Language menu
, English Spanish 2. Use the navigation key to highlight your language preference, then press
. 112 VerizonN330.book Page 113 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Clock set Use the Clock Set menu to set the current date and time. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press for Clock Set.
) Menu, then 2. Enter the current time and date using your keypad. The month, day, hour and minute must be entered with 2 digits. The year requires all four digits, and you must enter the hour in 24-hour format. 3. Press to save the time and date. In digital service mode, the Main Clock feature is disabled. The network adjusts time and date automatically. Version You can view both the software and hardware version of your phone using this feature. This feature is helpful if you need to contact Customer Service. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press software information appears in the display.
) Menu, then for Version. Your phones hardware and
, 2. Press to return to the Setup menu. Setup 113 VerizonN330.book Page 114 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM TTY/TDD Your phone is fully TTY/TDD compatible. TTY/TDD equipment is connected to your phone through the headset connector on the left side of the phone. TTY/TDD must be enabled before you can use your phone with a TTY/TDD device. 1. In standby mode, press the left soft key (
press
. TTY/TDD Lock appears in the display.
) Menu, then
, 2. Enter the lock code. The default is
(or #TTY). TTY Full and TTY Off appear in the display. 3. Use the navigation key to highlight your selection, then press
. Youre returned to the Sounds menu. The TTY icon (
the phone is in standby mode.
) appears in the top of the display when 114 VerizonN330.book Page 115 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Usage guidelines: all about performance and safety Getting the most out of your reception The quality of each call you make or receive depends on the signal strength in your area. Your phone informs you of the current signal strength by displaying a number of bars next to the signal strength icon. The more bars displayed, the stronger the signal. If youre inside a building, being near a window may give you better reception. Understanding the Power Save Feature If your phone is unable to find a signal after 15 minutes of searching, a Power Save feature is automatically activated. If your phone is active, it periodically rechecks service availability or you can check it yourself by pressing any key. Anytime the Power Save feature is activated, a message displays on the screen. When a signal is found, your phone returns to standby mode. Understanding How Your Phone Operates Your phone is basically a radio transmitter and receiver. When its turned on, it receives and transmits radio frequency
(RF) signals. When you use your phone, the system handling your call controls the power level. This power can range from 0.006 watts to 0.2 watts in digital mode. Usage guidelines: all about performance and safety 115 VerizonN330.book Page 116 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Knowing Radio Frequency Safety The design of your phone complies with updated NCRP standards described below. In 1991-92, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) and the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) joined in updating ANSIs 1982 standard for safety levels with respect to human exposure to RF signals. More than 120 scientists, engineers and physicians from universities, government health agencies and industries developed this updated standard after reviewing the available body of research. In 1993, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) adopted this updated standard in a regulation. In August 1996, the FCC adopted hybrid standard consisting of the existing ANSI/IEEE standard and the guidelines published by the National Council of Radiation Protection and Measurements (NCRP). Maintaining Your Phones Peak Performance For the best care of your phone, only authorized personnel should service your phone and accessories. Faulty service may void the warranty. There are several simple guidelines to operating your phone properly and maintaining safe, satisfactory service.
Hold the phone with the antenna raised, fully-extended and over your shoulder. Try not to hold, bend or twist the phones antenna. Dont use the phone if the antenna is damaged. Speak directly into the phones receiver.
116 VerizonN330.book Page 117 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM
Avoid exposing your phone and accessories to rain or liquid spills. If your phone does get wet, immediately turn the power off and remove the battery. If it is inoperable, return it to Verizon Wireless or call Customer Care for service. Maintaining safe use and access to your phone FAILURE TO FOLLOW THE INSTRUCTIONS OUTLINED MAY LEAD TO SERIOUS PERSONAL INJURY AND POSSIBLE PROPERTY DAMAGE IMPORTANT SAFETY INSTRUCTIONS - SAVE THESE INSTRUCTIONS. DANGER - TO REDUCE THE RISK OF FIRE OR ELECTRIC SHOCK, CAREFULLY FOLLOW THESE INSTRUCTIONS. FOR CONNECTION TO A SUPPLY NOT IN THE U.S.A., USE AN ATTACHMENT PLUG ADAPTOR OF THE PROPER CONFIGURATION FOR THE POWER OUTLET. 10 Driver Safety Tips Your wireless telephone gives you the powerful ability to communicate by voice - almost anywhere, anytime. But an important responsibility accompanies the benefits of wireless phones, one that every user must uphold. When driving a car, driving is your first responsibility. When using your wireless phone behind the wheel of a car, practice good common sense and remember the following tips:
1. Get to know your wireless phone and its features such as speed dial and redial. If available, these features help you to place your call without taking your attention off the road. Usage guidelines: all about performance and safety 117 VerizonN330.book Page 118 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 2. When available, use a hands free device. If possible, add an additional layer of convenience and safety to your wireless phone with one of the many hands free accessories available today. Please Note: Hands free devices are required by law in some areas. You are solely responsible for ensuring that your phone use complies with all applicable laws. 3. Position your wireless phone within easy reach. Be able to access your wireless phone without removing your eyes from the road. If you get an incoming call at an inconvenient time, if possible, let your voice mail answer it for you. 4. Let the person you are speaking with know you are driving; if necessary, suspend the call in heavy traffic or hazardous weather conditions. Rain, sleet, snow, ice, and even heavy traffic can be hazardous. 5. Do not take notes or look up phone numbers while driving. Jotting down a to do list or flipping through your address book takes attention away from your primary responsibility, driving safely. 6. Dial sensibly and assess the traffic; if possible, place calls when you are not moving or before pulling into traffic. Try to plan calls when your car will be stationary. If you need to make a call while moving, dial only a few numbers, check the road and your mirrors, then continue. 7. Do not engage in stressful or emotional conversations that may be distracting. Make people you are talking with aware you are driving and suspend conversations that have the potential to divert your attention from the road. 118 VerizonN330.book Page 119 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 8. Use your wireless phone to call for help. Dial 9-1-1 or other local emergency number in the case of fire, traffic accident or medical emergencies. Remember, it is a free call on your wireless phone!
9. Use your wireless phone to help others in emergencies. If you see an auto accident, crime in progress or other serious emergency where lives are in danger, call 9-1-1 or other local emergency number, as you would want others to do for you. 10. Call roadside assistance or a special non-emergency wireless assistance number when necessary. If you see a broken-down vehicle posing no serious hazard, a broken traffic signal, a minor traffic accident where no on appears injured, or a vehicle you know to be stolen, call roadside assistance or other special non-emergency number. Following Safety Guidelines Always turn off the phone in health care facilities and request permission before using the phone near medical equipment. To operate your phone safely and efficiently, always follow any special regulations in a given area. Turn your phone off in areas where use is forbidden or when it may cause interference or danger. Using Your Phone Near Other Electronic Devices Most modern electronic equipment is shielded from radio frequency (RF) signals. However, RF signals from wireless phones may affect inadequately shielded electronic equipment. Usage guidelines: all about performance and safety 119 VerizonN330.book Page 120 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM RF signals may affect improperly installed or inadequately shielded electronic operating systems and/or entertainment systems in motor vehicles. Check with the manufacturer or their representative to determine if these systems are adequately shielded from external RF signals. Also check with the manufacturer regarding any equipment that has been added to your vehicle. Consult the manufacturer of any personal medical devices, such as pacemakers and hearing aids, to determine if they are adequately shielded from external RF signals. Turning Off Your Phone Before Flying Turn off your phone before boarding any aircraft. To prevent possible interference with aircraft systems, the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) regulations require you to have permission from a crew member to use your phone while the plane is on the ground. To prevent any risk of interference, FCC regulations prohibit using your phone while the plane is in the air. Turning Off Your Phone in Dangerous Areas To avoid interfering with blasting operations, turn off your phone when in a blasting area or in other areas with signs indicating that two-way radios should be turned off. Construction crews often use remote-control RF devices to set off explosives. Never transport or store flammable gas, liquid or explosives in the compartment of your vehicle that contains your phone or accessories. 120 VerizonN330.book Page 121 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Turn off your phone when youre in any area that has a potentially explosive atmosphere. Although its rare, your phone or its accessories could generate sparks. Sparks could cause an explosion or a fire resulting in bodily injury or even death. These areas 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. Areas where the air contains chemicals or particles such as grain, dust or metal powders. Any other area where you would normally be advised to turn off your vehicles engine.
Restricting Childrens Access to your Phone Your phone is not a toy. Children should not be allowed to play with it because they could hurt themselves and others, damage the phone or make calls that increase your phone bill. Caring for the battery The guidelines listed below help you get the most out of your batterys performance.
Use only Samsung-approved batteries and desktop chargers. These chargers are designed to maximize battery life. Using other batteries or chargers voids your warranty and may cause damage. In order to avoid damage, charge the battery only in temperatures that range from 32 F to 104 F
(0 C to 40 C). Dont use the battery charger in direct sunlight or in high humidity areas, such as the bathroom.
Usage guidelines: all about performance and safety 121 VerizonN330.book Page 122 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM
Never dispose of the battery by incineration. Keep the metal contacts on top of the battery clean. Dont attempt to disassemble or short-circuit the battery. The battery may need recharging if it has not been used for a long period of time. Its best to replace the battery when it no longer provides acceptable performance. It can be recharged hundreds of times before it needs replacing. Dont store the battery in high temperature areas for long periods of time. Its best to follow these storage rules:
Less than one month:
32 F to 131 F (0 C to 55 C) More than one month:
32 F to 104 F (0 C to 40 C) Disposal of Lithium Ion (Li-Ion) Batteries For safety, do not handle a damaged or leaking Li-Ion battery. For safe disposal options of your Li-Ion batteries, contact your nearest Samsung-authorized service center. Special Note: Be sure to dispose of your battery properly. In some areas, the disposal of batteries in household or business trash may be prohibited. 122 VerizonN330.book Page 123 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Special precautions and FCC notices FCC Notice The phone may cause TV or radio interference if used in close proximity to receiving equipment. The FCC can require you to stop using the phone if such interference cannot be eliminated. Vehicles using liquefied petroleum gas (such as propane or butane) must comply with the National Fire Protection Standard (NFPA-58). For a copy of this standard, contact the National Fire Protection Association, One Batterymarch Park, Quincy, MA 02269, Attn: Publication Sales Division. Cautions Any changes or modifications to your phone not expressly approved in this document could void your warranty for this equipment, and void your authority to operate this equipment. Only use approved batteries, antennas and chargers. The use of any unauthorized accessories may be dangerous and void the phone warranty if said accessories cause damage or a defect to the phone. Although your phone is quite sturdy, it is a complex piece of equipment and can be broken. Avoid dropping, hitting, bending or sitting on it. Body-Worn Operation To maintain compliance with FCC RF exposure guidelines, if you wear a handset on your body, use the Samsung supplied or approved carrying case, holster or other body-worn accessory. If you do not use a body-worn accessory, ensure that the antenna is at least one inch (2.5 centimeters) from your body when transmitting. Use of non- Samsung approved accessories may violate FCC RF exposure guidelines. Usage guidelines: all about performance and safety 123 VerizonN330.book Page 124 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM For more information about RF exposure, please visit the FCC website at www.fcc.gov. 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 radio frequency (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 1.6W/kg.* Tests for SAR are conducted using standard operating positions specified by the FCC 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. 124 VerizonN330.book Page 125 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 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 1.26 W/kg and when worn on the body, as described in this user guide, the highest SAR value is 1.31 W/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 emission 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 FCC ID A3LSCHN330. 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 substantial margin of safety to give additional protection for the public and to account for any variations in measurements. Additional information on Specific Absorption Rates (SAR) can be found on the Cellular Telecommunications Industry Association (CTIA) web-site at http://www.wow-com.com. Usage guidelines: all about performance and safety 125 VerizonN330.book Page 126 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM FDA consumer update 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 radio frequency energy (RF) in the microwave range while being used. They also emit very low levels of RF when in 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 effects causes no known adverse health effects. Many studies of low level RF exposures have not found any biological effects. Some studies have suggested that some biological effects 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. 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 devices. However, the agency has authority to take action if wireless phones are shown to emit radio frequency 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. 126 VerizonN330.book Page 127 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Although the existing scientific data do not justify FDA regulatory 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 exposure to the user that it 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.
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health Environmental Protection Agency Federal Communications Committee Occupational Safety and Health Administration FDA belongs to a 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:
The National Institutes of Health participates in some interagency working group activities, as well. FDA shares regulatory responsibilities about 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 Usage guidelines: all about performance and safety 127 VerizonN330.book Page 128 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM wireless exposures that people get from these base stations are typically thousands of times lower than those they get from wireless phones. Base stations are thus not the subject of the safety questions discussed in this document. What kinds of phones are the subject of this update?
The term wireless phones refers here to hand-held wireless phones with built-in antennas, often called cell, mobile, or PCS. These types of wireless phones can expose the user to measurable radio frequency 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 phone wiring in a house, typically operate at far lower per levels, and thus produce RF exposures far below the FCC safety limits. 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 radio frequency energy (RF) exposures characteristic of wireless phones have yielded conflicting results that often cannot be repeated in other laboratories. A few animal studies, however, 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 128 VerizonN330.book Page 129 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM development used animals that had been genetically engineered or treated with cancer-causing chemicals so as to be pre-disposed to develop cancer in 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 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, glaucoma, meningioma, or acoustic neuroma, 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 phones RF exposures. However, none of the studies can answer questions about long-term exposures, since average period of phone use in these studies was around three years. What research is needed to decide whether RF exposure from wireless phones poses a health threat?
A combination of laboratory studies and epidemiological studies 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 studies can provide data that is directly applicable to human populations, but ten or more years follow-up may be needed to provide answers about some health effects, such as cancer. This is because the Usage guidelines: all about performance and safety 129 VerizonN330.book Page 130 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM interval between the time of exposure to a cancer-causing agent and the time tumors develop - if they do - may be many, many years. The interpretation of epidemiological studies is hampered by difficulties in measuring actual RF exposure during day-to-day use of wireless phones. Many factors affect this measurement, such as the angle at which the phone is held, or which model of phone is used. What is FDA doing to find out more about the possible health effects of wireless phone RF?
FDA is working with the U.S. Toxicology Program and with groups of investigators around the world to ensure that high priority animal studies are conducted to address important questions about the effects of exposure to radio frequency energy (RF). FDA has been a leading participant in the World Health Organization International Electromagnetic Fields (EMF) Project since its inception in 1996. An influential result of tis work has been the development of a detailed agenda of research needs that has driven the establishment of new research programs around the world. The project has also helped develop a series of public information documents on EMF issues. FDA and the Cellular Telecommunications & Internet Association (CTIA) have a formal Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA) to do research on wireless phone safety. FDA provides the scientific oversight, obtaining input from experts in government, industry, and academic organizations. CTIA-funded research is conducted through contracts to independent investigators. The initial research will include both laboratory studies and studies of wireless phone users. The CRADA will also include a broad 130 VerizonN330.book Page 131 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM assessment of additional research needs in the context of the latest research developments around the world. How can I find out how much radio frequency 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 radio frequency energy (RF) exposures. FCC established these guidelines in consultation with FDA and other federal health and safety agencies. The FCC limit for exposure from wireless 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 Electrical 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 tissue 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 exposure 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. Usage guidelines: all about performance and safety 131 VerizonN330.book Page 132 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM What has FDA done to measure the radio frequency energy coming from wireless phones?
The Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE) is developing a technical standard for measuring the radio frequency energy (RF) exposure from wireless phones and other wireless hand sets with the participation and leadership of FDA scientists and engineers. The standard, Recommended 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 measurement 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. What steps can I take to reduce my exposure to radio frequency energy from my wireless phone?
If there is a risk from these products--and at this point we do not know that there is--it 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 radio frequency 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. 132 VerizonN330.book Page 133 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 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 antenna. Again, the scientific data do not demonstrate that wireless phones are harmful. But if you are concerned about RF exposure from these products, you can use measures like those described above to reduce your RF exposure from wireless phone use. 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 radio frequency energy (RF), the measured described above would apply to children and teenagers using wireless phones. Reducing the time of wireless 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 Kingdom distributed leaflets containing such a recommendation in December 2000. They noted that no evidence exists that using 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 evidence that any health hazard exists. Usage guidelines: all about performance and safety 133 VerizonN330.book Page 134 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM What about wireless phone interference with medical equipment?
Radio frequency energy (RF) from wireless phones can interact 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 Advancement of Medical instrumentation
(AAMI). The final draft, a joint effort by FDA, medical device manufacturers, and many other groups, was completed on 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 Engineers (IEEE). This standard specifies test methods and performance requirements for hearing aids and wireless phones so that no interference occurs when a person uses a compatible 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 possible 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. 134 VerizonN330.book Page 135 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Where can I find additional information?
For additional information, please refer to the following resources:
FDA web page on wireless phones
(http://www.fda.gov/cellphones/) Federal Communications Commission FCC) RF Safety Program
(http://www.fcc.gov/oet/rfsafety) International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection
(http://www.icnirp.de)
World Health Organization (WHO) International EMF Project
(http://www.who.int/peh-emf/en/) National Radiological Protection Board (UK)
(http://www.nrpb.org/)
CTIA Safety Information Exposure to radio frequency signals Your wireless hand held 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 hand-held wireless phones. Those guidelines are consistent with the safety standards previously set by both U.S. and international standard bodies:
ANSI C95.1 (1992) NCRP Report 86 (1986) ICNIRP (1996) Usage guidelines: all about performance and safety 135 VerizonN330.book Page 136 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 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 (C95.1). The design of your phone complies with the FCC guidelines
(and those standards). Antenna care Use only the specified of approved replacement antenna. Unauthorized antennas, modifications, or attachments could damage the phone and may violate FCC regulations. Phone operation NORMAL POSITION: Hold the phone as you would any other telephone with the antenna pointed up and over your shoulder. TIPS ON EFFICIENT OPERATION:
For your phone to operate most efficiently:
Extend your antenna fully. Do not touch the antenna unnecessarily when the phone is in use. Contact with the antenna affects call quality and may cause the phone to operate at a higher power level than otherwise needed. Driving Check the laws and regulations on the use of wireless telephones in the areas where you drive. Always obey them. Also, if using your phone while driving, please:
Give full attention to driving--driving safety is your first responsibility. 136 VerizonN330.book Page 137 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM
Use hands-free operation, if available. Pull off the road and park before making or answering a call if driving conditions so require. Electronic devices Most modern electronic equipment is shielded from RF signals. However, certain electronic equipment may not be shielded against 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 hand-held wireless phone and a pacemaker to avoid potential interference with the pacemaker. These recommendations are consistent with the independent research by and recommendations of Wireless Technology Research. Persons with pacemakers:
Should ALWAYS keep the phone more than six inches from their pacemaker when the pacemaker is turned on;
Should not carry the phone in a breast pocket;
Should use the ear opposite the pacemaker to minimize the potential for interference. If you have any reason to suspect that interference is taking place, turn your phone OFF immediately.
HEARING AIDS When some mobile 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 Usage guidelines: all about performance and safety 137 VerizonN330.book Page 138 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM noise, and phones also vary in the amount of interference they generate. The wireless telephone industry has developed ratings for some of their mobile phones, to assist hearing device users in finding 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 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. T-Ratings: Phones rated T3 or T4 meet FCC requirements and are likely to be more usable with a hearing devices telecoil (T Switch or Telephone Switch) than unrated phones. T4 is the better/higher of the two ratings. (Note that not all hearing devices have telecoils in them.) Hearing devices may also be measured for immunity to this type of interference. Your hearing device manufacturer or hearing health professional may help you find results for your hearing device. The more immune your hearing aid is, the less likely you are to experience interference noise from mobile phones. Optional for each phone manufacturer. 138 VerizonN330.book Page 139 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 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 health care facilities when any regulations posted in these areas instruct you to do so. Hospitals or health care facilities may be using equipment that could be sensitive to external RF energy. VEHICLES RF signals may affect improperly installed or inadequately shielded electronic systems in motor vehicles. Check with the manufacturer or its representative regarding your vehicle. You should also consult the manufacturer of any equipment that has been added to your vehicle. POSTED FACILITIES Turn your phone OFF in any facility where posted notices so require. Aircraft FCC regulations prohibit using your phone while in the air. Switch OFF your phone 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. Usage guidelines: all about performance and safety 139 VerizonN330.book Page 140 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Sparks in such areas could cause an explosion or fire resulting in bodily injury of even death. Areas with a potentially explosive atmosphere are often but not always clearly marked. They include fueling areas such as gasoline stations; below deck on boats; fuel or chemical transfer or storage facilities; 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 vehicle engine. For vehicles equipped with an air bag An air bag inflates with great force. DO NOT place objects, including both installed or portable wireless equipment, in the area over the air bag deployment area. If in-vehicle wireless equipment is improperly installed and the air bag inflates, serious injury could result. Owner's record The model number, regulatory number and serial number are located on a nameplate inside the battery compartment. Record the serial number in the space provided below. This will be helpful if you need to contact us about your phone in the future. Model: SCH-n330 Serial No.:
140 VerizonN330.book Page 141 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM User guide proprietary notice CDMA Technology is licensed by QUALCOMM Incorporated under one or more of the following patents:
4,901,307 5,506,865 5,267,261 5,600,754 5,710,784 5,490,165 T9 Text Input is licensed by Tegic Communications and is covered by U.S. Pat. 5,818,437, U.S. Pat. 5,953,541, U.S. Pat. 6,011,554 and other patents pending. 5,109,390 5,544,196 5,414,796 5,778,338 5,056,109 5,511,073 5,416,797 5,101,501 5,535,239 5,337,338 5,659,569 5,267,262 5,657,420 5,504,773 5,228,054 5,568,483 Usage guidelines: all about performance and safety 141 VerizonN330.book Page 142 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Limited warranty 1. What is Covered and For How Long?
SAMSUNG TELECOMMUNICATIONS AMERICA, L.P.
(SAMSUNG) warrants the original (Purchaser) that SAMSUNGs phones and accessories (Products) are free from defects in material and workmanship under normal use and service for a period commencing on the date of purchase and continuing for the specified period of time after the date:
Phone - 1 year Batteries - 1 year Leather Case/Pouch/Holster - 90 Days Other Phone Accessories - 1 year 2. What is Not Covered?
The limited warranty is conditioned upon proper use of Product by Purchaser. This limited warranty does not cover: (a) defects or damage resulting from accident, misuse, abuse, neglect, unusual physical, electrical, or electromechanical stress, modifications of any part of the Product, including antenna, or cosmetic damage; (b) equipment that has the serial number removed or made illegible; (c) any plastic surfaces or other externally exposed parts that are scratched or damaged due to normal usage; (d) malfunctions resulting from the use of Product in conjunction with the accessories, products, ancillary, or peripheral equipment not furnished or approved by SAMSUNG; (e) defects or damage from improper testing, operation, maintenance, installation, or adjustment; (f) installation, maintenance, and service of product, or (g) Product used or purchased outside the United States or Canada. This Limited Warranty covers 142 VerizonN330.book Page 143 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM batteries only if the battery falls below 80% of rated capacity or the battery leaks, and this Limited Warranty does not cover any battery if (i) the battery has been charged by a battery charger not specified or approved by SAMSUNG for charging the battery, (ii) any of the seals on the battery are broken or show evidence of tampering, or (iii) the battery has been used in equipment other than the SAMSUNG phone for which it is specified. 3. What are SAMSUNGs Obligations?
During the applicable warranty period, SAMSUNG will repair or replace at SAMSUNGs sole option, without charge to purchaser, any defective component part of the phone or accessory. To obtain service under this limited warranty, purchaser must return Product to an authorized phone service facility in an adequate container for shipping, accompanied by Purchasers sales receipt or comparable proof of sale showing the date of purchase, the serial number of Product, and the sellers name and address. To obtain information on where to deliver the phone or accessory, call your service provider or Samsung Customer Care at (888) 987-4357. Upon receipt, SAMSUNG will promptly repair the defective product. SAMSUNG may, at SAMSUNGs sole option, use rebuilt, reconditioned, or new parts or components when repairing any product or replace a product with a rebuilt, reconditioned, or new product. Repaired products will be warranted for a period equal to the remainder of the original limited warranty on the original product or for 90 days, whatever is longer. All replaced parts, components, boards, and equipment becomes the property of SAMSUNG. If SAMSUNG Limited warranty 143 VerizonN330.book Page 144 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM determines that any product is not covered by this limited warranty, purchaser must pay all parts, shipping, and labor charges for the repair or return of said product. 4. What Are the Limits On SAMSUNGs Liability?
EXCEPT AS SET FORTH IN THE EXPRESS WARRANTY CONTAINED HEREIN, PURCHASER TAKES THE PRODUCT AS IS, AND SAMSUNG MAKES NO WARRANTY OR REPRESENTATION AND THERE ARE NO CONDITIONS, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, STATUTORY OR OTHERWISE, OF ANY KIND WHATSOEVER WITH RESPECT TO THE PRODUCT, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO:
THE MERCHANTABILITY OF THE PRODUCT OR ITS FITNESS FOR ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR USE;
WARRANTIES OF TITLE OR NON-
INFRINGEMENT;
DESIGN, CONDITION, QUALITY, OR PERFORMANCE OF THE PRODUCT;
THE WORKMANSHIP OF THE PRODUCT OR THE COMPONENTS CONTAINED THEREIN; OR
COMPLIANCE OF THE PRODUCT WITH THE REQUIREMENTS OF ANY LAW, RULE, SPECIFICATION OR CONTRACT PERTAINING THERETO. NOTHING CONTAINED IN THE INSTRUCTION MANUAL SHALL BE CONSTRUED TO CREATE AN EXPRESS WARRANTY OF ANY KIND WHATSOEVER WITH RESPECT TO THE PRODUCT. ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES AND CONDITIONS THAT MAY ARISE BY OPERATION OF LAW, INCLUDING IF APPLICABLE THE 144 VerizonN330.book Page 145 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, ARE HEREBY LIMITED TO THE SAME DURATION OF TIME AS THE EXPRESS WRITTEN WARRANTY STATED HEREIN. SOME STATES/PROVINCES DO NOT ALLOW LIMITATIONS ON HOW LONG AN IMPLIED WARRANTY LASTES, SO THE ABOVE LIMITATION MAY NOT APPLY TO YOU. IN ADDITION SAMSUNG SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR ANY DAMAGES OF ANY KIND RESULTING FROM THE PURCHASE, USE, OR MISUSE OF, OR INABILITY TO USE THE PRODUCT OR ARISING DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY FROM THE USE OR LOSS OF USE OF THE PRODUCT OR FROM BREACH OF THE EXPRESS WARRANTY, INCLUDING INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, CONSEQUENTIAL OR SIMULAR DAMAGES, OR LOSS OF ANTICIPATED PROFITS OR BENEFITS, OR FOR DAMAGES ARISING FROM ANY TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR GROSS NELIGENCE) OR FAULT COMMITTED BY SAMSUNG, ITS AGENTS OR EMPLOYEES, OR ANY BREACH OF CONTRACT OR FOR ANY CLAIM BROUGHT AGAINST PURCHASER BY ANY OTHER PARTY. SOME STATES/
PROVINCES DO NOT ALLOW THE EXCLUSION OR LIMITATION OF INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES, SO THE ABOVE LIMITATION OR EXCLUSION 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/PROVINCE TO PROVINCE. THIS LIMITED WARRANTY SHALL NOT EXTENT TO ANYONE OTHER THAN THE ORIGINAL PURCHASER OF THIS PRODUCT AND STATES PURCHASERS EXCLUSIVE REMEDY. IF ANY PORTION OF THIS LIMITED WARRANTY Limited warranty 145 VerizonN330.book Page 146 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM IS HELD ILLEGAL OR UNENFORCEABLE BY REASON OF ANY LAW, SUCH PARTIAL ILLEGALITY OR UNENFORCEABILITY SHALL NOT AFFECT THE ENFORCEABILITY FOR THE REMAINDER OF THIS LIMITED WARRANTY WHICH PURCHASER ACKNOWLEDGES IS AND WILL ALWAYS BE CONSTRUCTED TO BE LIMITED BY ITS TERMS OR AS LIMITED AS THE LAW PERMITS. THE PARTIES UNDERSTAND THE PURCHASER MAY USE THIRD-PARTY SOFTWARE OR EQUIPMENT IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE PRODUCT. SAMSUNG MAKES NO WARRANTIES OR REPRESENTATIONS AND THERE ARE NO CONDITIONS, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, STATUTORY OR OTHERWISE, AS TO THE QUALITY, CAPABILITIES, OPERATIONS, PERFORMANCE OR SUITABILITY OF ANY THIRD-PARTY SOFTWARE OR EQUIPMENT, WHETHER SUCH THIRD-PARTY SOFTWARE OR EQUIPMENT IS INCLUDED WITH THE PRODUCT DISTRIBUTED BY SAMSUNG OR OTHERWISE, INCLUDING THE ABILITY TO INTEGRATE ANY SUCH SOFTWARE OR EQUIPMENT WITH THE PRODUCT. THE QUALITY, CAPABILITIES OPERATIONS, PERFORMANCE AND SUITABILITY OF ANY SUCH THIRD-PARTY SOFTWARE OR EQUIPMENT LIE SOLELY WITH THE PURCHASER AND THE DIRECT VENDOR, OWNER OR SUPPLIER OF SUCH THIRD-PARTY SOFTWARE OR EQUIPMENT, AS THE CASE MAY BE. 146 VerizonN330.book Page 147 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM This Limited Warranty allocates risk of Product failure between Purchaser and SAMSUNG, and SAMSUNGs Product pricing reflects this allocation of risk and the limitations of liability contained in this Limited Warranty. The agents, employees, distributors, and dealers of SAMSUNG are not authorized to make modifications to this Limited Warranty, or make additional warranties binding on SAMSUNG. Accordingly, additional statements such as dealer advertising or presentation, whether oral or written, do not constitute warranties by SAMSUNG and should not be relied upon. Samsung Telecommunications America, L.P. 1301 E. Lookout Drive Richardson, TX 75082 Phone: 1-800-SAMSUNG Phone: 1-888-987-HELP (4357) 2005 Samsung Telecommunications America, Inc. All rights reserved. No reproduction in whole or in part allowed without prior written approval. Specifications and availability subject to change without notice. Limited warranty 147 VerizonN330.book Page 148 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM 148 VerizonN330.book Page 149 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Index Numerics 10 driver safety tips ......... 117 123 mode ........................ 53 911 ............................... 106 A Adjust LCD backlight setting ..... 22 Air bag information ......... 140 Alarm clock set alarm ..................... 80 set the alarm ................ 79 turn alarm off ................ 80 when an alarm sounds .... 80 Alerts .............................. 90 Antenna ............................ 9 Antenna care ................. 136 Apps buying ......................... 66 cancelling subscription .... 66 demo .......................... 66 disabled ....................... 67 paying for ..................... 66 removing ..................... 67 restoring ...................... 67 Auto retry ...................... 112 B Backlight features ............... 9 Battery care .......................... 121 charging ........................ 7 disposal ..................... 122 installation ...................... 6 low battery indicator ......... 7 removal ......................... 6 Body worn operation ....... 123 Buying apps ..................... 66 C Calculator ........................ 81 Call answer ....................111 Call answer mode .............15 Call end .........................111 Call notification methods ....21 Call restriction .................108 Call timer ..........................33 Call waiting .......................34 Calls menu .......................30 Cautions ........................123 Change language ............112 Change lock code ...........106 Charges for apps ..............66 Consumer update, FDA ...126 Contacts by entry ........................38 by group .......................38 by name .......................37 finding ..........................37 Count down edit timers .....................78 CTIA safety information ....135 CTIA website ..................125 D Dialing one-touch .....................46 three-touch ...................47 two-touch .....................47 Digit dial adapting .......................94 resetting .......................96 tips ..............................92 use ..............................93 Display screen icons ..........13 Display, extending ...............8 Draft messages creating ........................60 view and edit .................60 Index 149 VerizonN330.book Page 150 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM E Emergency numbers ........106 Emergency numbers, storing .. 107 Enter numbers ..................53 Erase memory ......................109 Erase logs ........................33 Erase message folder ........63 Exit Mobile Web ................69 Exposure to radio waves, limits 124 F FCC ID ..............................125 website ............. 125, 131 FDA consumer update .........126 health effects of wireless phones .......................130 RF measurements ........132 Role ..........................126 G Get It Now help .............................65 menu ...........................64 options .........................64 settings ........................65 Getting started ..................19 H Hard pause .......................42 I Ignore calls .......................22 Inbox folder ......................58 Incoming calls ............ 20, 31 Input mode .......................15 In-use menu .....................29 K Key beep ..........................89 150 L Launch Mobile Web ...........68 LCD backlight setting .........22 Left soft key ......................10 Limited warranty .............142 List of menus ....................24 Lock code, changing .......106 Lock mode .......................15 Lock phone ....................105 M Maintaining peak performance 116 Make outgoing calls ...........20 Medical equipment, interfer-
ence ..............................134 Memo pad edit memos ...................76 Menu shortcuts .................27 Message folder voice ...........................58 Message send options .......55 Message setting folder .......62 Messages and lock mode ...57 Messages, receive in call ...57 Microphone ......................11 Missed Calls .....................32 Mobile Web ......................68 Mode call answer ...................15 input ............................15 lock .............................15 silent ...........................17 standby ........................16 talk ..............................16 vibrate .........................17 N n330 key features ...............5 Name dial ........................96 Navigation key ..................12 VerizonN330.book Page 151 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM Navigation key shortcuts ... 28 O One-touch dialing ............. 46 Options, message sending 55 Others menu .................. 110 Outbox folder ................... 59 Outbox, reviewing messages . 59 Outgoing calls ............20, 30 Owners record ............... 140 P P pause ........................... 42 Peak performance, maintaining 116 Phone use in dangerous areas ...... 120 near electronic devices . 119 restricting childrens access . 121 while flying ................. 120 Planner add a new event ............ 72 alarm clock ................... 79 calculator ..................... 81 count down .................. 77 memo pad .................... 76 opening ....................... 71 scheduler ..................... 73 to do list ....................... 74 today .......................... 71 world time .................... 80 Power save feature ......... 115 Proprietary notice ........... 141 R Radio frequency safety .... 116 Receive text messages ..... 57 Reception, getting most of 115 Reset your phone ........... 109 Restrict calls .................. 108 Return to last menu .......... 27 Reviewing outbox ..............59 RF energy exposure ........131 RF exposure research .....129 RF safety .......................116 Right soft key ....................10 Ringer type .......................88 Roam ringer .....................91 S Safe use of your phone ....117 hearing aids ................137 in aircraft ....................139 in blasting areas ...........139 in explosive areas ........139 in posted facilities .........139 other medical devices ...139 pacemakers ................137 vehicles ......................139 Safety guidelines, following .... 119 Samsung address ...........147 Samsung phone numbers 147 SAR values ....................125 Scheduler .........................73 jump to date ..................74 view an event ................73 Service LED on & off ........................86 Service, obtaining ..............19 Shortcut to menus .............27 Silence a ringer .................22 SMS messages, sending ....54 Special precautions, FCC .123 Standby mode ..................16 Store emergency numbers 107 Store numbers after a call ..43 Store pauses ....................42 Symbol mode ...................53 T T pause ...........................42 T9 text entry .....................51 151 Index VerizonN330.book Page 152 Thursday, July 7, 2005 2:21 PM commands ....................92 digit dial .......................92 erase all memos ..........101 erase memos ..............100 name dial .....................96 record memo .................99 review memos .............100 voice memos .................99 Voice mail checking ......................58 the voice folder ..............58 Voice memos, voice kit ......99 Voicemail checking ......................23 setup ...........................23 W Wap push folder ................62 Warranty information Samsung liability ..........144 Samsung obligations ....143 what is covered ...........142 Websites CTIA .........................125 FCC ..........................135 FDA ..........................135 ICNIRP ......................135 NRPB ........................135 WHO .........................135 World time ........................80 Talk mode ........................16 Text entry mode 123 mode .....................53 abc mode .....................51 Symbol mode ................53 T9 ...............................51 Text messages, receiving ...57 Three-touch dialing ............47 Tips, efficient operation ....136 To do list ..........................74 edit tasks ......................75 Travel adapter ....................7 TTY ...............................114 Turn phone off ..................20 Turn phone on ..................19 Two-second pause ............42 Two-touch dialing ..............47 U Understanding phone operation 115 Usage children ......................133 electronic devices .........137 hearing aids ................137 in aircraft ....................139 in blasting areas ...........139 in explosive areas .........139 in posted facilities .........139 in vehicles ...................139 other medical devices ....139 pacemakers ................137 RF exposure ...............132 while driving ................136 Usage guidelines .............115 V Version ..........................113 VibeTonz ..........................87 Vibrate mode ....................17 View an event, scheduler ...73 Voice kit 152
frequency | equipment class | purpose | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2005-07-27 | 1851.25 ~ 1908.75 | PCE - PCS Licensed Transmitter held to ear | Class II permissive change or modification of presently authorized equipment |
2 | 2004-08-12 | 1851.25 ~ 1908.75 | PCE - PCS Licensed Transmitter held to ear | Original Equipment |
app s | Applicant Information | |||||
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1 2 | Effective |
2005-07-27
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1 2 |
2004-08-12
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1 2 | Applicant's complete, legal business name |
Samsung Electronics Co Ltd
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1 2 | FCC Registration Number (FRN) |
0027908797
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1 2 | Physical Address |
19 Chapin Rd., Building D
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1 2 |
Pine Brook, New Jersey 07058
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1 2 |
United States
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app s | TCB Information | |||||
1 2 | TCB Application Email Address |
r******@pctestlab.com
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1 2 | TCB Scope |
B1: Commercial mobile radio services equipment in the following 47 CFR Parts 20, 22 (cellular), 24,25 (below 3 GHz) & 27
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app s | FCC ID | |||||
1 2 | Grantee Code |
A3L
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1 2 | Equipment Product Code |
SCHN330
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app s | Person at the applicant's address to receive grant or for contact | |||||
1 2 | Name |
J******** C******
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1 2 | Title |
General Manager
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1 2 | Telephone Number |
973-8********
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1 2 | Fax Number |
973-8********
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1 2 |
j******@samsung.com
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app s | Technical Contact | |||||
1 2 | Firm Name |
PCTEST Engineering Lab., Inc.
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||||
1 2 | Name |
R**** O******
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||||
1 2 | Physical Address |
6660-B Dobbin Road
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1 2 |
Columbia, Maryland 21045
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1 2 |
United States
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1 2 | Telephone Number |
410-2********
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1 2 | Fax Number |
410-2********
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1 2 |
r******@pctestlab.com
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app s | Non Technical Contact | |||||
n/a | ||||||
app s | Confidentiality (long or short term) | |||||
1 2 | 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 | 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 | If so, specify the short-term confidentiality release date (MM/DD/YYYY format) | 09/10/2005 | ||||
1 2 | 09/26/2004 | |||||
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 | Is this application for software defined/cognitive radio authorization? | No | ||||
1 2 | Equipment Class | PCE - PCS Licensed Transmitter held to ear | ||||
1 2 | Description of product as it is marketed: (NOTE: This text will appear below the equipment class on the grant) | Dual-Band CDMA Phone | ||||
1 2 | Related OET KnowledgeDataBase Inquiry: Is there a KDB inquiry associated with this application? | No | ||||
1 2 | Modular Equipment Type | Does not apply | ||||
1 2 | Purpose / Application is for | Class II permissive change or modification of presently authorized equipment | ||||
1 2 | Original Equipment | |||||
1 2 | Composite Equipment: Is the equipment in this application a composite device subject to an additional equipment authorization? | No | ||||
1 2 | 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 | Grant Comments | Class II Permissive Change. Output is ERP for Part 22 and EIRP for Part 24. SAR compliance for body-worn operating configuration is limited to the specific holster/belt-clip tested for this filing. End-users must be informed of the body-worn operating requirements for satisfying RF exposure compliance. The highest reported SAR values under this FCC ID: are Part 22 Head: 1.26 W/kg; Body-worn: 1.31 W/kg, Part 24 Head: 0.523 W/kg; Body-worn: 0.932 W/kg HAC Rating: M3 | ||||
1 2 | Output is ERP for Part 22 and EIRP for Part 24. SAR compliance for body-worn operating configuration is limited to the specific holster/belt-clip tested for this filing. End-users must be informed of the body-worn operating requirements for satisfying RF exposure compliance. The highest reported SAR values under this FCC ID: are Part 22 Head: 1.26 W/kg; Body-worn: 1.31 W/kg, Part 24 Head: 0.523 W/kg; Body-worn: 0.932 W/kg | |||||
1 2 | Is there an equipment authorization waiver associated with this application? | No | ||||
1 2 | 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 | Firm Name |
PCTEST Engineering Laboratory, Inc.
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1 2 |
SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS CO., LTD.
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1 2 | Name |
R******** O******
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1 2 |
N****** P****
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1 2 | Telephone Number |
41029********
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1 2 |
82-31********
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1 2 | Fax Number |
41029********
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1 2 |
82-31********
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1 2 |
r******@pctestlab.com
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|||||
1 2 |
n******@samsung.co..kr
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Equipment Specifications | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 1 | 22H | HC | 824.7 | 848.97 | 0.255 | 2.5 ppm | 1M25F9W | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 2 | 24E | HC | 1851.25 | 1908.75 | 0.735 | 2.5 ppm | 1M25F9W | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2 | 1 | 22H | 824.7 | 848.31 | 0.255 | 2.5 ppm | 1M25F9W | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2 | 2 | 24E | 1851.25 | 1908.75 | 0.735 | 2.5 ppm | 1M25F9W |
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