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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | User Manual | Users Manual | 4.81 MiB |
TC55 VERIZON USER GUIDE February 2014 MN000xxxA01 2014 Motorola Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved PRELIMINARY PRELIMINARY Revision History Changes to the original guide are listed below:
MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY PRELIMINARY Contents | 5 Contents Revision History...............................................................................................................................3 List of Tables.................................................................................................................................... 9 List of Figures................................................................................................................................ 11 About This Guide...........................................................................................................................15 Documentation Set.............................................................................................................................................. 15 Configurations.....................................................................................................................................................15 Chapter Descriptions........................................................................................................................................... 16 Notational Conventions.......................................................................................................................................16 Icon Conventions.................................................................................................................................................16 Related Documents..............................................................................................................................................17 Service Information.............................................................................................................................................17 Chapter 1: Getting Started....................................................................................19 TC55 Features..................................................................................................................................................... 19 Unpacking........................................................................................................................................................... 22 Setup....................................................................................................................................................................22 Installing the SIM Card........................................................................................................................... 22 Installing an Optional microSD Card......................................................................................................24 Installing the Battery............................................................................................................................... 26 Charging the Battery............................................................................................................................... 28 Charging the Main Battery..........................................................................................................28 Charging LED Status...................................................................................................................29 Charging Temperature.................................................................................................................29 Powering On the TC55................................................................................................................30 Replacing the 2,940 mAh Battery....................................................................................................................... 30 Replacing the 4,410 mAh Battery....................................................................................................................... 32 Replacing the microSD Card...............................................................................................................................34 Battery Management........................................................................................................................................... 36 Monitor Battery Usage............................................................................................................................ 36 Low Battery Notification.........................................................................................................................37 Battery Optimization............................................................................................................................... 38 Turning Off the Radios................................................................................................................38 Setting the Date and Time...................................................................................................................................38 General Sound Setting.........................................................................................................................................39 Setting LED Notifications...................................................................................................................................40 Chapter 2: Using the TC55....................................................................................43 Home Screen....................................................................................................................................................... 43 Status Bar................................................................................................................................................ 44 Status Icons..................................................................................................................................45 Notification Icons........................................................................................................................46 Managing Notifications...........................................................................................................................47 Application Shortcuts and Widgets.........................................................................................................48 Adding an Application or Widget to the Home Screen...............................................................48 Moving Items on the Home Screen.............................................................................................48 Removing an App or Widget from the Home Screen................................................................. 48 Folders.....................................................................................................................................................49 Creating a Folder.........................................................................................................................49 Naming Folders........................................................................................................................... 49 PRELIMINARY 6 | Contents Removing a Folder...................................................................................................................... 49 Changing the Home Screen Wallpaper................................................................................................... 49 Using the Touchscreen........................................................................................................................................ 50 Using the On-screen Keyboard........................................................................................................................... 50 Applications.........................................................................................................................................................51 Accessing Applications........................................................................................................................... 55 Switching Between Recent Applications................................................................................................ 55 Un-Locking the Screen........................................................................................................................................56 Single User Mode....................................................................................................................................56 MultiUser Mode...................................................................................................................................... 58 MultiUser Login..........................................................................................................................58 MultiUser Logout........................................................................................................................59 Resetting the Device............................................................................................................................................59 Performing a Soft Reset.......................................................................................................................... 59 Performing a Hard Reset......................................................................................................................... 59 Suspend Mode..................................................................................................................................................... 60 Chapter 3: Calls......................................................................................................61 Making a Call Using the Dialer...........................................................................................................................62 Dialer Dialing Options............................................................................................................................ 63 Making a Call Using Contacts.............................................................................................................................64 Making a Call Using Call History.......................................................................................................................64 Making a Conference Call...................................................................................................................................65 Making a Call Using a Bluetooth Headset.......................................................................................................... 67 Answering Calls.................................................................................................................................................. 67 Answering Calls with a Bluetooth Headset.........................................................................................................69 Call Settings........................................................................................................................................................ 69 Chapter 4: Applications.........................................................................................71 File Browser........................................................................................................................................................ 71 Messaging............................................................................................................................................................72 Sending a Text Message..........................................................................................................................72 Sending a Multimedia Message.............................................................................................................. 73 People.................................................................................................................................................................. 74 Adding People......................................................................................................................................... 74 Editing People......................................................................................................................................... 74 Deleting People....................................................................................................................................... 74 Voice Dialer........................................................................................................................................................ 74 Calling a Person By Name...................................................................................................................... 75 Redialing Previous Call...........................................................................................................................75 Dialing By Number................................................................................................................................. 75 Opening an Application...........................................................................................................................75 Camera.................................................................................................................................................................76 Taking Photos..........................................................................................................................................76 Taking a Panoramic Photo...................................................................................................................... 77 Recording Videos....................................................................................................................................78 Camera Settings.......................................................................................................................................78 Video Settings......................................................................................................................................... 79 Gallery.................................................................................................................................................................80 Working with Albums.............................................................................................................................81 Share an Album...........................................................................................................................82 Get Album Information...............................................................................................................82 Deleting an Album...................................................................................................................... 82 Working with Photos...............................................................................................................................82 PRELIMINARY Contents | 7 Viewing and Browsing Photos....................................................................................................82 Rotating a Photo.......................................................................................................................... 83 Cropping a Photo.........................................................................................................................83 Setting a Photo as a Contact Icon................................................................................................84 Get Photo Information.................................................................................................................84 Share a Photo...............................................................................................................................85 Deleting a Photo.......................................................................................................................... 85 Working with Videos.............................................................................................................................. 85 Watching Videos......................................................................................................................... 85 Sharing a Video...........................................................................................................................86 Deleting a Video..........................................................................................................................86 Movie Studio....................................................................................................................................................... 87 DataWedge Demonstration................................................................................................................................. 87 Sound Recorder................................................................................................................................................... 88 Elemez.................................................................................................................................................................89 Disabling Elemez Data Collection.......................................................................................................... 90 Enabling Elemez Data Collection........................................................................................................... 90 MLog Manager....................................................................................................................................................90 Chapter 5: Data Capture.......................................................................................93 Linear Imager...................................................................................................................................................... 93 Digital Camera.................................................................................................................................................... 93 CS3070 Bluetooth Scanner................................................................................................................................. 93 RS507 Hands-Free Imager.................................................................................................................................. 94 Scanning Considerations..................................................................................................................................... 94 Bar Code Capture with Linear Imager................................................................................................................ 95 Bar Code Capture with Integrated Camera......................................................................................................... 96 Bar Code Capture with CS3070 Bluetooth Scanner........................................................................................... 96 Bar Code Capture with RS507 Hands-Free Imager............................................................................................ 97 DataWedge.......................................................................................................................................................... 99 Enabling DataWedge...............................................................................................................................99 Disabling DataWedge..............................................................................................................................99 Chapter 6: Wireless..............................................................................................101 Wireless Wide Area Networks..........................................................................................................................101 Sharing the Mobile Data Connection.................................................................................................... 101 USB Tethering...........................................................................................................................101 Bluetooth Tethering...................................................................................................................102 Portable Wi-Fi Hotspot............................................................................................................. 102 Data Usage............................................................................................................................................ 103 Disabling Data When Roaming.............................................................................................................104 Limiting Data Connection to 2G Networks.......................................................................................... 105 Locking the SIM Card...........................................................................................................................105 Editing the Access Point Name.............................................................................................................106 Wireless Local Area Networks..........................................................................................................................106 Scan and Connect to a Wi-Fi Network..................................................................................................107 Configuring a Wi-Fi Network............................................................................................................... 108 Manually Adding a Wi-Fi Network...................................................................................................... 109 Configuring for a Proxy Server.............................................................................................................109 Configuring the Device to Use a Static IP Address.............................................................................. 110 Advanced Wi-Fi Settings...................................................................................................................... 111 WLAN Configuration............................................................................................................................111 Modifying a Wi-Fi Network..................................................................................................................112 Connecting to a Wi-Fi Network Using WPS........................................................................................ 112 PRELIMINARY 8 | Contents Remove a Wi-Fi Network..................................................................................................................... 112 Bluetooth........................................................................................................................................................... 112 Adaptive Frequency Hopping............................................................................................................... 113 Security..................................................................................................................................................113 Bluetooth Profiles..................................................................................................................................113 Bluetooth Power States......................................................................................................................... 114 Bluetooth Radio Power......................................................................................................................... 114 Enabling Bluetooth....................................................................................................................114 Disabling Bluetooth...................................................................................................................114 Discovering Bluetooth Device(s).......................................................................................................... 115 Changing the Bluetooth Name.............................................................................................................. 116 Connecting to a Bluetooth Device.........................................................................................................116 Selecting Profiles on the Bluetooth Device...........................................................................................116 Unpairing a Bluetooth Device...............................................................................................................116 Pairing with the CS3070........................................................................................................................117 CS3070 Numeric Bar Codes for PIN Entry.............................................................................. 117 Pairing the RS507 Hands-Fee Imager...................................................................................................118 Near Field Communications..............................................................................................................................119 Sharing Information Using NFC........................................................................................................... 119 Communication Using NFC..................................................................................................................120 Pairing with NFC Enabled Bluetooth Devices......................................................................................120 Chapter 7: Accessories.........................................................................................123 TC55 Accessories..............................................................................................................................................123 Micro USB Cable.............................................................................................................................................. 124 Rugged Charge Cable........................................................................................................................................125 Five Slot Charge Only Cradle........................................................................................................................... 127 Vehicle Charge Cradle...................................................................................................................................... 128 Installing Vehicle Cradle on Windshield.............................................................................................. 128 Removing the Device from the Vehicle Cradle.................................................................................... 132 Dock Settings........................................................................................................................................ 133 Installing the Protective Boot............................................................................................................................135 Attaching the Stylus to the Protective Boot...................................................................................................... 136 Holster............................................................................................................................................................... 138 Chapter 8: Maintenance and Troubleshooting................................................. 141 Maintaining the TC55....................................................................................................................................... 141 Battery Safety Guidelines..................................................................................................................................141 Cleaning Instructions.........................................................................................................................................142 Cleaning the TC55.................................................................................................................................143 Connector Cleaning...................................................................................................................143 Cleaning Cradle Connectors......................................................................................................143 Troubleshooting.................................................................................................................................................144 Troubleshooting the TC55.....................................................................................................................144 Chapter 9: Technical Specifications................................................................... 147 TC55 Technical Specifications......................................................................................................................... 147 PRELIMINARY List of Tables | 9 List of Tables Table 1: Front View Features ......................................................................................................... 19 Table 2: Back View Features ..........................................................................................................21 Table 3: Charging LED Status ........................................................................................................29 Table 4: Home Screen Items ...........................................................................................................44 Table 5: Home Screen Items ...........................................................................................................44 Table 6: Status Icons .......................................................................................................................45 Table 7: Notification Icons ............................................................................................................. 46 Table 8: Applications ......................................................................................................................51 Table 9: DataWedge Demonstration Icons .....................................................................................88 Table 10: TC55 Accessories .........................................................................................................123 Table 11: Troubleshooting the TC55 ............................................................................................144 Table 12: TC55 Technical Specifications .....................................................................................147 PRELIMINARY 10 | List of Tables PRELIMINARY List of Figures | 11 List of Figures Figure 1: Manufacturing Label Location ........................................................................................18 Figure 2: Front View ...................................................................................................................... 19 Figure 3: Back View .......................................................................................................................21 Figure 4: Unlock SIM Card Holder ................................................................................................ 23 Figure 5: Install SIM Card ..............................................................................................................23 Figure 6: Close SIM Card Holder ...................................................................................................24 Figure 7: Lock SIM Card Holder ....................................................................................................24 Figure 8: Unlock microSD Card Door ............................................................................................25 Figure 9: Insert microSD Card ....................................................................................................... 25 Figure 10: Lock SD Card Door ...................................................................................................... 26 Figure 11: Inserting the 2,940 mAh Battery ...................................................................................26 Figure 12: Inserting the 4,410 mAh Battery ...................................................................................27 Figure 13: Install the Battery Cover ............................................................................................... 27 Figure 14: Secure Cover ................................................................................................................. 28 Figure 15: Connect the Rugged Charge Cable ............................................................................... 29 Figure 16: Remove the Battery Cover ............................................................................................ 30 Figure 17: Remove 2,940 mAh Battery ..........................................................................................31 Figure 18: Inserting the 2,940 mAh Battery ...................................................................................31 Figure 19: Align the Battery Cover ................................................................................................ 31 Figure 20: Secure the Battery Cover .............................................................................................. 32 Figure 21: Remove the Battery Cover ............................................................................................ 32 Figure 22: Remove 4,410 mAh Battery ..........................................................................................33 Figure 23: Inserting the 4,410 mAh Battery ...................................................................................33 Figure 24: Align the Battery Cover ................................................................................................ 33 Figure 25: Secure the Battery Cover .............................................................................................. 34 Figure 26: Unlock microSD Card Cover ........................................................................................ 35 Figure 27: Insert microSD Card ..................................................................................................... 35 Figure 28: Lock microSD Card Cover ............................................................................................36 Figure 29: Battery Screen ............................................................................................................... 37 Figure 30: Low Battery Notification .............................................................................................. 37 Figure 31: Battery Depleted Screen ................................................................................................38 Figure 32: Sounds Screen ............................................................................................................... 39 PRELIMINARY 12 | List of Figures Figure 33: Volumes Dialog Box .....................................................................................................40 Figure 34: LED Options Dialog Box ..............................................................................................41 Figure 35: Home Screen ................................................................................................................. 43 Figure 36: Notification and Status Icons ........................................................................................ 44 Figure 37: Notification Panel ..........................................................................................................48 Figure 38: Open Folder ...................................................................................................................49 Figure 39: Renamed Folder ............................................................................................................ 49 Figure 40: APPS Window .............................................................................................................. 55 Figure 41: Recently Used Applications ..........................................................................................56 Figure 42: Lock Screen ...................................................................................................................57 Figure 43: PIN Screen .................................................................................................................... 57 Figure 44: Pattern Screen ................................................................................................................58 Figure 45: Password Screen ............................................................................................................58 Figure 46: Multiple User Log In Screen .........................................................................................59 Figure 47: Three Button Reset ........................................................................................................60 Figure 48: Lock Screen ...................................................................................................................60 Figure 49: Insert Wired Headset Plug ............................................................................................ 62 Figure 50: Dialer Screen .................................................................................................................62 Figure 51: Call in Progress ............................................................................................................. 63 Figure 52: Dialer Contacts Tab .......................................................................................................64 Figure 53: Call History Tab ............................................................................................................65 Figure 54: Two Calls ...................................................................................................................... 66 Figure 55: Merged Calls ................................................................................................................. 66 Figure 56: Un-merge Calls ............................................................................................................. 67 Figure 57: Incoming Call Screen ....................................................................................................68 Figure 58: Select Answer Options ..................................................................................................68 Figure 59: Incoming Call Screen ....................................................................................................69 Figure 60: File Browser Screen ...................................................................................................... 71 Figure 61: New Text Message Screen ............................................................................................ 72 Figure 62: New Multimedia Message Screen .................................................................................73 Figure 63: Voice Dialer Window ................................................................................................... 75 Figure 64: Camera Mode ................................................................................................................ 76 Figure 65: Panoramic Mode ........................................................................................................... 77 Figure 66: Video Mode ...................................................................................................................78 Figure 67: Gallery Albums ........................................................................................................ 81 PRELIMINARY List of Figures | 13 Figure 68: Photos Inside an Album ................................................................................................ 81 Figure 69: Photo Example .............................................................................................................. 83 Figure 70: Cropping Tool ............................................................................................................... 84 Figure 71: Video Example ..............................................................................................................86 Figure 72: Movie Studio Application ............................................................................................. 87 Figure 73: DataWedge Demonstration Window ............................................................................ 88 Figure 74: Sound Recorder Application ......................................................................................... 89 Figure 75: Elemez Application .......................................................................................................89 Figure 76: MLog Manager ..............................................................................................................91 Figure 77: CS3070 Bluetooth Scanner ........................................................................................... 94 Figure 78: RS507 Hands-Free Imager ............................................................................................94 Figure 79: Scanning ........................................................................................................................95 Figure 80: Aiming Pattern .............................................................................................................. 95 Figure 81: Application with Preview Window ...............................................................................96 Figure 82: CS3070 Scanning .......................................................................................................... 97 Figure 83: Linear Scanner Aiming Pattern .....................................................................................97 Figure 84: Bar Code Scanning with RS507 ....................................................................................98 Figure 85: Aiming Pattern .............................................................................................................. 98 Figure 86: Pick List Mode with Multiple Bar Codes in Aiming Pattern ........................................98 Figure 87: Set up Wi-Fi Hotspot Dialog Box ...............................................................................103 Figure 88: Data Usage Screen ...................................................................................................... 104 Figure 89: Enter PIN to Lock SIM Card ...................................................................................... 105 Figure 90: Settings Screen ............................................................................................................ 107 Figure 91: Wi-Fi Screen ............................................................................................................... 107 Figure 92: WLAN Network Security Dialog Boxes .....................................................................108 Figure 93: Proxy Settings ............................................................................................................. 110 Figure 94: Static IP Settings ......................................................................................................... 110 Figure 95: Bluetooth Pairing - Enter PIN ..................................................................................... 115 Figure 96: Bluetooth Pairing - Smart Pairing ............................................................................... 115 Figure 97: Bluetooth Keyboard Emulation (HID) Bar Code ........................................................117 Figure 98: RS507 Bluetooth HID Bar Code .................................................................................118 Figure 99: Sharing Data Using NFC ............................................................................................ 119 Figure 100: Communication with NFC Chip, Tag or Card .......................................................... 120 Figure 101: Pairing with NFC Enabled Device ............................................................................121 Figure 102: Using the Micro USB Cable ..................................................................................... 124 PRELIMINARY 14 | List of Figures Figure 103: Rugged Charge Cable ............................................................................................... 125 Figure 104: Connect Rugged Charge Cable to TC55 ...................................................................125 Figure 105: Connect to Power ...................................................................................................... 126 Figure 106: Removing the Rugged Charge Cable ........................................................................126 Figure 107: Five Slot Charge Only Cradle ................................................................................... 127 Figure 108: Remove Cup Insert ....................................................................................................128 Figure 109: Windshield Installation ............................................................................................. 129 Figure 110: Move Level Toward Windshield .............................................................................. 129 Figure 111: Insert TC55 into Vehicle Charge Cradle ...................................................................130 Figure 112: Tighten Nut ............................................................................................................... 131 Figure 113: Connect Auto Charge Cable to Vehicle Charge Cradle ............................................131 Figure 114: Cable Retention .........................................................................................................132 Figure 115: Remove TC55 From Vehicle Cradle .........................................................................133 Figure 116: Dock Screen .............................................................................................................. 133 Figure 117: Dock Settings Screen ................................................................................................ 134 Figure 118: Protective Boot ..........................................................................................................135 Figure 119: Insert Top of TC55 into Boot ....................................................................................135 Figure 120: Insert Bottom of TC55 into Boot .............................................................................. 135 Figure 121: Insert Tether into Stylus ............................................................................................ 136 Figure 122: Feed Stylus through Tether Loop ..............................................................................136 Figure 123: Insert Stylus Point into Mounting Hole .................................................................... 137 Figure 124: Lock Stylus into Place ...............................................................................................137 Figure 125: Style in Protective Boot ............................................................................................ 138 Figure 126: Holster ....................................................................................................................... 138 Figure 127: Inserting the TC55 with 2,490 mAh Battery into the Holster ...................................139 Figure 128: Inserting the TC55 with 4,410 mAh Battery into the Holster ...................................139 Figure 129: Stylus in Holster ........................................................................................................140 PRELIMINARY About This Guide This guide provides information on using the TC55 and accessories. Note: Screens and windows pictured in this guide are samples and can differ from actual screens. Documentation Set The documentation set for the TC55 provides information for specific user needs, and includes:
TC55 Quick Start Guide - describes how to get the device up and running. TC55 User Guide - describes how to use the device. TC55 Integrator Guide - describes how to set up the device and accessories. Configurations This guide covers the following configurations:
Display 4.3 color WVGA Memory 1 GB RAM / 8 GB Flash Data Capture Options Linear imager and camera or camera Operating Sys-
tem Android-based, Android Open-
Source Project 4.1.2 or 4.3 color WVGA 1 GB RAM / 8 GB Flash Linear imager and camera or camera Android-based, Android Open-
Source Project 4.1.2 or 4.3 color WVGA 1 GB RAM / 8 GB Flash Linear imager and camera or camera Android-based, Android Open-
Source Project 4.1.2 or Configuration Radios TC55AH TC55BH TC55CH WLAN:
802.11a/b/g/n WPAN:
Bluetooth v4.0 and NFC WWAN: LTE WLAN:
802.11a/b/g/n WPAN:
Bluetooth v4.0 and NFC WWAN: HSPA+
WLAN:
802.11a/b/g/n WPAN:
Bluetooth v4.0 and NFC WWAN: CDMA/
EVDO, LTE Software Versions To determine the current software versions touch
>
>
About phone. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 16 | About This Guide Serial number Displays the serial number. Model number Displays the model number. Android version Displays the operating system version. Kernel version Displays the kernel version number. Build number Displays the software build number. Chapter Descriptions Topics covered in this guide are as follows:
Getting Started on page 19 provides information on getting the TC55 up and running for the first time. Using the TC55 on page 43 provides information for operating the TC55. Calls on page 61 provides instructions for making phone calls. Applications on page 71 provides information on using applications installed on the TC55. Data Capture on page 93 provides information for capturing bar code data using the linear imager or camera. Wireless on page 101 provides information on the various wireless options. Accessories on page 123 - provides information for using the accessories for the TC55. Maintenance and Troubleshooting on page 141 includes instructions on cleaning and provides troubleshooting solutions for potential problems during TC55 operation. Technical Specifications on page 147 provides the technical specifications for the TC55. Notational Conventions The following conventions are used in this document:
Italics are used to highlight the following:
Chapters and sections in this and related documents Icons on a screen. Bold text is used to highlight the following:
Dialog box, window, and screen names Drop-down list and list box names Check box and radio button names Button names on a screen. Bullets () indicate:
Action items Lists of alternatives Lists of required steps that are not necessarily sequential Sequential lists (for example, lists that describe step-by-step procedures) appear as numbered lists. Icon Conventions The documentation set is designed to give the reader more visual clues. The following graphic icons are used throughout the documentation set. These icons and their associated meanings are described below. Warning: The word WARNING with the associated safety icon implies information that, if disregarded, could result in death or serious injury, or serious product damage. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY About This Guide | 17 Caution: The word CAUTION with the associated safety icon implies information that, if disregarded, may result in minor or moderate injury, or serious product damage. Note: NOTE contains information more important than the surrounding text, such as exceptions or preconditions. They also refer the reader elsewhere for additional information, remind the reader how to complete an action (when it is not part of the current procedure, for instance), or tell the reader where something is located on the screen. There is no warning level associated with a note. Related Documents The following conventions are used in this document:
TC55 Quick Start Guide, p/n MN000014Axx TC55 Regulatory Guide, p/n MN000016Axx TC55 Integrator Guide, p/n MN000017Axx CS3000 Series Scanner Product Reference Guidde, p/n 72E-136088xx RS507 Hands-free Imager Product Reference Guide, p/n 72E-120802-xx MSP Client Software Guide, p/n 72E-128805-xx MSP Release Notes, p/n 72E-100160-xx. For the latest version of this guide and all guides, go to: http://supportcentral.motorolasolutions.com Service Information If you have a problem with your equipment, contact Motorola Solutions Global Customer Support Center for your region. Contact information is available at: http://www.motorolasolutions.com/support. When contacting Motorola Solutions Global Customer Support Center, please have the following information available:
Serial number of the unit (found on manufacturing label) Model number or product name (found on manufacturing label) Software type and version number MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 18 | About This Guide Figure 1: Manufacturing Label Location Motorola responds to calls by email or telephone within the time limits set forth in support agreements. If your problem cannot be solved by Motorola Solutions Global Customer Support Center, you may need to return your equipment for servicing and will be given specific directions. Motorola is not responsible for any damages incurred during shipment if the approved shipping container is not used. Shipping the units improperly can possibly void the warranty. If you purchased your product from a Motorola business partner, contact that business partner for support. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Chapter 1 Getting Started This chapter provides the features of the TC55 and explains how to set it up for the first time. TC55 Features Figure 2: Front View Table 1: Front View Features Number 1 2 Item Receiver LED Function Provides audio in handset mode. Indicates decode functionality. Lights red when scanning is in process. Lights green indicating a successful decode. Table continued MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback 12345678910111213PRELIMINARY 20 | Getting Started Number Item Function Indicates battery charge state when charging. See Charging LED Status on page 29. Indicates notifications. Lights blue when a notification is received. See Setting LED Notifications on page 40. Touch Screen Displays all information needed to operate the TC55. Programmable Button - By default, opens the Search application. Menu Button - Opens a menu with items that affect the current screen or application. On TC55 with GMS, touch and hold to display recently used applications. Use for communications in handset mode. Primary Microphone Charging Contacts Provides power to the device from cradles and cables. Speakers Provides audio output for video and music playback. Provides audio in speakerphone mode. Back Button - Displays the previous screen. Closes the keyboard if the on-
screen keyboard is open. Home Button - Displays the Home screen with a single touch. Displays recently used applications when held for a short period of time. On TC55 with GMS, displays the Home screen with a single touch. Touch and hold to open the Google Search application. Increase and decrease audio volume. Initiates scanning when a scan application is enabled (default). Programmable using the Button Remap settings. See TC55 Integrator Guide for more information. Determines ambient light for controlling display backlight intensity and for turning off display when in handset mode. Volume Up/Down Buttons Programmable Button Light Sensor/
Proximity Sensor 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Figure 3: Back View Getting Started | 21 Table 2: Back View Features Number 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 Item Battery Cover NFC Antenna Battery Cover Notch USB Port Power Button Flash Headset Jack Function Provides access to the battery, SIM and microSD card holders. Provides NFC communication with their NFC devices and NFC cards. Assists in battery cover removal. Provides USB client and host communications. Press and hold to turn on the TC55. Press to turn the screen on or off. Press and hold to select one of these options:
Power off - Turn off the TC55. Reset - Reboot the TC55 if software stops responding. Airplane mode - Disable all wireless connections. Provides illumination for the camera. Connects to headsets (3.5 mm plug). Note: Do not use 2.5 mm to 3.5 mm adapters. Use only headsets with straight plugs. Secondary Microphone Exit Window Use for making voice recordings and communications in speakerphone mode. Provides data capture using the linear imager (optional). Table continued MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback 14171820192122231615PRELIMINARY 22 | Getting Started Number 23 Item Camera Function Takes photos, videos and captures bar code data. Unpacking Carefully remove all protective material from the TC55 and save the shipping container for later storage and shipping. Verify the following items are in the box:
TC55 Lithium-ion battery (2,940 mAh or 4,410 mAh) Charge Cable Quick Start Guide Regulatory Guide. Note: Power Supply, p/n PWRS-12430601R, is required and must be purchased separately. Inspect the equipment for damage. If any equipment is missing or damaged, contact the Motorola Solutions Global Customer Support Center immediately. See Service Information on page 17 for contact information. Setup To start using the TC55 for the first time:
Install the SIM Card. Install microSD card (optional). Install the battery. Charge the TC55. Power on the TC55. Installing the SIM Card Caution:
For proper electrostatic discharge (ESD) precautions to avoid damaging the SIM card. Proper ESD precautions include, but not limited to, working on an ESD mat and ensuring that the user is properly grounded. Note:
The TC55 accepts a full size SIM card. If using a micro or nano SIM card, a third-party SIM adapter is required. The TC55 requires an activated SIM card. Obtain the card from a service provider. Procedure:
1 Slide the SIM card holder toward the bottom of the TC55 to unlock. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Figure 4: Unlock SIM Card Holder Getting Started | 23 2 Lift the SIM door. 3 Insert the SIM card with the cut edge and the contacts facing up. Figure 5: Install SIM Card 4 Close the SIM card holder. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 24 | Getting Started Figure 6: Close SIM Card Holder 5 Slide the SIM card holder toward the top of the TC55 to lock into place. Figure 7: Lock SIM Card Holder Installing an Optional microSD Card Caution:
For proper electrostatic discharge (ESD) precautions to avoid damaging the SD card. Proper ESD precautions include, but not limited to, working on an ESD mat and ensuring that the user is properly grounded. Changing the microSD card can change the functionality of the TC55. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Getting Started | 25 Note: The TC55 supports microSD cards up to 32 GB. Procedure:
1 Slide the microSD card door toward the top of the TC55 to unlock. Figure 8: Unlock microSD Card Door 2 Lift the SD card door. 3 Align the microSD card with the card holder. Ensure that the contacts on the card are facing down and toward the card holder. 4 Insert the microSD card into the card holder. Figure 9: Insert microSD Card 5 Close the SD card door. 6 Slide the SD card door toward the bottom of the TC55 to lock into place. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback OPENLOCKPRELIMINARY 26 | Getting Started Figure 10: Lock SD Card Door Installing the Battery There are two sizes of batteries available for the TC55; a 2,940 mAh battery and a 4,410 mAh battery. Procedure:
1 Align the three tabs on the bottom of the battery with the three slots in the battery compartment. 2 Press the battery down and then rotate until it locks into place. Figure 11: Inserting the 2,940 mAh Battery Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 OPENLOCKPRELIMINARY Figure 12: Inserting the 4,410 mAh Battery Getting Started | 27 3 Align the battery cover with the back of the device and press the battery cover down until it snaps into place. Figure 13: Install the Battery Cover 4 Press around the edge of the cover to ensure that the battery cover is seated properly. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 28 | Getting Started Figure 14: Secure Cover Charging the Battery Caution: Ensure that you follow the guidelines for battery safety described in Battery Safety Guidelines on page 141. Charging the Main Battery Before using the TC55 for the first time, charge the main battery until the light emitting diode (LED) turns solid green
(see Charging LED Status on page 29 for charge status indications). To charge the TC55, use the Rugged Charge Cable with the optional power supply. Note: Only connect the Rugged Charge Cable to the optional power supply. Do not connect the Rugged Charge Cable to a host computer for charging. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Figure 15: Connect the Rugged Charge Cable Getting Started | 29 The TC55 begins charging. The LED blinks green while charging, then turns solid green when fully charged. The 2,940 mAh battery charges in approximately three hours and the 4,410 mAh battery charges in approximately 4.5 hours. Charging LED Status Table 3: Charging LED Status Status Off Slow blinking green (1 blink every two seconds) Solid green Slow blinking red (1 blink every two seconds) Fast blinking red (2 blinks / per second) Indications TC55 is not inserted correctly in the cradle. TC55 is not connected to a power source. Cable or cradle is not powered. TC55 is charging. Charging complete. Battery is in an extremely low power state (normal slow charging mode). Charging error:
Temperature is too low or too high. Charging has gone on too long without completion (typically eight hours). Charging Temperature Charge batteries in temperatures from 0 C to 40 C (32 F to 104 F). Note that charging is intelligently controlled by the TC55. To accomplish this, for small periods of time, the TC55 or accessory alternately enables and disables MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 30 | Getting Started battery charging to keep the battery at acceptable temperatures. The TC55 or accessory indicates when charging is disabled due to abnormal temperatures via its LED. Powering On the TC55 Note: Ensure that the battery cover is properly installed. Otherwise, the TC55 will not power on. If the TC55 did not turn on when the battery was installed, press the Power button. The LED flashes green and the device vibrates. The splash screen displays for about a minute as the TC55 boots. Replacing the 2,940 mAh Battery Procedure:
1 Press the Power button until the menu displays. 2 Touch Power off. 3 Touch OK. 4 Place thumbnail at notch and lift the battery cover. Figure 16: Remove the Battery Cover 5 Note: Do not pull the battery tab straight out. Pull at a 45 degree angle. Pull the battery tab down at a 45 degree angle. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Figure 17: Remove 2,940 mAh Battery Getting Started | 31 6 Remove the battery from the battery compartment. 7 Align the three tabs on the bottom of the replacement battery with the three slots in the battery compartment. 8 Press the battery down and rotate until it locks into place. Figure 18: Inserting the 2,940 mAh Battery 9 Align the battery cover with the back of the device. Figure 19: Align the Battery Cover 10 Press around the edge of the cover to ensure that the battery cover is seated properly. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 32 | Getting Started Figure 20: Secure the Battery Cover 11 Press the Power button to turn on the TC55. Replacing the 4,410 mAh Battery Procedure:
1 Press the Power button until the menu displays. 2 Touch Power off. 3 Touch OK. 4 Place thumbnail at notch and lift the battery cover. Figure 21: Remove the Battery Cover 5 With two fingers, press the battery down. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Figure 22: Remove 4,410 mAh Battery Getting Started | 33 6 Rotate the battery out of the compartment. 7 Align the three tabs on the bottom of the replacement battery with the three slots in the battery compartment. 8 Press the battery down and rotate until it locks into place. Figure 23: Inserting the 4,410 mAh Battery 9 Align the battery cover with the back of the device. Figure 24: Align the Battery Cover 10 Press around the edge of the cover to ensure that the battery cover is seated properly. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 34 | Getting Started Figure 25: Secure the Battery Cover 11 Press the Power button to turn on the TC55. Replacing the microSD Card Caution:
For proper electrostatic discharge (ESD) precautions to avoid damaging the SD card. Proper ESD precautions include, but not limited to, working on an ESD mat and ensuring that the user is properly grounded. Changing the microSD card can change the functionality of the TC55. Ensure that you follow the procedures to shut down the TC55 before replacing the microSD card. Data corruption can occur if reading or writing to the microSD card and power is removed. Note: The TC55 supports microSD cards up to 32 GB. To replace the microSD card:
Procedure:
1 Press the Power button until the menu displays. 2 Touch Power off. 3 Touch OK. 4 Wait for the device to power off completely. 5 Remove the battery cover. 6 Remove the battery. 7 Slide the microSD card cover up to unlock. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Figure 26: Unlock microSD Card Cover Getting Started | 35 8 Lift the microSD card cover. 9 Remove the microSD card from the card holder. 10 Align the replacement microSD card with the card holder. Ensure that the contacts on the card are facing down and toward the card holder. 11 Insert the microSD card into the card holder. Figure 27: Insert microSD Card 12 Close the microSD card cover. 13 Slide the microSD card cover down to lock into place. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback OPENLOCKPRELIMINARY 36 | Getting Started Figure 28: Lock microSD Card Cover 14 Replace the battery. 15 Align the battery cover with the back of the device and press the battery cover down until it snaps into place. 16 Press the Power button to turn on the device. Battery Management Note:
Prior to checking the battery charge level, remove the TC55 from any AC power source (cradle or cable). To check the charge status of the main battery, touch Battery status indicates that the battery is discharging and Battery level lists the battery charge (as a percentage of fully charged). About phone > Status.
>
>
Monitor Battery Usage The Battery screen lists which applications consume the most battery power. Also use it to turn off applications that were downloaded if they are consuming too much power. Touch
>
> Battery. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 OPENLOCKPRELIMINARY Figure 29: Battery Screen Getting Started | 37 The Battery screen lists the applications using the battery. The discharge graph at the top of the screen shows the rate of the battery discharge since last charged (short periods of time when connected to a charger are shown as thin green lines at the bottom of the chart), and how long it has been running on battery power. Touch an application in the Battery screen to display details about its power consumption. Different applications display different information. Some applications include buttons that open screens with settings to adjust power use. Low Battery Notification When the battery charge level drops below 20% (2,940 mAh battery) or 13% (4,410 mAh battery), the TC55 displays a notice to connect the TC55 to power.The user should charge the battery using one of the charging accessories. Figure 30: Low Battery Notification When the battery charge drops below 10% (2,940 mAh battery) or 7% (4,410 mAh battery), the TC55 displays a notice to connect the TC55 to power. The user must charge the battery using one of the charging accessories. When the battery charge drops below 4% (2,940 mAh battery) or 3% (4,410 mAh battery), the TC55 turns off. Anytime the user then tries to power on the TC55, the following screen appears. The user must charge the TC55 using one of the charging accessories to retain data. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 38 | Getting Started Figure 31: Battery Depleted Screen The user must charge the TC55 using one of the charging accessories. Battery Optimization Observe the following battery saving tips:
Leave the TC55 connected to AC power at all times when not in use. Set the screen to turn off after a short period of non-use. See Setting Screen Timeout Setting. Reduce screen brightness. See Setting the Screen Brightness. Turn off all wireless radios when not in use. Note that the global positioning system (GPS) receiver is only turned on when a GPS application is using the GPS radio. Turn off automatic syncing for Email, Calendar, Contacts and other applications. Use the Power Control widget to check and control the status of radios, the screen brightness, and syncing. Minimize use of applications that keep the TC55 from suspending, for example, music, GPS and video applications. Turning Off the Radios To turn off all the radios:
Procedure:
1 Press the Power button until the menu appears. 2 Touch Airplane mode. The airplane icon appears in the Status bar indicating that all the radios are off. Setting the Date and Time The date and time are automatically synchronized when the TC55 is connected to most WAN networks. To manually set the date and time:
Procedure:
1 From the Home screen, touch
. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Getting Started | 39
. Date & time. 2 Touch 3 Touch 4 Touch Automatic date & time to disable automatic date and time synchronization. 5 Touch Automatic time zone to disable automatic time zone synchronization. 6 Touch Set date. 7 Move the sliders up and down to select the month, date and year. 8 Touch Done. 9 Touch Set time. 10 Move the sliders up and down to select the hour, minutes and part of the day. 11 Touch Done. 12 Touch Select time zone 13 Select the current time zone from the list. 14 Touch
. General Sound Setting Use the Sounds settings to configure media and alarm volumes. On the Home screen, touch Figure 32: Sounds Screen
>
>
Sounds. Volumes Use to change the volume of media, ringtones, notifications and alarms. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 40 | Getting Started Figure 33: Volumes Dialog Box Call Ringtone and Vibrate Phone ringtone - touch to select a ringtone to sound when an incoming call is received. Vibrate when ringing - Check to make the device vibrate when a call is received. System Dial pad touch tones - Check to play a sound when a phone key is touched. Default notification - Touch to select a sound to play for all system notifications. Touch sounds - Check to play a sound when making screen selections. Screen lock sounds - Check to play a sound when locking and unlocking the screen. Vibrate on touch - Check to have the device vibrate when touching soft keys and on certain screen interactions. Setting LED Notifications The TC55 LED can be configured to blink blue when an system or application notification occurs. Procedure:
1 Touch 2 Touch 3 Touch LED options. 4 Touch the check box next to an option to enable. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Figure 34: LED Options Dialog Box Getting Started | 41 5 Touch
. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY PRELIMINARY Chapter 2 Using the TC55 This chapter describes the screens, status and notification icons, and controls on the TC55, and provides basic instructions for using the TC55. Home Screen The Home screen displays when the TC55 turns on. Depending upon the configuration, the Home screen might appear different. Contact your system administrator for more information. After a suspend or screen time-out, the Home screen displays with the lock sliders. Slide to unlock the screen. For screen locking information see Un-Locking the Screen on page 56. to the right toward Alternately, slide to the left toward to open the Camera application. On TC55 with GMS, slide up toward Figure 35: Home Screen to open the Google search application. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 44 | Using the TC55 Table 4: Home Screen Items Item 1 Status Bar 2 Shortcut Icons 3 Browser Icon 4 All Apps Icon 5 Phone Icon 6 Widgets 7 Google Folder 8 Voice Search Description Displays the time, status icons (right side), and notification icons (left side). For more information see Status Icons on page 45 and Managing Notifications on page 47. Opens applications installed on the TC55. See Application Shortcuts and Widgets on page 48 for more information. Opens the Browser application. Opens the APPS window. Opens the Dialer window. Launches stand-alone applications that run on the Home screen. See Application Shortcuts and Widgets on page 48 for more information. On TC55 with GMS, opens a list of Google applications available on the device. On TC55 with GMS, allows users to use Google Search by speaking into the TC55 microphone. The Home screen provides four additional screens for placement of widgets and shortcuts. Swipe the screen left or right to view the additional screens. Status Bar The Status bar displays the time, notification icons (left side) and status icons (right side). Figure 36: Notification and Status Icons Table 5: Home Screen Items Item 1 2 Description Notification icons. Status icons. If there are more notifications than can fit in the Status bar, the Notifications panel to view all notifications and status. displays indicating that more notifications exist. Open Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Using the TC55 | 45 Status Icons Table 6: Status Icons Icon Description Indicates that GPS is in use. Indicates that the TC55 is searching location data. Indicates that the Alarm is active. Indicates that all sounds except media and alarms are silenced and vibrate mode is active. Indicates that the ringer is silenced. Microphone is muted during a call. Indicates that the battery is fully charged. Indicates that the battery is partially drained. Indicates that the battery charge is low. Indicates that the battery charge is very low. Indicates that the battery is charging. Indicates that the Airplane Mode is active. All radios are turned off. Indicates that Bluetooth is on. Indicates that the TC55 is connected to a Bluetooth device. Connected to a Wi-Fi network. No Wi-Fi signal. Mobile network signal strength. No mobile network signal. Connected to an 4G LTE network. Table continued MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 46 | Using the TC55 Icon Description Connected to an 4G network. Connected to a 3G network. Connected to an HSPA network. Connected to an EDGE network. Connected to an GPRS network. Roaming from a network. No SIM card installed. Notification Icons Table 7: Notification Icons Icon Description Indicates that more notifications are available for viewing. Indicates that data is syncing. Indicates incoming email. Indicates an upcoming event. Indicates that an open Wi-Fi network is available. Indicates that a song is playing. Indicates that a problem with sign-in or sync has occurred. Indicates that the TC55 is uploading data. Indicates that the microSD card is almost full. Indicates that the TC55 is downloading data when animated and download is complete when static. Indicates that the TC55 is connected via USB cable. Table continued Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Icon Description Indicates that the TC55 is connected to or disconnected from virtual private network (VPN). Using the TC55 | 47 Preparing SD card. Indicates that USB debugging is enabled on the TC55. Indicates that the MultiUser feature is enabled. Indicates that a new user is logging in. Indicates that the TC55 has received a text message. Indicates a missed call. Indicates that the TC55 is in car mode. Indicates that diagnostics data has been sent using the Elemez application. Indicates that Bluetooth tethering is active. Indicates that USB tethering is active. Indicates that Wi-Fi hotspot is active. On TC55 with GMS, indicates a Google Hangout chat notification. On TC55 with GMS, indicates a Google+ notification. Managing Notifications Notification icons report the arrival of new messages, calendar events, and alarms, as well as ongoing events. When a notification occurs, an icon appears in the Status bar with a brief description. See Table 7: Notification Icons on page 46 for a list of possible notification icons and their description. Open the Notifications panel to view a list of all the notifications. To open the Notification panel drag the Status bar down from the top of the screen. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 48 | Using the TC55 Figure 37: Notification Panel To respond to a notification, open the Notifications Panel and then touch a notification. The Notifications Panel closes and the subsequent activity is dependent on the notification. To clear all notifications, open the Notifications Panel and then touch Ongoing notifications remain in the list. All event-based notifications are removed. To close the Notification Panel, drag the bottom of the Notifications Panel to the top of the screen or touch
. Application Shortcuts and Widgets Application shortcuts placed on the Home screen allow quick and easy access to applications. Widgets are self-
contained applications placed on the Home screen to access frequently used features. Adding an Application or Widget to the Home Screen Procedure:
1 Go to the desired Home screen. 2 Touch 3 Swipe right, if necessary, to find the application icon or widget. 4 Touch and hold the icon or widget until the Home screen appears. 5 Position the icon on the screen and then release. Moving Items on the Home Screen Procedure:
1 Touch and hold the item until it floats on the screen. 2 Drag the item to a new location. Pause at the edge of the screen to drag the item onto an adjacent Home screen. 3 Lift finger to place the item on the Home screen. Removing an App or Widget from the Home Screen Procedure:
1 Go to the desired Home screen. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Using the TC55 | 49 2 Touch and hold the application shortcut or widget icon until it floats on the screen. 3 Drag the icon to on the top of the screen and then release. Folders Use Folders to organize similar applications together. Touch the folder to open and display items in the folder. Creating a Folder To create a folder, there must be at least two app icons on the Home screen. Procedure:
1 Go to the desired Home screen. 2 Touch and hold on one application icon. 3 Drag the icon and stack on top of another icon. 4 Lift and release. Naming Folders Procedure:
1 Touch the folder. Figure 38: Open Folder 2 Touch the title area and enter a folder name using the keyboard. 3 Touch Done. 4 Touch anywhere on the Home screen to close the folder. The folder name appears under the folder. Figure 39: Renamed Folder Removing a Folder Procedure:
1 Touch and hold the folder icon until it enlarges and the device vibrates. 2 Drag the icon to and release. Changing the Home Screen Wallpaper Note: Use of Live Wallpaper may reduce battery life. Procedure:
1 Touch 2 Touch Wallpaper. 3 From the Choose wallpaper from menu, touch Gallery, Live wallpapers or Wallpapers. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 50 | Using the TC55 Gallery - Select to use an image stored on the device. Live wallpapers - Select to use an animated wallpaper image. Wallpapers - Select to use a wallpaper image. 4 Touch Save or Set wallpaper. Using the Touchscreen Use the multi-touch sensitive screen to operate the device. Touch - Touch to:
select items on the screen type letters and symbols using the on-screen keyboard press on-screen buttons. Touch and Hold - Touch and hold:
an item on the Home screen to move it to a new location or to the trash. an item in Apps to create a shortcut on the Home screen. the Home screen to open a menu for customizing the Home screen. an empty area on the Home screen until the menu appears. Drag - Touch and hold an item for a moment and then move finger on the screen until reaching the new position. Swipe - Move finger up and down or left and right on the screen to:
unlock the screen view additional Home screens view additional application icons in the Launcher window view more information on an applications screen. Double-tap - Tap twice on a web page, map, or other screen to zoom in and out. Pinch - In some applications, zoom in and out by placing two fingers on the screen and pinching them together (to zoom out) or spreading them apart (to zoom in). Using the On-screen Keyboard Use the on-screen keyboard to enter text in a text field. To configure the keyboard settings, touch select Android keyboard settings.
>
and then Editing Text Edit entered text and use menu commands to cut, copy, and paste text within or across applications. Some applications do not support editing some or all of the text they display; others may offer their own way to select text. Entering Numbers, Symbols and Special Characters To enter numbers and symbols:
Touch and hold one of the top-row keys until a menu appears then select a number. Keys with alternate characters display an ellipsis ( ... ) below the character. Touch and hold the Shift key with one finger, touch one or more capital letters or symbols to enter them, and then lift both fingers to return to the lowercase keyboard. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Using the TC55 | 51 Touch Touch the to switch to the numbers and symbols keyboard. key on the numbers and symbols keyboard to view additional symbols. To enter special characters, touch and hold a number or symbol key to open a menu of additional symbols. A larger version of the key displays briefly over the keyboard. Keys with alternate characters display an ellipsis ( ... ) below the character. Applications The APPS screen displays icons for all installed applications. Table 8: Applications on page 51 lists the applications installed on the TC55. Refer to the TC55 Integrator Guide for information on installing and uninstalling application. Table 8: Applications Icon Description App Gallery - Provides links to utilities and demonstration applications that can be installed on the TC55. Browser - Use to access the Internet or intranet. Calculator - Provides the basic and scientific arithmetic functions. Calendar - Use to manage events and appointments. Camera - Take photos or record videos. For more information see Viewing Photos and Videos on page 6-6. Contacts - Use to manage contact information. Chrome - Use to access the Internet or intranet. TC55 with GMS only. Clock - Use to set an alarm, stopwatch or timer. DataWedge - Enables data capture using the camera or optional scanner. Table continued MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 52 | Using the TC55 Icon Description Downloads - lists all downloads files. Drive - Upload photos, videos, documents, and other files to personal storage site. TC55 with GMS only. DWDemo - Provides a way to demonstrate the data capture features using the Linear Imager or Camera. See DataWedge Demonstration on page 87 for more information. elemez Use to provide diagnostic information to Motorola. See Elemez on page 89 for more information. Email - Use to send and receive email. File Browser - Organize and manage files on the TC55. See File Browser on page 71 for more information. Gallery - Use to view photos stored on the microSD card. For more information, see Gallery on page 80 for more information. Gmail - Use to send and receive email using a Google email account. TC55 with GMS only. Google - Launches Google search application. TC55 with GMS only. Google Settings - Use to connect applications to Google account, setup Google Plus account, set location settings, set search features and configure Android Device Manager. TC55 with GMS only. Google+ - Connect with people on Google social network. TC55 with GMS only. Hangouts - Use to communicate with friends using text messages and photos. TC55 with GMS only. Maps - Use to see you location on a map (with public transit, traffic or satellite overlays). Search for any business or place of interest. Provides turn-by-turn navigation with voice guidance and traffic-avoidance and alternate routes, for drivers, cyclist, walkers and users of public transportation. TC55 with GMS only. Table continued Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Icon Description Messenger - Send messages to friends. TC55 with GMS only. Using the TC55 | 53 Messaging - Send SMS and MMS messages. Messaging on page 72 for more information. MLog Manager - Use to capture log files for diagnostics. See MLog Manager on page 90 for more information. Movie Studio - Create movie videos. See Movie Studio on page 87 for more information. MSP Agent - Enables management of the TC55 from an MSP server. Requires the purchase of an appropriate MSP client license per device to suit the level of management functionality required. Music - Play music stored on the microSD card. News & Weather - Displays current news and weather. TC55 with GMS only. People - Use to manage contact information. People on page 74 for more information. Phone - Use to make phone calls. Calls on page 61 for more information. Play Books - Use to read books. TC55 with GMS only. Play Games - Use to play games. TC55 with GMS only. Play Magazines - Use to subscribe to magazine and read on-line. TC55 with GMS only. Play Movies & TV - View movies and video on your device. TC55 with GMS only. Table continued MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 54 | Using the TC55 Icon Description Play Music - Use to listen to music. TC55 with GMS only. Play Store - Download music, movies, books, and Android apps and games from the Google Play Store. TC55 with GMS only. Rapid Deployment - Allows the TC55 to stage a device for initial use by initiating the deployment of settings, firmware and software. Requires the purchase of an MSP client license per device. RxLogger - Use to diagnose device and application issues. See the TC55 Integrator Guide for more information. Search - Use the Google search engine to search the Internet and the TC55. Settings - Use to configure the TC55. Sound Recorder - Use to record audio. TC55 User Guide - Displays the On-device User Guide. Voice Dialer - Use to place calls by speaking. Voice Search - Use to perform searches by asking questions. TC55 with GMS only. YouTube - Use to view videos on the YouTube web site. TC55 with GMS only. AppLock Administrator - Use to configure the Application Lock feature. This icon appears after the optional applications is installed. MultiUser Administrator - Use to configure the MultiUser feature. This icon appears after the optional applications is installed. Table continued Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Using the TC55 | 55 Icon Description Secure Storage Administrator - Use to configure the Secure Storage feature. This icon appears after the optional applications is installed. Accessing Applications All applications installed on the device are accessed using the APPS window. Procedure:
1 Touch
. Figure 40: APPS Window 2 Slide the APPS window left or right to view more application icons. Touch an icon to open the application. Note: See Application Shortcuts and Widgets on page 48 for information on creating a shortcut on the Home screen. 3 On TC55 with GMS, touch applications. to access the Google Play Store to purchase, download and install new Switching Between Recent Applications Procedure:
1 Touch and hold recently used applications. or on the TC55 with GMS, touch and hold
. A window appears on the screen with icons of MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 56 | Using the TC55 Figure 41: Recently Used Applications 2 Slide the window up and down to view all recently used applications. 3 Swipe left or right to remove application from the list and force close the application. 4 Touch an icon to open it or press to return to the current screen. Un-Locking the Screen Use the Lock screen to protect access to data on the TC55. Some email account require locking the screen. Refer to the TC55 Integrator Guide for information on setting up the locking feature. The Locking feature functions differently in Single User mode or Multiple User mode. Single User Mode When locked, a pattern, PIN or password is required to unlock the device. Press the Power button to lock the screen. The device also locks after a pre-defined time-out. Press and release the Power button to wake the device. The Lock screen displays. Slide If the Pattern screen unlock feature is enabled, the Pattern screen appears instead of the Lock screen. If the PIN or Password screen unlock feature is enabled, enter the PIN or password after unlocking the screen. to unlock the screen. to the right toward Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Figure 42: Lock Screen Using the TC55 | 57 Figure 43: PIN Screen MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 58 | Using the TC55 Figure 44: Pattern Screen Figure 45: Password Screen MultiUser Mode With MultiUser login, multiple users can log on to the device with each user having access to various applications and features. When enabled, the Login screen appears after powering on, resetting or after the device wakes from suspend mode. MultiUser Login Procedure:
1 In the Login text field, enter the username. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Figure 46: Multiple User Log In Screen Using the TC55 | 59 2 In the Password text field, enter the password. 3 Touch OK. After a resume from suspend, the user must enter the password. MultiUser Logout Procedure:
1 Drag the Status Bar down from the top of the screen. 2 Touch MultiUser is active. 3 Touch Logout. 4 The Login screen appears. Resetting the Device There are two reset functions, soft reset and hard reset. Performing a Soft Reset Perform a soft reset if applications stop responding. Procedure:
1 Press and hold the Power button until the menu appears. 2 Touch Reset. 3 The device reboots. Performing a Hard Reset Caution: Performing a hard reset with a SD card installed in the TC55 may cause damage or data corruption to the SD card. Perform a hard reset if the TC55 stops responding. Procedure:
1 Simultaneously press the Power, Programmable and Volume Up buttons. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 60 | Using the TC55 Figure 47: Three Button Reset 2 The TC55 reboots. Suspend Mode The TC55 goes into suspend mode when the user presses the Power button or after a period of inactivity (set in the Display settings window). To wake the TC55 from Suspend mode, press the Power button. The Lock screen displays. Slide is enabled, the Pattern screen appears instead of the Lock screen. See Un-Locking the Screen. to the right toward to unlock the screen. If the Pattern screen unlock feature Note:
If the user enters the PIN, password or pattern incorrectly five times, they must wait 30 seconds before trying again. If the user forgets the PIN, password or pattern contact the system administrator. Figure 48: Lock Screen Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Chapter 3 Calls Make a phone call from the Phone application, the People application or other applications or widgets that display contact information. Emergency Calling The service provider programs one or more emergency phone numbers, such as 911 or 999, that the user can call under any circumstances, even when the phone is locked, a SIM card is not inserted or the phone is not activated. The service provider can program additional emergency numbers into the SIM card. However, the SIM card must be inserted in the device in order to use the numbers stored on it. See the service provider for additional information. Note: Emergency numbers vary by country. The phones pre-programmed emergency number(s) may not work in all locations, and sometimes an emergency call cannot be placed due to network, environmental, or interference issues. Audio Modes The device offers three audio modes for use during phone calls:
Handset Mode: Switches audio to the receiver at the top front of the device, so the user can use the device as a handset. This is the default mode. Speaker Mode: Use the device as if on speaker phone. Headset Mode: Connect a Bluetooth or wired headset to automatically switch audio to the headset. Using a Bluetooth Headset Use a Bluetooth headset for audio communication when using an audio-enabled application. See Bluetooth on page 112 for information on connecting a Bluetooth headset to the device. Set the volume appropriately before putting on the headset. When a Bluetooth headset is connected, the speakerphone is muted. Using a Wired Headset Use a wired headset (with 3.5 mm plug) for audio communication when using an audio-enabled application. Set the volume appropriately before putting on the headset. When a wired headset is connected, the speakerphone is muted. Lift the headset cover and insert the headset plug. To end a call using the wired headset, press and hold the headset button until the call ends. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 62 | Calls Figure 49: Insert Wired Headset Plug Adjusting Audio Volume Use the Volume buttons to adjust the volume of the ringer when not in a call and the audio volume when in a call. Note: Adjust the conversation phone volume during a call. Adjusting the volume while not in a call affects the ring and notification sound levels. Making a Call Using the Dialer Use the dialer tab to dial phone numbers. Procedure:
1 On the Home screen touch Figure 50: Dialer Screen
. 2 Touch the tab above the dialer. 3 Touch the keys to enter the phone number. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY 4 below the dialer to initiate the call. Touch Figure 51: Call in Progress Calls | 63 If You want to display the dialer. You want to turn on the speakerphone. You want to mute the call. You want to place the call on hold. You want to add another person to the call. Then Touch Touch Touch Touch Touch
. 5 Touch to end the call. Dialer Dialing Options The dialer provides options to save the dialed number to contacts, insert pauses and wait into the dial string and options for setting the Call settings. Enter at least one digit to access these options. Touch following. Add to contacts add the dialed number to the People application. Add 2sec pause - pause the dialing of the next number for two seconds. Multiple pauses can be added to access the sequentially. Add wait - wait for confirmation to send the rest of the digits. Settings - Opens the Call settings screen. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 64 | Calls Making a Call Using Contacts Procedure:
1 On the Home screen touch 2 Touch the tab. Figure 52: Dialer Contacts Tab 3 Touch the contact to initiate the call. 4 Touch to end the call. Making a Call Using Call History Call History is a list of all the calls placed, received, or missed. It provides a convenient way to redial a number, return a call, or add a number to Contacts. Arrow icons beside a call indicate the type of call. Multiple arrows indicate multiple calls:
Procedure:
1
- Missed incoming call
- Received incoming call
- Outgoing call. On the Home screen touch
. 2 Touch the tab. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Figure 53: Call History Tab Calls | 65 3 4 Touch next to the contact to initiate the call. Touch to end the call. Making a Conference Call To create a conference phone session with multiple people. Note: Conference Calling and the number of conference calls allowed may not be available on all services. Please check with the service provider for Conference Calling availability. Procedure:
1 On the Home screen touch
. 2 Touch the tab above the dialer. 3 Touch the keys to enter the phone number. 4 Touch below the dialer to initiate the call. 5 When the call connects, touch The first call is placed on hold. 6 Touch the keys to enter the second phone number. 7 Touch below the dialer to initiate the call. 8 When the call connects, the first call is placed on hold and the second call is active. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 66 | Calls Figure 54: Two Calls 9 icon to create a conference call with three people. Touch Figure 55: Merged Calls 10 to add another call. Touch The conference is placed on hold. 11 Touch the keys to enter the second phone number. 12 Touch below the dialer to initiate the call. 13 Touch icon to add the third call to the conference. 14 Touch Manage Conference to view all callers. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Figure 56: Un-merge Calls Calls | 67 15 To remove a caller from the conference, touch next to the caller. Note: To speak privately with one party during a conference call, touch Manage Conference and then touch the caller. To include all parties again, touch
. Making a Call Using a Bluetooth Headset Procedure:
1 Pair the Bluetooth headset with the device. 2 Press the Call button on the Bluetooth headset. Speak now is heard from the Bluetooth headset and the Voice Dialer screen appears. 3 Say a command. If You want to call a contact by name:
You want to call a number:
If you want to call your voicemail:
If you want to call the previous caller:
4 Press the Call button on the Bluetooth headset to end the call. Then Say Call (name). Say Dial (number). Say Call voicemail. Say Redial. Answering Calls When you receive a phone call, the Incoming Call screen opens, displaying the caller ID and any additional information about the caller that is in the People application. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 68 | Calls Figure 57: Incoming Call Screen All incoming calls are recorded in the Phone application Call log tab. If you miss a call, you receive a notification. To silence the ringer before answering the call, press the volume down button on the side of device. When a call arrives, touch the white phone icon and slide over one of these icons:
Figure 58: Select Answer Options Answer call - Start talking to the caller. Send to voice mail - Direct the caller to leave a voice mail message. Send a message - Opens a list of quick text responses. Touch one to send it to the caller immediately. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Calls | 69 Answering Calls with a Bluetooth Headset When you receive a phone call, the Incoming Call screen opens, displaying the caller ID and any additional information about the caller that is in the People application. Figure 59: Incoming Call Screen All incoming calls are recorded in the Phone application Call log tab. If you miss a call, you receive a notification. To silence the ringer before answering the call, press the volume down button on the side of TC55. When a call arrives, touch the Call button on the Bluetooth headset to answer the call.. To end the call press the Call button on the Bluetooth headset. Call Settings Use the Call Settings to modify options related to the phone call feature. Ringtone Phone ringtone - Touch to select a ringtone to sound when an incoming call is received. Vibrate when ringing - Check to make the device vibrate when a call is received. Other Call Settings RingPath Settings - When using a Bluetooth headset, select the path that the ring is heard. Options: Bluetooth or Speaker and Bluetooth (default). Note: Bluetooth headset connection is required to set this option. Voicemail - Touch to configure voicemail settings. Service - Set the service provider or other provider for voicemail service. Setup - Touch to update the phone number used to access voicemail. Ringtone - Touch to select a ringtone to sound when a voicemail is received. Vibrate - Touch to select vibrate option. Options: Always, Only when silent or Never (default). Text message service center - Touch to update the phone number used to access text messages. Dial pad touch tones - Check to play a sound when a phone key is touched. Quick responses - Touch to edit quick responses to use instead of answering a call. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 70 | Calls Fixed Dialing Numbers - Use Fixed Dialing to restrict the phone to dial only the phone number(s) or area code(s) specified in a Fixed Dialing list. TTY/HAC mode - Touch to set the TTY/HAC setting. Use an optional teletypewriter (TTY) device with the TC55 to send and receive calls. Plug the TTY device into the TC55 headset jack and set the TC55 to operate in one of the TTY modes. Note:
Use a TSB-121 compliant cable (provided by the TTY manufacturer) to connect the TTY device to the TC55. Set the TC55 volume to a middle level setting for proper operation. If you experience a high number of incorrect characters, adjust the volume as needed to minimize the error rate. For optimal performance, the TC55 should be at least 30 cm (12 inches) from the TTY device. Placing the TC55 too close to the TTY device may cause high error rates. TTY/HAC off (default) - TTY and HAC is off. TTY Full - Transmit and receive TTY characters. TTY HCO - Transmit TTY characters but receive by listening to earpiece. TTY VCO - Receive TTY characters but transmit by speaking into microphone. HAC On - Turn Hearing Aide Compatibility (HAC) on. DTMF tones - Touch to set the length of the DTMF tones. Options: Normal (default) or Long. GSM call settings -
Call forwarding - Use call forwarding to forward incoming calls to a different phone number. Note: Call Forwarding may not be available on all networks. Check with the service provider for availability. Always forward - set to forward all calls to a different phone number. Forward when busy - enter the phone number to forward calls only when the line is busy. Forward when unanswered - enter the phone number to forward calls only when the phone cannot be answered. Forward when unreachable - enter the phone number to forward calls only when the phone is turned off or the user is unreachable. Call barring - Use call barring to block certain types of incoming and/or outgoing calls. Select the type of incoming and/or outgoing calls to block. Additional settings Caller ID - Enable caller ID to reveal the identity of the person making an outgoing call. Options:
Network default (default), Hide number, Show number. Call waiting - Check to enable. Internet Call Settings Accounts - Choose to receive Internet calls for accounts added to the device, view or change SIP accounts, or add an Internet calling account. Use Internet calling - Use Internet calling for all calls, only for calls to Internet calling addresses (the default setting), or to ask for each call. Must be connected to a Wi-Fi network and have added an Internet calling account to the device to use Internet calling. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Chapter 4 Applications This section describes the applications installed on the device. File Browser Use the File Browser application to view and mange files on the device. To open File Browser, touch
>
Figure 60: File Browser Screen
. The address bar (1) indicates the current folder path. Touch the current folder path to manually enter a path and folder name. Use Use Use Use
(2) to select multiple files/folder.
(3) to view the internal storage root folder.
(4) to view the microSD card root folder.
(5) to view the previous folder or to exit the application. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 72 | Applications Information - View detailed information about the file or folder. Touch and hold an item to perform an operation on that item. Select one of the options from the File Operations menu:
Move - Move the file or folder to a new location. Copy - Copy the select file. Delete - Delete the selected file. Rename - Rename the select file. Open as - Open the selected file as a specific file type. Share - Share the file with other devices. Touch Touch Touch Touch Touch Touch Touch Touch
> New Folder to create a new folder in the current folder.
> Search to search for a file or folder.
> Sort to sort the list by name, by type, by size or by date.
> Refresh to re-display the contents of the current folder.
> List View to change the folder view from tile to list format.
> Change Size to change the size of the icons: Large, Normal or Small.
> About File Browser to view the application version information. to open additional functionality:
Messaging Use Messaging to send and receive SMS and MMS messages. From a Home or All Apps screen, touch
. Sending a Text Message Procedure:
1 In the main Messaging screen, touch
. Figure 61: New Text Message Screen 2 In the To field, enter a name or a mobile phone number. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Applications | 73 3 In the Type message field, enter the text message. The 160-character limit counter indicates how many characters are left. If it goes over that limit, a new message is created, which is joined with its predecessors when received. If the user presses the Back button while composing a message, its saved as a draft in the Messaging screen. Touch the conversation to resume composing it. 4 Touch to send the message. Sending a Multimedia Message Procedure:
1 In the main Messaging screen, touch Figure 62: New Multimedia Message Screen
. 2 In the To field, enter a name or a mobile phone number. 3 to attach the media file of your choice:
Touch Pictures. Select a picture to attach. Capture picture. Camera opens to take a picture and attach it. Videos. Select a video to attach. Capture video. Camcorder opens to record a video and attach it to the message. Audio. Choose a sound file to attach. Record audio. Sound Recorder opens to record a spoken message and attach it to the message. Slideshow. Opens a screen opens to assemble text, photos, videos, and recordings into a slideshow of up to 10 slides to attach to the message. vCard. Send a contacts information. 4 Touch to send the message. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 74 | Applications People Use the People application to manage contacts. From a Home or Apps screen, touch the top of the screen: Groups , All contacts , and Favorites. Touch the tabs to change how to view the contacts. Swipe up or down to scroll through the lists. People opens to the main list of contacts. View contacts in three ways at Adding People Procedure:
1 In the People application, touch 2 If there are more than one account with contacts, touch the one to use. 3 Type the contacts name and other information. Touch a field to start typing, and swipe down to view all
. categories. 4 To add more than one entry for a category for example, to add a work address after typing a personal address touch Add new for that field. To open a menu with preset labels, such as Home or Work for an email address, touch the label to the right of the item of contact information. Or, to create your own label, touch Custom in the menu. 5 Touch Done. Editing People Procedure:
1 In the People application, touch 2 Touch a person to edit. 3 Touch 4 Touch Edit. 5 Edit the contact information. 6 Touch Done. tab. Deleting People Procedure:
1 In the People application, touch 2 Touch a person to edit. 3 Touch 4 Touch Delete. 5 Touch OK to confirm. tab. Voice Dialer Voice Dialer is a speech dialog system that provides natural human interface for users to communicate seamlessly with the device. Users can make phone calls, look up contact information, launch programs or check calendars. To initiate Voice Dialer touch Voice Dialer or press the call button on a Bluetooth headset. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Figure 63: Voice Dialer Window Applications | 75 The user says one of the following commands:
Call Dial Redial Open. Calling a Person By Name Procedure:
1 Launch Voice Dialer. 2 Say Call John Doe. 3 In the Voice Dialer dialog box, touch Call John Doe The call is initiated. Redialing Previous Call Procedure:
1 Launch Voice Dialer. 2 Say Redial. 3 In the Voice Dialer dialog box, touch Redial The call is initiated. Dialing By Number Procedure:
1 Launch Voice Dialer. 2 Say Dial (phone number). Note: Be careful not to say the number too fast or the application might not recognize what you are saying. 3 In the Voice Dialer dialog box, touch the number that appears. The call is initiated. Opening an Application Procedure:
1 Launch Voice Dialer. 2 Say Open (application name). MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 76 | Applications 3 In the Voice Dialer dialog box, touch the application name. The application opens. Camera This section provides information for taking photos and recording videos using the integrated digital cameras. Note: If a microSD card is installed, The TC55 saves photos and videos on the microSD card. If a microSD card is not installed, the TC55 saved photos and videos on the internal storage. Taking Photos Note: Camera settings are described in Camera Settings on page 78. To take a photo:
Procedure:
1 Touch 2
. Touch Figure 64: Camera Mode 3 If necessary, touch the options bar and touch 4
. Touch 78 for more information. to adjust exposure, flash, and other settings using the camera settings. See Camera Settings on page 5 Touch and to adjust the zoom level. 6 Frame the subject on screen. 7 Touch
. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Applications | 77 The camera brings the image into focus. When the image is in focus, the focus indicators in each corner turn green, the camera takes a photo and a shutter sound plays. Note: To disable the shutter sound, turn notification sounds off. Touch and slide the Notifications slider all the way to the left.
>
Sounds > Volumes Alternately, touch The photo appears momentarily then displays as a thumbnail in the upper right corner. and hold to focus first, before taking a photo; then release to take a focused photo. 8 Touch the thumbnail to view the photo in Gallery. See Gallery on page 80 for more information. Taking a Panoramic Photo Panorama mode lets the user create a single wide image by panning slowly across a scene. Procedure:
1 Touch 2
. Touch
. 3 Touch the options bar and touch Figure 65: Panoramic Mode
. 4 Frame one side of the scene to capture. 5 Touch shot is in progress. If panning too quickly, the message Too fast appears. and slowly start panning across the area to capture. A small white square appears inside the button the 6 Touch the image. to end the shot. The panorama appears immediately and a progress indicator displays while it saves 7 Touch the thumbnail to view the photo in Gallery. See Gallery on page 80. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 78 | Applications Recording Videos To record a video:
Procedure:
1 Touch
>
. 2 Touch the options bar and touch
. Figure 66: Video Mode 3 4 Touch for more information. to adjust exposure, flash, and other settings using the video settings. See Video Settings on page 79 Touch and to adjust the zoom level. 5 Point the camera and frame the scene. 6 to start recording. Touch The device starts recording the video. The video time remaining appears in the top left of the screen. 7 Touch to end recording. Note: Previously recorded video displays in the thumbnail at the top right. 8 Touch the thumbnail to access the Gallery application. See Gallery on page 80. Camera Settings When in Camera mode, Camera settings are displayed on screen. Touch for the settings to change. Touch to display the camera setting options. Settings - Touch to open a scrolling list of settings:
Store location - Include location information with each photo using the device global positioning system
(GPS). Options: On or Off (default). Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Applications | 79 Picture size - Touch to set the size (in pixels) of the photo. Options: 8M pixels (default), 5M pixels, 3.2M pixels, 2M pixels, 1M pixels, VGA or QVGA. Picture quality - Touch to select picture quality setting. Options: Super fine (default), Fine or Normal. Focus Mode - Touch to select the camera focus setting. Options: Continuous, Macro, Infinity or Auto
(default). Select ISO - Set how sensitive the camera is to light. Options: ISO Auto (default), ISO100, ISO200, ISO400, ISO800. ZSL - Set the camera to immediately take a picture when the button is pressed. Options: On or Off (default). Shutter sound - Touch to set the sound that occurs when the user presses the camera button. Options: On or Off (default). Restore defaults - Touch Restore defaults to restore all camera settings to the default values. Scene mode - Touch to select a preset combination of camera settings designed for specific scenes. Options: Auto (default), Night, Portrait, Landscape, Steady Photo or Sports. Exposure - Touch to adjust the exposure settings. Options: +3, +2, +1, 0 (default), -1, -2, or -3. White balance - Touch to select how Camera adjusts colors in different kinds of light, to achieve the most natural-looking colors. Auto - Adjust the white balance automatically (default). Incandescent - Adjust the white balance for incandescent lighting. Daylight - Adjust the white balance for daylight. Fluorescent - Adjust the white balance for florescent lighting. Cloudy - Adjust the white balance for a cloudy environment. Flash mode - Touch to set whether Rear-facing Camera relies on its light meter to decide whether a flash is necessary, or to turn it on or off for all shots. Auto - Camera adjusts flash automatically depending upon light meter. On - Enable flash upon taking a photo. Off - Disable flash (default). Torch - Turn flash on continuously. Video Settings When in Video mode, Video settings are displayed on screen. Touch for the settings to change. Touch to display the video setting options. Settings - Touch to open a scrolling list of settings:
Store location - Include location information with each photo using the device global positioning system
(GPS). Options: On or Off (default). Restore defaults - Touch Restore defaults to restore all video settings to the default values. Video quality - Touch to select video quality:
HD 1080p - High definition 1080p. HD 720p - High definition 720p. SD 480p - Standard definition 480p. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 80 | Applications Time lapse interval - Touch to select a time interval to set the frame rate for time lapse photography. Options:
Off (default), 1s, 1.5s, 2s, 2.5s, 3s, 5s or 10s. White balance - Touch to select how Camera adjusts colors in different kinds of light, to achieve the most natural-looking colors. Auto - Adjust the white balance automatically (default). Incandescent - Adjust the white balance for incandescent lighting. Daylight - Adjust the white balance for daylight. Fluorescent - Adjust the white balance for florescent lighting. Cloudy - Adjust the white balance for a cloudy environment. Flash mode - Touch to set whether Rear-facing Camera relies on its light meter to decide whether a flash is necessary, or to turn it on or off for all shots. On - Enable flash upon taking a photo. Off - Disable flash (default). Gallery Note:
The device supports the following image formats: jpeg, gif, png and bmp. The device supports the following video formats: H.263, H.264 and MPEG4 Simple Profile. Use Gallery to:
view photos play videos perform basic editing of photos set photos as wallpaper set photos as a contact photo share photos and videos. To open the Gallery application, touch right. Gallery presents all photos and videos stored on the microSD card in albums.
>
or in the camera application touch the thumbnail image at the top Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Figure 67: Gallery Albums Applications | 81 Touch an album to open it and view its contents. The photos and videos in the album are displayed in chronological order. Touch a photo or video in an album to view it. Touch icon (top left corner) to return to the main Gallery screen. Working with Albums Albums are groups of images and videos in folders. Touch an album to open it. The photos and videos are listed in a chronologically ordered grid. The name of the album displays at the top of the screen. Figure 68: Photos Inside an Album Swipe left or right to scroll images across the screen. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 82 | Applications Share an Album Procedure:
1 Touch 2 Touch
. 3 Touch and hold an album until it highlights. 4 Touch other albums as required. 5 Touch
. The Share menu opens. Touch the application to use to share the selected albums. 6 Follow the instructions within the selected application. Get Album Information Procedure:
1 Touch 2 Touch
. 3 Touch and hold an album until it highlights. 4 Touch
. 5 Touch Details. Deleting an Album To delete an album and its contents from the microSD card:
Procedure:
1 Touch 2
. Touch
. 3 Touch and hold an album until it highlights. 4 Check other albums to delete. Ensure that other albums are selected. 5 Touch
. 6 In the Delete selected item? menu, touch OK to delete the album. Working with Photos Use Gallery to view photos on the microSD card and edit and share photos. Viewing and Browsing Photos To view a photo:
Procedure:
1 Touch 2
. Touch
. 3 Touch an album to open it. 4 Touch a photo. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Figure 69: Photo Example Applications | 83 5 Swipe left or right to view the next or previous photo in the album. 6 Turn the device to view the photo in upright (portrait) or sideways (landscape) orientation. The photo is displayed
(but not saved) in the new orientation. 7 Touch the photo to view the controls. 8 Double-tap the screen to zoom in or pinch two fingers together or spread them apart to zoom in or out. 9 Drag the photo to view parts that are not in view. Rotating a Photo Procedure:
1 Touch a photo to view the controls. 2 Touch 3 Touch Rotate Left or Rotate Right. The photo is automatically saved with the new orientation. Cropping a Photo Procedure:
1 In Gallery, touch a photo to view the controls. 2 Touch 3 Touch Crop. The blue cropping tool appears. 4 Use the cropping tool to select the portion of the photo to crop. Drag from the inside of the cropping tool to move it. Drag an edge of the cropping tool to resize it to any proportion. Drag a corner of the cropping tool to resize it with fixed proportions. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 84 | Applications Figure 70: Cropping Tool 5 Touch OK to save a copy of the cropped photo. The original version is retained. Setting a Photo as a Contact Icon Procedure:
1 Touch 2 Touch
. 3 Touch an album to open it. 4 Touch the photo to open it. 5 Touch 6 Touch Set picture as. 7 Touch Contact photo. 8 In the People application, touch a contact. 9 Touch the blue box and crop the photo accordingly. 10 Touch OK. Get Photo Information Procedure:
1 Touch 2 Touch
. 3 Touch an album to open it. 4 Touch the photo to open it. 5 Touch 6 Touch Details. 7 Touch Close. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Applications | 85 Share a Photo Procedure:
1 Touch 2 Touch
. 3 Touch an album to open it. 4 Touch a photo to open it. 5 Touch
. 6 Touch the application to use to share the selected photo. The application selected opens with the photo attached to a new message. Deleting a Photo Procedure:
1 Touch 2 Touch
. 3 Touch an album to open it. 4 Touch a photo to open it. 5 Touch
. 6 Touch OK to delete the photo. Working with Videos Use Gallery to view videos on the microSD card and share videos. Watching Videos Procedure:
1 Touch 2 Touch
. 3 Touch an album to open it. 4 Touch a video. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 86 | Applications Figure 71: Video Example 5 Touch
. The video begins to play. 6 Touch the screen to view the playback controls. Sharing a Video Procedure:
1 Touch 2 Touch
. 3 Touch an album to open it. 4 Touch a video to open it. 5 Touch
. The Share menu appears. 6 Touch the application to use to share the selected video. The application selected opens with the video attached to a new message. Deleting a Video Procedure:
1 Touch 2 Touch
. 3 Touch an album to open it. 4 Touch a video to open it. 5 Touch
. 6 Touch OK. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Applications | 87 Movie Studio Movie Studio is a video editing application. Capture or upload videos or photos and Movie Studio automatically turns them into beautifully edited movies, complete with music and effects. Key features include:
Select video, photo and music files from the device. Trim and edit video clips. Delete the middle part from a video. Split a video file into several separate clips. Adding video effects (fade in, fade out , gray tone, negative, slow-motion). Add and edit the background music for the movie. Add multiple pictures as slide show movies. Figure 72: Movie Studio Application DataWedge Demonstration Use DataWedge Demonstration to demonstrate data capture functionality. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 88 | Applications Figure 73: DataWedge Demonstration Window Table 9: DataWedge Demonstration Icons Icon Description
/
/
/
Toggles the flash on and off when using the camera to capture bar code data. Use the flash in dimly lit areas. Toggles the data capture function between the imager and camera. If the device does not have an imager, only camera icon is active. Toggles between normal scan mode and picklist mode when using the camera to capture bar code data. Opens a menu to view the application information or to set the application DataWedge profile. Note:
See the TC55 Integrator Guide for information on DataWedge configuration. Either press the programmable button or touch the yellow scan button to enable data capture. The captured data appears in the text field below the yellow button. Sound Recorder Use Sound Recorder to record audio messages. Recordings are saved on the microSD card (if installed) or the Internal Storage and available in the Music application playlist titled "My Recordings."
Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Figure 74: Sound Recorder Application Applications | 89 Elemez Note: Elemez collects specific device information in the background and sends this information to Motorola Solutions to help improve product functionality . This feature can be disabled. See Disabling Elemez Data Collection on page 90. Use Elemez to provide diagnostics information to Motorola Solutions. Touch Submit Diagnostics button to send the data. Figure 75: Elemez Application MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 90 | Applications Disabling Elemez Data Collection
. The user can disable the Elemez application from collection specific data in the background and sending it to Motorola Solutions. Procedure:
1 From the Home screen, touch 2 Touch Manage Apps. 3 Swipe left or right until the ALL tab displays. 4 Scroll through the list and touch Elemez. 5 In the App info screen, touch Uninstall updates. 6 In the Uninstall updates dialog box, touch OK. 7 Touch OK. 8 After uninstall is complete, touch OK. 9 In the All tab, scroll through the list and touch Elemez. 10 Touch Disable. 11 In the Disable built-in app? dialog box, touch OK. 12 Touch
. Enabling Elemez Data Collection
. The user can re-enable the Elemez application for collection specific data in the background and sending it to Motorola Solutions. Procedure:
1 From the Home screen, touch 2 Touch Manage Apps. 3 Swipe left or right until the ALL tab displays. 4 Scroll through the list and touch Elemez. 5 In the App info screen, touch Enable. 6 Touch 7 Touch 8
. Touch
. 9 Touch Enable Elemez. MLog Manager Use MLog Manager to capture log files for diagnostics. See the TC55 Integrator Guide for detailed information on configuring the application. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Figure 76: MLog Manager Applications | 91 MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY PRELIMINARY Chapter 5 Data Capture The TC55 offers the following data capture options:
integrated linear imager integrated digital camera optional CS3070 Bluetooth scanner optional RS507 Hands-free Bluetooth imager. Note: DataWedge is installed and enabled on the TC55 by default. Linear Imager The device with an integrated linear imager has the following features:
Reading a variety of bar code symbologies, including the most popular 1-D code types. The imager uses digital camera technology to take a digital picture of a bar code, stores the resulting image in its memory, and executes state-of-the-art software decoding algorithms to extract the data from the image. Intuitive aiming for easy point-and-shoot operation. Digital Camera The device with an integrated camera based bar code scanning solution has the following features:
Omnidirectional reading of a variety of bar code symbologies, including the most popular linear, postal, QR, PDF417, and 2D matrix code types. Cross-hair reticle for easy point-and-shoot operation. Picklist mode to decode a particular bar code from many in the field of view. The solution uses the advanced camera technology to take a digital picture of a bar code, and executes state-of-the-art software decoding algorithms to extract the data from the image. CS3070 Bluetooth Scanner The CS3070 Bluetooth laser scanner captures bar code data, and transmits it to the device via Bluetooth. The scanner supports Bluetooth Human Interface Device (HID) connection to the device where the scanner emulates a keyboard. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 94 | Data Capture Figure 77: CS3070 Bluetooth Scanner 1 Bluetooth Button/LED 2 Delete Button 3 Scan Button 4 LED 5 Exit Window See the CS3000 Series Scanner Product Reference Guide for detailed information for configuring the CS3070. RS507 Hands-Free Imager The RS507 Hands-free Imager is a wearable bar code scan solution for both 1D and 2D bar code symbologies. The scanner supports Bluetooth Human Interface Device (HID) connection to the device where the scanner emulates a keyboard. Figure 78: RS507 Hands-Free Imager See to the RS507 Hands-free Imager Product Reference Guide for more information. Scanning Considerations Typically, scanning is a simple matter of aim, scan, and decode where a few quick trial efforts master it. However, consider the following to optimize scanning performance:
Range Any scanning device decodes well over a particular working range minimum and maximum distances from the bar code. This range varies according to bar code density and scanning device optics. Scanning within range brings quick and constant decodes; scanning too close or too far away prevents decodes. Move the scanner closer and farther away to find the right working range for the bar codes being scanned. Angle Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 34125PRELIMINARY Data Capture | 95 Scan angle is important for promoting quick decodes. When laser beams reflect directly back into the scanner from the bar code, this specular reflection can blind the scanner. To avoid this, scan the bar code so that the beam does not bounce directly back. But do not scan at too sharp an angle; the scanner needs to collect scattered reflections from the scan to make a successful decode. Practice quickly shows what tolerances to work within. Hold the device farther away for larger symbols. Move the device closer for symbols with bars that are close together. Note: Scanning procedures depend on the application and device configuration. An application may use different scanning procedures from those described. Bar Code Capture with Linear Imager To capture bar code data:
Procedure:
1 Ensure that an application is open on the TC55 and a text field is in focus (text cursor in text field). 2 Point the top of the TC55 at a bar code. Figure 79: Scanning 3 Press and hold the Programmable button. The LED lights red to indicate that data capture is in process. 4 Place the red aiming pattern across the bar code. The LED lights green and a beep sounds, by default, to indicate the bar code was decoded successfully. Figure 80: Aiming Pattern 5 The captured data appears in the text field. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 96 | Data Capture Bar Code Capture with Integrated Camera To capture bar code data:
Note: When capturing bar code data in poor lighting, turn on Illumination mode in the DataWedge application. See the TC55 Integrator Guide for detailed information on configuring DataWedge. Procedure:
1 Ensure that an application is open on the device and a text field is in focus (text cursor in text field). 2 Aim the camera at a bar code. 3 Press and hold the Programmable button. By default, a preview window appears on the screen. The Decode light emitting diode (LED) lights red to indicate that data capture is in process. Figure 81: Application with Preview Window 4 Note: When Picklist mode is enabled, move the TC55 until the bar code is centered under the red target on the screen. Move the TC55 until the bar code is visible on the screen. 5 The Decode LED lights green, a beep sounds and the device vibrates, by default, to indicate the bar code was decoded successfully. 6 The captured data appears in the text field. Bar Code Capture with CS3070 Bluetooth Scanner Prerequisites: Pair the CS3070 with the device. See Pairing with the CS3070 on page 117 for more information. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Data Capture | 97 Procedure:
1 Ensure that an application is open on the device and a text field is in focus (text cursor in a text field). 2 Aim the scanner at the bar code. 3 Press the scan (+) button. Figure 82: CS3070 Scanning 4 Ensure the scan line crosses every bar and space of the symbol. Figure 83: Linear Scanner Aiming Pattern 5 The scanner beeps and the LED turns green to indicate a successful decode. 6 The captured data appears in the text field. Bar Code Capture with RS507 Hands-Free Imager Prerequisites: Pair the RS507 with the TC55. See Pairing the RS507 Hands-Fee Imager on page 118 for more information. Procedure:
1 Ensure that an application is open on the device and a text field is in focus (text cursor in text field). 2 Point the RS507 at a bar code. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 98 | Data Capture Figure 84: Bar Code Scanning with RS507 3 Press and hold the trigger. The red laser aiming pattern turns on to assist in aiming. Ensure the bar code is within the area formed by the cross-hairs in the aiming pattern. The aiming dot is used for increased visibility in bright lighting conditions. The RS507 LEDs light green, a beep sounds to indicate the bar code was decoded successfully. Note that when the RS507 is in Pick List Mode, the RS507 does not decode the bar code until the center of the crosshair touches the bar code. Figure 85: Aiming Pattern Figure 86: Pick List Mode with Multiple Bar Codes in Aiming Pattern 4 The captured data appears in the text field. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Data Capture | 99 DataWedge DataWedge is a utility that adds advanced bar code scanning capability to any application without writing code. It runs in the background and handles the interface to built-in bar code scanners. The captured bar code data is converted to keystrokes and sent to the target application as if it was typed on the keypad. To configure DataWedge refer to the TC55 Integrator Guide. Enabling DataWedge
. Touch 3 Touch 4 Touch Settings. 5 Touch the DataWedge enabled checkbox. A blue checkmark appears in the checkbox indicating that DataWedge
. Procedure:
1 Touch 2 Procedure:
1 Touch 2
. is enabled. 6 Touch
. Disabling DataWedge
. Touch 3 Touch 4 Touch Settings. 5 Touch the DataWedge enabled checkbox. The blue checkmark disappears from the checkbox indicating that
. DataWedge is disabled. 6 Touch
. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY PRELIMINARY Chapter 6 Wireless This section provides information on the wireless features:
Wireless Wire Area Network (WWAN) Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN) Bluetooth Near Field Communications (NFC) Wireless Wide Area Networks Use Wireless wide area networks (WWANs) to access data over a cellular network. This section provides information on:
Sharing a data connection Disabling data roaming Monitoring data usage Limiting connections to 2G networks Locking a SIM card Editing Access Point Names (APNs). Sharing the Mobile Data Connection The tethering & portable hotspot settings allow you to share your data connection. You can share the TC55s mobile data connection with a single computer via USB tethering or Bluetooth tethering. You can also share the data connection with up to eight devices at once, by turning it into a portable Wi-Fi hotspot. While the TC55 is sharing its data connection, an icon appears at the top of the screen and a corresponding message appears in the notification list. USB Tethering Note: USB tethering is not supported on computers running Mac OS. If your computer is running Windows 7 or a recent version of Linux (such as Ubuntu), follow these instructions without any special preparation. If running a version of Windows that precedes Windows 7, or some other operating system, you may need to prepare the computer to establish a network connection via USB. Procedure:
1 Connect the TC55 to a host computer with the USB cable. A USB icon appears at the top of the screen, and the notification Connected as a media device or Connected as a camera appears briefly at the top of the screen. 2 Touch 3 Touch
. 4 Touch More ... 5 Touch Tethering & portable hotspot. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 102 | Wireless 6 Check USB tethering. The host computer is now sharing the TC55s data connection. Post requisites: To stop sharing the data connection, uncheck USB tethering or disconnect the USB cable. Bluetooth Tethering Use Bluetooth tethering to share the data connection with a host computer. Prerequisites: Configure the host computer to obtain its network connection using Bluetooth. For more information, see the host computers documentation. Procedure:
1 Pair the TC55 with the host computer. 2 Touch 3
. Touch
. 4 Touch More ... 5 Touch Tethering & portable hotspot. 6 Check Bluetooth tethering. The host computer is now sharing the TC55s data connection. Post requisites: To stop sharing the data connection, uncheck Bluetooth tethering . Portable Wi-Fi Hotspot Prerequisites: Configure the Wi-Fi Hotspot settings. Procedure:
1 Touch 2
. Touch
. 3 Touch More ... 4 Touch Tethering & portable hotspot. 5 Check Portable Wi-Fi hotspot. After a moment, the TC55 starts broadcasting its Wi-Fi network name (SSID), so you can connect to it with up to eight computers or other devices. Post requisites: To stop sharing the data connection, uncheck Portable Wi-Fi hotspot. Configuring the Wi-Fi Hotspot Procedure:
1 Touch 2 Touch
. 3 Touch More ... 4 Touch Tethering & portable hotspot. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Figure 87: Set up Wi-Fi Hotspot Dialog Box Wireless | 103 5 In the Network SSID text field, edit the network name. 6 Touch the Country option and select the country you are in from the drop-down list. 7 Touch the Channel option and select a channel number from the drop-down list. 8 Touch the Security option and select a security method from the drop-down list. Open WPA2 PSK 9 In the Password text field, enter a password. Note: If Open is selected in the Security option, a password is not required. 10 Touch Save. Data Usage Data usage refers to the amount of data uploaded or downloaded by the TC55 during a given period. Depending on the wireless plan, you may be charged additional fees when your data usage exceeds your plan's limit. To monitor your data usage, go to
>
Data usage.. Caution: The usage displayed on the data usage settings screen is measured by your device. Your carrier's data usage accounting may differ. Usage in excess of your carrier plan's data limits can result in steep overage charges. The feature described here can help you track your usage, but is not guaranteed to prevent additional charges. Data usage settings allow you to:
Set the data usage level at which you'll receive a warning. Set a data usage limit. View or restrict data usage by app. By default, when you open the data usage settings screen you see the settings for mobile data: that is, the data network or networks provided by your carrier:
Identify mobile hotspots and restrict background downloads that may result in extra charges. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 104 | Wireless Figure 88: Data Usage Screen To display Wi-Fi data usage settings in a separate tab touch Just below the on-off switch, note the data usage cycle. Touch it to choose a different cycle. This date range is the period of time for which the graph displays data usage. The vertical white lines on the graph show a period of time within the data usage cycle. This range determines the usage amount displayed just below the graph. Drag lines to change the period.
> Show Wi-Fi usage. Set Data Usage Warning Drag the orange line by its right side to the level where you want to receive a warning. When your data usage reaches this level, you'll receive a notification. Set Auto-Sync You can also conserve data usage by syncing your apps manually, only when you need the data, rather than relying on auto-sync. To turn auto-sync off or on, touch Disabling Data When Roaming
> Auto-sync data. To prevent the device from transmitting data over other carriers mobile networks when leaving an area that is covered by the carriers networks. This is useful for controlling expenses if the service plan does not include data roaming. Procedure:
1 Touch 2
. Touch
. 3 Touch More ... 4 Touch Mobile networks. 5 Un-check Data roaming. 6 Touch
. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Limiting Data Connection to 2G Networks Note: Not available when using AT&T SIM card. Wireless | 105 Extend the battery life by limiting the data connections to 2G networks (GPRS or EDGE). When connected to a 2G network, the user may want to postpone activities that transmit a lot of data, such as sending, uploading, or downloading pictures or video, until they are connected to a faster mobile or other wireless network. Procedure:
1 Touch 2
. Touch
. 3 Touch More ... 4 Touch Mobile networks. 5 Touch GSM 2G/3G selection. 6 Touch 2G only. 7 Touch
. Locking the SIM Card Locking the SIM card requires the user to enter a PIN every time the TC55 is turned on. If the correct PIN is not entered, only Emergency calls can be made. Procedure:
1 Touch 2
. Security. Touch 3 Touch 4 Touch Set up SIM/RUIM card lock. 5 Touch Lock SIM card. Figure 89: Enter PIN to Lock SIM Card 6 Enter the PIN associated with the card. Touch OK. 7 Reset the TC55. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 106 | Wireless Editing the Access Point Name Note: Many service provider Access Point Name (APN) data are pre-configured in the TC55. The APN information for all other service provides must be obtained from the wireless service provider. To use the data on a network the user must configure the APN information. Procedure:
1 Touch 2
. Touch
. 3 Touch More ... 4 Touch Mobile networks. 5 Touch Access Point Names. 6 Touch 7 Touch New APN. 8 Touch each APN settings and enter the appropriate data obtained from the wireless service provider. 9 When finished, touch 10 Touch Save. 11 Touch the radio button next to the new APN name to start using it. 12 Touch
. Wireless Local Area Networks Wireless local area networks (WLANs) allow the TC55 to communicate wirelessly inside a building. Before using the TC55 on a WLAN, the facility must be set up with the required hardware to run the WLAN (sometimes known as infrastructure). The infrastructure and the TC55 must both be properly configured to enable this communication. Refer to the documentation provided with the infrastructure (access points (APs), access ports, switches, Radius servers, etc.) for instructions on how to set up the infrastructure. Once the infrastructure is set up to enforce the chosen WLAN security scheme, use the Wireless & networks settings configure the TC55 to match the security scheme. The TC55 supports the following WLAN security options:
Open Wireless Equivalent Privacy (WEP) Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA)/WPA2 Personal (PSK) Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) Protected Extensible Authentication Protocol (PEAP) - with Microsoft Challenge-Handshake Authentication Protocol version 2 (MSCHAPv2) and Generic Token Card (GTC) authentication. EAP-Transport Layer Security (TLS) EAP-TTLS - with Password Authentication Protocol (PAP), MSCHAP and MSCHAPv2 authentication. The Status bar displays icons that indicate Wi-Fi network availability and Wi-Fi status. See Status Bar on page 44 for more information. Note: Turn off Wi-Fi when not using it, to extend the life of the battery. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Scan and Connect to a Wi-Fi Network Wireless | 107 Procedure:
1 Touch 2
. Touch Figure 90: Settings Screen 3 Slide the Wi-Fi switch to the ON position. 4 Touch Wi-Fi. The TC55 searches for WLANs in the area and lists them. Figure 91: Wi-Fi Screen 5 Scroll through the list and select the desired WLAN network. 6 For open networks, touch profile once or press and hold and then select Connect to network or for secure networks enter the required password or other credentials then touch Connect. See the system administrator for more information. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 108 | Wireless The TC55 obtains a network address and other required information from the network using the dynamic host configuration protocol (DHCP) protocol. To configure the TC55 with a fixed internet protocol (IP) address, See Configuring the Device to Use a Static IP Address on page 110. 7 In the Wi-Fi setting field, Connected appears indicating that the TC55 is connected to the WLAN. Configuring a Wi-Fi Network Procedure:
1 Touch 2
. Wi-Fi. Touch 3 Touch 4 Slide the switch to the ON position. 5 The TC55 searches for WLANs in the area and lists them on the screen. 6 Scroll through the list and select the desired WLAN network. 7 Touch the desired network. If the network security is Open, the TC55 automatically connects to the network. For all other network security a dialog box appears. Figure 92: WLAN Network Security Dialog Boxes Note: By default, the network Proxy is set to None and the IP settings is set to DHCP. See Configuring for a Proxy Server on page 109 for setting connection to a proxy server and see Configuring the Device to Use a Static IP Address on page 110 for setting the device to use a static IP address. 8 If the network security is WEP or WPA/WPA2 PSK, enter the required password and then touch Connect. 9 If the network security is 802.1x EAP, enter the information below and then touch Connect:
Touch the EAP method drop-down list and select PEAP, TLS or TTLS. Touch the Phase 2 authentication drop-down list and select an authentication method. If required, touch CA certificate and select a Certification Authority (CA) certificate. Note: Certificates are installed using the Security settings. If required, touch User certificate and select a user certificate. Note: User certificates are installed using the Location & security settings. If required, in the Identity text box, enter the username credentials. If desired, in the Anonymous identity text box, enter an anonymous identity username. If required, in the Password text box, enter the password for then given identity. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY 10 Touch
. Manually Adding a Wi-Fi Network Wireless | 109 Manually add a Wi-Fi network if the network does not broadcast its name (SSID) or to add a Wi-Fi network when out of range. Procedure:
1 Touch 2
. Wi-Fi. Touch 3 Touch 4 Slide the Wi-Fi switch to the On position. 5 Touch + in the bottom right corner of the screen. 6 Note: By default, the network Proxy is set to None and the IP settings is set to DHCP. See Configuring for a Proxy Server on page 109 for setting connection to a proxy server and see Configuring the Device to Use a Static IP Address on page 110 for setting the device to use a static IP address. In the Network SSID text box, enter the name of the Wi-Fi network. 7 In the Security drop-down list, select the type of security. Options:
None WEP WPA/WPA2 PSK 802.1x EAP. 8 If the network security is None, touch Save. 9 If the network security is WEP or WPA/WPA2 PSK, enter the required password and then touch Save. 10 If the network security is 802.1x EAP enter the information below and then touch Save:
Touch the EAP method drop-down list and select PEAP, TLS or TTLS. Touch the Phase 2 authentication drop-down list and select an authentication method. If required, touch CA certificate and select a Certification Authority (CA) certificate. Note: Certificates are installed using the Security settings. If required, touch User certificate and select a user certificate. Note: User certificates are installed using the Security settings. If required, in the Identity text box, enter the username credentials. If desired, in the Anonymous identity text box, enter an anonymous identity username. If required, in the Password text box, enter the password for then given identity. 11 Touch
. Configuring for a Proxy Server A proxy server is a server that acts as an intermediary for requests from clients seeking resources from other servers. A client connects to the proxy server, requesting some service, such as a file, connection, web page, or other resource, available from a different server. The proxy server evaluates the request according to its filtering rules. For example, it may filter traffic by IP address or protocol. If the request is validated by the filter, the proxy provides the resource by connecting to the relevant server and requesting the service on behalf of the client. It is important for enterprise customers to be able to set up secure computing environments within their companies, and proxy configuration is an essential part of doing that. Proxy configuration acts as a security barrier ensuring that the proxy server monitors all traffic between the Internet and the intranet. This is normally an integral part of security enforcement in corporate firewalls within intranets. Procedure:
1 In the network dialog box, touch a network. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 110 | Wireless 2 Touch Show advanced options checkbox. 3 Touch Proxy settings and select Manual. Figure 93: Proxy Settings 4 In the Proxy hostname text box, enter the address of the proxy server. 5 In the Proxy port text box, enter the port number for the proxy server. Note: When entering proxy addresses the Bypass proxy for field, do not use spaces or carriage returns between addresses. 6 In the Bypass proxy for text box, enter addresses for web sites that do not require to go through the proxy server. Use the separator | between addresses. 7 Touch Connect. 8 Touch
. Configuring the Device to Use a Static IP Address By default, the device is configured to use Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) to assign an Internet protocol (IP) address when connecting to a wireless network. To configure the device to connect to a network using a static IP address:
Procedure:
1 In the network dialog box, touch a network. 2 Touch Show advanced options checkbox. 3 Touch IP settings and select Static. Figure 94: Static IP Settings Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Wireless | 111 4 In the IP address text box, enter an IP address for the device. 5 If required, in the Gateway text box, enter a gateway address for the device. 6 If required, in the Network prefix length text box, enter a the prefix length. 7 If required, in the DNS 1 text box, enter a Domain Name System (DNS) address. 8 If required, in the DNS 2 text box, enter a DNS address. 9 Touch Connect. 10 Touch
. Advanced Wi-Fi Settings Note: Advanced Wi-Fi settings are for the device not for a specific wireless network. Use the Advanced settings to configure additional Wi-Fi settings. From the Wi-Fi screen, touch view the advanced settings. General
> Advanced to Network notification - When enabled, notifies the user when an open network is available. Keep Wi-Fi on during sleep - Opens a menu to set whether and when the Wi-Fi radio turns off. Always (increases data usage) - The radio stays on when the device enters suspend mode. Only when plugged in - The radio stays on while the device is connected to external power. Never - The radio turns off when the device enters suspend mode (default). MAC address - Displays the Media Access Control (MAC) address of the device when connecting to Wi-Fi networks. IP address - Displays the IP address of the device when connecting to Wi-Fi networks. Regulatory Country selection - Displays the acquired country code if 802.11d is enabled else it displays the currently selected country code. Region code - Displays the current region code. About Version - Displays the current Fusion information. WLAN Configuration Use the WLAN Configuration settings to configure additional WLAN settings. From the Wi-Fi screen, touch WLAN Configuration to view the settings. Country Override - Check to disable 802.11d. Select the country of operation from the menu. Rate Selection
>
Auto Mode (a/b/g/n) - Use all data rates available (default). 11a/b/g Only - Use only 802.11 a/b/g. 11n mode Only - Use only 802.11n. Band Selection Auto (2.4GHz and 5GHz) - Use both the 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands (default). 2.4Ghz Only - Use only the 2.4 GHz band. 5Ghz Only - Use only the 5 GHz band. Enable Power Saving - When enabled, the WLAN radio goes into sleep mode when there is no WLAN activity. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 112 | Wireless Modifying a Wi-Fi Network The user can change settings and passwords for a network in the Wi-Fi list. Procedure:
1 Touch 2
. Wi-Fi. Touch 3 Touch 4 Slide the Wi-Fi switch to the On position. 5 Touch and hold on a network name and then touch Modify network. 6 Modify the network settings and then touch Save. 7 Touch
. Connecting to a Wi-Fi Network Using WPS Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS) allows users to set up Wi-Fi Protected Access making it easy to add new devices to an existing network without entering long passphrases. Procedure:
1 Touch 2
. Wi-Fi. Touch 3 Touch 4 Slide the Wi-Fi switch to the On position. 5 Touch
. 6 On the wireless router, press the WPS button. The TC55 connects to the wireless router. 7 Touch
. Remove a Wi-Fi Network To remove a remembered or connected network:
Procedure:
1 Touch 2
. Wi-Fi. Touch 3 Touch 4 In the Wi-Fi networks list, touch and hold the name of the network. 5 In the menu, touch Forget network. 6 Touch
. Bluetooth Bluetooth-equipped devices can communicate without wires, using frequency-hopping spread spectrum (FHSS) radio frequency (RF) to transmit and receive data in the 2.4 GHz Industry Scientific and Medical (ISM) band (802.15.1). Bluetooth wireless technology is specifically designed for short-range (10 meters (32.8 feet) ) communication and low power consumption. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Wireless | 113 Devices with Bluetooth capabilities can exchange information (e.g., files, appointments, and tasks) with other Bluetooth enabled devices such as printers, access points, and other mobile devices. Adaptive Frequency Hopping Adaptive Frequency Hopping (AFH) is a method of avoiding fixed frequency interferers, and can be used with Bluetooth voice. All devices in the piconet (Bluetooth network) must be AFH-capable in order for AFH to work. There is no AFH when connecting and discovering devices. Avoid making Bluetooth connections and discoveries during critical 802.11b communications. AFH for Bluetooth consists of four main sections:
Channel Classification - A method of detecting an interference on a channel-by-channel basis, or pre-defined channel mask. Link Management - Coordinates and distributes the AFH information to the rest of the Bluetooth network. Hop Sequence Modification - Avoids interference by selectively reducing the number of hopping channels. Channel Maintenance - A method for periodically re-evaluating the channels. When AFH is enabled, the Bluetooth radio hops around (instead of through) the 802.11b high-rate channels. AFH coexistence allows Motorola Enterprise Tablets to operate in any infrastructure. The Bluetooth radio in this device operates as a Class 2 device power class. The maximum output power is 2.5 mW and the expected range is 10 meters (32.8 ft.). A definition of ranges based on power class is difficult to obtain due to power and device differences, and whether one measures open space or closed office space. Note: It is not recommended to perform Bluetooth wireless technology inquiry when high rate 802.11b operation is required. Security The current Bluetooth specification defines security at the link level. Application-level security is not specified. This allows application developers to define security mechanisms tailored to their specific need. Link-level security occurs between devices, not users, while application-level security can be implemented on a per-user basis. The Bluetooth specification defines security algorithms and procedures required to authenticate devices, and if needed, encrypt the data flowing on the link between the devices. Device authentication is a mandatory feature of Bluetooth while link encryption is optional. Pairing of Bluetooth devices is accomplished by creating an initialization key used to authenticate the devices and create a link key for them. Entering a common personal identification number (PIN) in the devices being paired generates the initialization key. The PIN is never sent over the air. By default, the Bluetooth stack responds with no key when a key is requested (it is up to user to respond to the key request event). Authentication of Bluetooth devices is based-upon a challenge-response transaction. Bluetooth allows for a PIN or passkey used to create other 128-bit keys used for security and encryption. The encryption key is derived from the link key used to authenticate the pairing devices. Also worthy of note is the limited range and fast frequency hopping of the Bluetooth radios that makes long-
distance eavesdropping difficult. Recommendations are:
Perform pairing in a secure environment Keep PIN codes private and do not store the PIN codes in the device Implement application-level security. Bluetooth Profiles The TC55 supports the following Bluetooth services:
Generic Access Profile (GAP) - Use for device discovery and authentication. Service Discovery Protocol (SDP) - Handles the search for known and specific services as well as general services. Serial Port Profile (SPP) - Sets up a virtual serial port and connects two Bluetooth enabled devices. For example, connecting the TC55 to a printer. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 114 | Wireless Human Interface Device Profile (HID) - Allows Bluetooth keyboards, pointing devices, gaming devices and remote monitoring devices to connect to the TC55. Object Push Profile (OPP) - Allows the TC55 to push and pull objects to and from a push server. Dial-up Networking (DUN) - Allows the TC55 to access the Internet and other dial-up services using a Bluetooth enabled mobile phone. Hands-Free Profile (HFP) - Allows a hands-free device, such as a Bluetooth headset, to place and receive calls on the TC55. Advanced Audio Distribution Profile (A2DP) - Allows the TC55 to stream stereo-quality audio to a wireless headset or wireless stereo speakers. Audio/Video Remote Control Profile (AVRCP) - Allows the TC55 to control televisions, hi-fi equipment, etc. General Object Exchange Profile (GOEP) - Provides a basis for other data profiles. Based on OBEX and sometimes referred to as such. Handsfree Profile (HFP) - Allow car hands-free kits to communicate with mobile phones in the car. Personal Area Network (PAN) - Allow the use of Bluetooth Network Encapsulation Protocol on Layer 3 protocols for transport over a Bluetooth link. General Audio/Video Distribution Profile (GAVDP) - Provides the basis for A2DP, and VDP. PhoneBook Access Profile (PBAP) - Allows exchange of Phone Book Objects between a car kit and a mobile phone to allow the car kit to display the name of the incoming caller; allow the car kit to download the phone book so the user can initiate a call from the car display. Bluetooth Power States The Bluetooth radio is off by default. Suspend - When the TC55 goes into suspend mode, the Bluetooth radio stays on. Airplane Mode - When the TC55 is placed in Airplane Mode, the Bluetooth radio turns off. When Airplane mode is disabled, the Bluetooth radio returns to the prior state. When in Airplane Mode, the Bluetooth radio can be turned back on if desired. Bluetooth Radio Power Turn off the Bluetooth radio to save power or if entering an area with radio restrictions (e.g., an airplane). When the radio is off, other Bluetooth devices cannot see or connect to the device. Turn on the Bluetooth radio to exchange information with other Bluetooth devices (within range). Communicate only with Bluetooth radios in close proximity. Note: To achieve the best battery life turn off radios when not in use. Enabling Bluetooth also appears in the Status bar. Procedure:
1 Touch 2 Touch 3 Slide the Bluetooth switch to the ON position. 4 Touch
. Disabling Bluetooth Procedure:
1 Touch 2 Touch 3 Slide the Bluetooth switch to the OFF position. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY 4 Touch
. Discovering Bluetooth Device(s) Wireless | 115 The TC55 can receive information from discovered devices without pairing. However, once paired, the TC55 and a paired device exchange information automatically when the Bluetooth radio is on. To find Bluetooth devices in the area:
Procedure:
1 Ensure that Bluetooth is enabled on both devices. 2 Ensure that the Bluetooth device to discover is in discoverable mode. 3 Ensure that the two devices are within 10 meters (32.8 feet) of one another. 4 Touch 5 Touch 6 Touch 7 Touch SCAN FOR DEVICES. The TC55 begins searching for discoverable Bluetooth devices in the area and
. Bluetooth. displays them under AVAILABLE DEVICES. 8 Scroll through the list and select a device. The Bluetooth pairing request dialog box appears. Figure 95: Bluetooth Pairing - Enter PIN Figure 96: Bluetooth Pairing - Smart Pairing 9 Enter a PIN in the text box and touch OK. Enter the same PIN on the other device. 10 For Simple Pairing, touch Pair on both devices. 11 The Bluetooth device is added to the Bluetooth devices list and a trusted (paired) connection is established. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 116 | Wireless Changing the Bluetooth Name
. Bluetooth. By default, the TC55 has a generic Bluetooth name that is visible to other devices when connected. Procedure:
1 Touch 2 Touch 3 Touch 4 If Bluetooth is not on, slide the switch to the ON position. 5 Touch 6 Touch Rename device. 7 Enter a name and touch Done. 8 Touch
. Connecting to a Bluetooth Device Once paired, connect to a Bluetooth device. Procedure:
1 Touch 2 Touch 3 Touch 4 If Bluetooth is not on, slide the switch to the ON position. 5 In the PAIRED DEVICES list, touch and hold on a unconnected Bluetooth device until a menu appears. 6 Touch Connect. When connected, the device is displayed as connected in the list. Bluetooth. Selecting Profiles on the Bluetooth Device Some Bluetooth devices have multiple profiles. To select a profile:
Procedure:
1 Touch 2 Touch 3 Touch 4
. Bluetooth. In the PAIRED DEVICES list, touch next to the device name. 5 Under PROFILES, check or uncheck a profile to allow the device to use that profile. 6 Touch
. Unpairing a Bluetooth Device To unpair a Bluetooth device and erase all pairing information:
Procedure:
1 Touch 2 Touch 3 Touch 4
. Bluetooth. In the PAIRED DEVICES list, touch next to the device name. 5 Touch Unpair. 6 Touch
. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Wireless | 117 Pairing with the CS3070 Procedure:
1 Press the CS3070 scan button (+) to wake the scanner. 2 Press and hold the Bluetooth button (round button with Motorola logo) for five seconds. The scanner beeps and the Bluetooth button starts blinking quickly to indicate that the scanner is discoverable by the host. Note:
HID is the default profile for the CS3070. If this was changed, scan for bar code below. Figure 97: Bluetooth Keyboard Emulation (HID) Bar Code 3 Touch 4
. Bluetooth. Touch 5 Touch 6 Slide the switch to the ON position. 7 The CS3070 appears in the Available Devices list, indicated by its model name and serial number. 8 Select the CS3070 from the list. A dialog box displays the PIN to enter on the CS3070. 9 With the CS3070, scan the PIN using the Numeric Bar Codes. See CS3070 Numeric Bar Codes for PIN Entry on page 117 and then scan Enter. The scanner beeps to indicate it has paired with the device, and the device displays Connected below the CS3070 device name. CS3070 Numeric Bar Codes for PIN Entry Use the following bar codes for pin entry for Bluetooth connection. Table continued MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback 01234PRELIMINARY 118 | Wireless Pairing the RS507 Hands-Fee Imager An RS507 Hands-free Imager can be used with the device to capture bar code data. Procedure:
1 Ensure that Bluetooth is enabled on both devices. 2 Ensure that the Bluetooth device to discover is in discoverable mode. 3 Ensure that the two devices are within 10 meters (32.8 feet) of one another. 4 Place the RS507 in Human Interface Device (HID) mode. If the RS507 is already in HID mode, skip to step 5. a Remove the battery from the RS507. b Press and hold the Restore key. c d Keep holding the Restore key for about five seconds until a chirp is heard and the Scan LEDs flash green. e Scan the bar code below to place the RS507 in HID mode. Install the battery onto the RS507. Figure 98: RS507 Bluetooth HID Bar Code 5 Touch 6 Touch 7 Touch 8 Touch SCAN FOR DEVICES. The device begins searching for discoverable Bluetooth devices in the area and
. Bluetooth. displays them under AVAILABLE DEVICES. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 56789EnterPRELIMINARY Wireless | 119 9 Scroll through the list and select RS507. The device connects to the RS507 and Connected appears below the device name. The Bluetooth device is added to the Bluetooth devices list and a trusted (paired) connection is established. Near Field Communications Near field communication (NFC) is a set of standards for devices to establish radio communication with each other by bringing them into close proximity. Communication is possible between an NFC device and an un-powered NFC chip, NFC tag or two NFC devices. Using NFC, the TC55 can:
The NFC antenna is located at the bottom of the battery cover indicated by an antenna icon. send and receive photos, videos, contacts and web pages with another NFC enabled device. transmit and read information to and from an NFC chip or tag. pair with NFC enabled Bluetooth devices. Sharing Information Using NFC You can beam a web page, a video, or other content from your screen to another device by bringing the devices together back to back. Prerequisites: Make sure both devices are unlocked, support NFC, and have both NFC and Android Beam turned on. Procedure:
1 Open a screen that contains a web page, video, photo or contact. 2 Move the back of the TC55 toward the back of the other device. Figure 99: Sharing Data Using NFC When the devices connect, you hear a sound, the image on the screen reduces in size, the message Touch to beam appears. 3 Touch anywhere on the screen. The transfer begins. Note: The devices do not have to be held close to each other once the transfer begins. Keep devices within 10 m (32.8 ft.) of each other. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 120 | Wireless Communication Using NFC Procedure:
1 Launch an NFC enabled application. 2 Hold TC55 as shown. Do not cover antenna area on battery cover. Figure 100: Communication with NFC Chip, Tag or Card 3 Move TC55 to close to the NFC chip, tag or card until data transfer is complete (usually indicated by the application). Pairing with NFC Enabled Bluetooth Devices Prerequisites: Ensure that the NFC-enabled Bluetooth devices is on and in discoverable mode. See the devices user documentation. Procedure:
1 Hold TC55 as shown. Do not cover antenna area on battery cover. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Figure 101: Pairing with NFC Enabled Device Wireless | 121 2 Move TC55 to close to the device. The device indicates that pairing is successful. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY PRELIMINARY Chapter 7 Accessories This chapter provides information for using the accessories for the device. TC55 Accessories The table below lists the accessories available for the TC55. Table 10: TC55 Accessories Accessory Cradles Five Slot Charge Only Cradle Five Slot Charge Only Cradle Base Vehicle Cradle Chargers Power Supply (12 VDC, 4.16 A.) Power Supply (5 VDC, 1.2 A) Cables Rugged Charge Cable Micro USB Cable Auto Charge Cable US AC Line Cord (3-
wire) International AC line Cord Miscellaneous Spare 2,940 mAh lithium-ion battery Part Number Description CRDUNIV-55-5000R CRDUNIV-XX-5000R CRD-TC55-VCD1-01 Provides charging for up to five TC55 devices. Requires additional power supply. Provides charging for up to five TC55 devices. Requires charging cups and additional power supply. Provides mounting of the TC55 in a vehicle. PWRS-14000-148R Provides power to the Five Slot Charge Only Cradle. PWRS-124306-01R Provides power to the TC55. CBL-TC55-CHG1-01 25-MCXUSB-01R VCA400-01R 50-16000-221R Provides power to the TC55. Provides USB communication with a host computer. Charges the TC55 in a Vehicle Cradle using a vehicles cigarette lighter. Provides power to the power supplies.
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Provides power to the power supplies. Purchase separately. BTRY-TC55-29MA1-01 Replacement 2,940 mAh battery. Table continued MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 124 | Accessories Accessory Spare 4,410 mAh lithium-ion battery 2,940 mAh Battery Cover 4,410 mAh Battery Cover Charging Cup Protective Boot (Blue/
Black) Protective Boot (Grey/
Black) Stylus for Protective Boot Part Number BTRY-TC55-44MA1-01 Description Replacement 4,410 mAh battery. KT-TC55-29BTYD1-01 Replacement battery cover for 2,940 mAh battery. KT-TC55-44BTYD1-01 Replacement battery cover for 4,410 mAh battery. Blank Slot Cover CUPUNICVR-5000R CUPTC55XX-1000R SG-TC55-BOOT1-01 Mounts onto the Multi Slot Charge Only Cradle Base and provides TC55 charging slot. Mounts on the Five Slot Charge Only Cradle and covers a slot when a cup is not required (5-pack). Provides additional protection for the TC55. SG-TC55-BOOT2-01 Provides additional protection for the TC55. KT-TC55-STYLUS1-01 KT-TC55STYLUS103 Single stylus for Protective Boot with tether. Stylus for Protective Boot with tether (3pack). Holster SG-TC55-HLSTR1-01 Mounts on belt and provides storage for the TC55. Micro USB Cable Use the Micro USB Cable to provide USB communication with a host computer. When the TC55 is connected to a host computer using the Micro USB Cable, the TC55 appears as a Removable Disk on the host computer. Refer to the TC55 Integrator Guide for more information. Figure 102: Using the Micro USB Cable Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Accessories | 125 Note: The preferred method to charge the TC55 is to use the Rugged Charge Cable. You can also use the Micro USB Cable to charge the TC55 but the time to fully charge the battery will increase. Rugged Charge Cable Use the Rugged Charge Cable to provide power to the TC55. Note:
Do not connect the Rugged Charge Cable to the USB port of a host computer. The TC55 will not charge from the host computer using the Rugged Charge Cable. Use Motorola Solutions power supply, p/n, PWRS-12430601R with Rugged Charge Cable. Figure 103: Rugged Charge Cable Rugged Charge Cable Setup Figure 104: Connect Rugged Charge Cable to TC55 MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 126 | Accessories Figure 105: Connect to Power Rugged Charge Cable Removal Figure 106: Removing the Rugged Charge Cable Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Accessories | 127 Five Slot Charge Only Cradle The Five Slot Charge Only cradle:
Provides 5 VDC power for operating the TC55. Simultaneously charges up to five TC55s. Consists of a cradle base and optional cups. Refer to the TC55 Integrator Guide for setup and configuration instructions. Charging the TC55 To charge the TC55, insert the TC55 into an open slot. Figure 107: Five Slot Charge Only Cradle The TC55's LED shows the status of the battery charging. See Battery Charge LED Status for charging status indications. The 2,940 mAh battery charges in approximately three hours and the 4,410 mAh battery charges in approximately 4.5 hours. A Charge LED is provided for each battery charging well. See Charging LED Status on page 29 for charging status indications. Charge batteries in temperatures from 0 C to 40 C (32 F to 104 F). Charging is intelligently controlled by the charger in order to ensure safe operation and optimize long-term battery life. To accomplish this, for small periods of time, the charger alternately enables and disables battery charging to keep the battery at acceptable temperatures. The charger indicates when charging is disabled due to abnormal temperatures via the LED. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 128 | Accessories Inserting a TC55 with Boot into Cradle Each cradle cup has an insert that must be removed prior to inserting the TC55 with Protective Boot. Remove the insert and then insert the TC55 into the cup. Figure 108: Remove Cup Insert Vehicle Charge Cradle Warning: Some countries prohibit the mounting of any electronic device in any location on the vehicle dashboard. Be sure to check with local laws acceptable mounting areas before installing the auto mounting kit. Install the vehicle mount on the surface of the vehicle that is reasonably flat and free of dirt and oil. Clean the mounting surface with a glass cleaner and a clean cotton cloth. Install the vehicle mount on the windshield or other flat car surface using the supplied mounting disc. The TC55 can detect when it is inserted into the cradle. Use the Dock settings to configure the TC55 when in the cradle. See the TC55 Integrator Guide for more information. You can place the TC55 in the cradle either with or without the protective boot. Installing Vehicle Cradle on Windshield Procedure:
1 Fix the suction cup mount to the selected area with the suction lever facing up. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Figure 109: Windshield Installation Accessories | 129 2 Flip the lever down to create a vacuum between the suction cup and the mounting surface. Figure 110: Move Level Toward Windshield 3 Make sure that the suction bond is strong enough before proceeding to the next step. 4 Place the TC55 top first into the cradle and push up. 5 Rotate the bottom into the cradle and place in the bottom of the cradle. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 130 | Accessories Figure 111: Insert TC55 into Vehicle Charge Cradle Note: When the TC55 is installed in the vehicle cradle, it automatically detects the insertion and goes into Car Mode, by default. 6 Position the TC55 for best viewing. 7 Tighten the nuts to lock the cradle in place. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Figure 112: Tighten Nut Accessories | 131 8 In order to charge the TC55 while in a vehicle, connect the micro USB connector of the auto charge cable (p/n VCA40001R) to the input power connector in the Vehicle Charge Cradle. Figure 113: Connect Auto Charge Cable to Vehicle Charge Cradle 9 Use the cable retention feature to secure the cable. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 132 | Accessories Figure 114: Cable Retention 10 Connect the other end to the vehicle power outlet. The LED indicator flashes green indicating the TC55 is charging. Removing the Device from the Vehicle Cradle Procedure:
1 Lift the TC55 up. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Figure 115: Remove TC55 From Vehicle Cradle Accessories | 133 2 Remove bottom of TC55 from the cradle Dock Settings Use the Dock Settings to set specific device settings when the TC55 is inserted into the Vehicle Cradle. Figure 116: Dock Screen Dock detection - Check to enable the detection of the TC55 when placed into the Vehicle Cradle. Enabled by default. Dock insert sound - Check to play a sound when the TC55 is placed in or removed from the Vehicle Cradle. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 134 | Accessories Dock settings - Touch to modify the TC55 settings when placed in the cradle. Figure 117: Dock Settings Screen Enable Dock Profile - Slide switch to enable or disable dock settings when the TC55 is in the Vehicle Cradle. Enable Wi-Fi Radio - Enable or disable the Wi-Fi radio when the TC55 is in the Vehicle Cradle. Enable GPS Radio - Enable or disable the GPS radio when the TC55 is in the Vehicle Cradle. Enable BT Radio - Enable or disable the Bluetooth radio when the TC55 is in the Vehicle Cradle. Change Notification/Ring setting - Select notification that occurs when the TC55 is in the Vehicle Cradle. Options: Play Sound or Vibrate. Brightness - Set the screen brightness when the TC55 is in the Vehicle Cradle. Display timeout setting - Set the amount of time before the screen turns off when the TC55 is in the Vehicle Cradle. Touchscreen mode- Select touch screen mode when the TC55 is in the Vehicle Cradle. Options: Finger/Gloved or Finger/Stylus. Launch an installed application - Select an application that launches when the TC55 is inserted into the cradle. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Accessories | 135 Installing the Protective Boot Figure 118: Protective Boot Procedure:
1 Insert the top of the TC55 into the top of the Protective Boot. Figure 119: Insert Top of TC55 into Boot 2 Rotate the bottom of the TC55 into the protective Boot. Figure 120: Insert Bottom of TC55 into Boot MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 136 | Accessories 3 Ensure that the Protective Boot is properly fitted on the TC55. Attaching the Stylus to the Protective Boot Procedure:
1 Insert one end of the tether into the hole in the stylus. Figure 121: Insert Tether into Stylus 2 Feed the other end of the tether through the first loop. 3 Pull the tether taut. 4 Feed the loose end of the tether through the tether hole in the Protective Boot. Figure 122: Feed Stylus through Tether Loop 5 Feed the stylus through the tether loop. 6 Pull the tether taut. 7 Insert the point of the stylus into the mounting hole in the boot. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Figure 123: Insert Stylus Point into Mounting Hole Accessories | 137 8 Rotate the stylus into the boot. Figure 124: Lock Stylus into Place 9 Ensure that the top of the stylus snaps into the boot. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 138 | Accessories Figure 125: Style in Protective Boot Holster Use the holster to securely carry the TC55 when working. Figure 126: Holster Insert the TC55 with the 2,490 mAh battery into the holster with the screen facing in or out. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Figure 127: Inserting the TC55 with 2,490 mAh Battery into the Holster Accessories | 139 Insert the TC55 with the 4,410 mAh battery into the holster with the screen facing in. Figure 128: Inserting the TC55 with 4,410 mAh Battery into the Holster The holster provides a sleeve for holding an optional stylus. Note: Do not place the stylus into the holder when the TC55 with the Protective Boot is in the holster. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 140 | Accessories Figure 129: Stylus in Holster Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Chapter 8 Maintenance and Troubleshooting This chapter includes instructions on cleaning and storing the device, and provides troubleshooting solutions for potential problems during operation. Maintaining the TC55 For trouble-free service, observe the following tips when using the TC55:
Do not scratch the screen of the TC55. When working with the TC55, use a finger, glove or approved stylus or pen intended for use with a capacitive touch-sensitive screen. Never use an actual pen or pencil or other sharp object on the surface of the TC55 screen. The touch-sensitive screen of the TC55 is glass. Do not to drop the TC55 or subject it to strong impact. Protect the TC55 from temperature extremes. Do not leave it on the dashboard of a car on a hot day, and keep it away from heat sources. Do not store or use the TC55 in any location that is dusty, damp, or wet. Use a soft lens cloth to clean the TC55. If the surface of the TC55 screen becomes soiled, clean it with a soft cloth moistened with isopropyl alcohol. Periodically replace the rechargeable battery to ensure maximum battery life and product performance. Battery life depends on individual usage patterns. Battery Safety Guidelines The area in which the units are charged should be clear of debris and combustible materials or chemicals. Particular care should be taken where the device is charged in a non commercial environment. Follow battery usage, storage, and charging guidelines found in this guide. To charge the mobile device battery, the battery and charger temperatures must be between 0 C and +45 C (+32 Improper battery use may result in a fire, explosion, or other hazard. F and +113 F) Do not use incompatible batteries and chargers. Use of an incompatible battery or charger may present a risk of fire, explosion, leakage, or other hazard. If you have any questions about the compatibility of a battery or a charger, contact Motorola Solutions Global Customer Support Center. For devices that utilize a USB port as a charging source, the device shall only be connected to products that bear the USB-IF logo or have completed the USB-IF compliance program. Do not disassemble or open, crush, bend or deform, puncture, or shred. Severe impact from dropping any battery-operated device on a hard surface could cause the battery to overheat. Do not short circuit a battery or allow metallic or conductive objects to contact the battery terminals. Do not modify or remanufacture, attempt to insert foreign objects into the battery, immerse or expose to water or other liquids, or expose to fire, explosion, or other hazard. Do not leave or store the equipment in or near areas that might get very hot, such as in a parked vehicle or near a radiator or other heat source. Do not place battery into a microwave oven or dryer. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 142 | Maintenance and Troubleshooting Battery usage by children should be supervised. Please follow local regulations to properly dispose of used re-chargeable batteries. Do not dispose of batteries in fire. In the event of a battery leak, do not allow the liquid to come in contact with the skin or eyes. If contact has been made, wash the affected area with large amounts of water and seek medical advice. If you suspect damage to your equipment or battery, contact Motorola Solutions Global Customer Support Center to arrange for inspection. Cleaning Instructions Caution:
Always wear eye protection. Read warning label on compressed air and alcohol product before using. If you have to use any other solution for medical reasons please contact Motorola Solutions for more information. Warning: Avoid exposing this product to contact with hot oil or other flammable liquids. If such exposure occurs, unplug the device and clean the product immediately in accordance with these guidelines. Approved Cleanser Active Ingredients 100% of the active ingredients in any cleaner must consist of one or some combination of the following: isopropyl alcohol, or mild dish soap. Harmful Ingredients The following chemicals are known to damage the plastics on the device and should not come in contact with the device: ammonia solutions, compounds of amines or ammonia; acetone; ketones; ethers; aromatic and chlorinated hydrocarbons; acqueous or alcoholic alkaline solutions; ethanolamine; toluene; trichloroethylene; benzene; carbolic acid and TB-lysoform. Cleaning Instructions Do not apply liquid directly to the device. Dampen a soft cloth or use pre-moistened wipes. Do not wrap the device in the cloth or wipe, but gently wipe the unit. Be careful not to let liquid pool around the display window or other places. Allow the unit to air dry before use. Special Cleaning Notes Many vinyl gloves contain phthalate additives, which are often not recommended for medical use and are known to be harmful to the housing of the device. The device should not be handled while wearing vinyl gloves containing phthalates, or before hands are washed to remove contaminant residue after gloves are removed. If products containing any of the harmful ingredients listed above are used prior to handling the device, such as hand sanitizer that contain ethanolamine, hands must be completely dry before handling the device to prevent damage to the plastics. Cleaning Materials Required Alcohol wipes Lens tissue Cotton-tipped applicators Can of compressed air with a tube. Isopropyl alcohol Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Maintenance and Troubleshooting | 143 Cleaning Frequency The cleaning frequency is up to the customers discretion due to the varied environments in which the mobile devices are used. They may be cleaned as frequently as required, but it is advisable to clean the camera window periodically when used in dirty environments to ensure optimum performance. Cleaning the TC55 Housing Using the alcohol wipes, wipe the housing including buttons. Display The display can be wiped down with the alcohol wipes, but care should be taken not to allow any pooling of liquid around the edges of the display. Immediately dry the display with a soft, non-abrasive cloth to prevent streaking. Camera and Exit Window Wipe the camera and exit window periodically with a lens tissue or other material suitable for cleaning optical material such as eyeglasses. Connector Cleaning To clean the connectors:
Procedure:
1 Remove the main battery from mobile computer. 2 Dip the cotton portion of the cotton-tipped applicator in isopropyl alcohol. 3 Rub the cotton portion of the cotton-tipped applicator back-and-forth across the connector. Do not leave any cotton residue on the connector. 4 Repeat at least three times. 5 Use the cotton-tipped applicator dipped in alcohol to remove any grease and dirt near the connector area. 6 Use a dry cotton-tipped applicator and repeat steps 4 through 6. Caution: Do not point nozzle at yourself and others, ensure the nozzle or tube is away from your face. 7 Spray compressed air on the connector area by pointing the tube/nozzle about inch away from the surface. 8 Inspect the area for any grease or dirt, repeat if required. Cleaning Cradle Connectors To clean the connectors on a cradle:
Procedure:
1 Remove the DC power cable from the cradle. 2 Dip the cotton portion of the cotton-tipped applicator in isopropyl alcohol. 3 Rub the cotton portion of the cotton-tipped applicator along the pins of the connector. Slowly move the applicator back-and-forth from one side of the connector to the other. Do not leave any cotton residue on the connector. 4 All sides of the connector should also be rubbed with the cotton-tipped applicator. Caution: Do not point nozzle at yourself and others, ensure the nozzle or tube is pointed away from your face. 5 Spray compressed air in the connector area by pointing the tube/nozzle about inch away from the surface. 6 Remove any lint left by the cotton-tipped applicator. 7 If grease and other dirt can be found on other areas of the cradle, use a lint-free cloth and alcohol to remove. MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 144 | Maintenance and Troubleshooting 8 Allow at least 10 to 30 minutes (depending on ambient temperature and humidity) for the alcohol to air dry before applying power to cradle. If the temperature is low and humidity is high, longer drying time is required. Warm temperature and dry humidity requires less drying time. Troubleshooting The following tables provides typical problems that might arise and the solution for correcting the problem. Troubleshooting the TC55 Table 11: Troubleshooting the TC55 Problem When the user presses the Power button, the TC55 does not turn on. When the user presses the Power button the TC55 does not turn on but a charge battery icon appears on the screen. After connecting the TC55 to the Rugged Charge Cable, a battery charging icon appears on the screen. When charging, the LED slowly blinks red. Cause Battery is completely discharged. Battery not installed properly. Power button not held down long enough. TC55 not responding. Battery charge level is very low. Battery is depleted but is charging. The TC55 is at an extremely low power state. Battery did not charge. Battery failed. TC55 was removed from power while battery was charging. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 Solution Re-charge or replace the battery. Install the battery properly. See Installing the Battery. Press the Power button until the LED lights green. Perform a hard reset. See Resetting the TC55. Re-charge or replace the battery. Press and hold the Power button to turn on the TC55. Charge the TC55 for a few minutes. The LED will change to flashing green then press the Power button to turn on the TC55. If LED continuously blinks red, check power connections. Disconnect and reconnect connections. Replace battery. If the TC55 still does not operate, perform a hardware reset. Insert TC55 in cradle or attach Charge Cable. The 2,940 mAh battery fully charges in approximately three hours and the 4,410 mAh battery charges in approximately 4.5 hours. Table continued PRELIMINARY Maintenance and Troubleshooting | 145 Problem During data communication with a host computer, no data transmitted, or transmitted data was incomplete. During data communication over Wi-
Fi, no data transmitted, or transmitted data was incomplete. During data communication over Bluetooth, no data transmitted, or transmitted data was incomplete. During data communication over WAN, no data transmitted, or transmitted data was incomplete. No sound. TC55 turns off. A message appears stating not enough storage memory. Turn on the Wi-Fi radio. See the system administrator. Move closed to an access point. Solution Battery does not charge if ambient temperature is below 0 C (32 F) or above 40 C (104 F). Reattach the communication cable and re-transmit. Cause Extreme battery temperature. TC55 removed from USB cable or disconnected from host computer during communication. Incorrect cable configuration. Wi-Fi radio is not on. You moved out of range of an access point. Bluetooth radio is not on. You moved out of range of another Bluetooth device. You are in an area of poor cellular service. APN is not set up correctly. SIM card not installed properly. Data plan not activated. Volume setting is low or turned off. TC55 is inactive. The display turns off after a period of inactivity. Set this period to 15 Remove and re-install the SIM card. See Installing the SIM Card on page 22. Contact your service provider and ensure that your data plan is enable. Adjust the volume. See system administrator for APN setup information. Move without 10 m (32.8 ft.) of the other device. Move into an area that has better service. Turn on the Bluetooth radio. seconds, 30 seconds, 1, 2, 5, 10, or 30 minutes. Recharge or replace the battery. Battery is depleted. Extreme battery temperature. Too many applications installed on the TC55. Move device to an area where the ambient temperature is between -10 C (+14 F) and +60 C (+140 F). Remove user-installed applications on the TC55 to recover memory. Select and touch Uninstall.
>
Apps > Downloaded. Select the unused programs Table continued MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 146 | Maintenance and Troubleshooting Problem The TC55 does not decode when reading bar code. TC55 cannot find any Bluetooth devices nearby. Cause DataWedge is not enable. Unreadable bar code. Distance between the TC55 and bar code is incorrect. TC55 is not programmed for the bar code type. TC55 is not programmed to generate a beep. Too far from other Bluetooth devices. The Bluetooth device(s) nearby are not turned on. The Bluetooth device(s) are not in discoverable mode. Solution Ensure that DataWedge is enabled and configured properly. Refer to the TC55 Integrator Guide for more information. Ensure the symbol is not defaced. Place the TC55 within proper scanning range. Program the TC55 to accept the type of bar code being scanned. Refer to the TC55 Integrator Guide for DataWedge configuration. If the TC55 does not beep on a good decode, set the application to generate a beep on good decode. Move closer to the other Bluetooth device(s), within a range of 10 meters (32.8 feet). Turn on the Bluetooth device(s) to find. Set the Bluetooth device(s) to discoverable mode. If needed, refer to the devices user documentation for help. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Chapter 9 Technical Specifications The following sections provide technical specification for the device. TC55 Technical Specifications The following table summarize the TC55s intended operating environment and technical hardware specifications. Table 12: TC55 Technical Specifications Item Physical Characteristics Dimensions Description Height: 137 mm (5.4 in.) Width: 69 mm (2.7 in.) Weight Display Touch Panel Backlight Battery Pack Expansion Slot Connectivity Notification Keypad Options Audio Depth (with 2,940 mAh battery): 15.9 mm (0.63 in.) Depth (with 4,410 mAh battery): 22.5 mm (0.89 in.) 220 g (7.8 oz) 4.3 in. color WVGA; 800 x 480, 700 NITs Gorilla Glass 2 LED backlight Rechargeable Lithium Ion 3.7V, 2,940 or 4,410 mAh Smart battery User accessible microSD slot, up to 32 GB. USB 2.0 (Host/Client) LED, audio and vibration. On-screen keyboard and 4 capacitive front panel keys. Speakers, dual noise cancelling microphones and headset connector (3.5 mm jack with microphone).Three speakers, including two front facing speakers; dual noise-
cancelling microphones; high-quality speaker phone; 3.5 mm headset jack and Bluetooth wireless headset support. Performance Characteristics CPU Operating System 1.5 GHz Dual Core Processor Android-based, Android Open-Source Project (AOSP) 4.1.2. Table continued MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 148 | Technical Specifications Item Memory Output Power (USB) User Environment Operating Temperature Storage Temperature Charging Temperature Humidity Drop Specification Tumble Specification Description 1 GB RAM, 8 GB Flash 300 mA 10 C to 50 C (14 F to 122 F)
-40 C to 70 C (-40 F to 158 F) 0 C to 40 C (32 F to 104 F) 5% to 85% RH non-condensing Multiple 1.2 m (4 ft.) drops per MIL-STD 810G specifications. With protective boot: Multiple 1.2 m (4 ft.) drops to concrete across the operating temperature range. 150 0.5 m (1.5 ft.) tumbles (300 drops);
With protective boot: 300 0.5 m (1.5 ft.) tumbles (600 drops); per applicable IEC tumble specifications. IP67 per applicable IEC sealing specifications. Sealing Wireless WAN Data and Voice Communications Wireless Wide Area Network
(WWAN) radio Frequency band 4G LTE, HSPA+, DC-HSPA, EDGE/GPRS/GSM, CDMA 1X, EvDO TC55AH:
GSM/EDGE: 850/900/1800/1900 MHz WCDMA: FDD2, FDD4, FDD5, FDD17 LTE Americas:LTE Band 2, LTE Band 4, LTE Band 5, LTE Band 17 TC55BH:
GSM/EDGE: 850/900/1800/1900 MHz WCDMA: FDD1, FDD2, FDD5, FDD8 TC55CH:
CDMA/EVDO: 850/1900 MHz (BC0/BC1) LTE: Band 13 Integrated, Autonomous, Assisted-GPS (A-GPS), GLONASS GPS Wireless LAN Data Communications Wireless Local Area Network
(WLAN) radio Data Rates Supported IEEE 802.11a/b/g/n with internal antenna 802.11b: 1, 2, 5.5, 11 Mbps 802.11a/g: 6, 9, 12, 18, 24, 36, 48, 54 Mbps 802.11n: 6.5, 13, 19.5, 26, 39, 52, 58.5, 65 Mbps Note that 802.11n data rates may be higher. Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 Table continued PRELIMINARY Technical Specifications | 149 Item Operating Channels Security Description Channel 36-165 (5180 5825 MHz), Channel 1-13 (2412-2472 MHz); actual operating channels/frequencies depend on regulatory rules and certification agency Security Modes: Legacy, WPA and WPA2 Encryption: WEP (40 and 128 bit), TKIP and AES Authentication: TLS, TTLS (MS-CHAP), TTLS (MS-CHAP v2), TTLS (PAP), PEAP (MS-CHAP v2), PEAP (GTC). Spreading Technique Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum (DSSS) and Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) Wireless PAN Data and Voice Communications Bluetooth Data Capture Linear Imager Camera Class II, v 4.0; integrated antenna. CS3070 Bluetooth Scanner
(optional) RS507 Hands-free Imager
(optional) Sensors Motion Sensor Ambient Light Sensor Proximity Sensor Electronic Compass Imager (SE655) Specifications Scan Repetition Rate Scan Angle Roll Pitch Angle Skew Tolerance Ambient Light Captures 1D bar codes. For bar code scanning and image capture: 8 MP auto-focus camera; captures 1D and 2D bar codes, photographs, video, signatures and documents. Captures 1D bar codes. Captures 1D and 2D bar codes. 3-axis accelerometer that enables motion sensing applications for dynamic screen orientation and power management. Automatically adjusts required display backlight to maximize power efficiency. Automatically detects when the user places the handset against head during a phone call to disable display output and touch input. Independent does not depend on GPS. Nominally 50 scans/second 53.3 3 25 65 from normal 50 from normal Fluorescent: 450 ft. candles (4845 lux) High Efficiency Fluorescent: 450 ft. candles (4845 lux) Incandescent: 450 ft. candles (4845 lux) Mercury Vapor: 450 ft. candles (4845 lux) Sodium Vapor: 450 ft. candles (4845 lux) Table continued MN000xxxA01 | February 2014 | Send Feedback PRELIMINARY 150 | Technical Specifications Item Description Sunlight: 900 ft. candles (9690 lux) Supported Symbologies 1D 2D (Camera only) Chinese 2 of 5, Codabar, Code 11, Code 128, Code 39, Code 93, Coupon Code, Discrete 2 of 5, EAN-8, EAN-13, GS1 DataBar, GS1 DataBar 14, GS1 DataBar Expanded, GS1 DataBar Expanded Stacked, GS1 DataBar Limited, Interleaved 2 of 5, ISBT 128, Korean 2 of 5, Matrix 2 of 5, MSI, TLC39, Trioptic 39, UCC/EAN 128, UPCA, UPCE, UPCE1, UPC/EAN Supplementals, Webcode Australian Postal, Aztec, Canadian Postal, Composite AB, Composite C, Data Matrix, Dutch Postal, Japanese Postal, Linked Aztec, Maxi Code, Micro PDF-417, microQR, PDF-417, QR Code, US Planet, UK Postal, US Postnet, USPS 4-state
(US4CB) Send Feedback | February 2014 | MN000xxxA01 PRELIMINARY Index A adaptive frequency hopping 113 adjust volume 62 airplane mode 38 albums 81 android version 16 application shortcuts 48 approved cleanser 142 audio modes 61 B battery charging 28 installation 26 battery cover 21 battery safety guidelines 141 battery usage 36 bluetooth 112 Bluetooth PIN 113 security 113 Bluetooth call 67 Bluetooth headset 61, 69 build number 16 C call barring 70 call forwarding 70 call waiting 70 caller ID 70 camera 15 camera settings 78 charge cable 123, 125 charging error 29 charging indications 29 charging temperature 29 chrome 51 cleaning 142 cleaning instructions 142 clock 51 conference call 65 configuration 15 cradle connector cleaning 143 D datawedge 99 diagnostics 89 digital camera 93 display cleaning 143 drive 52 DTMF tones 70 Index | 151 E Elemez 89 emergency calling 61 exit window 21 F file browser 71 five slot charge only cradle 127 five-slot charge only cradle 123 five-slot charge only cradle base 123 fixed dialing numbers 70 flash 21 G GMail 52 google+ 52 H HAC 70 handset mode 61 hangouts 52 harmful ingredients 142 headset mode 61 hearing aid compatibility 70 I installing the battery 26 internet calling 70 K keyboard 50 L LED notification 40 low battery notification 37 M main battery charging 28 maps 52 memory 15 micro USB cable 123, 124 N naming folders 49 news & weather 53 PRELIMINARY V vehicle cradle 123 video settings 79 videos 76, 78 voicemail setup 69 W wired headset 61 152 | Index O operating system 15 P panoramic 77 photos 76 play books 53 play games 53 play magazines 53 play movies & tv 53 play music 54 power on 30 R radios 15 recording videos 78 related documents 17 resetting 59 ringtone 69 RS507 scanning 97 S scan angle 94 scanning range 94 screen lock sound 40 screen touch notification 40 search 52 serial number 16 service information 17 set date 38 set time 38 set time zone 38 setting camera 78 video 79 setup 22 SIM card installation 22 soft reset 59 spare battery 123 speaker mode 61 status bar 44 system notification 40 T taking a panoramic photo 77 taking photos 76 troubleshooting 144 TTY 70 TY/HAC 70 U using a Bluetooth headset 61 using a wired headset 61 using the dialer 62 PRELIMINARY
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | User Manual - Regulatory Guide | Users Manual | 688.39 KiB |
TC55 REGULATORY GUIDE Motorola Solutions reserves the right to make changes to any product to improve reliability, function, or design. Motorola Solutions does not assume any product liability arising out of, or in connection with, the application or use of any product, circuit, or application described herein. No license is granted, either expressly or by implication, estoppel, or otherwise under any patent right or patent, covering or relating to any combination, system, apparatus, machine, material, method, or process in which Motorola Solutions products might be used. An implied license exists only for equipment, circuits, and subsystems contained in Motorola Solutions products. Warranty For the complete Motorola Solutions hardware product warranty statement, go to: http://
www.motorolasolutions.com/warranty. Service Information If you have a problem using the equipment, contact your facilitys Technical or Systems Support. If there is a problem with the equipment, they will contact the Motorola Solutions Global Customer Support at: http://www.motorolasolutions.com/support. For the latest version of this guide go to: http://supportcentral.motorolasolutiuons.com. Motorola Solutions, Inc. 1301 E. Algonquin Rd. Schaumburg, IL 60196-1078, U.S.A. http://www.motorolasolutions.com MOTOROLA, MOTO, MOTOROLA SOLUTIONS and the Stylized M Logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of Motorola Trademark Holdings, LLC and are used under license. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. 2014 Motorola Solutions, Inc. All Rights Reserved. MN000016A02 Rev. A January 2014 Regulatory Information This device is approved under Motorola Solutions, Inc. This guide applies to Model Number TC55AH, TC55BH and TC55CH. All Motorola devices are designed to be compliant with rules and regulations in locations they are sold and will be labeled as required. Local language translations are available at the following website: http://
supportcentral.motorolasolutions.com Any changes or modifications to Motorola equipment, not expressly approved by Motorola, could void the user's authority to operate the equipment. CAUTION Only use Motorola approved and UL Listed accessories, battery packs and battery chargers. Do NOT attempt to charge damp/wet mobile computers or batteries. All components must be dry before connecting to an external power source. Declared maximum operating temperature: 50C. UL Listed Products with GPS Underwriters Laboratories Inc. (UL) has not tested the performance or reliability of the Global Positioning System (GPS) hardware, operating software or other aspects of this product. UL has only tested for fire, shock or casualties as outlined in UL's Standard(s) for Safety for Information Technology Equipment, UL60950-1. UL Certification does not cover the performance or reliability of the GPS hardware and GPS operating software. UL MAKES NO REPRESENTATIONS, WARRANTIES OR CERTIFICATIONS WHATSOEVER REGARDING THE PERFORMANCE OR RELIABILITY OF ANY GPS RELATED FUNCTIONS OF THIS PRODUCT. Bluetooth Wireless Technology This is an approved Bluetooth product. For more information or to view the End Product Listing, please visit http://www.bluetooth.org/tpg/listings.cfm. Wireless Device Country Approvals Regulatory markings, subject to certification, are applied to the device signifying the radio(s) is/are approved for use in the following countries:
United States, Canada, Japan, China, S. Korea, Australia, and Europe. Please refer to the Declaration of Conformity (DoC) for details of other country markings. This is available at http://www.motorolasolutions.com/doc. Note: Europe includes, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Croatia, Cyprus, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. Operation of the device without regulatory approval is illegal. Country Roaming This device incorporates the International Roaming feature (IEEE802.11d) which will ensure the product operates on the correct channels for the particular country of use. Frequency of Operation - FCC and IC 5 GHz Only The use in the UNII (Unlicensed National Information Infrastructure) band 1
(5150 - 5250 MHz) is restricted to Indoor Use Only; any other use will make the operation of this device illegal. Industry Canada Statement:
Caution: The device for the band 5150 - 5250 MHz is only for indoor usage to reduce potential for harmful interference to co-Channel mobile satellite systems. High power radars are allocated as primary users (meaning they have priority) of 5250 - 5350 MHz and 5650-5850 MHz and these radars could cause interference and/or damage to LE-LAN devices. Avertissement: Le dispositive fonctionnant dans la bande 5150 - 5250 MHz est rserv uniquement pour une utilisation l'intrieur afin de rduire les risques de brouillage prjudiciable aux systmes de satellites mobiles utilisant les mmes canaux. Les utilisateurs de radars de haute puissance sont dsigns utilisateurs principaux (c.--d., qu'ils ont la priorit) pour les bands 5250 - 5350 MHz et 5650 - 5850 MHz et que ces radars pourraient causer du brouillage et/ou des dommages aux dispositifs LAN-EL. Health and Safety Recommendations Ergonomic Recommendations CAUTION In order to avoid or minimize the potential risk of ergonomic injury follow the recommendations below. Consult with your local Health & Safety Manager to ensure that you are adhering to your companys safety programs to prevent employee injury. Improve work procedures. Reduce or eliminate repetitive motion Maintain a neutral posture Reduce or eliminate excessive force Keep objects that are used frequently within easy reach Perform tasks at correct heights Reduce or eliminate vibration Reduce or eliminate direct pressure Provide adjustable workstations Provide adequate clearance Provide a suitable working environment Vehicle Installation RF signals may affect improperly installed or inadequately shielded electronic systems in motor vehicles (including safety systems). 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. An air bag inflates with great force. DO NOT place objects, including either 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. Position your device within easy reach. Be able to access your device without removing your eyes from the road. Note: Connection to an alert device that will cause a vehicle horn to sound or lights to flash, on receipt of a call on public roads, is not permitted. IMPORTANT Before installing or using, check state and local laws regarding windshield mounting and use of equipment. For Safe installation Do not put your phone in a location that obstructs the drivers vision or interferes with the operation of the Vehicle. Do not cover an airbag. Safety on the Road Do not take notes or use the device while driving. Jotting down a to do list or flipping through your address book takes attention away from your primary responsibility, driving safely. When driving a car, driving is your first responsibility - Give full attention to driving. Check the laws and regulations on the use of wireless devices in the areas where you drive. Always obey them. When using a wireless device behind the wheel of a car, practice good common sense and remember the following tips:
1. Get to know your wireless device and any 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. 3. 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. 4. 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. 5. 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. 6. Use your wireless phone to call for help. Dial the Emergency services, (9-
1-1 in the US, and 1-1-2 in Europe) 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! The call can be made regardless of any security codes and depending on a network, with or without a SIM card inserted. 7. 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 the Emergency Services, (9-1-1 in the US, and 1-1-2 in Europe) or other local emergency number, as you would want others to do for you. 8. 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. The wireless industry reminds you to use your device / phone safely when driving. Warnings for Use of Wireless Devices Please observe all warning notices with regard to the usage of wireless devices. Potentially Hazardous Atmospheres - Vehicles Use You are reminded of the need to observe restrictions on the use of radio devices in fuel depots, chemical plants etc. and 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. Safety in Aircraft Switch off your wireless device whenever you are instructed to do so by airport or airline staff. If your device offers a 'flight mode' or similar feature, consult airline staff as to its use in flight. Safety in Hospitals Wireless devices transmit radio frequency energy and may affect medical electrical equipment. Wireless devices should be switched off wherever you are requested to do so in hospitals, clinics or healthcare facilities. These requests are designed to prevent possible interference with sensitive medical equipment. Pacemakers Pacemaker manufacturers recommended that a minimum of 15 cm
(6 inches) be maintained between a handheld wireless device and a pacemaker to avoid potential interference with the pacemaker. These recommendations are consistent with independent research and recommendations by Wireless Technology Research. Persons with pacemakers:
Should ALWAYS keep the device more than 15 cm (6 inches) from their pacemaker when turned ON. Should not carry the device in a breast pocket. Should use the ear furthest from the pacemaker to minimize the potential for interference. If you have any reason to suspect that interference is taking place, turn OFF your device. Other Medical Devices Please consult your physician or the manufacturer of the medical device, to determine if the operation of your wireless product may interfere with the medical device. RF Exposure Guidelines Safety Information Reducing RF Exposure - Use Properly Only operate the device in accordance with the instructions supplied. International The device complies with internationally recognized standards covering human exposure to electromagnetic fields from radio devices. For information on International human exposure to electromagnetic fields refer to the Motorola Declaration of Conformity (DoC) at http://
www.motorolasolutions.com/doc. For further information on the safety of RF energy from wireless devices -
see http://responsibility.motorolasolutions.com/index.php/downloads/
located under Wireless Communications and Health. Europe Handheld Devices This device was tested for typical body-worn operation. Use only Motorola tested and approved belt-clips, holsters, and similar accessories to ensure EU Compliance. US and Canada Phones (placed to ear or used with headset) Use only Motorola tested and approved belt-clips, holsters, and similar accessories to ensure FCC Compliance. The use of third-party belt-clips, holsters, and similar accessories may not comply with FCC RF exposure compliance requirements, and should be avoided. The FCC has granted an Equipment Authorization for these model phones with all reported SAR levels evaluated as in compliance with the FCC RF emission guidelines. SAR information on these model phones is on file with the FCC and can be found under the Display Grant section of http://www.fcc.gov/oet/ea/fccid. Co-located Statement To comply with FCC RF exposure compliance requirement, the antenna used for this transmitter must not be co-located or operating in conjunction with any other transmitter/antenna except those already approved in this filing. LED Devices 1. LED LIGHT DO NOT VIEW DIRECTLY WITH OPTICAL INSTRUMENTS. CLASS 1M LED PRODUCT. 2. CAUTION-CLASS 1M LED LIGHT WHEN OPEN. DO NOT VIEW DIRECTLY WITH OPTICAL INSTRUMENTS. 3. COMPLIES WITH IEC 60825-1:2001 AND IEC62471:2006. Power Supply Use ONLY a Motorola approved UL LISTED ITE (IEC/EN 60950-1, LPS) power supply with electrical ratings: Output 5 VDC, min 1.2 A, with a maximum ambient temperature of at least 50 C. Use of alternative power supply will invalidate any approvals given to this unit and may be dangerous. Batteries Taiwan - Recycling Replace the battery when a significant loss of run time is detected. Standard warranty period for all Motorola batteries is one year, regardless if the battery was purchased separately or included as part of the mobile computer. For more information on Motorola batteries, please visit: http:/
mysymbolcare.symbol.com/battery/batbasics1.html Battery Safety Guidelines The area in which the units are charged should be clear of debris and combustible materials or chemicals. Particular care should be taken where the device is charged in a non commercial environment. Follow battery usage, storage, and charging guidelines found in the user's guide. Improper battery use may result in a fire, explosion, or other hazard. To charge the mobile device battery, the battery and charger temperatures must be between 0 C and +45 C (+32 F and +113 F) Do not use incompatible batteries and chargers. Use of an incompatible battery or charger may present a risk of fire, explosion, leakage, or other hazard. If you have any questions about the compatibility of a battery or a charger, contact Motorola Solutions Global Customer Support. For devices that utilize a USB port as a charging source, the device shall only be connected to products that bear the USB-IF logo or have completed the USB-IF compliance program. Do not disassemble or open, crush, bend or deform, puncture, or shred. Severe impact from dropping any battery-operated device on a hard surface could cause the battery to overheat. Do not short circuit a battery or allow metallic or conductive objects to contact the battery terminals. Do not modify or remanufacture, attempt to insert foreign objects into the battery, immerse or expose to water or other liquids, or expose to fire, explosion, or other hazard. Do not leave or store the equipment in or near areas that might get very hot, such as in a parked vehicle or near a radiator or other heat source. Do not place battery into a microwave oven or dryer. Battery usage by children should be supervised. Please follow local regulations to promptly dispose of used re-chargeable batteries. Do not dispose of batteries in fire. Seek medical advice immediately if a battery has been swallowed. In the event of a battery leak, do not allow the liquid to come in contact with the skin or eyes. If contact has been made, wash the affected area with large amounts of water and seek medical advice. If you suspect damage to your equipment or battery, contact Motorola Solutions Global Customer Support to arrange for inspection. EPA (Environmental Protection Administration) requires dry battery producing or importing firms in accordance with Article 15 of the Waste Disposal Act are required to indicate the recycling marks on the batteries used in sales, giveaway or promotion. Contact a qualified Taiwanese recycler for proper battery disposal. Battery Information CAUTION Risk of explosion if battery is replaced by an incorrect type. Dispose of batteries according to instructions. Use only Motorola approved batteries. Accessories which have battery charging capability are approved for use with the following battery models:
Motorola 82-164807-01 (3.7Vdc, 2940 mAh) Motorola 82-172087-01 (3.7Vdc, 4410 mAh) Note: '-02' version - Brazil sku. Motorola rechargeable battery packs are designed and constructed to the highest standards within the industry. However, there are limitations to how long a battery can operate or be stored before needing replacement. Many factors affect the actual life cycle of a battery pack, such as heat, cold, harsh environmental conditions and severe drops. When batteries are stored over six (6) months, some irreversible deterioration in overall battery quality may occur. Store batteries at half of full charge in a dry, cool place, removed from the equipment to prevent loss of capacity, rusting of metallic parts and electrolyte leakage. When storing batteries for one year or longer, the charge level should be verified at least once a year and charged to half of full charge. Use with Hearing Aids When some wireless devices are used near some hearing devices (hearing aids and cochlear implants), users may detect a buzzing, humming, or whining noise. Some hearing devices are more immune than others to this interference noise, and wireless devices also vary in the amount of interference they generate. In the event of interference you may want to consult your hearing aid supplier to discuss solutions. 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. Motorola terminals that are rated have the rating included on the Declaration of Conformity (DoC) at http://www.motorolasolutions.com/doc. The ratings are not guarantees. Results will vary depending on the user's 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. ANSI C63.19 Rating System 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 device's 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. Hearing Aid Compatibility This phone has been tested and rated for use with hearing aids for some of the wireless technologies that it uses. However, there may be some newer wireless technologies used in this phone that have not been tested yet for use with hearing aids. It is important to try the different features of this phone thoroughly and in different locations, using your hearing aid or cochlear implant, to determine if you hear any interfering noise. Consult your service provider or the manufacturer of this phone for information on hearing aid compatibility. If you have questions about return or exchange policies, consult your service provider or phone retailer. This phone has been tested to ANSI C63.19-2011 and rated for use with hearing aids as follows:
TC55AH: M4/T4 and TC55CH: M4/T3. This device is marked HAC showing compliance with the applicable requirements of the FCC. This device is not HAC compliant during Voice Over IP / WLAN (VOIP) calls. Radio Frequency Interference Requirements-FCC Note: 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 Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver which the receiver is connected Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help. Radio Transmitters (Part 15) This device complies with Part 15 of the 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. Radio Frequency Interference Requirements -
Canada CAN ICES-3(B)/ NMB-3(B) Radio Transmitters For RLAN Devices:
The use of 5 GHz RLAN's, for use in Canada, have the following restrictions:
Restricted Band 5.60 - 5.65 GHz This device complies with RSS 210 of Industry Canada. 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. Ce dispositif est conforme la norme CNR-210 d'Industrie Canada applicable aux appareils radio exempts de licence. Son fonctionnement est sujet aux deux conditions suivantes: (1) le dispositif ne doit pas produire de brouillage prjudiciable, et (2) ce dispositif doit accepter tout brouillage reu, y compris un brouillage susceptible de provoquer un fonctionnement indsirable. Label Marking: The Term IC: before the radio certification only signifies that Industry Canada technical specifications were met. Marking and European Economic Area (EEA) The use of 2.4 GHz RLAN's, for use through the EEA, have the following restrictions:
Maximum radiated transmit power of 100 mW EIRP in the frequency range 2.400 - 2.4835 GHz Bluetooth Wireless Technology for use through the EEA has the following restrictions:
Maximum radiated transmit power of 100 mW EIRP in the frequency range 2.400 - 2.4835 GHz The use of RFID Devices has varying restrictions for use within the EEA;
please refer to the Motorola Declaration of Conformity (DoC) for details at http://www.motorolasolutions.com/doc. Statement of Compliance Motorola hereby, declares that this device is in compliance with the essential requirements and other relevant provisions of Directive 1999/5/EC and 2011/
65/EU. A Declaration of Conformity may be obtained from http://
www.motorolasolutions.com/doc. Korea Warning Statement for Class B ITE
. Other Countries Australia Use of 5 GHz RLAN's in Australia is restricted in the following band 5.60 -
5.65GHz. Brazil Declaraes Regulamentares para TC55AH Nota: A marca de certificao se aplica ao Transceptor, modelo TC55AH. Este equipamento opera em carter secundrio, isto , no tem direito a proteo contra interferncia prejudicial, mesmo de estaes do mesmo tipo, e no pode causar interferncia a sistemas operando em carter primrio. Para maiores informaes sobre ANATEL consulte o site:
www.anatel.gov.br. Este equipamento opera em carter secundrio, isto , no tem direito a proteo contra interferncia prejudicial, mesmo de estaes do mesmo tipo, e no pode causar interferncia a sistemas operando em carter primrio. Este produto est homologado pela Anatel, de acordo com os procedimentos regulamentados pela Resoluo n242/2000 e atende aos requisitos tcnicos aplicados, incluindo os limites de exposio da Taxa de Absoro Especfica referente a campos eltricos, magnticos e eletromagnticos de radiofrequncia, de acordo com as Resolues n 303/2002 e 533/2009. Este dispositivo est em conformidade com as diretrizes de exposio radiofrequncia quando posicionado pelo menos 1.5 centmetros de distncia do corpo. Para maiores informaes, consulte o site da Anatel. Chile Este equipo cumple con la Resolucin No 403 de 2008, de la Subsecretaria de telecomunicaciones, relativa a radiaciones electromagnticas. China
http://www.motorolasolutions.com/CN-ZH/Pages/Contact_Us#support_tab Mexico Restrict Frequency Range to: 2.450 - 2.4835 GHz. La operacin de este equipo est sujeta a las siguientes dos condiciones:
(1) es posible que este equipo o dispositivo no cause interferencia perjudicial y (2) este equipo o dispositivo debe aceptar cualquier interferencia, incluyendo la que pueda causar su operacin no deseada. South Korea
Taiwan
Turkey Bu cihaz Trke karakterlerin tamamn ihtiva eden ETSI TS 123.038 V8.0.0
(veya sonraki srmn kodu) ve ETSI TS 123.040 V8.1.0 (veya sonraki srmn kodu) teknik zelliklerine uygundur. Ukraine Bu cihaz Trke karakterlerin tamamn ihtiva eden ETSI TS 123.038 V8.0.0
(veya sonraki srmn kodu) ve ETSI TS 123.040 V8.1.0 (veya sonraki srmn kodu) teknik zelliklerine uygundur. Thailand
Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE)
.
TURKISH WEEE Statement of Compliance EEE Ynetmeliine Uygundur Software Support Motorola wants to ensure that customers have the latest release of entitled software at the time of product purchase. To confirm that your Motorola Solutions device shipped with the latest release of entitled software, visit: www.motorolasolutions.com/support. Check for the latest software from Software Downloads > Product Line/
Product > Go. If your device does not have the latest entitled software release as of your product purchase date, please e-mail a request to Motorola at:
entitlementservices@motorolasolutions.com. You must include the following essential device information with your request:
Model number Serial number Proof of purchase Title of the software download you are requesting. If it is determined by Motorola Solutions that your device is entitled to the latest software release, you will receive an e-mail containing a link directing you to a Motorola web site to download the appropriate software. CMM Disclosure
(Parts)
(Pb) O
(Hg) O
(Cd) O X O O X X O O O O O O O O X O
(Metal Parts)
(Circuit Modules)
(Cables and Cable Assemblies)
(Plastic and Polymeric Parts)
(Optics and Optical Components)
(Batteries)
(Cr6+)
(PBB)
(PBDE) O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O Motorola Solutions, Inc. End User License Agreement BY INSTALLING AND/OR USING THIS PRODUCT, YOU ACKNOWLEDGE THAT YOU HAVE READ THIS AGREEMENT, UNDERSTAND IT AND AGREE TO BE BOUND ITS TERMS. IF YOU DO NOT AGREE TO THE TERMS OF THIS AGREEMENT, MOTOROLA SOLUTIONS IS NOT WILLING TO LICENSE THE PRODUCT TO YOU, AND YOU MUST NOT USE OR INSTALL THIS PRODUCT. Grant of License. Motorola Solutions grants you (Licensee or you) a personal, nonexclusive, nontransferable, nonassignable, no cost license to use the software and documentation
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The terms and conditions of this Agreement shall each continue to apply, but only to the extent that such terms and conditions are not inconsistent with the rights provided to you under the aforementioned provisions of the FAR and DFARS, as applicable to the particular procuring agency and procurement transaction. Governing Law. This Agreement shall be governed by the laws of the United States of America to the extent that they apply and otherwise by the laws of the State of New York without regard to its conflict of laws provisions. Compliance with Laws. Licensee will comply with all applicable laws and regulations, including export laws and regulations of the United States. Licensee will not, without the prior authorization of Motorola Solutions and the appropriate governmental authority of the United States, in any form export or re-export, sell or resell, ship or reship, or divert, through direct or indirect means, any item or technical data or direct or indirect products sold or otherwise furnished to any person within any territory for which the United States Government or any of its agencies at the time of the action, requires an export license or other governmental approval. Violation of this provision will be a material breach of this Agreement, permitting immediate termination by Motorola Solutions. Third Party Software. The Products may contain one or more items of Third-Party Software. The terms of this Agreement govern your use of any Third-Party Software UNLESS A SEPARATE THIRD-PARTY SOFTWARE LICENSE IS INCLUDED, IN WHICH CASE YOUR USE OF THE THIRD-PARTY SOFTWARE WILL THEN BE GOVERNED BY THE SEPARATE THIRD-PARTY LICENSE. Open Source Software. The Products may contain one or more items of Open Source Software. Open Source Software is software covered by a publicly available license governed solely under Copyright law, whereas the complete terms and obligations of such license attach to a licensee solely through the act of copying, using and/or distribution of the licensed software, such obligations often include one or more of attribution obligations, distribution obligations, copyleft obligations, and intellectual property encumbrances. The use of any Open Source Software is subject to the terms and conditions of this Agreement as well as the terms and conditions of the corresponding license of each Open Source Software package. If there is a conflict between the terms and conditions of this Agreement and the terms and conditions of the Open Source Software license, the applicable Open Source Software license will take precedence. Copies of the licenses for the included Open Source Software, if any, as well as their attributions, acknowledgements, and software information details, are provided in the electronic copy of this Agreement, which is available in the Legal Notices or README file associated with the Product. Motorola Solutions is required to reproduce the software licenses, acknowledgments and copyright notices as provided by the authors and owners, thus, all such information is provided in its native language form, without modification or translation. Depending on the license terms of the specific Open Source Software, source code may not be provided. Please reference and review the entire Open Source Software information to identify which Open Source Software packages have source code provided or available. For instructions on how to obtain a copy of any source code made publicly available by Motorola Solutions related to Open Source Software distributed by Motorola Solutions, you may send your request (including the Motorola Solutions Product name and version, along with the Open Source Software specifics) in writing to: Motorola Solutions, Inc., Open Source Software Management, 1301 E. Algonquin Road, Schaumburg, IL 60196 USA. To view additional information regarding licenses, acknowledgements and required copyright notices for open source packages used in this Motorola Solutions product, touch Settings >
About phone > Legal information > Open source licenses.
frequency | equipment class | purpose | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2015-05-19 | 5745 ~ 5825 | NII - Unlicensed National Information Infrastructure TX | Class II Permissive Change |
2 | 2015-01-21 | 2412 ~ 2472 | DTS - Digital Transmission System | |
3 | 5745 ~ 5825 | NII - Unlicensed National Information Infrastructure TX | ||
4 | 2014-02-19 | 1851.25 ~ 1908.75 | PCE - PCS Licensed Transmitter held to ear | Original Equipment |
5 | 5670 ~ 5670 | NII - Unlicensed National Information Infrastructure TX | ||
6 | 2402 ~ 2480 | DSS - Part 15 Spread Spectrum Transmitter | ||
7 | 5755 ~ 5795 | DTS - Digital Transmission System | ||
8 | 13.56 ~ 13.56 | DXX - Part 15 Low Power Communication Device Transmitter |
app s | Applicant Information | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Effective |
2015-05-19
|
||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 |
2015-01-21
|
|||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 |
2014-02-19
|
|||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Applicant's complete, legal business name |
Zebra Technologies Corporation
|
||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | FCC Registration Number (FRN) |
0015642663
|
||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Physical Address |
1 Zebra Plaza
|
||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 |
Holtsville, NY
|
|||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 |
United States
|
|||||
app s | TCB Information | |||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | TCB Application Email Address |
T******@TIMCOENGR.COM
|
||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 |
t******@timcoengr.com
|
|||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | TCB Scope |
A4: UNII devices & low power transmitters using spread spectrum techniques
|
||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 |
B1: Commercial mobile radio services equipment in the following 47 CFR Parts 20, 22 (cellular), 24,25 (below 3 GHz) & 27
|
|||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 |
A1: Low Power Transmitters below 1 GHz (except Spread Spectrum), Unintentional Radiators, EAS (Part 11) & Consumer ISM devices
|
|||||
app s | FCC ID | |||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Grantee Code |
UZ7
|
||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Equipment Product Code |
TC55CH
|
||||
app s | Person at the applicant's address to receive grant or for contact | |||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Name |
L******** Z******
|
||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Title |
Regulatory Specialist
|
||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Telephone Number |
346-2********
|
||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Fax Number |
631-6********
|
||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 |
L******@zebra.com
|
|||||
app s | Technical Contact | |||||
n/a | ||||||
app s | Non Technical Contact | |||||
n/a | ||||||
app s | Confidentiality (long or short term) | |||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Does this application include a request for confidentiality for any portion(s) of the data contained in this application pursuant to 47 CFR § 0.459 of the Commission Rules?: | No | ||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Yes | |||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Long-Term Confidentiality Does this application include a request for confidentiality for any portion(s) of the data contained in this application pursuant to 47 CFR § 0.459 of the Commission Rules?: | No | ||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Yes | |||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | If so, specify the short-term confidentiality release date (MM/DD/YYYY format) | 08/13/2014 | ||||
if no date is supplied, the release date will be set to 45 calendar days past the date of grant. | ||||||
app s | Cognitive Radio & Software Defined Radio, Class, etc | |||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Is this application for software defined/cognitive radio authorization? | No | ||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Equipment Class | NII - Unlicensed National Information Infrastructure TX | ||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | DTS - Digital Transmission System | |||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | PCE - PCS Licensed Transmitter held to ear | |||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | DSS - Part 15 Spread Spectrum Transmitter | |||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | DXX - Part 15 Low Power Communication Device Transmitter | |||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Description of product as it is marketed: (NOTE: This text will appear below the equipment class on the grant) | Touch Computer | ||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | TOUCH COMPUTER | |||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Related OET KnowledgeDataBase Inquiry: Is there a KDB inquiry associated with this application? | No | ||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Modular Equipment Type | Does not apply | ||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Purpose / Application is for | Class II Permissive Change | ||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Original Equipment | |||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Composite Equipment: Is the equipment in this application a composite device subject to an additional equipment authorization? | Yes | ||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Related Equipment: Is the equipment in this application part of a system that operates with, or is marketed with, another device that requires an equipment authorization? | No | ||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Grant Comments | Power listed is conducted. For body-worn operation, this phone has been tested and meets the FCC RF exposure guidelines when used with the specific body-worn accessories tested for this filing or an accessory that contains no metal and that positions the handset a minimum of 1.5cm from the users body. End-users must be informed of the body-worn operating requirements for satisfying RF exposure compliance. The highest reported SAR values for head, body-worn accessory, and simultaneous transmission conditions are 0.70W/kg, 0.57W/kg, and 1.56W/kg, respectively. This device has a 20 MHz and 40 MHz bandwidth mode. | ||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Power listed is conducted. For body-worn operation, this phone has been tested and meets the FCC RF exposure guidelines when used with the specific body-worn accessories tested for this filing or an accessory that contains no metal and that positions the handset a minimum of 1.5cm from the users body. End-users must be informed of the body-worn operating requirements for satisfying RF exposure compliance. The highest reported SAR values for head, body-worn accessory, product specific (wireless router), and simultaneous transmission conditions are 0.78W/kg, 0.22W/kg, 0.37W/kg, and 1.56W/kg, respectively. | |||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Power listed is conducted. For body-worn operation, this phone has been tested and meets the FCC RF exposure guidelines when used with the specific body-worn accessories tested for this filing or an accessory that contains no metal and that positions the handset a minimum of 1.5cm from the users body. End-users must be informed of the body-worn operating requirements for satisfying RF exposure compliance. The highest reported SAR values for head, body-worn accessory, and simultaneous transmission conditions are 0.70W/kg, 0.57W/kg, and 1.56W/kg, respectively. This device has a 20 MHz and 40 MHz bandwidth mode. | |||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Power listed is EIRP for part 24 and ERP for part 22/27. For body-worn operation, this device has been tested and meets the FCC RF exposure guidelines when used with the specific body-worn accessories tested for this filing or an accessory that contains no metal and that positions the handset a minimum of 1.5cm from the users body. End-users must be informed of the body-worn operating requirements for satisfying RF exposure compliance. The highest reported SAR values for head, body-worn accessory, product specific (wireless router), and simultaneous transmission conditions are 0.71W/kg, 1.34W/kg, 1.33W/kg, and 1.56W/kg respectively. This device contains functions that are not operational in U.S. Territories. This filing is only applicable for U.S. operations. HAC Ratings: M4 T3 -2011 | |||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Power listed is conducted. Operations in the band 5.15-5.25GHz are restricted to indoor use only. For body worn operation, this phone has been tested and meets the FCC RF exposure guidelines when used with the specific body-worn accessories tested for this filing or an accessory that contains no metal and that positions the handset at a minimum of 1.5 cm from the users body. End-users must be informed of the body-worn operating requirements for satisfying RF exposure compliance. The highest reported SAR values for head, body-worn accessory, and simultaneous transmission conditions are 0.70W/kg, 0.57W/kg, and 1.56W/kg, respectively. This device has a 20 MHz and 40 MHz bandwidth mode. | |||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Power listed is conducted. | |||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Power listed is conducted. For body-worn operation, this phone has been tested and meets the FCC RF exposure guidelines when used with the specific body-worn accessories tested for this filing or an accessory that contains no metal and that positions the handset a minimum of 1.5cm from the users body. End-users must be informed of the body-worn operating requirements for satisfying RF exposure compliance. The highest reported SAR values for head, body-worn accessory, product specific (wireless router), and simultaneous transmission conditions are 0.78W/kg, 0.22W/kg, 0.37W/kg, and 1.56W/kg, respectively. This device has a 20 MHz and 40 MHz bandwidth mode. | |||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Is there an equipment authorization waiver associated with this application? | No | ||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | If there is an equipment authorization waiver associated with this application, has the associated waiver been approved and all information uploaded? | No | ||||
app s | Test Firm Name and Contact Information | |||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Firm Name |
Sporton International Inc.
|
||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Name |
A****** C******
|
||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Telephone Number |
886-3******** Extension:
|
||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Fax Number |
886-3********
|
||||
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 |
a******@sporton.com.tw
|
|||||
Equipment Specifications | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 1 | 15E | 38 CC HX | 5180 | 5240 | 0.0483 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 2 | 15E | 38 CC HX | 5260 | 5320 | 0.0485 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 3 | 15E | 38 CC HX | 5500 | 5700 | 0.0454 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 4 | 15E | 38 CC HX | 5745 | 5825 | 0.048 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2 | 1 | 15C | CC | 2402 | 2480 | 0.0024 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2 | 2 | 15C | CC HX | 2412 | 2472 | 0.2275 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3 | 1 | 15E | CC HX | 5180 | 5240 | 0.0483 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3 | 2 | 15E | CC HX | 5260 | 5320 | 0.0485 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3 | 3 | 15E | CC HX | 5500 | 5700 | 0.0454 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3 | 4 | 15E | 39 CC HX | 5745 | 5825 | 0.048 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
4 | 1 | 22H | HC | 824.7 | 848.31 | 0.23 | 0.03 ppm | 1M28F9W | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
4 | 2 | 24E | HC | 1851.25 | 1908.75 | 0.42 | 0.01 ppm | 1M28F9W | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
4 | 3 | 27 | HX | 779.5 | 784.5 | 0.16 | 0.01 ppm | 4M51G7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
4 | 4 | 27 | HX | 779.5 | 784.5 | 0.14 | 0.01 ppm | 4M50D7W | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
4 | 5 | 27 | HX | 782 | 782 | 0.16 | 0.01 ppm | 9M08G7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
4 | 6 | 27 | HX | 782 | 782 | 0.14 | 0.01 ppm | 9M04D7W | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
5 | 1 | 15E | CC HX | 5180 | 5240 | 0.0483 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
5 | 2 | 15E | CC HX | 5190 | 5230 | 0.0296 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
5 | 3 | 15E | CC HX ND | 5260 | 5320 | 0.0485 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
5 | 4 | 15E | CC HX ND | 5270 | 5310 | 0.0303 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
5 | 5 | 15E | CC HX ND | 5500 | 5580 | 0.0454 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
5 | 6 | 15E | CC HX ND | 5510 | 5550 | 0.0304 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
5 | 7 | 15E | CC HX ND | 5660 | 5700 | 0.0217 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
5 | 8 | 15E | CC HX ND | 5670 | 5670 | 0.0249 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
6 | 1 | 15C | CC | 2402.00000000 | 2480.00000000 | 0.0028000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7 | 1 | 15C | CC | 2402 | 2480 | 0.0024 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7 | 2 | 15C | CC HX | 2412 | 2472 | 0.2275 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7 | 3 | 15C | CC HX | 5745 | 5825 | 0.1175 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7 | 4 | 15C | CC HX | 5755 | 5795 | 0.1016 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
8 | 1 | 15C | CC | 13.56000000 | 13.56000000 |
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